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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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and night And thus for our main and principall debt of Obedience hath our Mediatour given satisfaction unto the Justice of his Father with good measure pressed down shaken together and running over But beside this we were lyable unto another debt which wee have incurred by our default and drawne upon our selves by way of forfeiture and nomine poenae For as Obedience is a due debt and Gods servants in regard thereof are truly debters so likewise is sinne a debt and sinners debters in regard of the penalty due for the default And as the payment of the debt which commeth nomine poenae dischargeth not the tenant afterwards from paying his yearly rent which of it self would have been due although no default had been committed so the due payment of the yearly rent after the default hath been made is no sufficient satisfaction for the penalty already incurred Therefore our surety who standeth chargeable with all our debts as he maketh payment for the one by his Active so must he make amends for the other by his Passive obedience he must first suffer and then enter into his glory For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many sons unto glory to make the Captain of their salvation perfect that is a perfect accomplisher of the worke which he had undertaken through sufferings The Godhead is of that infinite perfection that it cannot possibly be subject to any passion He therefore that had no other nature but the Godhead could not pay such a debt as this the discharge whereof consisted in suffering and dying It was also fit that Gods justice should have been satisfied in that nature which had transgressed and that the same nature should suffer the punishment that had committed the offence Forasmuch then as the children were partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil and deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Such and so great was the love of God the Father toward us he spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all and so transcendent was the love of the Son of God toward the sons of men that he desired not to be spared but rather then they should lie under the power of death was of himself most willing to suffer death for them which seeing in that infinite nature which by eternall generation hee received from his Father he could not doe he resolved in the appointed time to take unto himselfe a Mother and out of her substance to have a body framed unto himself wherein he might become obedient unto death even the death of the crosse for our redemption And therefore when hee commeth into the world he saith unto his Father A body hast thou fitted me Lo I come to doe thy will O God By the which will saith the Apostle wee are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Thus we see it was necessary for the satisfaction of this debt that our Mediatour should be Man but he that had no more in him then a Man could never be able to goe through with so great a work For if there should be found a Man as righteous as Adam was at his first creation who would be content to suffer for the offence of others his suffering possibly might serve for the redemption of one soul it could be no sufficient ransome for those innumerable multitudes that were to be redeemed to God out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation Neither could any Man or Angel be able to hold out if a punishment equivalent to the endlesse sufferings of all the sinners in the world should at once bee laid upon him Yea the very powers of Christ himself upon whom the spirit of might did rest were so shaken in this sharp encounter that he who was the most accomplisht pattern of all fortitude stood sore amazed and with strong crying and tears prayed that if it were possible the houre might passe from him This man therefore being to offer one sacrifice for sins for ever to the burning of that sacrifice he must not onely bring the coals of his love as strong as death and as ardent as the fire which hath a most vehement flame but he must add thereunto those everlasting burnings also even the flames of his most glorious Deity and therefore through the eternall Spirit must he offer himself without spot unto God that hereby he might obtain for us an eternall redemption The bloud whereby the Church is purchased must bee Gods own bloud and to that end must the Lord of glory be crucified the Prince and author of life be killed he whose eternall generation no man can declare be cut off out of the land of the living and the man that is Gods own fellow be thus smitten according to that vvhich God himselfe foretold by his Prophet Awake O sword against my shepherd and against the man that is my fellow saith the Lord of hosts smite the shepherd and the sheep shall be scattered The people of Israel we read did so value the life of David their King that they counted him to be worth tenne thousand of themselves how shall we then value of Davids Lord who is the blessed and onely Potentate the King of kings and Lord of lords It was indeed our nature that suffered but he that suffered in that nature is over all God blessed for ever and for such a Person to have suffered but one houre was more then if all other persons had suffered ten thousand millions of years But put case also that the life of any other singular man might be equivalent to all the lives of whole mankind yet the laying down of that life would not be sufficient to doe the deed unlesse he that had power to lay it down had power likewise to take it up again For to be detained always in that prison from whence there is no comming out before the payment of the uttermost farthing is to lie always under execution and to quit the plea of that full payment of the debt wherein our surety stood engaged for us And therefore the Apostle upon that ground doth rightly conclude that if Christ be not raised our faith is vaine we are yet in our sinnes and consequently that as he must be delivered to death for our offences so he must be raised again for our justification Yea our Saviour himself knowing full well what he was to undergoe for our sakes told us before-hand that the Comforter whom hee would send unto us should convince the world that is fully satisfie the consciences of the sons of men
fall by sin from their first blessed estate Matth. 18. 18. Whence commeth this Not from their own nature which was subject to mutability but from Gods mercy for seeing those Angels are elect of God 1 Tim. 5. 21. it followe●h of necessity that they are kept and upholden only by his grace and mercy whereupon his election is grounded Now for the employment of these Angels what are you to note therein Their apparitions and the offices which they perform In how many sorts have Angels appeared In as divers as it pleased God to send them but specially in two namely in visions and true bodies What mean you by Visions Their appearing in some extraordinary sort to the mind and inward senses either in the night by dreams as to Joseph Matth. 2. 13. or in the day by some strange shows as they did to the Prophets Zach. 2. 3. How manifold was their apparition in body In the true bodies either of men or of other creatures What examples have you of their apparition in the bodies of men Gen. 19. 2. two Angels beside Christ appeared to Abraham so did two likewise to the Apostles Act. 1. 10. and Gabriel to the Virgin Mary Luk. 1. 26. Were these bodies of living men who had souls or bodies created upon occasion They were bodies extraordinarily created upon that occasion by God having no souls but the Angels to give them motions and after were dissolved by God to nothing having neither birth nor buriall Did they move from place to place in these bodies Yes and did many other actions proper to man the Angels appearing to Abraham did truly eat and drink though without need the Angels did truly speak and touch Lot pulling him but these actions were done by them in an extraordinary speedinesse and manner more then any man can doe Have Angels ever appeared in the bodies of other creatures Yes for therefore are they called Cherubims of creatures that have wings Satan spoke in the body of a serpent to Evah and so to the Heathen in sundry other creatures With what feeling did the godly finde the apparition of the Angels Many times with great fear and terror as may be seen in Daniel 7. 7 8 9 10 c. which was caused by the small glimpse of glory that God vouchsafed to them which man for his sin could not bear What learn we by that To know our misery and corruption and that in comparison of Gods appearing we should be ready to turn to dust How many are the Offices the good Angels perform Twofold First in respect of God Secondly in respect of the creatures How many are their duties concerning God Three 1. They doe continually praise and glorifie God in Heaven 2. They do always wait upon the Lord their God in heaven to expect what he would have them doe 3. They knowing his will doe put it in execution How manifold are their duties concerning the creatures Twofold either generall in respect of all the creatures or speciall in respect of man What is the generall dutie That they are the Instruments and Ministers of God for the administration and government of the whole world What are the Offices which they perform towards Man They are either in this life or in the life to come How manifold are the Offices which they perform towards man in this life Twofold either such as respect the godly the procuring of whose good is their speciall calling Heb. 1. 14. Mat. 4. 11. Ps. 104. 4. or such as respect the wicked How many good Angels hath every one attending upon him in this life hath he one alone or hath he many That is as the glory of God and the necessity of the Saints requireth sometimes there doe many attend upon one sometimes one upon many What are the good offices which the Angels perform towards the godly in this life They are used as Instruments 1. To bestow good things upon them 2. To keep them from evill How manifold are those good things which by the ministery of the Angels are bestowed upon the godly They partly concern the body partly the soul. What are the good things that concern the body 1. They are used as Instruments to bestow things needfull for the preservation of it and to bring necessary helps to men in their distress as to Elias and Hagar 2. They are appointed of God to be as a guard and garrison unto his children to comfort and defend them walking in their lawfull callings Psal. 34. 7. 91. 11. 3. They give an happy successe to them in the good things they go about Gen. 24. 7. 40. ver 4. They are appointed as watchmen over the Saints that by their presence they might keep their bodies in shamefastnesse holinesse and purity 1 Cor. 11. 10. What are the good things of the soul which the Lord doth bestow upon the Saints by the ministery of the good Angels 1. To reveal the will of God to them and to inform them in things which he would have done Act. 10. 5. 2. To stir up good motions in their hearts 3. To comfort them in sorrow as Christ was comforted being distressed in soul Luk. 22. 43 44. and Paul Acts 27. 23 24. 4. To rejoyce at the conversion of the Saints Luk. 15. 10. How manifold are the evill things from which the good Angels doe keep the godly They likewise doe partly concern the body partly the soul. What are the evils of the body They are either without or within us From what evils without us are we preserved by the ministery of the Angels 1. From those dangers that one man bringeth upon another 2. From those that they are subject unto by reason of wilde beasts 3. From those evils whereunto we are subject by reason of other creatures without life 4. They doe not only preserve the bodies of the Saints but also all things that are theirs as their goods wife children and families What are the evils within us from which the Angels doe keep us First sicknesse Secondly famine Thirdly death VVhat are the evils of the soule from which the Angels doe keep us From sin and that two ways 1. By their continual presence 2. By their power What are the actions which the good Angels perform towards wicked men in this life 1. They restrain and hinder them from many wicked things which they would bring to passe 2. They execute judgements upon the wicked and punish them for their sins committed 2 Kings 19. 35. Gen. 19. 11. What are the offices which the good Angels are to perform towards man after this life First they carry the souls of the godly being separated from the body with comfort into heaven as Lazarus Luk. 16. 22. and thrust the wicked into hell Secondly they wait upon Christ at the day of Judgement to gather all the faithfull unto him and to separate the wicked from among them Matth. 24. 31. 51. and to rejoyce at the sentence which he shall give Are we
as most men think it to be What breaches of the first Commandement may be observed in this transgression First infidelity whereby they doubted of Gods love towards them and of the truth of his word Secondly contempt of God in disregarding his threatnings and crediting the word of Satan Gods enemy and theirs Thirdly hainous ingratitude and unthankfulnesse against God for all his benefits in that they would not be beholding unto him for that excellent condition of their creation in respect whereof they ought unto him all fealty but would needs be his equall Fourthly curiosity in affecting greater wisdome then God had endued them withall by vertue of their creation and a greater measure of knowledge then hee thought fit to reveale unto them Fiftly intolerable pride and ambition not onely desiring to be better then God made them but also to be equall in knowledge to God himselfe and aspiring to the highest estate due to their Creatour How did our first parents break the second Commandement Eve by embracing the word of the Devill and preferring it before the word of God Adam by hearkning to the voyce of his wife rather then to the voyce of the Almighty Gen. 3. 17. What were the breach of the third First presumption in venturing to dispute of Gods truth and to enter in communication with Gods enemy or a beast who appeared unto them touching the word of God with whom no such conference ought to have been entertained Secondly reproachfull blasphemy by subscribing to the sayings of the Devill in which he charged God with lying and envying their good estate Thirdly superstitious conceit of the fruit of the tree imagining it to have that vertue which God never put into it as if by the eating thereof such knowledge might be gotten as Satan perswaded Fourthly want of that zeale in Adam for the glory of God which he ought to have shewed against his wife when hee understood shee had transgressed Gods Commandements How was the fourth Commandement broken In that the Sabbath was made a time to conferre with Satan in matters tending to the high dishonour of God If it be true that on that day man fell into this transgression as some not improbably have conjectured for at the conclusion of the sixth day all things remained yet very good Gen. 1. 31. and God blessed the seventh day Gen. 2. 3. Now it is very likely Satan would take the first advantage that possibly he could to entrap them before they were strengthened by longer experience and by partaking of the Sacrament of the tree of life whereof it appeareth by Gen. 3. 22. that they had not yet eaten and so from the very beginning of man became a manslayer John 8. 44. Shew briefly the grounds of the breach of the Commandements of the second table in the transgression of our first parents The fifth was broken Eve giving too little to her husband in attempting a matter of so great weight without his privity and Adam giving too much to his wife in obeying her voyce rather then the Commandement of God and for pleasing of her not caring to displease God Gen. 3. 17. The sixth by this act they threw themselves and all their posterity into condemnation and death both of body and soule The seventh though nothing direct against this Commandement yet herein appeared the root of those evill affections which are here condemned as not bridling the lust and wandring desire of the eyes as also the inordinate appetite of the tast Gen. 3. 6. in lusting for and eating that onely fruit which God forbad not being satisfied with all the other fruits in the garden The eighth first laying hands upon that which was none of their own but by a speciall reservation kept from them Secondly discontent with their present estate and covetous desire of that which they had not The ninth judging otherwise then the truth was of the vertue of the tree Gen. 3. 6. and receiving a false accusation against God himselfe The tenth by entertaining in their minds Satans suggestions and evill concupiscence appearing in the first motions leading to the forenamed sinnes Thus much of our first parents sinne and the causes thereof Now let us come to the effects of the same shew therefore what followed in them immediately upon this transgression Three fruits were most manifest namely guiltinesse of conscience shame of face and feare of Gods presence Did any punishment follow upon this sinne Sinne guiltinesse and punishment doe naturally follow one upon another otherwise the threatning that at what time soever they did transgresse Gods Commandement they should certainly dye should not have taken effect Declare how that threatning took effect They were dead in sinne which is more fearfull then the death of the body as that which is a separation from the favour of God for there came upon them the decay of Gods glorious image in all the faculties of their soule and also a corruption of the powers of their body from being so fit instruments to serve the soule as God made them and this in them is signified by nakednes Gen. 3. 7. And in their children called originall sin Then there issued from thence a streame of actuall sinnes in the whole course of their life which appeared in Adam even upon his fall by his flying from Gods presence and affirming that it was his nakednesse that made him flye his excusing of his sin and laying it on the woman c. By sin an entrie being made for death Rom. 5. 12. they became subject to the separating of the soul from the body which is bodily death and of both from God which is spirituall death signified by expelling them out of Paradise and debarring them of the sacramentall tree of life Gen. 3. 22. c. And thus by the just sentence of God being for their sin delivered into the power both of corporall and of eternall death they were already entred upon death and hell to which they should have proceeded untill it had been accomplished both in body and soule in hell with the Devill and his Angels for ever if the Lord had not looked upon them in the blessed Seed For the fuller understanding of the things that immediatly followed the transgression of our first parents let us consider more particularly what is recorded in the 3d. ch of Gen. And first shew what is meant by that in v. 7. that their eyes were opened they saw themselves naked were they not naked before and having the eye sharper then after the fall must they not needs see they were naked It is true howbeit their nakednesse before the fall was comely yea more comely then the comeliest apparell we can put on being clad with the robe of innocency from the top of the head unto the sole of the foot wherefore by nakednesse he meaneth a shamefull nakednesse both of soule and body as the Scripture speaketh elsewhere Rev. 3. 17 18. Exod. 32. 25. What
naturall Son of God How is he said to be conceived by the Holy Ghost Because the holy Ghost by his incomprehensible power wrought his conception supernaturally which Fathers doe naturally in the begetting of their children not that any of the substance of the Holy Ghost which is indivisible came to his generation in the womb of the Virgin Why is he called the Word John 1. 1. As for other reasons declared in the doctrine of the Trinity so also because he is he whom the Father promised to Adam Abraham and all the holy Patriarchs to make his promises of salvation sure unto them as a man that hath ones word thinketh himself sure of the matter that is promised Why is the Word said to have been in the beginning Joh. 1. 1. Not because he began then to be but that then he was and therefore is from all eternity What gather you of this that he is the Wisdome of God That our Saviour is from everlasting as wel as his Father for it were an horrible thing to think that there were a time when God wanted Wisdome Why is he called the Character or Image of his Father Because God by him hath made himselfe manifest to the world in the Creation and especially in the Redemption of it What learn you from hence That whosoever seeketh to come to the knowledge of God must come to it by Christ. How is the Godhead of Christ proved Not onely by abundant testimonies of Scripture Esa. 7. 14. 9. 6. 25. 9. John 1. 1. 20. 28. Rom. 9. 5. 1 Joh. 5. 20. But also by his miracles especially in the raising of himselfe from death Rom. 1. 4. together with the continuance and conquest of the Gospell Acts 5. 39. and that not by carnall power or policie but onely by the power of his Spirit Zach. 4. 6. and patient suffering of his Saints Rev. 12. 11. Why was it requisite that our Saviour should be God Because first none can satisfie for sin nor be a Saviour of soules but God alone Psal. 49. 7. 1. Thess. 1. 10. For no creature though never so good is worthy to redeem another mans sin which deserveth everlasting punishment Secondly the satisfaction for our sins must be infinitely meritorious otherwise it cannot satisfie the infinite wrath of God that was offended therefore that the work of our Redemption might be such it was necessary our Saviour should be God to the end his obedience and sufferings might bee of an infinite price and worth Acts 20. 28. Heb. 9. 14. Thirdly No finite creature was able to abide and overcome the infinite wrath of God and the sufferings due unto us for our sins Therefore must our Saviour be God that he might abide the burthen of Gods wrath in his flesh sustaining and upholding the man-hood by his divine power and so might get again and restore to us the righteousnesse and life which we have lost Fourthly our Saviour must vanquish all the enemies of our salvation and overcome Satan Hell Death and Damnation which no creature could ever doe Rom. 1. 4. Heb. 2. 14. Fifthly he must also give efficacie to his satisfaction raising us up from the death of sin and putting us in possession of eternall life Sixthly he must give us his Spirit and by it seale these graces to our soules and renew our corrupt nature which only God can doe What comfort have we then by this that Christ is God Hereby we are sure that he is able to save by reconciling us to the Father And what by this that he is the Sonne That uniting us unto himselfe he may make us children unto his heavenly Father Heb. 2. 10. Being God before all worlds how became he man He took to himselfe a true body and a reasonable soule being conceived in time by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin MARY Heb. 1. 6. Joh. 1. 14. Matth. 1. 18. 20. Luk. 1. 31 32. 2. 7. and so became very man like unto us in all things even in our infirmities sin onely excepted Heb. 5. 7. In which respect he hath the name of the Sonne of man given unto him Matth. 26. 24. because he was of the nature of man according to the flesh and the Sonne of David Mat. 9. 27. because he sprang of the linage and stock of David How doth it appeare that he was true man Besides manifold predictions and cleare testimonies of Scripture Gen. 3. 15. Heb. 2. 17. 1 Tim. 2. 5 c. it is abundantly proved by plentifull experiments especially by his partaking of humane infirmities his Conception Birth Life and Death 1 Pet. 3. 18. Joh. 4. 6 7. Luk. 1. 31. 2. 7. Heb. 2. 9. 14 15. How by his Conception Because according to the flesh he was made of a woman and formed of her onely substance she continuing still a pure Virgin by the power of the most High Rom. 1. 3. Gal. 4. 4. Luk. 1. 34 35. Why is he said to be born Mat. 2. 1. To assure us of his true humanity even by his infancie and infirmitie Luk. 2. 7. Why was he born of a Virgin Luk. 1. 27. That he might be holy and without sin the naturall course of originall corruption being prevented because he came not by naturall propagation What learn you from hence That God is faithful as well as merciful ever making good his word by his work in due season Luk. 1. 20. 45. Act. 3. 18. 24. Why is there mention of the Virgin by her name Mary Luc. 1. 27. For more certainty of his birth and linage Mat. 1. 16. Heb. 7. 14. 2 Tim. 2. 8. as also to acquaint us with his great humility in so great poverty Luk. 2. 24. compared with Lev. 12. 8. What gather you from hence The marvellous grace of Christ who being rich for our sakes became poor that we through his poverty might be made rich 2 Cor. 8. 9. Did he not passe through the Virgin Mary as some say like as saffron passeth through a bag and water through a Pipe or Conduit God forbid he was made of the seed of David and was a plant of the root of Jesse for he took humane nature of the Virgin and so the Word was made flesh If he was only made flesh it would seem that the Godhead served instead of a soul unto him Flesh is here taken according to the use of Scripture for the whole man both body and soul otherwise our Saviour should not have been a perfect man and our souls must have perished everlastingly except his soul had satisfied for them Was not the Godhead turned into flesh seeing it is said he was made flesh In no wise no more then he was turned into sin or into a curse because it is said He was made sin and made a curse for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 3. 13. If the Godhead be not changed into the Manhood is it not at least mingled with it Nothing lesse for then he should be
jurisdiction and authority Mat. 20. 19. Joh. 18. 31 32. as likewise to teach us that he appeared willingly and of his own accord before a mortall Judge of whom he was pronounced innocent and yet by the same he was condemned What comfort have you hereof That my Saviour thus suffering not any whit for his own sins but wholly for mine and for other mens sins before an earthly Judge I shall be discharged before the heavenly Judgement seat What did he chiefly suffer under Pontius Pilate He was apprehended accused arraigned mocked scourged condemned and crucified Mat. 26. 27. and 28. chapters What learn you here That he that knew no sin was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 24. Did Christ suffer these things willingly as he suffered them innocently Yes he laid down his life meekly as the sheep doth his fleece before the shearer being obedient even unto the death Luc. 23. 41. 1 Pet. 2. 22. Esa. 53. 7. Phil. 2. 8. Heb. 5. 8. Vnto what death was he so obedient Even unto the most reproachfull painfull and dreadfull death the death of the Crosse Mat. 27. 30. 38. Phil. 2. 8. Why was Christ put unto this death of the Crosse Because it was not a common death but such a death as was accursed both of God and man that so he being made a curse for us he might redeem us from a curse due unto us Deut. 21. 23. Gal. 3. 13. What comfort have you by this I am comforted in this because I am delivered from the curse which I have deserved by the breach of the law and shall obtain the blessing due unto him for keeping of the same Why was it requisite that our Saviours soul should be separated from his body Because we were all dead that so he might be the death of death for us 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. Heb. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. for by sin death came into the world and therefore the Justice of God could not have been satisfied for our sins unlesse death had been joyned with his sufferings How could the death and sufferings of Christ which were but for a short time be a full satisfaction for us which have deserved eternall death Although they were not everlasting yet in regard of the worthinesse of the person who suffered them they were equivalent to everlasting torments forasmuch as not a bare man nor an Angel did suffer them but the eternall Son of God though not in his Godhead but in our nature which he assumed his person Majesty Deity Goodnesse Justice Righteousnesse being every way infinite and eternall made that which he suffered of no lesse force and value then eternall torments upon others yea even upon all the world besides For even as the death of a Prince being but a man and a sinfull man is of more reckoning then the death of an Army of other men because he is the Prince much more shall the death and sufferings of the Son of God the Prince of all Princes not finite but every way infinite and without sin much more I say shall that be of more reckoning with his Father then the sufferings of all the world and the time of his sufferings of more value for the worthinesse of his person then if all the men in the world had suffered for ever and ever What use are we to make of Christs death and passion 1. The consideration hereof may bring us to a sound perswasion and feeling of our sins because they have deserved so grievous a punishment as either the death of the Son of God or hell fire 2. Hereby we reap unspeakable comfort forasmuch as by his stripes we are healed by his bloud washed by his sacrifice God is satisfied and by his death we are saved and redeemed 1 Pet. 2. 24. Rev. 1. 5. Heb. 10. 10. 12. Rom. 5. 8 9 10. 3. We learn from hence to die to our sins and to live henceforth unto him that hath dyed for us Rom. 6. 2. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 15. What befell our Saviour after his soule was separated from his body He was buried Act. 13. 29 30. and went to Hades or as we commonly speak descended into hell Act. 2. 31. Why was it needfull that Christ should be buried 1. To assure us more fully that he was truly dead Mat. 27. 59 60. 94 65 66. Act. 2. 29. 2. That even in the grave the very fortresse of death he might loose the sorrows and bands of death Act. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 55. What is meant by his descending into Hell Not that he went to the place of the damned but that he went absolutely unto the estate of the dead Rom. 10. 7. Eph. 4. 9. What doe you call the estate of the dead That departing this life he went in his soul into heaven Luc. 23. 43. and was in his body under the very power and dominion of death for a season Acts 2. 24. Heb. 2. 14. Rom. 6. 9. What comfort have you by Christs death buriall and lying under the power of death 1. I am comforted because my sinnes are fully discharged in his death and so buried that they shall never come into remembrance 2. My comfort is the more because by the vertue of his death and buriall sin shall be killed in me and buried so that henceforth it shall have no power to reign over me 3. I need not to fear death seeing that sin which is the sting of death is taken away by the death of Christ and that now death is made unto me an entrance into his life Hitherto of his sufferings what is the other part of his satisfaction His perfect righteousnesse whereby he did that which we were not able to doe and absolutely fulfilled the whole law of God for us Ps. 40. 7 8. Rom. 3. 19. 5. 19. Why was it necessary that Christ should as well fulfill the Law as suffer for us Because as by his sufferings he took away our unrighteousnesse and freed us from the punishment due to us for our sins so by performing for us absolute obedience to the whole law of God he hath merited our righteousnesse making us just and holy in the sight of God and purchased eternall happinesse for us in the life to come 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 4. 4 5. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 8. 3 4. For as we are made unrighteous by Adams sinne so are we made fully and wholly righteous being justified by a man that is God How manifold is the righteousnesse of our Saviour Two-fold Originall Actuall VVhat is his originall righteousnesse The perfect integrity and purenesse of his humane nature which in himselfe was without all guile and the least staine of corruption Heb. 7. 26. Being very man how could he be without sin The course of naturall corruption was prevented because he was not begotten after the ordinary course by man but was conceived in the
to the clearing of the understanding How then doth our Saviour perform his Propheticall office Two wayes outwardly and inwardly How inwardly By the teaching and operation of his holy Spirit Ioh. 6. 45. Act. 16. 14. How outwardly By opening the whole will of his Father and confirming the same with so many signes and wonders How did he this Both in his own person when he was upon the earth Heb. 2. 2 3. as a Minister of the circumcision Rom. 15. 18. but with the authority of the Law-giver Mat. 7. 29. and by his servants the Ministers Mat. 10. 40. Luk. 10. 16. from the beginning of the world to the end thereof before his incarnation by the Prophets Priests and Scribes of the old Testament Heb. 1. 1. 1 Pet. 1. 11 12. 3. 18 19. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 20 21. Hos. 4. 6. Mat. 2. 5. 6. 17. 23. 37. And since to the worlds end by his Apostles and Ministers called and fitted by him for that purpose 2 Cor. 4. 6. 5. 19 20. Eph. 4. 8. 11 12 13. How doth it appeare that he hath opened the whole will of his Father unto us Both by his own testimony Joh. 15. 15. I call you no more servants because the servant knoweth not what his Master doth but I call you friends because all which I have heard of my Father I have made knowne unto you and by the Apostles comparison Heb. 3. preferring him before Moses though faithfull in Gods house In what respect is our Saviour preferred before Moses 1. As the builder to the house or one stone of the house 2. Moses was only a servant in the house our Saviour Master over the house 3. Moses was a witnesse only and writer of things to be revealed but our Saviour was the end and finisher of those things What learn you from hence 1. That it is a foul errour in them that think of our Saviour Christ so faithfull hath not delivered all things pertaining to the necessary instruction and government of the Church but left them to the traditions and inventions of men 2. That sith our Saviour was so faithfull in his office that he hath concealed nothing that was committed to him to be declared the Ministers of the word should not suppresse in silence for feare or flattery the things that are necessarily to be delivered and that are in their times to be revealed 3. That we should rest abundantly contented with that Christ hath taught rejecting whatsoever else the boldnes of men would put upon on us Did he first begin to be the Prophet Doctor or Apostle of his Church when he came into the world No but when he opened first his Fathers will unto us by the ministery of his servants the Prophets 1 Pet. 1. 10 11. 3. 19. Heb. 3. 7. Is his Propheticall office the same now in the time of the Gospell that it was before and under the Law It is in substance one and the same but it differeth in the manner and measure of revelation for the same doctrine was revealed by the ministery of the Prophets before the Law by word alone after by word written and in the time of the Gospell more plainly and fully by the Apostles and Evangelists What have we to gather hence that Christ taught and teacheth by the Prophets Evangelists and Apostles 1. In what estimation we ought to have the books of the old Testament sith the same Spirit spake then that speaketh now and the same Christ. 2. We must carry our selves in the hearing of the word of God not to harden our hearts Heb. 3. 8. 15. For as much as the carelesse and fruitlesse hearing thereof hardeneth men to further Judgement for it is a two-edged sword to strike to life or to strike to death it is either the favour of life to life or the savour of death to death 2 Cor. 2. 16. How doth the Apostle presse this Heb. 3. verse 8 9 10. c. First he aggravateth the refusall of this office of our Saviour against the Israelites by the time forty yeares by the place the wildernesse and by the multitude of his benefits then he maketh an application thereof verse 12 13. consisting of two parts 1. A removing from evill 2. A moving to good What comfort have we by the Propheticall office of our Saviour 1. Hereby we are sure that he will lead us into all truth revealed in his word needfull for Gods glory and our salvation 2. We are in some sort partakers of the office of his prophecie by the knowledge of his will for he maketh all his to prophecie in their measure enabling them to teach themselves and their brethren by comforting counselling and exhorting one another privately to good things and withdrawing one another from evill as occasion serveth Acts 2. 17 18. So much of the Propheticall office of our Saviour Christ what is his Kingly office It is the exercise of that power given him by God over all Ps. 110. 1. Ezek. 34. 24. and the possession of all Mat. 28. 18. Psalm 2. 8 c. for the spirituall government and salvation of his elect Esa. 9. 7. Luk. 1. 32 33. and for the destruction of his and their enemies Psalm 45. 5. For what reasons must Christ be a King 1. That he might gather together all his Subjects into one body of the Church out of the world 2. That he might bountifully bestow upon them and convey unto them all the aforesaid meanes of salvation guiding them unto everlasting life by his Word and Spirit 3. That he might appoint Lawes and Statutes which should direct his people and bind their consciences to the obedience of the same 4. That he might rule and governe them and keep them in obedience to his Lawes 5. That he might appoint officers and a setled government in his Church whereby it might be ordered 6. That he might defend them from the violence and outrage of all their enemies both corporall and spirituall 7. That he might bestow many notable priviledges and rewards upon them 8. That he might execute his judgements upon the enemies of his subjects How doth he shew himselfe to be a King By all that power which he did manifest as well in vanquishing death and hell as in gathering the people unto himselfe which he had formerly ransomed and in ruling them being gathered as also in defending of them and applying of those blessings unto them which he hath purchased for them How did he manifest that power First in that being dead and buried he rose from the grave quickned his dead body ascended into heaven and now sitteth at the right hand of his Father with full power and glory in heaven Act. 10. 30. Eph. 4. 8. Secondly in governing of his Church in this world 1 Cor. 15. 25 26 27 28. continually inspiring and directing his servants by the divine power of his holy Spirit according to his holy word Esa. 9. 7. 30. 21. Thirdly by his
the world Esa. 9. 7. What fruit receive we by the Kingly office of our Saviour Christ By it all the treasures brought in by his Priestly and Propheticall office are dealt to us continually For from it all the means of applying and making effectuall unto us Christ and all his benefits doe come yea without it all the actions of his other offices are to us void fruitlesse and of none effect What comfort have we by this Hereby we are assured that by his Kingly power we shall finally overcome the flesh the world the devill death and hell To whom will this blessed King communicate the means of salvation He offereth them to many and they are sufficient to save all mankind but all shall not be saved thereby because by faith they will not receive them Matth. 20. 16. Joh. 1. 11. 1 Joh. 2. 2. Are not the Faithfull in some sort also made partakers of this honor of his Kingdome Yes verily For they are made Kings to rule and subdue their stirring and rebellious affections and to tread Satan under their feet Rom. 6. 12. 16. 20. Rev. 1. 6. 5. 10. You have spoken of the two natures and three offices of our Saviour Shew now in what state did Christ God and man perform this three-fold office In a two-fold estate 1. Of abasement and humiliation Phi. 2. 7 8. 2. Of advancement and exaltation Ph. 2. 9. Col. 2. 15. Eph. 1. 20 21. In the former he abased himself by his sufferings for sin whereof we have heard largely in the declaration of his Priesthood In the latter he obtained a most glorious victory and triumphed over sin thereby fulfilling his Priesthood and making way to his Kingdome What was his estate of Humiliation It was the base condition of a servant whereto he humbled himself from his Conception to his Crosse and so untill the time of his resurrection Phil. 2. 7 8. Wherein did this base estate of the Son of God consist In his Conception Gestation and Birth and in his Life diversly as in his Poverty Hunger Thirst Wearinesse and other Humiliations even unto death of which heretofore hath been spoken What learn you from this that Christ first suffered many things before he could enter into his Glory Luk. 24. 26. 46. That the way to reign with Christ is first to suffer with him and such as bear the Crosse constantly shall wear the Crown eternally Rom. 8. 17 18. 2 Tim. 2. 12. 4. 8. James 1. 12. What is his estate of Exaltation His glorious condition Phil. 2. 9. Heb. 2. 9. beginning at the instant of his Resurrection Acts 2. 24 31 36. and comprehending his Ascension Eph. 4. 8. Acts 2. 34. Heb. 9. 24 25. Sitting at the right hand of God his Father Psal. 110. 1 2 5 6. Mark 16. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 22. and the second comming in glory to judge the world Mat. 25. 31. What is the first degree of this estate His glorious Resurrection for after he had in his manhood suffered for us he did in the third day rise again by his own power from the dead Eph. 1. 19. Luc. 24. 7. 1 Cor. 15. 4. What it needfull that Christ being dead should rise again Yes it was for his own glory and our good Acts 2. 24. 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. How for his glory That being formerly abased as a servant and crucified as a sinner he might thus be declared to be the Son of God and exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour Phil. 2. 7. Luc. 23. 33. Esay 53. 12. Rom. 1. 4. Act. 5. 30 31. How for our good That having paid the price of our redemption by his death we might have good assurance of our full Justification by his life 1 Pet. 1. 19. Acts 20. 28. Rom. 4. 23. 1 Cor. 15. 17. What speciall comfort ariseth from this that the Lord of life is risen from death 1. It assureth me that his righteousnesse shall be imputed unto me for my perfect Justification that he that had the power of death is destroyed Heb. 2. 14. his works dissolved 1 Joh. 3. 8. and that all our misery is swallowed up in Christs victory 1 Cor. 15. 54. 2. It comforteth me because it doth from day to day raise me up to righteousnesse and newnesse of life in this present world 3. It ministreth unto me a comfortable hope that I shall rise again in the last day from bodily death What fruits then are we to shew from the vertue of his resurrection We are to stand up from the dead to awake to righteousnesse to live unto God and dying in him or for him to look for life again from him Eph. 5. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 34. Rom. 6. 4. 11. Phil. 3. 20. 1 Thes. 4. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 22. Col. 3. 4. Why is Christ said to raise himself To let us know that as he had power to lay down his life so he had also to take it up again Joh. 10. 18. What gather you hence That being Lord both of quick and dead he can and will both quicken our souls here to the life of grace and raise our bodies hereafter to the life of glory Rom. 14. 9. John 5. 21. Phil. 3. 21. Why did he rise the third day Because the bands of death could no longer hold him this being the time that he had appointed and the day that best served for his glorious resurrection Act. 2. 24. Mat. 20. 17. 12. 40. Why did he not rise before the third day Lest rising so presently upon his death his enemies might take occasion of cavill that he was not dead Mat. 27. 63 64. 28. 13 14. And why would he not put it off untill the fourth day Lest the faith of his Disciples should have been weakned and their hearts too much cast down and discouraged Mat. 28. 1. Luc. 24. 21. What gather you hence That as the Lord setteth down the tearm of our durance so doth he chuse the fittest time of our deliverance Rev. 2. 10. Mat. 12. 40. Dan. 11. 35. Hosea 6. 2. What is the second degree of his Exaltation His Ascension Mark 16. 19. Ephes. 4. 8 9. For we beleeve that Christ in his humane nature the Apostles looking on ascended into heaven What assurance have you of Christs Ascension The evidence of the Word the testimony of heavenly Angels and holy men Luc. 24. 51. Acts 1. 9. Wherefore did Christ ascend into heaven Because he had finished his Fathers work on earth Joh. 17. 3 4 5. and that being exalted in our nature he might consecrate a way prepare a place Joh. 14. 2 3. and appear in the presence of God to make intercession for us Heb. 4. 29. 9. 24. VVhat benefits did he bestow upon his Church at his Ascension He triumphed over his enemies gave gifts to his friends and taking with him a pledge of our flesh he sent and left with us the earnest of his Spirit Eph. 4. 8. Heb. 10. 12. 20. 2
far off and aliens from God are now brought neer through Christ Eph. 2. 12 13. 18. 19. 1 Joh. 1. 3. Heb. 12. 22 23. What is Adoption Adoption is the power and priviledge to be the sons of God Joh. 1. 12. Eph. 1. 5. derived unto us from Christ who being the eternal Son of God became by Incarnation our brother that by him God might bring many sons and daughters unto glory Heb. 2. 10. What are the benefits that flow to us from our Adoption 1. Some are privative immunities and freedome from many grievances as 1. We are freed from the slavery of sin Rom. 6. 14. 2 From condemnation Rom. 8. 1. 3 From all slavish fears and terrors Rom. 8. 15. We have not received the spirit of bondage to fear again but the spirit of adoption 4 From the law not Ceremoniall only Gal. 5. 1. but Moral freed I mean from the curse of it freed from the condemning power of it freed from the coaction and compulsion of it freed from the rigorous exaction inexorable demands of it as it is a Covenant of works But not freed from the doctrine of holinesse contained in it the justified and adopted are every way freed from the Law as it was an enemy and against us Luc. 1. but not freed as it is our guide and director containing the rule of Gods holy will Our Sonship doth not free us from service but from slavery not from holinesse but to holinesse There is a free service which benefits the condition of a son Gods service is perfect freedome 2. Some are positive dignities as 1. Free accesse to the throne of Grace that we may come to God in prayer as to a Father Gal. 4. 6. Rom. 8. 15. 2 We have an Interest in Gods particular and speciall Providence 2 Cor. 6. ult Rom. 8. 28. 3 We by our adoption have a free and sanctified use of all God● creatures restored the right unto which we forfeited in Adam for no man hath any true right to any thing now by nature he may have the use of Gods creatures by Gods patience forbearance but not by Gods licence and allowance untill he be in Covenant with God in Christ and made a son and heir with him and then all things are restored 1 Cor. 3. 21. Rom. 8. 32. 4 From Adoption flows all Christians joy which is called the joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1. 8 9. Rom. 5. 2. For the spirit of Adoption is first a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. 2ly A seale Eph. 4. 30. 3ly The pledge and earnest of our Inheritance Eph. 1. 14. setling a holy security in the soul whereby it rejoyceth even in affliction in hope of glory Doe the Justified children of God always then rejoyce Joy considered as a delightfull apprehension of the favour of God gladding the heart though it ought continually to be laboured for Phil. 4. 4. and preserved yet it may be at times not only darkned and daunted but for a time even lost and to be restored Psal. 51. 12. yet it is as all spirituall gifts of God perpetuall and without repentance if we regard 1. The matter of rejoycing which is Gods unchangeable love and grace Mal. 3. 6. 2. The causes and fountains of joy in the regenerate which are the never failing graces of Faith Luk. 22. 32. Hope Rom. 5. 5. and Love towards God in Christ 1 C●● 8. 3. The valuation even in the deepest dismay of our part and hope in Christ above the pleasures of ten thousand worlds 4. The pretence and claim of a faithfull heart promising and challenging unto it self a comfortable harvest of joy for the present seed-time of sorrow Psal. 42. 5. Psal. 126. 5. 57. 11. So much of the first main benefit which Christians receive by their communion with Christ viz. Justification Now what is the second benefit which is called Glorification and Sanctification It is the renewing of our nature according to the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse which is but begun in this life and is called Sanctification and perfected in the life to come which therefore is most strictly called Glory How far forth is our nature renewed in this life by Sanctification This renewing is of our whole nature 1 Thess. 5. 23. Rom. 12. 2. the understanding being enlightned the will rectified the affections regulated the outward man reformed But not wholly in this life and this is done by the powerfull operation of the Spirit of God who having begun a good work in us will perfect it unto the day of the Lord Joh. 13. 6. Psal. 51. 10. Ezek. 36. 26. What be the parts of our Sanctification Two answerable to the two powerfull meanes whereby they are wrought First Mortification or dying unto sin and thereby freedome from the dominion thereof by the death of Christ Rom. 6. 6 7. Secondly Vivification or quickning unto newnesse of life by the power of the resurrection of Christ In regard whereof it is also called our first resurrection Rev. 20. 6. How doth Sanctification differ from the former grace of Justification In many main and materiall differences as 1. In the order not of time wherein they goe together Rom. 8. 30. nor of knowledge and apprehension wherein this latter hath precedency 1 Cor. 6. 11. but of nature wherein the former is the ground of this latter 2 Cor. 7. 1. Secondly in the Subject the righteousnesse whereby we are justified being inherent in Christ for us but this of Sanctification in our selves from him Rom. 8. 10. Thirdly in the cause our Justification following from the merit our Sanctification from the efficacy of the death and life of Christ. Fourthly in the Instrument Faith which in Justification is only as an hand receiving in Sanctification is a co-working vertue Acts 15. 19. Gal. 5. 6. Fiftly in the measure Justification being in all Beleevers and at all times alike but Sanctification wrought differently and by degrees Sixtly in the end which being in both eternall life Rom. 6. 23 24. yet the one is among the causes of reigning the other onely as the high-way unto the kingdome What is the rule and square of our Sanctification The whole word of God Joh. 17. 17. Ps. 119. 9. as containing that will of his Rom. 12. 2. which is even our Sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 3 c. How doe you prove that Gods word is such a rule 1. By expresse warrant of Scripture 2 Tim. 3. 14. 17. 2. By the resemblances and things whereunto it is compared as to the way we walk in Jer 6. 16. Mark 12. 14. Act. 18. 24 25. to a Light and a Lanthorn in a dark place to guide our feet into the way of peace Psa. 119. 105. Prov. 6. 23. 2 Pet. 19. 20. Luc. 1. 77. 79. to a Glasse Jam. 1. 25. to a Rule Line Square Measure and Ballance whereby must be framed ordered measured and
for a certaine time onely or for ever What is that which is onely for a certaine time It is either a liberall alienation of the use onely of a thing for a certaine time or of the dominion also and that freely without any expectation of recompence For both these ought to be liberall respecting onely the profit of the receiver and secondly just to which is required that that which is lent bee his own who lendeth it and fit for his use who borroweth it And this duty is commended Psalme 112. 5. and commanded Deut. 15. 7. 8 Matth. 5. 42. Luke 6. 35. What is that alienation which is for ever It is free giving when as goods are alienated from the true owner unto another liberally and without expectation of any recompence 2 Cor. 9. 7. Acts 20. 35. What is further required to it That it be not only free but also just giving that only which is a mans owne and not anothers which were no better then theft As when a man by lavish giving defraudeth his children of their inheritance or giveth his goods or lands from his daughters to strangers or remote kindred of his name because he hath no sonnes to continue it Secondly That we make good choice of those upon whom we confer benefits either for their worth or indigency but especially we must give and doe good to those who are of the houshold of faith Gal. 6. 10. What are the uses unto which we must freely contribute They are either publick or private and the publick are either civill or Ecclesiasticall What are the Civill When as we freely give our goods for the service preservation and benefit of the Common-wealth both in the time of peace and warre To which uses we must give freely to the uttermost of our ability yea even above it when the necessity of the State requireth it seeing the good of the whole body must be preferred before the good of any particular member 2 Sam. 17. 27 28 29. What are the Ecclesiasticall When as we give freely for the maintenance of the Ministery and means of Gods Worship tending to the salvation of our soules To which uses we must give so much the more cheerefully as the soule is to be preferred before the body or outward estate Luke 10. and last Prov. 3. 9. An example whereof we have in the Israelites Exod. 36. 5 6. 1 Chron. 29. 9. And if they were so free and liberall in giving towards the building of the Tabernacle and Temple how much more should we towards the building of Gods spirituall Houses and Temples for the Holy-Ghost What are the private uses For the benefit and reliefe of private men whose necessity doth require it of us according to our abilities and these are those Almes-deeds and other works of mercy unto which the Apostle exhorteth Heb. 13. 16. And are partly fruits of mercy and partly of brotherly love and Christian charity of which we shall have occasion to speake afterwards Hitherto you have spoken of the duties respecting our owne and Neighbours person both in regard of life in the sixth and of chastity in the seventh as also our owne and their gods in the eighth Now what is the ninth Commandement Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour What is the maine scope and end at which God aymeth in this Commandement The conservation of truth amongst men and of our owne and Neighbours fame and good name Why doth God so much regard truth Because it is most deare unto him for he is the God of truth Deut. 32. 4. Psal. 31. 5. yea truth it selfe John 14. 6. Therefore Christ came into the world that he might beare witnesse unto the truth John 18. 37. and by speaking the truth God is glorified Josh. 7. 19. Why doth he respect so much our fame and good name Because it is his owne good gift and therefore he taketh care to preserve that unto us which himself hath given What was the occasion of this commandement First our naturall corruption which maketh us prone to lying Psal. 58. 3. Rom. 3. 4. as appeareth hereby in that we no sooner speak then lye and not onely for advantage but without any cause out of meer vanity Secondly out of a naturall disposition men are ready to trespasse against the fame and good name of others and this ariseth out of meere envie and pride which maketh us ready to abase others to advance our selves And these corruptions God opposeth in this commandement What is the thing that is here chiefly forbidden That we should not in legall proceedings and Courts of justice give a false testimony concerning our neighbours as appeareth by the words expresly used Thou shalt not answere a false testimony concerning thy neighbour which imply a precedent question or examination unlesse we will say that answering is here used for speaking or saying as it is often times Matth. 11. 25. Luk. 14. 3 5. Matth. 28. 5. and then the meaning is that we must not give a false testimony of our neighbour either publikely or privately whether it be with or against him or if we had rather take it of legall testimonies in Courts of justice then by a synecdoche we must under this one kinde understand all other kindes of false testimonies but this is here named as the chiefe and of all the rest most hurtfull and pernicious to comprehend under it all the rest as it is in the other commandements What then is the negative part of this commandement It generally forbiddeth all false vaine and offensive speeches concerning our neighbour whether it be for or against him whether in judgement or out of judgement although principally here are forbidden all false testimonies which tend to the prejudice of the fame or state of our neighbours or more briefly it forbiddeth all falsity and untruth especially that which is prejudiciall to our neighbour in any respect or to our selves What doth the affirmative part require Two things the conservation of the truth and of our own and neighbours good name with all duties of the tongue homogeneall and of the same nature and kind with all helps and meanes tending hereunto Why are our words and speeches so much to be regarded seeing they are but winde as is commonly supposed Great care is to be had of our speech seeing it is an excellent faculty peculiar to man and being a speciall gift of God it must not be abused to Gods dishonour and our owne destruction Neither are words slightly to be regarded seeing we must give account of every idle word and by our words we shall be justified or condemned Matth. 12. 37. And the wise man telleth us that death and life are in the power of the tongue Pro. 18. 21. and that a wholesome tongue is a tree of life whereas an evill tongue is an unruly evill and full of deadly poison James 3. 8. which if we doe not subdue and rule whatsoever
23. And first that it doe not admit any evill concupiscence Secondly that if it be admitted it be not retained And this care must be taken both when wee be awake that we keep our mindes intent unto lawfull and good things Matth. 12. 44. And when we goe to sleep that by hearty prayer we commend them to Gods keeping But what if the heart have admitted evill concupiscences We must strive and fight against them and never be at rest untill we have cast them out and extinguished them What further is required to the conserving of the heart in purity In the third place we must observe our sences that they doe not bring into our mindes such objects as being apprehended will stirre up in us evill concupiscence Gen. 3. 6. 6. 2. Josh. 7. 21. 2 Sam. 11. 2. Matth. 5. 28. Job 31. Psal. 119. 37. What are the speciall meanes to suppresse or take away the concupiscence of the eyes First we must mortifie selfe-love and not seek our owne but every man anothers wealth 1 Cor. 10. 24. Secondly we must pull out the eyes of envy Thirdly we must labour after contentation Phil. 4. 11. And to this end consider First how many want those good things which thou enjoyest who are farre more worthy of them Secondly thine owne unworthinesse of the least of Gods benefits Thirdly meditate on Gods providence and fatherly care who provideth all things necessary for thy good and salvation What doe you learne from this Commandement thus expounded That it is most impossible for any man to keep it For who can say that his heart is cleane from the first motions of sinne and concupiscence that goe before consent Prov. 20. 9. To what purpose serveth the knowledge of this impossibility To humble us in the sight and sense of our sinnes which have made us subject to the wrath of God and the curse of the Law that so despairing in our owne merits we may be driven out of our selves and with more ardent desire flye unto the mercies of God in the satisfaction and obedience of Iesus Christ. What other use are we to make of it That being by Christ freed from the curse of the Law we study and endeavour to conforme our selves our soules and lives according to the prescript rule of this holy and most perfect law Matth. 5. 48. and that mortifying the flesh with all the carnall concupiscences and lusts of it we be dayly more and more renewed unto the Image of God in all holinesse and righteousnesse and walke worthy of our high calling as it becommeth Saints Eph. 4. 1. Hitherto we have treated of the rule and square of our Sanctification viz. The ten Commandements Now wherein is the effect or exercise of Sanctification seene IN unfeigned repentance and new obedience springing from thence For the fruits of Sanctification are First inward vertues whereby all the powers of the minde are rightly ordered Secondly the exercise of the same by putting those heavenly and sanctified abilities to holy use and service If then the exercise of Sanctification be first seen in repentance what is repentance An inward and true sorrow for sinne especially that we have offended so gracious a God and so loving a father together with a setled purpose of heart and a carefull endeavour to leave all our sinnes and to live a Christian life according to all Gods Commandements Psalme 119. 57. 212. Or a turning of our selves to God whereby wee crucifie and kill the corruptions of our nature and reforme our selves in the inward man according to Gods will What is it to crucifie the corruption of our nature It is freely and with all our heart to be sorry that we have angred God with it and with our other sinnes and every day more and more to hate it and them and to flye from them How is this wrought in us It is wrought in us partly by the threatning of the Law and the feare of Gods judgements but especially increased by feeling the fruit of Christ his death whereby we have power to hate sin and to leave it For when the sinner is once humbled with the terrours of the Law he flyeth to the comforts of the Gospell and he there seeth in Christ Crucified not onely the mercy of God discharging him of all his sinnes but also how deep the wounds of sin are wherewith he hath pierced his Saviour Zach. 12. 10. and how severe the wrath of God is against sin even to the slaughtering of his owne Son and hence 1 Peter 4. 1. commeth he to hate his sins Psalme 97. 10. as God hateth them and to look backe thereon with godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7. 10. resolving for ever after to forsake them all How is the reformation of our selves newnesse of life wrought in us Onely by the promise of the Gospel whereby we feele the fruit of the rising again of Christ. What doth ensue hereof Hereby we are raised up into a new life having the Law written in our hearts and so reforme our selves Wherein then doth repentance properly consist In a thorough changing of our purpose and desires from the evill which Gods Word rebuketh in us to the good which it requireth of us Rom. 12. 1 2. Esa. 1. 16 17. What is required in respect of the evil we turne from First knowledge of the evill then a condemning of the same together with a judging of our selves for it and then with godly sorrow for that which is past a hatred of it for ever and all this because it is sin and displeaseth our God What is required in regard of the good we turne unto First a knowledge and approbation of good to be done with a purpose of heart to doe it then an earnest love of the same shewed by care desire and endevour Can men repent of themselves or when they list No for it is the gift of God given unto them that are born againe Is it sufficient once to have repented No we must continue it alwayes in disposition and renew it also in act as occasion is given by our transgressions and Gods displeasure for there is none of Gods Saints but alwayes carrying this corruption about them they sometimes fall and are farre from that perfection and goodnesse which the Lord requireth and therefore stand in need of repentance so long as they live When then is this repentance to be practised of us The practice of repentance ought to be continually an abhorring of evill and cleaving unto that which is good Rom. 12. 9. for as much time as remaineth in the flesh after our conversion 1 Pet. 4. 2 3. yet at times there ought to be a more speciall practice and renewing thereof as after grievous falls Psal. 51. in feare of eminent judgements Amos 4. 12. Gen. 33. 2 3 c. or when we would fit our selves to receive speciall mercies Gen. 35. 2 3 c. In what manner must the especiall practice of repentance in such
justified us from all the sins for which Satan can accuse us Secondly by all those comfortable promises of forgivenesse of sins which in Christ name are made unto us What is the third assault of Satan against us He seeketh by manifold inward terrors and outward troubles to swallow us up and therefore is called a roaring Lyon How shall we overcome him in these terrors and troubles 1. By faith in Iesus Christ who was heard in all his troubles to give us assurance that we shall not be overcome in them Secondly by faith in Gods providence whereby we know that Satan can doe no more harme unto us then the Lord doth permit him for our good So much of Satan our first enemy What call you the World The corrupt state and condition of men and of the rest of the creatures which Satan abuseth as his store-house or armory of temptations 1 Iohn 2. 15. How doth the World fight against us By alluring and withdrawing us to the corruption thereof What meanes doth it use First it allureth us to evill with hope of false pleasures gaine and profit preferment and glory of this world drawing us from our obedience to God 1 Joh. 2. 16. Secondly otherwhiles with feare of paines troubles losses reproaches it discourageth us from our duty and allureth us to distrust Gods promises Joh. 16. 33. How may we withstand these temptations of the world By our faith 1 Joh. 5. 4. which setteth a better world even Gods heavenly kingdom before our eyes and so enableth us both to contemne Heb. 11 24 c. and crucifie Gal. 6. 14. the love of this present world and to endure manfully the threats and wrongs the reof Heb. 11. 36 37. both confessing Christ in perill and suffering martyrdome for his sake if we be thereto called Rev. 12. 11. How are then the pleasures profits and glory of this world to be overcome First by a true faith in Iesus Christ who despised all these things to worke our salvation and to make us overcome them Secondly by faith in Gods word that feareth us from doing any thing that is against his will And how shall we overcome the paines losses and reproaches of this world First by a lively faith in Iesus Christ who suffered all these things to worke our salvation and to enable us to suffer them Secondly by a stedfast faith in Gods promises and providence that we shall want no good thing and that all things seeming hurtfull shall bee turned to the furtherance of our salvation So much of the World the second enemy What call you the Flesh The corruption of our nature wherein we were borne and conceived Doth that remaine after Regeneration Yea it dwelleth in us and cleaveth fast unto us so long as we carry the outward flesh about us How doth the flesh fight against the Spirit As a treacherous parte within us being by Satan stirred up and invegled with the baits of the world or discouraged with the evill entreaty thereof it fighteth on his side against our soule 1 Pet. 2. 11. That is our spirituall life and welfare by continuall lusting against the Spirit Gal. 5. 24. How is that First by hindring or corrupting us in the good motions words and deeds of the Spirit Secondly by continuall moving us to evill motions words and deeds What call you the Spirit The holy Spirit which God in Christ hath given us whereby we are begotten againe Doe we not receive the Spirit in full measure and perfection at the first No but first wee receive the first fruits and afterward daily increase of the same unto the end if the fault be not in our selves How doth the Spirit fight in us By lusting against the flesh How doth it lust against the flesh First partly by rebuking and partly by restraining in us the evill motions and deeds of the flesh Secondly by continuall enlightning and affecting us with thoughts words and deeds agreeable to Gods will How may we withstand the temptations of our flesh By setting before our eyes the patterne of the death of Christ and arming our selves with the same minde that it behoveth us also to suffer in the flesh ceasing from sinne 1 Pet. 4. 1. hereto craving and imploying the power of the same death of Christ to subdue and crucifie our carnall lusts and affections Rom. 6. 2. c. Whereto also belongeth the helpe and assistance of the Spirit for the repressing of our inordinate desires of nature 1 Cor. 9. 25. So much of the spirituall fight what followeth after a man hath gotten the victory in any tempatation or affliction Experience of Gods love in Christ and so increase of peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 5. 3. 2 Cor. 1. 5. What followes if in any temptation he be overcome and through infirmity fall After a while there will arise godly sorrow which is when a man is grieved for no other cause in the world but for this onely that by his sin he hath displeased God who hath been unto him a most mercifull and loving father 2 Cor. 7. 8 9. Matth. 26. 75. What signe is there of this sorrow The true signe of it is this when a man can be grieved for the very disobedience of God in his evill word or deed though he should never be punished and though there were neither heaven nor hell 1 Pet. 2. 18 19. What followes after this sorrow Repentance renewed afresh 1 Cor. 7. 11. By what signes will this repentance appeare By seven 2. Cor. 7. 11. 1. A care to leave the sin whereinto he is falne 2. An utter condemning of himselfe for it with a craving of pardon 3. A great anger against himselfe for his carelesnesse 4. A feare lest he should fall into the same sin againe 5. A desire ever after to please God 6. A zeale of the same 7. Revenge upon himselfe for his former offences Thus farre of repentance and the spirituall warfare accompanying the same What are those good workes wherein our new obedience is exercised That which proceeding from a person acceptable is something of God commanded performed in right manner and directed unto a good end namely whatsoever thing is done of us not by the force or conduct of nature 2 Cor. 3. 5. but by the power of the Spirit of Christ dwelling in us Rom. 8. 10. and according to the rule of the knowne will of God Rom. 12. 2. unto the glory of God 1 Cor. 10. 31. the assurance of our election 2 Pet. 1. 10 c. and the edification of others 1 Cor. 10. 23. How many things then are needfull for the making of our actions good and what properties are to be required in good works Five 1. They that doe them must first be such as are ingraffed into Christ and continue in him that so their persons may be acceptable unto God 2. They must be agreeable to the Law of God and he that doth them must know that
accident or fortune as naturall men say What doth not God oftentimes bestow his benefits without Prayer Yes both upon the wicked either to provoke them to repent or to make them inexcusable and upon his owne children even as a loving father in regard of his ignorant and sometimes negligent childe doth give things unasked even so doth God towards his Why will the Lord have us beg his blessings of him To exercise our faith in seeking Mat. 7. 7. and our patience in waiting Jam. 5. 10 11. as also to stir up a feeling of our wants Mat. 15. 22. and to quicken our affections unto good things Phil. 4. 6. What gather you hence That where the heart is faithlesse the Prayer must needs be fruitlesse for according to our faith it shall be unto us Luk. 18. 11 14. Iam. 1. 6 7. But why doth not he answer when we aske but delayes to help us when yet he sees and heares us Because we are sometimes too haughty and he will humble us sometimes too hasty and he will curbe us 2 Cor. 12. 7 8 9. sometimes we faile in the matter asking we know not what sometimes in the manner asking we know not how and sometimes in the end asking we know not wherefore Iam. 4 2 3. Doth he not sometimes delay us when yet he purposeth to answer us Yes he doth First because he loves to heare the voice of his owne spirit in us Rom. 8. 26 27. Secondly because the suite may be good and yet the season not so meet for us Rev. 6. 10 11. Acts 1. 7. Thirdly he takes pleasure in our constancy being a fruit of faith and fervency Luk. 18. 1. Mat. 15. 27 28. Fourthly because such blessings as are won by long and strong prayers are alwayes esteemed very highly received in humility enjoyed in sobriety and imployed faithfully for mans good and Gods glory 1 Sam. 1. 20 21. 1 Chron. 29. 14 15. What gather you hence That if we faint not in praying we shall in due season be sure of a blessing Luk. 18. 7 8. And that when our God denyes us or delayeth us in that which seemes good unto us even then he gives us that which he knowes is better for us 2 Cor. 12. 8 9. What good meanes may we use to obtaine the gift of prayer in some measure 1. To get some true feeling of our misery for sense of misery breeds suit for mercy Matth. 15. 22. 2. Bring hungring and thirsty soules after grace and good things Psal. 42. 1 2. when the soule panteth most the soule prayeth best 3. Gather principles of knowledge that the head may guide the heart 1 Cor. 14. 15. for what we know is worth the having we will not lose for the asking 4. Consider the examples of Gods servants in like sorrowes and make like suits Dan. 9. Nehem. 9. be thou as they were to him and he will be to thee what he was to them 5. Be well perswaded of Christs ordinance Master teach us to pray Luke 11. 1. and of Gods acceptance reckon of him as of our father Matth. 6. 5 9. for according to our faith it shall be unto us 6. Be resolute against sin neither living in grosser iniquities nor allowing lesser infirmities Rom. 7. 15. so he will never shut out our prayers not with-hold his mercies from us Psalme 66. 19 20. 7. In reading or hearing turne precepts into prayers Lord give what thou commandest and command what thou wilt Duties enjoyned graces commended blessings promised and cursings threatned do all quicken us to prayer and furnish us with matter for the same Matth. 5. 6 7. Rom. 12. Ephes. 6. But when for all this our prayers are few and faint cold and weak what speciall helps may we then have against our infirmities None better then to pray for the spirit of prayer which helpeth and healeth our infirmities and teacheth us both for manner measure and matter to lay open all our necessities Rom. 8. 26. Luke 11. 13. And secondly call others which are best acquainted with the practice and power of prayer to pray with us being present Iames 5. 14. and for us being absent from us Rom. 1. 9. What be the signes of a sound prayer 1. To use all other good meanes carefully Acts 27. 23 31. 2. To seek Gods glory principally Exod. 32. 11 12. 3. To desire the best things most earnestly Col. 1. 9 10 11. 4. To aske nothing but what Gods Word warranteth us 1 Iohn 5. 14. 5. To wait patiently till he heare and help us Psal. 40. 1. Iam. 5. 10 11. What motives may we have to stirre up our hearts to this duty Many and good Because prayer is the voice of Gods spirit in us Rom. 8. 26. a jewell of grace bequeathed by Christ unto us Luke 11. 2. It is the hand of faith the key of Gods treasury the soules Solicitor the hearts Armour-bearer and the mindes interpreter Matth. 7. 7. Ephes. 6. 18. It procureth all blessings preventeth curses 2 Chro. 7. 14. sanctifieth all creatures that they may doe us good 1 Tim. 4. 5. seasoneth all crosses that they can doe us no hurt 2 Cor. 12. 18. Lastly it keeps the heart in humility the life in sobriety strengtheneth all graces overcommeth all temptations subdueth all corruptions purgeth our affections makes our duties acceptable to God our lives profitable unto men and both life and death comfortable to our selves Acts 9. 11. Eph. 6. 18. Iude 20. Act. 4. 24. 7. 5 9. What are the lets and hinderances of Prayer There be some which hinder the power of it as our ordinary infirmities Mark 9. 23 24. other which hinder either the practise or the fruit of it as our customary and grosser iniquities Psalme 66. 18. What are the infirmities that weaken the power of Prayer Roving imaginations inordinate affections dulnesse of spirit weaknesse of faith coldnesse in feeling faintnesse in asking wearinesse in waiting too much passion in our owne matters and too little compassion in other mens miseries Psalme 32. 3 4. Marke 9. 24. Isa. 38. 13 14. Ionah 4. 2 3. What be the customary iniquities which hinder the practise of Prayer 1. The prophanenesse of the Atheists in not calling upon God Psal. 14. 4. 2. The sottishnesse of the Papists lifting up their hearts and hands to base Idols Psal. 44 20. 3. The sensuality of the voluptuous drowning all his desires in delights and his prayers in pleasures 2 Tim. 2. 3 4. 4. The stupidity of worldlings that thinke they have no need of praying but of carking and caring toyling and moyling in the world Luke 12. 17 18. Phil. 3. 19. 5. The foolishnesse of the malitious which because they will not forgive their brother a 100 pence cannot pray to God to forgive them the 1000 Talents Mat. 18. 32. What be the grosse sins that shut the eares of the Lord and hinder the fruit of our Prayers 1. Gracelesse hypocrisie drawing neare with our lips but having
9. 11. because he destroyeth many And that the Pope is such an one some of his owne Secretaries make it good confessing that many who were well disposed persons before their entry into that Sea became cursed and cruell beasts when once they were setled in the same as if there were some pestilent poyson in that seat infecting those that sit therein What learne you of this That the calling of the Pope is unlawfull for every office or calling which the Lord doth not blesse or wherein none occupying the place groweth in piety is to be esteemed for an unlawfull calling for in a lawfull calling some at the least are found in all ages profitable to the Church or Common-wealth What is the use of all this Doctrine That whosoever are partakers of the sins of Rome are also under the same curse and therefore such as have lived in Popery should examine our selves if we have truely repented us of it first by the change of our understanding as whether we have grown in the knowledg of the truth And secondly by the change of our affections as whether we hate Popery and love the truth unfainedly and so let every one judge himselfe that he be not judged and that with harder judgment Rom. 2. 4. according as God hath been the longer patient towards us What further That there can be no sound agreement betwixt Popery and the profession of the Gospel no more then betwixt light and darknesse falshood and truth God and Beliall and therefore no reconciliation can be devised betwixt them for if the members of Antichrist shall be destroyed we cannot in any sort communicate with them in their errours unlesse we will beare them company in their destruction also Doth every errour destroy the soule No verily for as every wound killeth not a man so every errour depriveth not a man of salvation but as the vitall parts being wounded or infected bring death so those errours that destroy the fundamentall points and heads of faith bring everlasting destruction in which kind is Popery which sundry ways overthroweth the principles and grounds of our holy faith and therefore is tearmed an apostasie or departing from the faith Is it then impossible for a Pope to be saved No it is not impossible his sinne being not necessarily against the holy Ghost to which onely repentance is denyed for some in likelhood have entered into and continued in that Sea ignorantly and therefore may possibly finde place to repentance But if any be saved it is a secret hidden with God for concerning any thing that appeares by the end of any Pope since he was lift up in the Emperours chaire and discovered to be the man of sin there is no grounded hope given to perswade that any one of them is saved So much of Antichrist what he is towards others what is hee in himselfe That is set downe in two points first in that contrary to right and by meere usurpation he seateth himselfe in the Temple of God as if he were Christs Vicar being indeed his enemy both which the word Antichrist noteth Secondly in that he is here expressely named an adversary and one that is contrary to Christ. Wherein is the Pope adversary unto Christ Every way in life and in office How in life In that Christ being most pure and holy yea holinesse it selfe the Popes many of them are and have been most filthy and abominable in blaspheming conjuring murthering covetousnesse whoring and that incestuously and Sodomitically and yet will they in their ordinary Titles be called holy yea holinesse it selfe which is proper onely to Christ. How in Office First in his Kingdome Christs Kingdome is without all outward shew or pompe But the Popes Kingdome consisteth wholly in Pompe and Shewes as imitating his Predecessors the Emperours of Rome in his proud stately and lordly offices princely traine and outrageous expences in every sort Secondly in his Priest-hood in raising up another Sacrifice then Christ another Priesthood then his other Mediators then him Thirdly in his Propheticall office in that he teacheth cleane contrary to him Christ taught nothing but what hee received of his Father The Pope setteth out his owne Canons and Decrees of councells and in them he teacheth such Doctrine as overthroweth the maine foundation of that which Christ taught What is the second effect That he is exceedingly lifted up against all that is called God How doth this agree to the Pope More fitly then to any other person for Christ being very God abaseth himselfe unto the assuming of the nature of man the Pope a vile man advanceth himself to the Throne of God Christ being above all secular power paid tribute and was taxed and suffered himselfe to bee crowned with a crowne of Thornes and beare his owne Crosse but the Pope being under all secular power exalteth himselfe above all secular powers exacteth Tribute of Kings setteth his foot on the neck of Emperours carrieth a tripple Crowne of gold and is borne upon mens shoulders But he calleth himself the servant of servants Though he doe yet by the confession of his owne Canonists he doth it but dissemblingly and in hypocrisie which is double iniquity for they say that he doth in humility onely say so not that hee is indeed so as he saith What are the effects of this his pride They are two First he sitteth in the Church as God for he bindeth the consciences of men by his decrees which no Princes Law can doe for though men observe not such Lawes yet if they break them not of contempt they are discharged as if they did beare the penalty prescribed in them By this it seemeth that the Church of Rome is yet the Church of God although corrupt seeing it is said that hee sitteth in the Temple of God No verily but it is so said first because it beareth the name of the Church for the Scriptures give the name to a thing according to that it hath been as when Christ saith The abomination of desolation shall stand in the holy place he meaneth not that the Temple was then holy which at that time being no figure nor shadow of Christ and his Church was profaned but that it had been holy so we confesse that there had beene a true Church in Rome which is now no Church of Christ but the Synagogue of Satan Secondly he is said to sit in the Temple of God because he exerciseth his tyrannicall rule in the Christian world and is most busie in those parts where Christ had his Church and the Gospell is professed labouring in all places either by himselfe or his wicked instruments to overthrow or corrupt poyson or hinder the free course of the Gospel so that in this regard he may be said to sit in the Temple of God that is to reigne and tyrannize in the Church of God though the City where he is be Sodome and the Church whereof he is head the Synagogue of Satan What is the other
thing is gone for he hath neither the chiefe City nor the Tribune nor the Commandement of the people and therefore he can be no let to the Antichrists comming especially the Pope having gotten such an upper hand over him as to cause him to waite at his gate barefoot and to hold his stirrop What shall be the end of this Antichrist God shall confound him with the breath of his mouth that is with the preaching of his Word which serveth for another argument to prove the Pope to be Antichrist for whereas he had subdued Kingdomes and Empires under his feet he hath been of late mightily suppressed by the Word preached and not by outward force as other Potentates use to be What learne you of this The marvellous power of Gods Word to suppresse whatsoever riseth against it for if the mightiest cannot stand before it much lesse the smallest and therefore it is expressed by a mighty winde Acts 2. 23. which carrieth all before it and by fire which consumeth all and pierceth all And it declareth a marvellous easie victory against the enemies when it is said that with the breath of his mouth hee shall consume his enemies 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. What else shall be the overthrow of Antichrist The glorious appearance of the Son of God in the latter day What gather you of this That before the last day he shall not be utterly consumed whereof notwithstanding it followeth not that the head shall remaine till then for the Beast and the false Prophet shall be taken and cast into the fire before the latter day but some shall retaine a liking of him and his errors and superstitions even till the last day Hitherto of the head of this generall Apostasie what are the members of it They are first described by their end even a number of people that shall perish which accordeth with that name and property of the head the Destroyer or Son of perdition being truely verified in them in regard of the fearefull end he shall bring them to What is the use of this That as no poyson can take away the life of an elect so small occasions carry away such as are appointed to destruction How otherwise are these members of Antichrist described By this that they never loved the truth although they understood and professed it How should a man love the truth For the truthes sake not for vaine glory filthy delight or commodidities How appeareth it that men love the Word of God When they walke accordingly and keep faith in a good Conscience which some losing by their wicked life lost also their Faith that is their Religion 1 Tim. 1. 19. How is it to be understood that God giveth men up to strong delusions Because God is a just Iudge which by them either punisheth or correcteth former sinnes and especially the contempt of the Gospell in which regard even amongst us now some are cast into the sinke of Popery some into the Family of love some become Arians some Anabaptists at which are as it were divers Gaoles and Dungeons whereinto hee throweth those that are cold and carelesse Professors of the Gospell What learne you by this That they that imagine God favourable unto them notwithstanding their sinnes because their life or goods or honours are spared are foully deceived for when the Lord ceaseth to reprove any or to strive with them Rom. 1. 24 26. then doth he give them up into vanity of their own minds to do their wicked wills which is the greatest judgement and very usuall with God to doe What is our duty in such cases To pray unto the Lord to keep us from all errors but if for our triall and further hardning of others it please him to send errors amongst us that it would please him to preserve us in that danger that we taste not of that bait whereby Satan seeketh to catch us What other cause is there of sending these errors That those may be damned which believe not the truth for as God hath appointed them to damnation so betwixt his counsell in rejecting them and the finall effect of it there must be sin to bring the effect justly upon them What reason is annexed for their just damnation Because they rest in unrighteousnesse having their eares itching after errors which they drink in as the earth drinketh up water So that albeit they be powerfully sent of God in his judgement yet are they also greedily desired and affected of them Having spoken at large of the providence of God disposing of man in this world it followeth to speak of his providence concerning mankinde in the world to come How doth God then deale with men after this life He bringeth them all to judgement What is meant here by judgment The pronouncing or executing of the irrevocable sentence of absolution or condemnation How is that done Partly on every man in particular at the hour of his death Heb. 9. 27. but fully and generally upon all men at the second comming of Christ Acts 17. 31. The death of every one severally goeth immediately before the particular judgement the generall resurrection of all goeth before the finall judgement which shall be at the last day Must all men then die Yea all both good and bad Psal. 49. 10. Eccl. 2. 16. save that unto some namely such as shall be found alive at Christs comming a change shall be in stead of death as shall be shewed Death being the punishment of sinne how commeth it to passe that the righteous dye to whom all sinnes are forgiven Death indeed came on all mankinde by reason of sinne Rom. 5. 12. but yet it is not in all things the same to the godly and to the wicked for howsoever unto both it be the enemy of nature as the end of naturall life 1 Cor. 15. 26. Psal. 90. 3. Yet 1. unto the godly it is a token of Gods love unto the wicked of his anger Psal. 37. 37 38. Job 18. 13 14. 2. Vnto the godly it is a rest from labour and misery Apoc. 14. 13. the last enemy being now destroyed 1 Cor. 15. 26. unto the wicked it is the height of all worldly evils Luke 12. 20. 3. Vnto the godly it is the utter abolishing of sin and perfection of mortification Rom. 6. 7. unto the wicked it is the conquest of sinne and accomplishment of their spirituall captivity 4. Vnto the godly it is so far from being a separation from Christ that even the body severed from the soule and rotting in the grave is yet united to Christ and the soule freed from the body is with him in Paradise Luk. 23. 43. Phil. 2. 16. unto the wicked it is an utter cutting off from the favourable presence and fruition of God 5. Vnto the godly it is the beginning of heavenly glory unto the wicked it is the entrance into hellish and endlesse torments Luke 16. 22 23. How are men judged at the houre of death 1. God at that instant pronounceth and the conscience apprehendeth the sentence of blessing or cursing Heb. 9. 27. 2. The soule of every man accordingly is by the power of
the glory of Christ. We read in the holy story that God took of the spirit which was upon Moses and gave it unto the seventy Elders that they might bear the burden of the people with him and that hee might not bear it as before hee had done himself alone It may bee his burden being thus lightned the abilities that were left him for government were not altogether so great as the necessity of his former imployment required them to have been and in that regard vvhat vvas given to his assistants might perhaps bee said to bee taken from him But wee are sure the case was otherwise in him of whom now wee speak unto whom God did not thus give the Spirit by measure And therefore although so many millions of beleevers doe continually receive this supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ yet neither is that fountain any way exhausted nor the plenitude of that well-spring of grace any whit impaired or diminished it being Gods pleasure That in him should all fulnesse dwell and that of his fulnesse all wee should receive grace for grace That as in the naturall generation there is such a correspondence in all parts betwixt the begetter and the Infant begotten that there is no member to bee seen in the Father but there is the like answerably to bee found in the Childe although in a farre lesse proportion so it falleth out in this spirituall that for every grace which in a most eminent manner is found in Christ a like grace will appeare in Gods Childe although in a far inferiour degree similitudes and likenesses being defined by the Logicians to bee comparisons made in quality and not in quantity Wee are yet further to take it into our consideration that by thus enlivening and fashioning us according to his own image Christs purpose was not to raise a seed unto himself dispersedly and distractedly but to gather together in one the Children of God that were scattered abroad yea and to bring all unto one head by himselfe both them which are in Heaven and them which are on the Earth That as in the Tabernacle the vail divided between the Holy place and the most Holy but the curtaines which covered them both were so coupled together with the taches that it might still bee one Tabernacle so the Church Militant and Triumphant typified thereby though distant as farre the one from the other as Heaven is from Earth yet is made but one Tabernacle in Jesus Christ In whom all the building fifty framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord and in whom all of us are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit The bond of this mysticall union betwixt Christ and us as elsewhere hath more fully been declared is on his part that quickning Spirit which being in him as the Head is from thence diffused to the spirituall animation of all his Members and on our part Faith which is the prime act of life wrought in those who are capable of understanding by that same Spirit Both whereof must bee acknowledged to bee of so high a nature that none could possibly by such ligatures knit up so admirable a body but hee that was God Almighty And therefore although wee did suppose such a man might bee found who should perform the Law for us suffer the death that was due to our offence and overcome it yea and whose obedience and sufferings should be of such value that it were sufficient for the redemption of the whole world yet could it not be efficient to make us live by faith unlesse that Man had been able to send Gods Spirit to apply the same unto us Which as no bare Man or any other Creature whasoever can doe so for Faith wee are taught by S. Paul that it is the operation of God and a work of his power even of that same power wherewith Christ himself was raised from the dead Which is the ground of that prayer of his that the eyes of our understanding being enlightned wee might know what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power to us-ward who beleeve according to the working of his mighty power which hee wrought in Christ when hee raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places far above all Principality and Power and Might and every Name that is named not onely in this World but also in that to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to bee head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulnesse of him that filleth all in all Yet was it fit also that this Head should bee of the same nature with the Body which is knit unto it and therefore that hee should so bee God as that hee might partake of our Flesh likewise For wee are members of his body saith the same Apostle of his flesh and of his bones And except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man saith our Saviour himself and drink his blood yee have no life in you Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in mee and I in him Declaring thereby first that by this mysticall and supernaturall union wee are as truely conjoyned with him as the meate and drink wee take is with us when by the ordinary work of Nature it is converted into our own substance Secondly that this conjunction is immediately made with his humane nature Thirdly that the Lamb slaine that is Christ crucified hath by that death of his made his flesh broken and his blood powred out for us upon the Crosse to bee fit food for the spirituall nourishment of our soules and the very well-spring from whence by the power of his Godhead all life and grace is derived unto us Upon this ground it is that the Apostle telleth us that wee have boldnesse to enter into the Holyest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which hee hath consecrated for us through the vaile that is to say his flesh That as in the Tabernacle there was no passing from the Holy to the most Holy place but by the vaile so now there is no passage to bee looked for from the Church Militant to the Church Triumphant but by the flesh of him who hath said of himself I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth unto the Father but by mee Jacob in his dream beheld a ladder set upon the Earth the top whereof reached to Heaven and the Angels of God ascending and descending on it the Lord himself standing above it Of which vision none can give a better interpretation then hee who was prefigured therein gave unto Nathaniel Hereafter you shall see Heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Whence wee may well collect that the onely meanes whereby God standing