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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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who doth not love fear trust in him as well as he that sets up an Idol to worship him 2. The first and main evil of sin was in the omission Sin first draws away from God before it enticeth Iam. 1. 22. Ier. 2. 13. To speak exactly there is no sin but that of omission it is a deficiency and coming short of the rule 3. The state of unregeneracy lies mainly in the sins of omission there is much more evil in a state of sin then in the act of it Eph. 2. 12. the reign of sinne is more seen in omission then commission there is a higher act of soveraignty in the negative voice then in any positive Law 4. The ground of every sin of commission is a sin of omission turning away the soul from God Psa. 14. 1 2. Iob 15. 4. Iam. 1. 14. negligentiam in orando semper aliqua notabilis transgressio sequitur Iohn 20. 24 25. Rom. 1. 21. compared with 24. 2 Thes. 2. 10. 5. The greatnesse of sin is measured by the mischief it doth the sinner sins against the Gospel are greater then those against the Law sins of commission make the wound sins of omission keep you from the plaister Iohn 3. ult 6. These are the sins which Christ will mainly enquire after Mat. 25. 42 43. We should loathe sins of omission which in the world are little made of 1 Sam. 12. 23. Wo unto me if I preach not the Gospel saith Paul Peter and Iohn say We cannot but speak the things which we have heard These omissions directly oppose the will law and honour of God as well as the committing of foul faults 2. They will damn us as well as commissions 3. They will make way for grosse evil deeds There are three sorts of omissions 1. Totall non-performances not praying reading hearing meditating Psal. 14 4 ● 2. Seldome performances intermission or performing of duties unevenly 1 Thes. 5. 17. Col. 4. 2. 3. Sleighty performances when we keep a tract of duty but do it customarily pray not fervently and spiritually Rom. 12. 11. Sins against the Gospel are greater then sins against the Law 1. The more Laws are transgrest the greater the sin There are three sorts of Laws 1. The Law of nature which teacheth to do good to them that do good to us Mat. 5. 43. 2. The morall Law which requires subjection to whatever God commands 3. The Law of faith Rom. 3. 27. which requires subjection to God in his Son all these are broken by sinning against the Gospel 2. The more of the minde of the Law-giver is in the Law the greater is the sinne Mens legis est lex Gods minde is clearly seen in the Gospel viz. the exalting of himself in his Son Pro. 8. 30. 3. The more any one sins against light the greater the sin there was never such a discovery of the filthinesse of sin nor of the justice of God upon sin it could not be purged but by the bloud of God Acts 12. 28. See Ephes. 5. 26. never such a discovery of Gods grace as in the New Covenant a second Covenant was never tendred to the Devils 4. They are sins against higher love God loved Adam and the Angels Amore amicitiae they had never offended him he loved us Amore misericordiae Rom. 5. 8. he loved Adam and Angels in themselves us in Christ Eph. 1. 6. 5. These sins make way for the sin against the holy Ghost Matth. 12. 32. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium The sins of Gods people are greater then others sins In eadem specie peccati gravius peccat fidelis quam infidelis Grace aggravates and heightens sin They sin 1. Against the highest light Ps. 51. 6. 2. The highest love peculiar goodnesse electing love Of all sins to be without God or out of Covenant with God is the greatest sin it is against the great command in the Law the first Commandment and the great promise in the Gospel Those sins wherein a mans self is the object are the worst of all sins self-deceit is the worst of all deceits and self-murder is the worst of all murders The degrees of sin in a mans own heart or the conception birth and perfection of sin there First Injection or suggestion from Satan which stirs up the lusts in the heart 1 Iohn 5. 19. Secondly The soul receives the thought there must be Partus cordis as well as seminarium hostis Bernard Iob 17. 11. Thirdly Delectatio the soul is pleas'd with such thoughts so Eve Fourthly Upon this the will consenteth then lust is conceived Fifthly There is a consultation in the soul how to bring this into act Rom. 13. 14. CHAP. VII That all Sins are Mortal THe Schoolmen and their followers the Jesuites distinguish sins into Venial and Mortal Some sins say they are sua natura in their own nature venial others mortal of which they reckon up seven Veniale quod est praeter mortale quod est contra legem As all sin except that against the holy Ghost Mark 7. 29. is venial in Christ so without him is all mortal and deadly Cartw on Mat. 5. 23. All sinne deserveth eternal death Rom. 6. 23. as appeareth by the opposition of life everlasting which the Apostle joyneth in the same verse Id. ibid. There is the merit of hell in every idle word because the wages of sin as sin is death Every transgression of the Law is worthy of death Gal. 3. 10. Every sinne is a transgression of the Law 1 Iohn 3. 4. Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 2. cap. 164. 165. See Deut. 27. 26. 30. 19. Ezekiel 18. 4. Iames 2. 10. Numbers 15 22 23 24. 1 Cor. 15. 56. Bellarmine seeks to elu de these and that other place with these glosses The soul that sinneth that is mortally shall die the wages of sin that is of mortal sin is death and the sting of death is sinne that is deadly sinne these are tautologies as if the Prophet had said The soul that sinneth a sinne unto death shall die and the Apostie sinne that deserveth death deserveth death He saith they are venial ex natura sua such as if God please to remit the temporal punishment they are so little that he cannot inflict eternal for them they are venial propter parvitatem materiae imperfectionem actus Quodvis peccatum peccantem in rigore l●gis morte involveret si persona absque misericordia Dei in Christo judicaretur Episc. Daven Sins may be termed venial or mortal 1. Either comparatè in comparison of others or simpliciter simply and in themselves and that either 1. Ex natura sua of their own nature 2. Ex gratia by favour or indulgence 3. Ex eventu in the issue or event in the two last respects all the sins of the elect are venial but no sins ex natura sua are venial that is such as in their own nature deserve
praise God if against us to be humbled If thou beest hungry and in penury murmur not nor repine but say with the blessed Martyr If men take away my meat God will take away my stomack Merlin during the massacre at Paris some fortnight together was nourished with one egg a day laid by an hen that came constantly to the hay-mow where he lay hid in that danger The whole power almost of France being gathered together against the City Rochel and besieging them with extremity who defended the Town God in the time of famine and want of bread did for some whole moneths together daily cast up a kinde of fish unto them out of the Sea wherewith so many hundreds were relieved without any labour of their own Be of good comfort Brother said Ridley to Latimer for God will either asswage the fury of the fire or else strengthen us to abide it In the time of the Massacre at Paris there was a poor man who for his deliverance crept into a hole and when he was there there comes a Spider and weaves a cob-web before the hole when the murtherer came to search for him saith one certainly he is got into that hole No saith another he cannot be there for there is a cob-web over the place and by this means the poor man was preserved Let us observe the signal acts of Gods providence amongst us He studies not the Scripture as he should which studies not providence as he should we should compare Gods promises and providences together What we hear of him in his Word with what we see in his Works There is a three-fold vision of God in this life In his Word Works and in his Son answerable to our vision of God will be our communion with him The very Providence of God is sometimes called Prudence Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia sed nos Tefacimus Fortuna Deam Coeloque locamus Juven Sat. 10. Prudence in man is a vertue some way like Providence in God Prudens dicitur quasi porrò videns Isid. in lib. Etym. Austin preaching once forgat what he had purposed to utter and so made an excursion from the matter in hand and fell into a discourse against the Manichees Possidonius and others dining with him that day Austin told them of it and asked them whether they observed it They answered that they observed it and much wondered at it Then Austin replied Credo quòd aliquem errantem in populo Dominus per nostram oblivionem errorem curari voluit Two daies after one came to Austin before others falling at his feet and weeping confessing also that he had many years followed the heresie of the Manichees and had spent much mony on them but the day before through Gods mercy by Austins Sermon he was converted and then was made Catholike The End of the third Book THE FOVRTH BOOK OF THE Fall of Man OF Sin Original Actual CHAP. I. Of the Fall of Man HAving in my Treatise of Divinity handled three principal heads there viz. the Scripture God and the Works of God I shall now proceed to speak of mans Apostasie and Restauration or of the Fall and Recovery of Man There is a four-fold Estate of man to be considered 1. That happy estate wherein he was made Ecc. 7. 31. 2. That miserable estate whereto he fell Rom. 3. 23. 24. and 5. 12. 3. That renewed estate whereto by grace he is called 1 Pe. 1. 3. 4. That glorious estate which is in Heaven reserved for him 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Having spoken already of his estate of Innocency or primitive condition I shall now speak of his corrupt estate in which I shall consider 1. The cause of it the Devils temptation and our first Parents yeelding to it 2. The parts of it sinfullnes●e of nature and life and the punishment of sin here and hereafter 3. The properties of it 1. Generall 2. Irremediable Though I shall not perhaps handle the last The Apostasie of man is his fall from the obedience due to God or the transgression of the Law prescribed by God In which two things are con●●derable 1. The transgression 2. The propagation of it Our first Parents being seduced by Satan sinn'd against the known Law of God in eating of the forbidden fruit Adams sinne was against his own light and therefore a presumptuous sin so some interpret that place Rom. 5. 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression that is those which had not the Law clearly revealed to them yet he was seduced by Satan whereas Satan sinned without temptation thence he is called the old Serpent because by the Serpent he seduced Eve When God saith Gen. 3. 22. Behold Adam is become like one of us knowing good and evill it confuteth S. Augustines conjecture that he beleeved not the Serpent but consented to his wife out of matrimoniall indulgence Etsi credendo non sunt ambo decepti peccando tamen ambo capti sunt diaboli laqueis implicati and sheweth manifestly that Adam also was circumvented with errour wherefore doth God else upbraid him so ironically that he is now like unto God That Sarcasmus in my understanding is a taxation of his credulous temerity in beleeving the Serpents promise When S. Paul 1 Tim. 2. 14. saith that Adam was not deceived but the woman he meant not to extenuate the mans offence or to exempt him from the fraud of the devil but to shew whether sex was more credulous or like to be seduced Doctor Hampton on Rom. 5. 9. The consummation of that transgression was the eating of the forbidden fruit or of the tree of knowledge of good and evill by Adam Gen. 2. 17. as the beginning of it was looking on it by Eve saith Paulus Fagius on Gen. 3. 6. 2. The tree was no better then the rest only God forbad him to eat of it for the triall of his obedience The lesser the thing was required to shew his obedience the greater was his fault in disobeying It is called disobedience Rom. 5. 19. and offence or fall Rom. 5. 15 17 18. Some say the devill as an unclean Spirit could not have accesse to Adams inward man to tempt him therefore he tempted him by a Serpent and audible voice as he did Christ by a visible Landskip of the world The time of Adams fall is not certain Some say he fell the same day he was created Neither Angels nor men did fall the sixth day before the Sabbath for then God looked upon all his works and they were very c good Gen. 1. 31. and therefore could not as yet be bad and evill by any sin or fall The objections against this from Iohn 8. 44. and Psa. 49. 12. are easily answered Some learned Divines as Simpson in his Chronology observes conjecture that Adam and Eve were cast out of Paradise the eighth day after
hereditary to all his seed in case of obedience and his sin in case of disobedience 3. There is an after consent on our part to Adams treason Imitation is a kinde of consent Isa. 43. 27. 4. The offering of another Adam to thee in the Church shews that the dispensation is not rigorous so you may share in his obedience as well as the others disobedience It is as agreeable to the wisedom and justice of God by the first Adam to introduce death as to the wisedom and grace of God by the second Adam to introduce life The first Covenant makes way for the second 5. There is a parallel in Scripture between the first and second Adam Isa. 49. 18. Rom. 5. 12. 1 John 5. 11. Christ is caput cum foedere as well as the first Adam Object This sinne of Adam being but one could not desile the universall nature Socinus Ans. Adam had in him the whole nature of mankinde 1 Cor. 15. 47. by one offencr the whole nature of man was defiled Rom. 5. 12 17. Object Adams sin was nor voluntary in us we never gave consent to it Answ. There is a twofold will 1. Voluntas naturae the whole nature of man was represented in Adam therefore the will of nature was sufficient to conveigh the sin of nature 2. Voluntas personae by every actuall sin we justifie Adams breach of Covenant Rom. 5. 12. 19. seems clear for the imputation of Adams sinne All were in Adam and sinned in him as after Austin Beza doth interpret that Rom. 5. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so our last Translators in the Margent And though it be rendred for that all have sinned by us the Syriack Eras. Va●ab Calv. Pisc. yet must it so be understood that all have sinned in Adam for otherwise it is not true that all upon whom death hath passed have sinned as namely Infants newly born it is not said All are sinners but All have sinned which imports an imputation of Adams act unto his posterity Vide Bellarmine Tom. 4. l. 4. de Amiss grat Statu peccati c. 3. Peccatum Adami ita posteris omnibus imputatur ac si omnes idem peccatum patravissent Id. ib. c. 16. and again c. 8. peccatum originale tametsi ab Adamo est non tamen Adami sed nostrum est Some Divines do not differ so much re as modo loquendi about this point they grant the imputation of Adams sin to his posterity in some sense so as that there is a communication of it with them and the guilt of it is charged upon them yet they deny the imputation of it to posterity as it was Adams personall sin But it is not to be considered as Adams personall sinne but as the sin of all mankinde whose person Adam did then represent It was one that made us sinners it is one that makes us righteous prior in semine alter in sanguine it was man that forfeited it is man that satisfied D. Hampton on Rom. 5. 10. The parts of this corrupt estate Sinfulnesse of nature and life and the punishment of sin here and hereafter The division of sin into Original and Actual is gathered out of Rom. 5. 14. and I shall first treat of originall sin or the corruption of nature Sin is an absence of that righteousnesse which should be in us in our nature as originall sin in our actions as actuall sin a morall inconformity or difformity in nature or life to the Law of God This vitiousnesse of nature is not unfitly called Sin Rom. 6. 7. 1. Ex causa it is the fruit and effect of that first transgression of our Father Adam 2. Ex effectu it is the root seed spawn of all actual transgressions in every one of us Originall sinne is against the whole Law which is spirituall and requires perfect integrity in man more specially against the first and last Commandments That there is original sin a defilement in every mans heart as soon as he is born which were enough to destroy him though he break out into no outward acts of rebellion is proved 1. By Scripture Gen. 6. 5 8. Iob 14. 14. 15. 14 15 16. Psal. 51. 5. Sunt qui dicunt quod per hoc innuitur Eva quae non peperit nisi postquam peccavit Porchetus Rom. 5. 12. Eph. 2. 13. 2. By the effects 1. Mans desperate contrariety to good things even from his youth Psal. They went astray from their youth up In Isay Transgressors from the womb A childe is opposite to any good duty and ready to imitate all evil 2. The Lord instituted circumcision to shew the filthinesse we are begotten and born in and which should be cut off Therefore saith Bellarmine it was commanded to be done in that member in which the effect of that sin doth more violently appear and by which mankinde is propagated and by propagation infected The use of baptisme also is to take away the guilt and filth of nature The woman that had a childe was to go offer as unclean 3. It is demonstrated by sicknesse other crosses and death even of infants Rom. 3. 23. 4. The unserviceablenesse of the creatures proves that there is original sin 5. Because there must be a change of our natures 1. Every man is born guilty of Adams sin 2. Every man is born dead in sin Ephes. 2. 1. 3. Every natural man is born full of all sin Rom. 1. 29. as full as a toad of poison 4. What ever he doth is sin 1. His thoughts Gen. 6. 5. 2. His words Psal. 50. 16. 3. His actions 1. Civil Prov. 21. 4. 2. Religious Prov. 15. 18 19. 28. 9. The vile nature of man is apt to commit most foul and presumptuous sins Rom. 3. 9 10 11 to 18. v. Mark 7. 21. Reas. 1. From mans self sin hath come over all together with death 2. The devil laboureth to bring men to the most notorious sins that he may render them most like to himself Ephes. 2. 2. 3. The world is full of such things and persons as may induce an evil nature to most horrible deeds 4. God in justice gives men over to work wickednesse with greedinesse CHAP. II. What Original Corruption is THese names are given to Orignall sin in Scripture It is called sin Rom. 7. 8. The sinning sin Rom. 7. 13. Sin that dwelleth in us Rom. 7. 20. Sin that doth easily beset us Heb. 13. 1. The body of sin Rom. 7. 23. A law in the members and the body of death Rom. 7. 24. It is also called flesh Joh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 5. The old man Rom. 6. 6. Ephes. 4. 12. Col. 3. 9. The law of sin Rom. 7. 25. The wisdom of the flesh Rom. 8. 6 7. The law of sin and of death Rom. 8. 2. The plague in ones own heart 1 King 8. 38. The root of bitternesse Heb. 12. It is called by the Fathers Original sin It is not a meer want of
taken off by Christ the Surety Rom. 8. 1. 4. Reatus conscientiae Jer. 17. 1. The whole man is the subject of the pollution of sinne conscience of the guilt Heb. 9. 14. and 10. 17. The properties of this guilt 1. It is in its own nature incurable by all the power of the creature he that breaks the precept of the Law can never break through the curse of it Rom. 5. 12. Iude 6. 2. It is universall morbus Epidemicus Rom. 3. 19. John 13. 10. 3. Hereditary conveighed from parents to children Rom. 5. 17 18. by one man and one offence 4. Lothsome and stinking Psa. 38. 5. 5. Very troublesome a small sin in the conscience is like a mote in the eye 6. Of an infectious and spreding nature Rom. 1. ult 3 ep Iohn 10. Christ was that true scape-goat Lev. 16 22. who expiated the sins of all the elect laid upon him and carried them far from the sight of God that they never appear That is explained by the Prophet Isa. 53. Isa. 11. and is confirmed by the Apostle 2 Cor. 5. 21. if Christ had not taken our guilt upon himself saith Sanford de descensu Christi ad inferos lib. 3. We had been guilty to this day There are 3 things saith he in sin the name the fault the guilt which may be imputed the fault that is the fact it self cannot be imputed but to us sinners so either the guilt saith he is imputed to Christ or only the empty name of our sin Fourthly The dominion of sinne There is 1. a virtuall dominion in sin so originall sin reigns 2. Actuall every mans darling and bosome sin 1. The darling sin keeps Christ out of the soul. 2. All other lusts are serviceable to it These things make a reigning sin 1. Soveraignty in the sinne 2. Absolute and uncontrolled subjection in the sinner Soveraignty is a Throne of sin set up in the heart three things concur to this 1. A conquest yet that alone makes it not a raigning but a prevailing sin 2. Possession a standing power in the heart 3. The exercising of that power Secondly On the sinners side there must be a willingnesse Rom. 5. his servants ye are whom ye obey often in that Chapter of the Romans Iude 11. there is a going on notwithstanding warning in the way an obstinacy in sin 2. They ran greedily or powred out themselves there is a free giving of the will to it Sins of ignorance and omission may be raigning sins Hos. 4. 1. 2 Thes. 1. 8. not so much the greatnesse of the sin as the manner of committing it makes it a raigning sin Secret sins may be raigning sins In the Eastern Countries the King was seldome seen abroad Hos. 7. 17. an Oven the more it is stopt the hotter it is ignorance of the act makes it not a raigning sin but of the right doth if one be bound to know it Sins of thought may be raigning sins therein the heart is the Throne Isa. 59. 5. Pray that the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee Little sins such as the world cals little may be committed with a high hand Every man hath some peccatum in delicijs as the Fathers call it some bosome or darling sin as Modern Divines term it Matth. 5. 29. 2 Tim. 2. 25. A man is proner to some sins then others in regard of his temper of body manner of life education age place of living state calling and the like one mans bodily temper inclineth him to anger anothers to lust a third to carnall sorrow a fourth to fear a fifth to carking and worldly cares As envy in Saul covetonsnesse in Iudas ambition in Absalom uncleannesse in Herod This is called in Scripture a mans right eye his own inquity the stumbling block of his iniquity How to know a mans darling sin 1. Nothing is so pleasing to the soul nor so much ingros●eth his thoughts as it ma●k what thy soul is most prone to take pleasure in Iob 20. 12. and what thou most thinkest of Mat. 6. 21. Iob 17. 11. Hos. 14 11. 2. What the Spirit of God in thy most secret soul-searchings discovers to thee or thy private friends most tell thee of the guilt of it doth most affright thy conscience when it is awakened 3. What it is thy heart is most careful to hide Iob 10. 13. men have several distinctions and excuses for it 4. It is the same which most interposeth in holy duties Ezek. 31. 33. How to know when ones darling sin is mortified Quod non placet non nocet Rom. 7. 17. what displeaseth us shall never hurt us Sin reigneth not 1. If we have purpose against it 2. If we have grief for it 3. If we seek for strength against it Bains Spirit Armour A diligent and constant care to resist a mans own corruption is a sure proof of uprightnesse and such a one shall enjoy the comfort of his sincerity in due time This is Satans great bait and by this sin thou dost most dishonour God and wound conscience because this sin sets up another God against God CHAP. V. Of the Evill of Sinne. 1. IN regard of God it strikes not only at his soveraignty Psa. 51. 4. but his Being Psa. 10. 4. It is contrary to the whole nature of God Lev. 26. 22. Col. 1. 12. If we look on the Soveraignty of God sin is rebellion if on his justice sin is iniquity If on his goodnesse sin is unkindenesse but it especially wrongeth the Holinesse of God in respect of its defilement Zech. 11. 8. Amos 5. 21. Hab. 1. 13. Psa. 5. 4 5. If we consider Gods Holinesse as a Rule sin is a transgression if as an excellency sinne is a deformity It is a separation or aversion of the soul from him in these respects 1. It is a taking off the soul from the love of God as the greatest good and the fear of God and delight in him ●elying on him committing our selves to him ler. 2. 12 13. Iam. 4. 4. 2. A separation from the Law of God as our rule therefore it is a going besides a being without the Law Iohn 3. 4. Mat. 15. 6. In the Law there is 1. A rectitude I have esteemed thy Commandements in every thing to be right sin is a croookednesse Psal. 125. 5. 2. A wisedom wisedom is justified of her children there is a folly in sin the wicked man is called a fool often in the Proverbs Jer. 8. 9. 3. There is a purity and holinesse in the Law Thy Commandements are very pure therefore thy Servant loveth them Rom. 7. 12. sin is filthinesse it self 4. There is a harmony in the Law sin is a disharmony 5. There is a liberty in the Law Iam. 2. 8. sin is a bondage 2 Tim. 2. 26. 6. The keeping of the Law brings a reward but sin shame and death Rom. 6. 22 23. 3. It takes away the soul from the dominion of God we will not have
All evils of misery are but the issue of sin first sin entred into the world and by sin death 1. Temporal evils All publick commotions wars famine pestilence are the bitter fruits of sin Deut. 28. there is Gods curse on the creature mans body all his relations 2. Spiritual Terrours of conscience horrours of death 1 Cor. 15. 56. are the effects of sin What an evil is a condemning heart an accusing conscience yet this is the fruit of sin A wounded spirit who can bear Some will bear outward evils stoutly nay suffer death it self boldly but sin will not so easily be born when the conscience it self is smitten See this in Cain and Iudas many a one maketh away himself to be rid of this vexation This sils one with shame Iohn 8. 9. fear Gen. 3. 11. and grief Acts 2. 37. The greatest torment that in this life can be fall a sinner is desperation when the soul of a man convinced in her self by the number of her hainous offences loseth all hope of life to come and casteth her eyes wholly on the fearful torments of hell prepared for her the continual thought and fright whereof do so amaze and afflict the comfortlesse soul that she shrinketh under the burden and feeleth in her self the horrour of hell before she come to it 3. Eternal The everlasting absence of all good 2 Thes. 1. 19. and the presence of all evil Mark 9. 49. are the consequents of it Iustum est quòd qui in suo aeterno peccavit contra Deum in aeterno Dei puniatur Sin is finite in the act and subject but of infinite demerit being committed 1. Against an infinite Good therefore it deserves infinite punishment 2. The obligation of the Law is everlasting This was the first Doctrine which was published to man that eternal death is the punishment of sinne Gen. 2. 17. the Devil opposed it Gen. 3. 4. the belief of the threatning would have hindered them from sinne The Socinians say that man should have died in the state of innocency although he had not sinned and therefore that death is not a punishment of sinne but a condition and consequent of nature The holy Ghost assigns death to sinne as the cause See of it Rom. 5. 12. 6. 23. Our bodies were not mortal till our souls were sinful Arminians say That there is neither election nor reprobation of Infants and that ●o Infants can be condemned for original sin Iacob was in a state of election in his mothers womb Rom. 9. 11. All men in the counsel of God are either elect or reprobate But Infants are men or part of mankinde Therefore they are either elect or reprobate 1. Infants are saved therefore there is some election of Infants for salvation is a fruit of election and proper to the elect Rom. 11. 7. There is a manifest difference among Infants between those that are born in and out of the Church Gen. 17. 17. Acts 2. 37. 3 21. Children of unbelievers are unclean 1 Cor. 7. 14. and aliens from Christ and the Covenant of promise Ephes. 2. 11 12. 2. That opinion That no Infants are condemned for original sinne seems to be contrary to that place Ephes. 2. 3. If this were true the condition of a Turks childe dying in his infancy is farre better then the condition of Abraham Isaac or Iacob living for they might fall from grace say they and be damned but a Turks childe dying according to their opinion shall certainly be saved The worst punishment of sinne is to punish it with sin and so God punisheth it sometimes in his own people Isa. 63. 17. Mar. 6. 52. a judicial blindnesse and hardnesse is the worst See Ezek. 24 13. Rom. 1. 26 28. Revel 22. 11. Concerning National sins Sins though committed by particular persons may be National First When they are interwoven into the policy of a State Psa. 94. 20. when sin is established by a Law Rev. 16. 8. 17. 17. 6. 12. Ier. 15. 9. Secondly When they are universal and overspread the whole Kingdom Ier. 9. 2 3. Isa. 56. 11. Thirdly When the people that professe the name of God are infected with those sins Gen. 6. 2 3 4. Fourthly When few or none in the Nation bewail them Ier. 5. 31. Fifthly When they are openly countenanced and tolerated 1 Kings 14. 24. when there are no masters of restraint Iudg. 18. 7. Sixthly When they are the predominant humour of the Nation at that time The sins of Gods people which commonly provoke him to break a Nation 1. Their omissions that they stand not in the gap Ezek. 22. 30 31. improve not their interest in him 2. When their hearts are inordinately set upon the things of this world 2 Chro. 36. 12. Mat. 24. 39. 3. When there is a great unfruitfulness and lukewarmness in the things of God Hos. 10. 1. 4. When divisions are still fomented amongst those that fear God Isa. 9. 21. Desolations in a State follow divisions in the Church The sins which may provoke God against a Nation 1. Idolatry Ier. 5. 19. when the true God is worshipped in a way that he hath not appointed 2. Intestine divisions Isa. 9 ult compared with 10. 6. 3. Incorrigiblenesse under lesser judgements Isa. 9. 11. 4 Wearying of God Isa. 7. 13 18. 5. Unworthy and wicked compliances Hos. 5. 13. CHAP. XI Signes of a Christian in regard of sinne and that great corruptions may be found in true Christians OF the first Signs of a Christian in regard of sin First He is convinced of sin Iohn 16. 9. the Greek word signifies to evidence by demonstration the Spirit so demonstrates it that a man hath nothing to object Psal. 51. 13. Secondly He is free from its dominion as Paul saith Sinne shall have no dominion over you for you are not under the law but under grace and after Being freed from sinne Whosoever is born of God sinneth not John They do no iniquity David They serve not sin in the lusts thereof He hath not an habitual resolution to continue in sinne Thirdly He is troubled and wearied with the reliques of it and driven to Christ for pardon and help He is weary of sin and every sin so farre as he knoweth specially his own sin and that iniquity which cleaveth closest to him His flesh is inclined to it but his Spirit is a verse from it and even tired and burdened with it so that he often sighes out in himself the complaint of St Paul O miserable man that I am Still as he prevails more against sin the remainders of it do more afflict him sinne in it self considered is his greatest unhappinesse that he hath so vile a nature is prone to so vile deeds and doth in many things so foolishly offend this troubleth and disquieteth him even then when he hath no other crosse to trouble him and many times imbitters all his prosperity Fourthly He is grieved
and blaspheming of it Mr. Bedford Of the sin unto death out of 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mr. Deering on Heb. 6. 4 5 6. saith It is a general Apostacy from God with wilfull malice and an unrepentant heart to persecute his truth to the end Mr. White in his Treatise of this sin thus describes it It is a wilfull malicious opposing persecuting and blaspheming the truths of God against knowledge and conscience without ever repenting and grieving for so doing but rather fretting and vexing that one can do no more It is a totall falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed into a verball calumniating and a reall persecuting of that Gospel with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end and actually to do so to persevere till then and so to passe away in that disposition It is a spitefull rejecting of the Gospel after that the Spirit hath supernaturally perswaded a mans heart of the truth and benefit thereof It is a sin committed against clear convincing tasting knowledge with despight and revenge Heb. 10. 29. 1. It must be a clear knowledge an ignorant man cannot commit it 2. Such a knowledge as le ts in a tast of the goodnesse as well as discovers the truth of the Gospel Heb. 6. 3. yet goes against this knowledge with despight opposeth the motions of Gods Spirit with rage this puts a man into the devils condition Compare Heb. 6. 4 5. with 10. 26 27. It is a voluntary way of sinning after one hath received not only the knowledge but the acknowledgement of the truth so much knowledge as subdues the understanding The will is chiefly in this sin he sins wilfully he trampleth under his foot the blood of the Son of God sins maliciously and with revenge The Jews put Christ to death with the greatest malice The conditions of that sin are 1. Hatred of the truth 2. A settled malice 3. An obstinate will 4. An accusing conscience Therefore this sin is distinguished from other sins by three degrees 1. That they all fall toti 2. à toto 3. In totum 1. Toti Because they fall from God and his gifts not out of infirmity or ignorance but out of knowledge will and certain purpose 2. A toto Because they cast away and oppose the whole doctrine his authority being contemned 3. In totum Because they are so obfirmed in their defection that they voluntarily oppose and seek to reproach the Majesty of God But the specificall difference of this sin is that they reproach those things which the holy Ghost hath revealed to them for true and of whose truth they are convinced in their minde This sin necessarily supposeth the knowledge of the Mediator wheresoever there is any mention of it in the new Testament there comes with it some intimation of the works of the Mediator In Matth. 12. they opposed Christ in his miracles in Heb. 6. Paul instanceth in their crucifying again of Christ Heb. 10. speaks of their trampling under foot the Son of God The devils sinned against light and with revenge but not against the light of the second Covenant this sin is purely against the Gospel Heb. 4. 10. 27 28 29. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium Matth. 12. 32. He that commits this sin shall neither be pardoned in this world in foro conscientiae nor in the world to come in foro judicii neither in this world per solutionem ministerii by the Ministry of the word nor in the world to come per approbationem Christi When once the means of recovery by the Gospel are neglected contemned and despised then there is no place for remission see Heb. 1● 26. The sacrifices in the old Law were effectual in their time to the expiation of sin if joyned with faith The sacrifice of Christs death was alwaies effectuall but if this also be despised this being the last there is no more sacrifice for sin and yet without sacrifice no remission It is called the sin unto death not because it may kill for no sin but may kill if it be not repented of but because it must kill Divines observe two sorts subject to this sin Some have both known the truth and also professed it as Saul Iudas Alexander the Copper-smith all these made profession of the Gospel before they fell away Others have certain knowledge of the truth but yet have not given their names to professe it but do hate persecute and blaspheme it such were the Pharisees Matth. 13. All they who fall into this sin first do attain unto a certain and assured knowledge of the truth though all do not professe it Absolutely to determine of such a one is very difficult neither is there any sufficient mark but the event viz. finall impenitency But the grounds of suspition are such as these 1. Prophannenesse 2. Doubting of every saving truth and impugning it 3. Envying anothers grace and happinesse 4. Blasphemy 5. Want of good affections Many Christians are ready to suspect that they have sinned against the holy Ghost Some Divines give this as a rule If the Lord give you a heart to fear that you have sin'd against the holy Ghost then you have not Boasting A man boasts when he is full of that which he thinks excellent and to adde worth and excellency to him Psal. 34. 2. 44. 8. 64. 10. It is one of the sins of the tongue 1 Sam. 2. 3. a high degree of pride see Ezek. 28. 3 4. Rom. 2. 17. there is vera and vana gloriatio the highest act of faith is to glory in God we make our boast of God all the day long Psal. 44. but to boast of God when one hath no interest in him is vain Bribery A bribe is a gift given from him which hath or should have a cause in the Court of justice to them which have to intermeddle in the administration of justice Bribery or taking gifts is a sin Exod. 23. 8. the same is repeated Deut. 16. 19. Isa. 1. 23. Prov. 17. 23. Psal. 26. 10. Hos. 4. 18. Amos 2. 12. Micah 3. 11. Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Covetousnesse Samuels sons inclined after lucre and took gifts 2. Hollownesse and guile 3. A want of love of justice 4. A want of hatred of sin 2. The effects 1. In the parties self that offends 2. In others 1. In himself The bribe blindes the eyes of the wise 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 23. 8. it makes him unable to see and finde out the truth in a Cause 2. It perverts the words of the righteous that is it makes them which otherwise would deal righteously and perhaps have had an intention of dealing righteously yet to speak otherwise then becomes it exposeth the offender to condigne punishment Solomon saith A gift prospers whither ever it goeth and it makes room for a man meaning that otherwise deserve h no
〈◊〉 saith he de Eccles. Different forms of Churches and Church-government in one State must needs lay a foundation of strife and division therein It is no wisedom saith M. Durie in a Letter in a State to reject an approved way of government which all the best Reformed Churches have received all this while and acknowledged to be Gods way and by experience found to be safe sound and instead of it to take up another which it is not yet known what it is nor was ever tried but in two or at the most three Churches and that for the space of a few years The slighter the cause of Separation the greater the fault of Schisme when men hold the same Faith and Orthodox truths yet separate for lesser matters The true Saints in the 7. Churches of the Revelation were never bid go out of them though they were very corrupt as they were out of Babylon M. Vines The first Separatist in the Scripture saith one was Cain Gen. 4. 16. Enforcements to love are clear 1 Cor. 13. 1. That question of Separation in Scripture is dark See M. Gillespy miscel c. 10. and 15. and M. Manton on Jam. 3. 17. Schisma est secessio in religionis negotio vel temeraria vel injusta Cameron de Eocles Schisme is a causelesse separation from externall communion with any true Church of Christ M. Ball against Separation c. 8. Schism is a breach of the unity of the Church D. Field l. 3. of the Church c. 5. We do not leave communion of true Churches for corruptions and sins but only abstain from the practice of evil in our own persons and witnesse against it in others still holding communion with the Churches of Christ. You send me unto such a Book of M. Robinson as himself doth begin to revoke pubpubliquely as being unsound in divers things whereas I refer you unto a later book of his made with riper deliberation and in no part that I hear of publikely revoked His Book which you send me unto being his Iustification of Separation is sick of King Iehorams incurable disease the guts of it fall out day by day yea he openly plucks out some of the bowels thereof with his own hands This is to be observed by them especially who much follow M. Robinson CHAP. XXIII Of Sedition Self-love Self-seeking Slander SEDITION SEdition is a sin whereto people are much inclined It is to leave our present Governours which rule us according to law and follow other Governours who rise up of their own accord to leave a David and follow a Sheba The Israelites raised sedition against David by means of Absalom and Achitophel and proceeded so farre in their rebellion that they brought it to a pitcht field and would not give over till their Captain with twenty thousand more were slain in the battell 2 Sam. 19. Corah Dathan and Abiram stir up a great multitude against Moses and Aaron At another time of themselves they rose against Moses and were ready to stone him because they wanted water At another time they cry to have a Captain and return back to Egypt M. Hobbs in his Rules of government c. 12. reckons up these two among other wilde ones as seditious opinions that the knowledge of good and evil belongs to each single man and saith Legitimate Kings make the things they command just by commanding them and those which they forbid unjust by forbidding them This is to make Subjects beasts and the Magistrate God 2. That faith and holinesse are not acquired by study and naturall reason but are supernaturally infused and inspired unto man which if it were true saith he I understand not why we should be commanded to give an account of our faith or why any man who is truly a Christian should not be a Prophet This opinion is so contrary to Scripture and the judgement of all sound Divines that I need not spend time to confute it See Phil. 1. 29. Eph. 1. 8. Heb. 12. 2. One indeed saith the habits of Faith Hope and Charity are infused after the manner of acquisite God having ordained not to infuse them but upon the means of hearing praying caring studying and endeavouring Some say there are no graces wrought in us but severall actings of the Spirit as the Spirit acteth with us where grace is wrought we need the Spirit to excite and draw it forth but the Scripture is plain for infused habits grace is called a good work in us Phil. 1. 6. the Law written in our hearts God is said to shine into our hearts 2 Cor. 4. 6. we are said to be partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. See Eph. 2. 10. 1. It is a sin it is plain by Scripture how severely did God punish it in Korah and his accomplices making the earth to gape wide and swallow them up Solomon condemns it saying meddle not with such as be given to change Gal. 5. 20. yea it is a great sin as is evident 1. It is contrary to the light of Scripture in the Law he that cursed that is railed upon or used ill wishes against the Ruler of his people was to be put to death how much more then he that shall rise up against him The Scriptures of the New Testament are full of precepts for duty and subjection Rom. 13. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 13. 14. Give unto Caesar that which is Caesars saith our blessed Saviour Give to every one his due fear to whom fear honour to whom honour belongeth You must needs be subject for conscience sake And the Apostle willeth Titus to put them in minde to obey principalities and powers and be subject to Magistrates and ready to every good work as if a man were unfit for any good work if he be not duly subject to authority The Jesuites are still tampering about Kingdomes Monarchies Common-wealths and temporall States how to bring them into mutinies contentions seditions rebellions and uproars Watsons Quodlibets of Religion and State Quodl 5. Answer to the fourth Article They are like unto Aesops Trumpetter who being taken in war made his lamentation saying that he never drew his sword against any nor shot at any but the enemy answered Thou hast animated others thou hast put courage rage and fury into all the rest Saint Peter and Iude do blame them which despise government and speak evil of them in authority Secondly It is contrary to the light of nature for even among those Nations which never had any divine revelation yet the necessity of duty to Magistrates was alwaies maintained as a thing which they perceived absolutely requisite for the welfare of humane societies seeing without government the societies of men could never continue in a good estate No man could possesse his own goods enjoy his own lands and house live comfortably with his own wife and children or give himself to any profitable calling and endeavour Thirdly It is contrary to those principal vertues by which all men
Saviour even such and such a one they were Types of Christ the great Saviour That saveth us out of the hands of our enemies as that holy man telleth in this Song This is the first Title Jesus and the reason of it and it was his Name by which he was commonly known and called and now known and called a name of infinite sweetnesse to us of infinite honour and praise to him For how much comfort did oppressed Nations receive at the hearing of such a Deliverer How much honour did they shew unto him And therefore when the Apostle telleth us of our subjection unto Christs Authority he ascribeth it unto this Name as shewing us that this is the foundation of his requiring and our yeelding all honour and obedience to him He takes not upon him to be honoured onely because he will be honoured or because he is in himself worthy of it in regard of Excellency but because he hath deserved it at our hands and is perfectly worthy of it in regard of the things he hath done for us Baptism saves representatively Ioshua temporally Ministers instrumentally Jesus principally Christ delivers his people from their spiritual slavery the bondage of sin Satan the Law Death Hell The slavery of sin and Satan is all one the Devil hath dominion over the soul only by sinne our lusts are his strong holds Satan is cast out when sinne is broken 2 Tim. 2. 26. See 1 Ioh. 3. 8. Where he comes to be a Saviour First He breaks all the yokes of sinne Rom. 7. 14 17. 8. 2. He delivers his servants 1. From the guilt of sin whereby the sinner is bound over to punishment Christ hath discharged the debt for us Rom. 8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. 2. From the stain and defilement of sinne 1 Cor. 6. 11. and that partly by repairing the image of God in the soul which sinne had defaced and by imputing all his righteousnesse to them so that the soul stands covered over before God with the beauty of Christ Jesus Revel 1. 5. 3. From the reigning power of sin by his Spirit Rom. 6. Acts 3. 26. Titus 2. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 18. Secondly Christ delivers his people from the yoke of the Law both Ceremonial and Moral 1. He hath totally delivered his people from the ceremonial Law those ceremonies that concerned the publick external Worship of God and their private conversation multitude of observations and some costly 2. He hath freed them from the burden of the Moral Law 1. From it as a Covenant of life they have life by Christ. 2. From the curses of it Gal. 3. 13. 3. The rigor of it 4. As it brings wrath and the Spirit of bondage 2 Tim. 1. 7. 5. From the irritation of it for by accident it provokes a mans corruption Rom. 7. 8. 6. As it increaseth the guilt of sin Christ hath taken all the guilt upon his own shoulders Thirdly Christ sets all his servants free from the yoke of Death and Hell the first and second death this is proved out of 1 Cor. 15. 25 26 54. Ioh. 11. 26. Revel 2. 10. 20. 6. 1 Thes. 1. ult Christ delivers his people from the curse of Death 1. Meritoriously by undergoing death Heb. 2. 14 15. In morte Christi obiit mors he endured the wrath of God due to all Gods people 2. He effectually applies this to his people in the administration of the Covenant of Grace The Papists abuse the name of Jesus four wayes 1. In making it a name of wonder using it idly and foolishly in their talk O Iesus 2. In a superstitious worshipping of the letters and syllables bowing at the sound of the word Vox Iesus vel audita vel visa is worshipped by them They say this is the name which God gave his Son after he had submitted to death for us This name Jesus was given to Christ long before his exaltation It is common to others Iesus the sonne of Syrach and Ioshua Heb. 4. 8. They doe not bow at the Name of Christ or Immanuel or at the mention of any other Person in the Trinity 3. In making it a name of a Sect the Jesuites are so termed from it Vide Bezam in 1 Cor. 2. 21. They should rather be called Ignatians of Ignatius the first author of their Society and Order 4. In abusing it for a charm to cast out Devils The Scripture indeed saith By thy Name but the meaning is by thy power have we cast out Devils They abuse that place Acts 3. 16. His Name hath made this man strong that is say they the Apostles pronounced the Name Jesus and the pronunciation of this name hath a force of driving away Devils or doing other miracles the Name of Christ there is Christ himself or his power The Jews out of the word Iesu make the number of ●16 by the Letters and there they have curses and blasphemies scarce to be named Calverts Annot. on the blessed Jew of Morocco The Arminians say Salvation may be had without knowledge of or faith in Christ Jesus Vide Musaeum contra Vedel c. 9. Act. 4. 12. Some of the ancient Fathers before the rising of the Pelagian Heresie who had so put on Christ as Lipsius speaks that they had not fully put off Plato have unadvisedly dropt some speeches seeming to grant that divers men before the Incarnation living according to the dictates of right reason might be saved without faith in Christ. The Quession is not Whether a Gentile believing in Christ may be saved But Whether a man by the conduct of Nature without the knowledge of Christ may come to heaven The assertion whereof we condemn as wicked Pelagian Socinian Heresie and think that it was well said of Bernard That many labouring to make Plato a Christian do prove themselves to be Heathens The Patriarchs and Jews believed in Christum exhibendum moriturum as we in him Exhibitum mortuum Gen. 12. 3. 49. 10. Psal. 27. 8. 110. Bowing at the name of Jesus is defended by Mountague Orig. Eccles. part 1. pag. 123. And Parre on the Romans seems from Zanchy and Paraeus to justifie it but it is generally disliked by the soundest Divines The second Title by which he is termed is a Redeemer by which is expressed in part the manner how he saved us even by buying us out of the hands of our enemies For to save signifieth to deliver without intimating the means of delivering but to redeem noteth also the way how the deliverance was accomplished even by paying a price a valuable consideration in regard of which the party captived and forfeited to death or bonds should be restored to his liberty and good estate again And this kind of deliverance is the fairest deliverance the only way of procuring deliverance when a person is made miserable by his own default and fallen into the hands of Justice joyned with perfect strength so that there is neither reason
v●ra ●a distinctio qu●● re ●●t nisi ●● n●●●m praeceptum si●●●●●mum contra decimum uonum Drus. Miscel. centuria 1. c 1. Vide Buxto f. de Decalog Primum praeceptum substantiam objectum divini cultus imperat Deum solum secundùm verò praeceptum imperat cultus divini modum spiritualem solum Jun. The first Table containeth four Commandments the which division doth Iosephus Antiqu. lib. 6. cap. 3. Origen Homil in Exod. 8. Ambrose in Chap. 6. Epist. ad Ephes. approve The tenth Commandment Thou shalt not covet is but one Commandment as I have diligently searched all the Editions that we have in the Hebrew Tongue With one point period and sentence he concludeth the whole tenth Commandment In Deut. 5. certain late Edition make the division of the Text but that is nothing to the purpose there Moses repeateth the words unto them that knew before the division of the Tables in the eldest Edition and print that I have seen the tenth Commandment in Deuteronomy is not divided the which Edition Venice gave unto us Onkelos the Chaldee Interpreter on Deuteronomy maketh but one Commandment of the tenth Bishop Hooper of the Commandments This is not a new question it was in Calvins dayes and in the dayes of some of the ancient Fathers Augustine wrote two Books Contra adversarios legis Calvin wrote against the pestilent Sect of Libertines The Papists calumniate us as if we taught that men are freed from the Decalogue Vide Bellarm. de justificat l. 4. c. 5. David à Mauden Discurs moral in decem Decalogi Praecepta Discursum primum Decal praevium But that we urge the obedience of the Moral Law as well as they do and upon better Arguments and reasons then they do See B. Down of the Coven of Grace c. 7. He shews also there chap. 5. how our Saviour hath delivered us 1. From the curse of the moral Law 2. The rigour and exaction 3. The terrour and coaction of it And 4. From the irritation of it See M. Burgess his Vindiciae Legis Lect. 17. 22. It is a Question diversly disputed by Divines both Popish and Protestant Bellarm. de Iust. l. 4. c. 6. Zanch. de ●e●emp l. 1. c. 11. Thes. 1. Whether the moral Law binde Christians as it was delivered by Moses and the Prophets or only as it was engraven in the hearts of all men by nature and as it is renewed in the Gospel by Christ and his Apostles That opinion that the Law as it was given by Moses and the Prophets and written in the Old Testament doth binde Christians is better and more safe The moral Law of the Old Testament is pronounced spiritual holy good just and eternal Psal. 10. 8 9. Rom. 7. 10. d The Antinomists interpret those words of Christ in this sense He came not to destroy the Law but to fulfill it that is he came not to destroy it with out fulfilling it in his own person he hath destroyed it unto the person of every beleever Rom. 10. 4. One distinction well heeded and rightly applied will clear the whole point concerning the abrogation and obligation of the moral Law under the New Testament The Law may be considered either as a rule or as a Covenant Christ hath freed all believers from the curse and rigor of the Law considered as a Covenant Rom. 10. 4. ●ut he hath not freed them from obedience to the Law considered as a Rule D. Sanders on 1 Pet. 2. 16. Believers are freed from whatsoever in the Law is hurtful unprofitable burdensome e Christ as Mediatour was subject to the moral Law Rom. 8. 13. Gal. 2. 11. 4. 4. The Law requires as perfect obedience of us as of Adam in innocency under the danger of contracting guilt though not of incurring death This opinion carries Libertinism and Familism in the womb of it if the Law have nothing to do with me what ever I do I do not sin Jam. 1. 23 24. The Law is a Judge by 1. Condemning the sinner passeth the sentence of death upon a man Rom. 7. 9. 2 Cor. 3. 8 9. Hos. 6. 5. 2. By holding a man under this conviction and self-condemnation Gal. 5. 22 23. Lex est career spiritualis verè inferuus See Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 2. Job 13. 26. f The Lord for brevity and our infirmity sake nameth only in every Commandment either the most horrible sin forbidding it or else the most singular vertuo commanding it Rom. 6. 17. 7. 14. Psal. 119. 167. 1 Chron. 29. 14. g M. Perkins on Jude v. 1. He that keeps one Commandment because God enjoyns it will keep all the rest because the same authority enjoyns all Psal. 119. 6. Integrity and sincerity is the scope of the Law Deut. 5. 27. The substantial duties of the first Table are greater then the substantial duties of the second Table as love of God then love of my neighbour and my father but the substantial duties of the second Table are greater then the ceremonial duties of the first it is better to save the life of a beast then hear a Sermon h Praecepta affirmativa obligant semper sed non a● semper negativa semper ad semper say the Schoolmen Josh. 6. 4. Gen. 22. 1 2. 1 King 20. 27 35. 1 King 11. 30. Judg. 3. 20 21. 11. 1 2. Isa. 20. 2. Fines mandatorum sunt diligenter observandi ex causis dicendi habenda est intelligentia dictorum Hilarie Matth. 5. 33 34 35 36. The end of every Commandment saith the Apostle is love out of a pure heart the immediate end of the Commandments of the first Table love to God of the second love to my neighbour 1 Cor. 13. per tot The Law by some one particular or part meaneth the general and whole as an Idol is put for any means of false worship Parents for all betters Killing for any hindering of life Thou for every one or none Estey upon the Command Josh. 6. 18. 7. 1. 22. 13 14 17 18. Psal. 34 3. Levit. 19. 17 1 Sam. 15. 28. 1 Sam. 3. 13. 2 Sam. 13. 28. 1 King 21. 19. Exod. 19. 6 7 8. 20. 1. Mat. 19. 17 18 19. 1 Tim. 4. 7 8. 2. 2. 2 Pet. 3. 11. Matth. 22. 37. Jansen Harm Evang. c. 81. Chemnit Har. Evang. c. 105. Luk. 10. 29. Gal. 6. 10. Mic. 2. 10. Rom. 1. 29. Mat. 5. 45 46. Greenham For the order of the Commandments it we account from the fi●st to the last they are of greatest perfection which are last described and he who is arrived to that severity and dominion of himself as not to desire his neighbours goods is free from actual injury but vices are to take their estimate in the contrary order he that prevaricates the first Commandment is the greatest sinner in the world and the least is he that only cove●s without any actual injustice D. Taylor of the life and death
soul. 2. It separates the heart from lusts and the world 3. Alters and changeth the customs of men 4. It keeps the heart up against all the power of the devil It quickneth the dull Psal. 119. 93 107. comforteth the feeble Rom. 15. 4. giveth light to the simple Psal. 19. 7. convinceth the obstinate 1 Cor. 12. 3. 14. 24. reproveth errors rebuketh vices 2 Tim. 3. 16. is a discerner of the thoughts 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. and aweth the conscience Iam. 4. 12. 10. The Candour and Sincerity of the Pen-men or Amanuenses respecting Gods glory only and not their own and in setting down not only the sins of others but their own slips and infirmities doth testifie that they were guided by the holy Ghost Moses shews his disobedience Numb 11. 11. Ionah his murmuring Ionah 1. 4. Ieremiah his fretting Ier. 20. 14. David shames himself in his Preface to the 51 Psalm St Mark wrote the Gospel out of Peters mouth and yet the denial of Peter is more expresly laid down by the Evangelist Saint Mark then any other and Paul sets down with his own Pen his own faults in a sharper manner then any other Matthew the Evangelist tels us of Matthew the Publican The Pen-men of the holy Scripture were holy men called sent inspired by the Spirit which had denied the world with the lusts and affections thereof and were wholly consumed with zeal for the glory of God and salvation of men 2 Pet. 3. 15. 2 Tim. 3. 16. Matth. 16. 17. Gal. 2. 11 12. Ephes. 2. 3 5. They learned not of men what they wrote Moses David Amos were Herdsmen Ieremiah was almost a childe Peter Iames and Iohn were in their ships other Apostles were unlearned before their Calling Acts 4. 13. Moses learned of the Aegyptians and Daniel of the Caldeans humane Arts and Sciences but they could not learn of them the knowledge of the true God they themselves being ignorant and grosse Idolaters Neither could they erre in that which they delivered for by them the Spirit of Christ and Christ himself did speak 1 Pet. 1. 11. 2 Pet. 1. 21. Acts 28. 25. 2 Cor. 13. 3. In their own judgement the most holy did erre as 1 Sam. 16. 1. and Nathan 2 Sam. 6. which errour is truly related in the Scripture but when they spake according to the guidance of the Spirit which did ever assist them in the penning of the Scripture they could not erre I have learned saith Augustine to Ierom to give this honour only to the Canonical Books firmly to believe that no author of th●m erred in writing from all others he expected proof from Scripture or Reason 11. The wonderful Consent singular Harmony and Agreement of the Scriptures shews that they came not from men but from God Luk. 1. 70. Acts 3. 18. Iohn 5. 46. each part sweetly agreeth with it self and with another and with the whole Acts 26. 22. 11. 17. Luke 24. 27 44. Iohn 5. 46. Matth. 4. 4. what was foretold in the Old is fulfilled in the New Testament If there seem any contrariety either in numbring of years circumstance of time and place or point of Doctrine The fault is in our apprehension and ignorance not in the thing it self and by a right interpretation may easily be cleared See D. Willet on Gen. 24. 38. Doctor Vane in his lost Sheep returned home Chap. 2. saith Seeing no man is infallibly sure that all the answers used to reconcile the seeming contradictions of Scripture are true no man can be assured by the evidence of the thing that there is that perfect Harmony in the Scriptures nor consequently that they are thereby known to be the word of God Moreover if we were infallibly assured that there were this perfect Harmony in the Scriptures yet this to me seemed not a sufficient proof that they are the Word because there is no reason forbids me to believe that it may not be also found in the writings of some men yea I make no question but it is to be found and that with lesse seeming contradiction then is in the Scripture yet no man accounts that this proves their writings to be the Word of God After he saith We believe it to be harmonious because it is the Word of God not to be the Word of God because it is harmonious which we do not infallibly see How well this agrees with what I have in the margent quoted out of Bellarmine who urgeth that as an argument to prove the Scripture to be from God let the intelligent Reader judge Vid. Aberic Gent. Ad. 1. Mac. Disput. c. 10. These considerations strengthen this Argument 1. The length of time in which this Writing continued from Moses untill Iohn to whom was shewed the last authentical Revelation which prevents all conceits of forgery since they were not written in one nor yet in many ages 2. The multitude of Books that were written and of Writers that were imployed in the service 3. The Difference of place in which they were written which hinders the Writers conferring together Two other Arguments may evince this Truth that the Scriptures were from God 1. Miracles both of 1. Confirmation which the Lord shewed by Moses Exod. 19. 16. 24. 18. 34. 29. the Prophets 1 King 17. 24. Christ himself and the Apostles for the confirmation of their Doctrine such as the devil was not able to resemble in shew The raising of the dead the standing still and going back of the Sunne the dividing of the red Sea and the Rivers the raining of manna in so great a quantity daily as to suffice all the multitude in the wildernesse the making of the barren fruitfull My works testifie of me saith Christ and Believe the works which I do if you will not believe me See Ioh. 15. 24. 2. Preservation of the Books of the Scripture from the fury of many wicked Tyrants which sought to suppresse and extinguish them but could not As God caused it to be written for the good of his people so by Divine Providence he hath preserved the same whole and entire Here we have three Arguments in one 1. The hatred of the Devil and his wicked Instruments against the Scripture more then any other Book Antiochus burnt it and made a Law That whosoever had this Book should die the death 1 Macchab. 1. 56. Yet secondly It was preserved maugre his fury and the rage of Dioclesian Iulian and other evil Tyrants Thirdly The miserable end of Iulian Antiochus Epiphanes Herod Nero Domitian and Dioclesian and other Persecutors of this Doctrine The Books of Salomon which he wrote of natural Philosophy and other knowledge the profitablest books that ever were the Canon excepted are perished but those alone which pertain to godlinesse have been safely kept to Posterity which is the rather to be observed since many more in the world affect the knowledge of natural things
Tali quaestione nullus pulsabatur Pelagianis nondum litigantibus securius loquebantur Austen himself saith Moulin at the first spake inconsideratly of this point but after his con●lict with the Pelagians he accurately handled this question like a stout Champion for the truth whom Prosper and Fulgentius followed CHAP. IV. Of Actual Sin THis distinction of sin into Original and Actual is according to Scripture Deut. 29. 18. Matth. 17. 17 18. 12. 34 35. Luke 6. 43. It is a hard thing for any to tell exactly what sin is 1 Iohn 3. 4. Sin is the transgression of the law The Greek word is a privative word an anomy irregularity illegality The Greek and Hebrew word for sin signifies a missing the mark Peccare est quasi transilire lineam actus indebitus contra debitum finem Ambrose saith it is a prevarication of the Divine law Austen saith it is Dictum factum or concupitum contra aeternam legem A saying deed or thought against the eternal law It may be defined thus It is a defect declination or aberration from the Law or Will of God obliging to eternal death Or thus It is a transgression of the Law of God by omitting some duty which it requireth or doing of some act which it forbiddeth Rom. 7. 7. Chemnitius hath gathered eight names of sin out of the Old Testament and eight out of the New Gerhard hath added eight more twenty four in all See Exo. 34. 7. Psa. 12. 13. it is called a turning away from God a defection rebellion abomination filthinesse and lewdnesse Ezek. 24. 13. stubbornnesse Deut. 29. 19. perversenesse Isa. 30. 10. provocation the metaphoricall names are innumerable The divers distinctions of sin Many have written great Volumes about the divisions of sin who can set out the severall kindes of it They may be taken from the persons which commit it or the object against whom they are committed God immediatly as those of the first Table irreligion unbelief our neighbour injustice oppression and our selves as gluttony intemperance from the subject wherein they are the outward and inward man 2 Cor. 7. 1. Inward of the minde will and affections only Eph. 2. 3. Tit. 3. 3. Heb. 3. 9. Psal. 10. 3. or outward committed by the members of the body also Rom. 6. 19. Eph. 2. 3. Gal. 5. 16. Isa. 59. 3. Psa. 36. 3 4. and 53. 1 2. From the canses that produce it ignorance or knowledge Iam. 4. ult Sins 1. of ignorance when a man doth evil not knowing or marking it to be evil by reason of his ignorance of the Law or of the fact done Lev. 5. 17. Luke 23. 34. 1 Tim. 1. 19. Psal. 29. 12. 2. Of knowledge when a mans sins knowing that which he doth to be evill Rom. 7. 14 15. From the acts of sin of omission when a good prescribed is left undone in respect of substance manner or measure Of commission when a thing forbidden is committed Eze. 18. 24. and both these are either against the Law Rom. 3. 27. or Gospel Heb. 2. 2 3. 2 Thes. 1. 7 8. From the manner of committing them out of infirmity or obstinacy secret or open sins 1 Tim. 5. 24. A sin of negligence or infirmity when a man is overtaken or prevented with some sin before such time as he doth seriously consider of the fact Gal 6. 1. Heb. 12. 1 2. Of obstinacy or purpose when a man upon deliberate counsell and purpose of heart doth do that which he knows is offensive in the sight of God This division is in expresse words laid down Numb 15. 12. Psa. 19. 13 14. 2 Pet. 3. A presumptuous sinne is 1. against light 2. It is done with deliberation usually 3. They bear themselves upon the mercy and free grace of God Some say there are two things in sin the blot or blemish whereby the soul is stained 2. The guilt of it whereby we become actually obnoxious to the curses of the Law Others say there are four things in sin 1. culpa the fault 2 macula the stain 3. reatus the guilt 4. dominium the reign of sin The fault is so essentially inseparable to a sin that it can never be taken away but covered the other three are taken away by Christ Rom. 8. 2. Titus 1 15. Heb. 12. 15. Answerable to these three powers of sinne are Christs three Offices 1. His Kingdome takes away the reign of sinne his priesthood the guilt of sin and his prophetical office the stain of it Psa. 1 19. 9. Secondly the stain of sin The defilemen● blot and blacknesse of sin is the absence and privation of that morall rectitude the want of that whitenesse and righteousnesse which the holy Law of the Lord requireth to be in the actions inclinations and powers of the soul of a reasonable creature The soul is deprived of that native beauty it had in the sight of God Sin is compared to a menstruous cloth a plague-sore vomit mire called an excrement Iam. 1. 2. it defiles the soul and the very land Hos. 4. 4. the Sanctuary of God Ezek. 44. 7. the Sabbaths of God Exo. 20. 16. the Name of God Exo. 20. 39. God himself in the eyes of the people Ezek. 13. 19. facinus quos inquinat aequat It is compared to the leaven which hath three properties say the Fathers ser●it infla● inficit To a leprosie which was 1 Loathsome 2 Secret lurking in the bloud Lev. 13. 2. 3 Spreads 4 Infects see 13 and 14 Chapters of Lev. 3. The guilt Some what which issueth from the blot and blacknesse of sinne according to which the person is liable and obnoxious to eter●all punishment There is a twofold guilt sinfull and paenall reatus culpae poenae the guilt of sin as sin this is all one with sin being the very essence soul and formall being of sin and is removed in sanctification 2. Reatus poenae reatus formalis seu actualis the actuall guilt or obligation of the person who ●ath sinned to punishment this is fully removed in justification There is a double guilt of sin 1. ●●reditary this comes on all by Adam 2. Personall by the actings of sin This is likewise twofold 1. Intrinsecal the merit of sin this is inseparable from it it deserves eternal wrath 2. Extrinsecall a guilt which God hath added to it a power which it hath to binde over the sinner to the just vengeance of God untill he hath made him an amends There is a four-fold guilt of sinne 1. Reatus culpae which is an inseparable consequence of the offence there is as necessary a connexion between the sin and guilt as between the precept and the curse in the Law 2. Reatus poenae an obligation and ordination to punishment this may be separated from the sinne the damned in hell blaspheme God but are not punished for it 2 Cor. 5. 10 3. Reatus personae a guilt that comes upon the person this is
divers grounds and roots of Apostacy 1. Unbelief Heb. 3. 12. ult Faith unites the soul to Christ and preserves it in him by it we stand 2. The love of the world 1 Tim. 6. 9. 1 Iohn 2. 15. 3. Living in the practice of a known sin 2 Thes. 2. 10 11. 4. Carnall security 5. Needlesse society with wicked men and base fear Remedies against Apostacy 1. Labour to be well principled in the grounds of Religion 2. Keep your hearts in continual fear Blessed is he that feareth alwaies this will keep a man low in his own eyes Pride of parts and gifts betrayes men to errour 3. Be sincere live up to your knowledge 1 Tim. 1. 19. He that begins in hypocrisie many times ends in Apostacy Blasphemy According to the notation of the Greek word it signifies to hurt ones fame or credit yea in the Hebrew also a blasphemer of God is said to strike through the name of Jehovah Lev. 24. 16. It was so detested of old that whereas it had a name yet they did expresse it by an Antiphrasis and used the word blessing instead of cursing 1 King 21. 10. The Jews were wont to rend their garments at the hearing of the name of God blasphemed Isa. 30. ult 37. 1. Acts 14. 14. to expresse the rending of their hearts with grief and indignation The School Divines thus describe it If one deny any thing concerning God which agrees to him or affirm any thing of him which doth not agree to him or when that is attributed to the creature which belongs to the Creator Vide Aquin. secunda secundae Q. 13. Art 1. The Name of God is blasphemed in regard of the matter and manner In regard of the matter God is blaspheamed two waies either Privatively by taking away from him that which is due unto him and wherein his honour consisteth Or Positively By attributing that unto him which is unbeseeming his Majesty dishonourable to his great Name In regard of the manner when any thing is spoken of God ignominiously contemptuously as Exodus 5. 2. 2 Kings 6. 33. Dan. 3. 15. I would I were able to resist God said Francis Spira Gregory the 9th reckoned three famous impostors of the world Moses Mahomet and Christ. Iulian blasphemed Christ living and dying The Heathens would never suffer their Gods to be blasphemed but punished such as were guilty thereof by the power of the Magistrate Socrates was put to death for blaspheming their multiplicity of Gods Master Burroughes Irenicum chap. 5. The very Turks who account of Christ but as a great Prophet and powerfull in word and deed inflict death upon that man that speaketh blasphemies against Jesus Christ. Hereticks ought to be put to death now as well as false prophets under the law the equity of the judicial law remains of putting blasphemers to death Cartw. against Whit. When Servetus condemned Zuinglius for his harshnesse he answers In aliis mansuetus ero in blasphemiis in Christum non ita In other things I will be mild but not so in blasphemy against God For immediate blasphemy against God himself it was capitall Levit. 24. 16. The Civil law herein followeth the Divine law Blasphemi ultimis suppliciis afficiantur Others have punished this sin with cutting off or plucking out the tongue and that deservedly for that tongue is unworthy ever to speak more that shall dare once to speak against its Creator Lewis the 9th King of France stiled the Saint publisht an Edict for the burning of blasphemous persons in the lips A Noble man having offended in that kinde and being brought to the King many interceded for him that such an infamous punishment might be changed to another The King would not hearken to their requests but said he himself would take it for an honour to be marked so on his forehead if by that means he might drive away that enormous sin out of his Kingdom Helps against it 1. Labour for a distinct well-grounded knowledge in the principles of Christian Religion Iude 10. 2. Receive the love of the truth 2 Thess. 2. 11. 3. Walk in the truth 2 Iohn 4. 2 Cor. 13. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 14. 4. Pray earnestly Iude v. 24. It s a Question among the Schoolmen Utrum damnati blasphement Aquinas thinks it credible that after the resurrection they shall vocally blaspheme as the Saints shall vocally praise God And some say Damnati dum blasphemant Deum in hoc peccant because they are bound to an eternal law After this life the demerit of sin ceaseth you shall give an account for the things done in the body 2 Cor. 5. 10. The soul sins after but shall not be judged for those sins as in heaven good actions Pertinent ad beatitudinis praemium so in hell evil actions Pertinent ad damnationis paenam saith Aquinas in the same place Of Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost It is called the great transgression Psal. 19. 12. and blasphemy against the Spirit Matth. 12. Blasphemy against the Spirit is When a man doth maliciously and proudly revile and despite the truth of the Gospel and Word of God which he certainly knoweth It is called the blasphemy against the Spirit because it is against the knowledge wherewith a man is lightened by the Spirit of God Cartw. on Matth. 12. 31. It is called the sin against the holy Ghost not that it is only against the third Person in the Trinity the three Persons make but one Divine Essence but because it is a direct opposition and resistance of the light of knowledge with which the holy Ghost hath enlightened it Non dicitur blasphemia Spiritus ratione personae illius sed ratione propriae ipsius in hominibus energiae quatenus Spiritus Sanctus est is qui in veritatis lucem introducit Rivet in Exod. 30. Vide Thom. Aquin. 2da 2dae quaest 14. Artic. 1 2 3 4. It is called sin against the holy Ghost not in respect of the Essence but of the Office of the holy Ghost this sin is all malice wilfull without any infirmity he being pleased with malice for it selfs sake Capell of Tentat part 2. c. 3. Origen as Bellarm. l 2. de Paenitentia c. 16. alledgeth thought that every sin committed against the law of God after Baptism was the sin against the holy Ghost so Novatus Austen makes it finall impenitency The Shoolmen say any sin of malice It is conceived by some that the presumptuous sin in the old Testament is the same with or answers to the sin against the holy Ghost in the new and that which leads to this apprehension is because no sacrifice was appointed for that under the Law as this is said to be unpardonable under the Gospel Heb. 10. 20. but by Psal. 19. 12. it seems to be a pitch of sinning beyond presumption It is described to be a general Apostacy and revolt of a man wilfully fallen from the truth known even to a malicious persecuting
and hooting at him out of disdain as accounting him undoubtedly a blasphemous impostor because pretending to be the Messiah from whom they looked for the restitution of their earthly Kingdom he was so farre from doing that as now he could not so they thought deliver himself from the hands of men Then Pilate sets him in balance with a seditious murderer and they require the murderer to be saved and him to be crucified renouncing him and denying him before Pilate as not the lawfull King of the Jews but a grand Impostor and will have no nay but with importunate clamours inforce the timerous Judge to condemn him Now is sentence solemnly pronounced upon him That for as much as he was a Seditious person a Traitor and one that went about to usurp the Kingdom against the Royal dignity of C●sars Imperiall Majesty therefore he should be taken by the Roman Officers and led to a place without the City where malefactors used according to the fashion of the Romans with their basest slaves to be nailed to a Crosse and so hang till they were dead No sooner was the sentence passed but that it began to be executed The souldiers seize upon him and having gotten him as a Dove among Kites a Sheep among Lions they sport themselves with mocking deriding and abusing him by words and gestures of counterfeit honour which are the greatest dishonours thereby upbraiding him with folly that would needs make a King of himself To the place of crucifying they lead him bearing his own Crosse till he being spent with watching bleeding wearinesse and grief was no longer able to bear it then they compelled another whom they met to bear one end of it after him So being arrived at the dismall place of dead mens skuls they offer him the potion of malefactors wine mingled with myrrhe as it is thought to intoxicate his brain which he refusing they stretch his hands and legs till all his bones might be told and so nailing one hand to one horn of the Crosse the other to the other and his feet to the stump at the bottom they leave him hanging and that also betwixt two theeves with a scornfull superscription of his fault I. N. R. I. Ierusalem was chosen for the place of his suffering Ibi peractum est verum hoc summum sacrificium ubi reliqua legis sacrificia umbrae istius Ludovic Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 15. His soul was filled with unspeakable grief in the sense of the curse of the Law which there he bare and so vehement was his anguish that he cried out for thirst when they gave him the cold comfort of a little vinegar and gall with a scoff to make it relish the bitterer Let us see if Elias will come All the people wagge their heads at him the Pharisees they insult over him with Oh thou that didst destroy the Temple His poor mother and some friends stood by and lamented him till at the end of three full hours he mightily crying did give up the ghost into his Fathers hands So he died a most vile and shamefull death a most hard and painfull a most execrable and cursed death the death of the Crosse. The death of the Crosse was 1. A shamefull death Heb. 12. 2. 13. 13. Isa. 53. 12. A filthy death Alexander ab Alexandro so termeth it Mors turpissima Bernard Therefore Iulian called Christ the crucified or staked God And the Jews continue still in railing on Christ and cursing him and ignominiously call him Talui him that was hanged in which the Christians glory Gal. 6. 14. They teach their children to curse Christ. The Turks mock us at this day with our crucified God He died In medio latronum tanquam latronum maximus He was counted a malefactour by wicked men Matth. 26. 65. Good men lookt on him as an Impostor Luk. 24. 21. God lookt on him as a malefactour Heb. 9. 28. Tully saith Facinus est vincire civem Romanum scelus verberare quid dicam in crucem tollere It is a great offence to binde a Citizen of Rome a greater to beat him the greatest to set him on the Crosse. 2. It is a painfull death He endured the crosse Heb. 12. 2. Christs strong cries like womens in their travell argued strong pain Acts 2. 24. see Lament ● 24. Bruising hath pain Gen. 3. 15. Isa. 53. 10. He was nailed in the hands and feet the most sinewy and sensitive parts Psal. 22. 16. 3. It was a cursed death Gal. 3. 13. that is yielded himself to a cursed death for us so the Fathers glosse it It was a cursed death by the decree and appointment of God Deut. 21. 23. Christs hanging on the Crosse seems to be prefigured by the Heave offering of which the Law makes mention and the brazen Serpent Numb 21. 1. was a Type of Christ crucified Iohn 3. 14 15. 12. 32 33. The reason was That he might free us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. The Prince of darknesse would not let so great an advantage passe without proving once more whether in this last hideous pang of death he might not prevail to have fastened some stain of sinne upon the pure soul of that immaculate and now dying Lamb of God He could not have fitly been said to have triumphed over them on the Crosse if he had not properly grappled and fought with them there wherefore assuredly the whole band of that hellish kingdom of darknesse was let loose upon our Saviour he having at once the Creator and the creatures men and devils against him and yet maintaining himself in perfect faith and patience might indeed make a full satisfaction to the Divine justice for the miserable disobedience of man Christ died for the reprobate five waies 1. By way of proclamation Remission of sins is proclaimed to thee if thou wilt beleeve Luke 24. 47. Act. 13. 38. 10. 43. 2. By way of obligation Thou art bound to beleeve that thy sins may be forgiven thee in Christ Mark 1. 15. Rom. 7. 2. 3. By way of obsignation 4. By way of generall merit Iohn 3. 16. 5. By way of special intention too for all that thou knowest Act. 8. 22. M. Fenners Hidden Manna That is an Argument of great fame but little credit used by the Arminians Quod unusquisque tenetur credere hoc verum c. That which every one is bound to beleeve is true But every one is bound to beleeve that Jesus Christ died for him Therefore it is true that Jesus Christ died for every one The first object of faith is not to beleeve that Christ died for us but that there is salvation in no other Act. 4. 12. To beleeve that Christ died for me is one of the heights of Religion Rom. 8. 33. Gal. 2. 20. Faith is grounded on the word assurance on experience A wicked man going on in sin is not
resolved upon it 1. Motives to Conversion They may be taken from every place Heaven Earth and Hell From Heaven look to God his Angels and Saints From Earth look to your selves the godly and ungodly nay the beasts From Hell look to the Devils and damned ghosts From Heaven First Look to God the Father Son and holy Ghost Is it not a most desirable thing to turn to him seeing he is so rightful a Lord so great a Prince and so gracious a Father so willing to accept us and hath given us means time and commandments and encouraged us with promises of acceptance and threatned us if we do not and complains that they have not turned to him who smote them God hath sent his Son into the world that converts might be graciously received Secondly Christ himself is a weighty argument of conversion for if we refuse to turn then we do what in us lies to frustrate his death and to make him shed his bloud in vain seeing it is intended for the benefit only of such as turn In Christ you may see the hatefulnesse of sinne from which you are to turn and the graciousnesse of God to whom Thirdly The holy Ghost striveth to bring you to this turning in his Ordinances Gen. 6. 3. and will you suffer him to prevail Secondly The blessed Angels will rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner All the Saints in Heaven have given you examples of converting and are now glad of their pains bestowed that way Secondly Look to the Earth and there to your selves first consider 1. That you are out of the way Psal. 14. 53. 119. ult and know that you are so 2. That you have bound your selves by Covenant to convert when you were baptized and as often as you come to the Supper 3. You have and do daily make profession of converting 4. You can by no means save your selves out of the hands of Gods justice if you do not submit and convert to him Secondly The Duty it self is 1. Most reasonable and equal because the wayes are evil from which and good to which we are wished to turn 2. Most needful without it we cannot escape the greatest misery 3. Most profitable Turn and live by continuing in our evil wayes we may get a little perishing profit vanishing pleasure and bewitching credit by turning from them we shall gain pardon of sins past peace and joy of soul for the present and eternal life hereafter When the sinner turneth I will blot out all his sins out of my remembrance 4. Likely to succeed if we set to it in earnest Prov. 1. 24. Let us labour to grieve for our sins by a serious applying of the threats of God humbly confesse them and resolve by Gods help to leave them You will not come to me that you may have life Secondly Look to the godly in the world They pray for it they will further it rejoyce in our conversion they will love and esteem us when converted To the ungodly by this means we may perhaps win them or shall leave them without excuse Yea look to other creatures in the bad we hate incorrigiblenesse in evil we dislike the creatures which have gotten an evil quality and will not leave it We like and praise obedience in the good Thirdly Look upon Hell 1. On the Devil he seeks to hinder thy conversion will be vexed at it he is most loathsome because obstinate in evil The Devils worst property is that he is now so hardened in evil that there is no possibility of change in him Wilt thou be like the Devil in that which is the worst thing in him Besides thou abusest and neglectest grace offered and so doth not he 2. The damned Ghosts who because they did not convert are damned and blame themselves for not turning when they had time and now it is too late 2. Means of Conversion First Take notice of your own strayings and unconvertednesse and your peril thereby Secondly Acknowledge your utter inability to convert your selves and therefore cry earnestly to God to convert you as the Church doth Turn me and I shall be turned Turn presently and begin with that sin which hath most drawn thee away from God 3. Remove Hinderances 1. Outward 1. Ill company 2. The occasions of sin Salomon adviseth the young man not to come near the corner of the Harlots house and the drunkard not to look on the wine 2. Inward 1. Love of earthly things 2. Presumptuous and despairful fancies 3. Hardnesse of heart and wilfulnesse in sinning 4. Use all Helps and Furtherances 1. Outward good company attend on all Gods Ordinances hearing reading Psal. 19. conference 2. Inward Cherish and practise good motions ponder on the Law and Gospel think often and seriously on those quatuor novissima Death Judgement Heaven and Hell Of Free-will The word it self is Terminus Ecclesiasticus not Biblicus not a Scripture-term but such a one as godly men in the Church took up for more convenient expression as they have done the name Trinity and Sacrament To render Liberum arbitrium into English is not proper for arbitrari and arbitrium is an act of the understanding but use hath applied it to the will A mixed power of understanding and will saith Mr Perkins It can be onely in an intelligent nature as Bellarmine proves lib. 3. de Grat. Lib. Arb. c. 15. and the understanding though it be not formally free yet it is radically and the liberty of the will ariseth from the indifferency of the judgement The liberty of the will properly consists in choosing that which the understanding judgeth best Radix libertatis constituta est in libero rationis judicio Aquin. There is in the will a double freedom 1. Natural a power that a man hath to choose or refuse as it seemeth good to himself and this is so annexed to or dependant on his reasonablenesse that they cannot be separated and this he hath not nor could loose by corruption 2. Sanctified an inclination to use the former liberty well by choosing that he ought to choose and this he hath lost when now he will choose and refuse what he ought not Or thus Free-will may be considered either in the essence and being of it as it is an immediate faculty of the soul and the same with the will we have this free-will for Adam by his fall hath no more lost this then he hath lost his very nature it is therefore a great calumny of the Papists when they say That we deny free-will and make man no better then a beast for take free-will thus as it is a natural power in a man so it remaineth still The free-will of man after the fall is not so corrupted that it is not capable of the grace of Regeneration Tolle liberum arbitrium non erit quod salvetur tolle gratiam non erit unde salvetur Bern. There is a threefold power 1. Activa an ability to concur
repentance When God called his people to renew their Covenant there was a special humiliation before Ezra 8. 21. Isa. 6. When Ioshua was called to build the Temple and be an high-Priest to God Zech. 3. When they were to come to the Sacrament they were to examine themselves thorowly and judge themselves so Exod. 19. 14. Else our unworthinesse may stand as a bar that we shall not comfortably go on in the work of the Lord Gen. 35. begin Fourthly When we look to receive any special mercy when we either need or expect by vertue of a promise that God will do some great thing for us as Isaac when he lookt for his Fathers servant to return with a wife Dan. 9. The whole Chapter is the humblest exercise of repentance that we reade of the occasion was he expected that the Lord would now break the Babylonian yoke Moses called the people to deep humiliation and repentance when they were to possesse the Land of Canaan Fifthly The time of death when we expect our change then is a special time for the exercise of the duty of repentance that is a fitter time to finish then begin repentance then we should specially look to our hearts and examine our wayes It was the commendation of the Church of Thyatira that their last works were best and it is the last time that we shall have to do with repentance we carry love and joy to Heaven and most of the Graces except Faith and Hope there shall be no use of them when we go hence we go to the greatest Communion with God that the creature is capable of Esther the night or two before she went to lie with Ahashuerus was most carefull to have her body perfumed and oiled Motives to provoke us to the practice of Repentance two especially which are the great Motives to any duty 1. The necessity of it 2. The Utility of it I. The Necessity of it Repentance is necessary to remission 1. Necessitate praecepti Ezek. 18. 30. 2. Necessitate medii one must condemn his sinne and loath himself and prize a pardon afore he obtain it Ezek. 20. 43. Luke 7. 47. The Schoolmen demand why repentance should not make God satisfaction because it hath God for its object as well as sin 2 Cor. 7. 10. The offence takes it measure from the object the good duty from the subject therfore Christ only could make satisfaction It is necessary because every man must appear before the judgement seat of Christ and receive an everlasting doom and our plea must then be either that we have not sinned or else that we have repented Except ye repent ye shall all perish while one remains impenitent his person and services are abominable in the sight of God Isa. 1. Isa. 66. liable to all the curses written in the book of God The Jews have a Proverb saith Drusius Uno die ante mortem poenitentiam agas Repent one day before death that is every day because thou maist die tomorrow There is an absolute necessity of Repentance for a fruitful and worthy receiving of the Sacrament First Without this there can be no true desire to come to this Supper Faith is the hand Repentance the stomack by a sight of sin we see our want and need of Christ. Secondly Without it there can be no fitnesse to receive Christ. We must eat this Passeover with bitter herbs Thirdly All should labour to have assurance of the pardon of their sins This Cup is the New Testament in my bloud for the remission of sins without repentance there is no remission Act. 5. 31. Fourthly Because sinne is of a soiling nature and doth de●ile Gods Ordinance to a mans soul and if we come in sinne we cannot profit by the Lords Ordinance II. The Utility of it The Necessity of it should work on our fear the Utility of it on our love the two great passions of the soul. First It is infinitely pleasing to Almighty God Luke 15. per totum the intent of three Parables there is to shew what content it is to God to see a sinner to turn from his evil wayes him that had lost his Groat his Sheep and the Prodigal Sonne Secondly The benefit of it is unspeakable to thine own soul. 1. It will remove all evil 1. Spiritual all the guilt of sinne and the defilement of it 1 Iohn 1. lat end Isa. 1. 16 17 18. no more prejudice lies against thee then if thou hadst never sinned against him Mary Magdalen was infamous for her uncleannesse yet Christ first appeared to her after he rose from the dead all the curses due to sin are laid on Christ. 2. Outward Evil When I speak concerning a Nation if they repent I will repent of all the evil I thought to do See Ioel 2. 2. B●ing all Good it brings Gods favour that flows on the soul God hath promised grace and means of grace to such Ier. 3. 13 14 15. Prov. 1. 23. temporal blessing Iob 22. Everlasting life is their portion it is called Repentance unto life Act. 11. 18. Unto Salvation 2 Cor. ●1 10. it is a means conducing to that end Means of Repentance 1. Diligently study to know how miserable your state is without it reade over thy doings that have not been good every day See the evil and danger of sin Acts 2. 21. 3. 17 18. 26. 18. Ier. 31. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 25. 2. Repentance is the gift of God he granted also repentance to the Gentiles beg earnestly at Gods hand that he would make sin bitter to thee and cause thee to hate it Zech. 12. they mourned apart then God poured on the house of David the Spirit of supplication Ier. 3. 18. Turn me Lord and I shall be turned 3. Attend upon the Ministery of the Word the preaching of the Word is called the word of Repentance the preaching of the Law Gods word is a hammer to break the hard heart especially the preaching of the Gospel the discovery of Christ They shall look on him whom they have pierced Rom. 2. The goodnesse of God should leade thee to repentance 4. Faith in the bloud of Christ when thou seest thy self lost and undone venture thy self upon the free grace of God revealed in the Gospel faith in Christ will purifie the heart Acts 15. that is instrumentally the holy Ghost is the principal agent You have received the Spirit by the preaching of faith Three things are required in Repentance 1. The sight of sin by the Law 2. Hearty and continual sorrow for sin by considering the filthinesse and desert of it Gods judgements due for sin his mercies bestowed on us Christs suffering for our sins our own unthankfulnesse notwithstanding Gods benefits 3. Amendment an utter and well-advised forsaking of all sin in affection and of grosse sin in life and conversation Renewing of Repentance lies 1. In renewing a mans humiliation and godly sorrow 2. In renewing his obligation to duty The
consideration of our Saviours death for our sins should be unto us a most powerful motive to repentance Two things are necessary in the point of repentance for sins past to confesse and lament them before God humbly craving pardon and for the time to come to reform and amend our lives casting away all our transgressions and applying our selves to all holinesse and righteousnesse Now to the performance of this duty the death of Christ must needs be to him that considers of it the most effectual argument and mighty motive in the world Do we not here see that the sins we have lived in are most loathsome to God for had he not hated them with infinite hatred would he have inflicted such horrible punishments upon our Saviour his only Son by them Do we not see that they are most dangerous to our selves exposing us to the suffering of intollerable evils unlesse by vertue of Christs death we be freed from them which can never be but upon our Repentance God hath in the death of Christ discovered such infinite abomination of sin and withall such infinite grace to the sinner that this should prevail with us Paul saith All we which are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death and we are buried with him by baptism into his death and we are crucified together with him that the body of sinne may be abolished We must be made partakers of the death of Christ if ever we will be made partakers of his resurrection we must be made conformable to his death if ever we will live and reign with him Marks to know whether our repentance be right 1. If it be speedy and without delay Satan alwayes saith it is either too soon to repent as in youth or too late as in old-age 2. Constant not cast it aside because we repented at our first conversion 3. Voluntary and so a filiall not a forced repentance voluntary repentance speaks love to God forced love to our selves 4. It must be deep and thorow repentance sutable to our sins the greatest sinners if gracious have the greatest sorrow and their joy is the more full after Psa. 22. 4. 2 Sam. 14. 14. III. Love This is a special grace of the Gospel it is a longing desire for the good of our brethren or a willing that good to one which is proper to him There is a double Union First Mystical with Christ the Head by faith and with one another by love Secondly Moral an agreement in judgement and affection Ioh. 17. 11. See 21 22 23. v. Act. 4. 32. Christ was 1. Incarnate for this end that his people might be one Ephes. 1. 10. 2. This is often inculcated in Christs Sermons Iohn 15. 17. He came from heaven on purpose to propound to us a patern of charity Ephes. 5. 2. Unity is the beauty strength and safety of the Church Act. 1. 14. See Isa. 11. 6. 3. Christ died for this end Isa. 2 15 16. 4. Christ aimed at this in his Ascention and pouring out of his Spirit Ephes. 4. 5. 5. It is the end of Christs Ordinances in the Church of Baptism 1 Cor. 12. 13. and of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 10. 17. Every one is bound to love four things saith Augustine First God who is the chiefest good and therefore deserves the chiefest love Secondly Himself God gives no commandment for one to love himself because he commands one to love God as the chiefest good and so to love him as to enjoy him which one cannot do without love of himself Thirdly To love man as man 1 Thess. 3. 12. Fourthly To love all the Saints the brotherhood 1 Pet. 3. 17. those which love Saints as Saints or because Saints must needs love them all Ephes. 1. 15. Col. 1. 4. Philem. 5. Our love must be 1. Sincere or without hypocrisie Rom. 12. 9. it is so when we cleave to what ever is good in him and abhor what is evil in him 2. Fervent 1 Pet. 1. 22. 3. Constant a friend loveth at all times We must also love our enemies Matth. 5. 44 45. It is reported of Iohn that in his old-age being unable by weaknesse to speak long unto the Congregation he would stand up and ●n stead of a long Sermon ingeminate this precept Diligite filioli diligite Little children love love one another The subject of his Epistle is love 1 Iohn 3. 18. He is called the beloved Disciple because he was so full of it himself Christ cals it the new Commandment because excellent or because solemnly renewed by him Iohn 13. 34. These are my Commandments that you love one another This is the great grace which distinguisheth the children of light from the children of darknesse Iohn 13. 35. He that loves not is not of God There are high Elogies of it 1 Cor. 17. We must love our neighbour as our selves Iam. 2. 8. We must neither wish nor do them any more hurt then we would wish or do to our selves 2. We should really promote his good as our own 1 Cor. 10 24. We are 1. To pray for them Heb. 13. 3. 2. Counsel them Heb. 3. 13. 3. Relieve them in their wants Mat. 25. lat end The Sacrament is a Seal of our Communion that we are all one bread and one body It is evident that Christ upon his death instituted that Supper As to be a seal of that Covenant of grace between God and us ratified thereb● So also to be a communion the highest outward pledge ratification and testimony of love and amity among his members themselves M. Thomas Goodwins Christ the universal Peace-maker part 2. Sect. 2. Yet the great wall of separation between the Papists and us is the Sacrament of the Altar and those that are called Lutherans and Calvinists the Lords Supper And this is a grace pressed with the like necessity toward man that saith is toward God The Christians in the Primitive Church did kisse each other at the Sacrament this was called Osculum pacis the kisse of peace in sign of love D. Clerk Some keep themselves from the Sacrament because they are not in charity These men shew manifest contempt to Christ and his blessed Ordinance that rather then they will forsake their malice they will want it 2. Such professe they will live still in malice and have no desire to be reconciled for if they had they need not refuse to receive 2 Cor. 8. 12. The Love-feasts were appointed to signifie their mutual love one to another they were immediately before the receiving of the Sacrament 1 Cor. 11. 21. St Chrysostome makes the love-feasts to be after the taking of the Eucharist They were used to have a great Feast to which all the poor people were invited on the charges of the rich This they did partly in imitation of our Saviour who instituted the Sacrament after a full Supper and partly in expression of their perfect love towards all men These Agapae or Love feasts
time of his Creation the Law that was proclaimed by Gods own mouth upon Mount Sinai which we call the ten Commandments whether it be in force in the Christian Church First Take the true state of the Question betwixt us and the Antinomians that deny the Law to be in force in these distinctions 1. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given to Adam in Paradise as a Covenant of life and death and as it is given in the hand of a Mediatour the Lord Jesus Christ. 2. You must distinguish betwixt the things that are contained in the Law and the binding power of the Law 3. You must distinguish betwixt the principal Law-giver and the ministerial Law-giver 4. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given by God even by the hand of Moses in the true intent and meaning of it and between the interpretation that the Jewish Doctors could make of it 5. You must distinguish betwixt the Law it self and the sanction of it The only Question is about the binding power of the Law that is Whether the things contained in the ten Commandments are by the Lord the great Law-giver commanded now to Christians The Antinomians hold the contrary quid nobis cum Mose the only rule say they they are under is the free Spirit of God enclining them by a holy renewed nature to do that which is good in his sight they are acted by a Law of love and they do the things of the Law but not because commanded in the Law they urge Rom. 6. 14. 1 Tim. 1. 9. But on the other side the Orthodox Divines say That it is true our light is only from Christ and the Spirit of God dwelling in us is the fountain of all the good we doe but yet say they the Lord hath commanded his holy Law to be our Rule which we must look to which if we transgresse we sinne and are to account every transgression of it a sinne and so are to be humbled for it and to walk as those which have offended a gracious God Reasons to prove the moral Law still in force to believers First Some places of Scripture prove it as Mal. 4. 12. Eccles. 13. 4. Matth. 5. 17. Think not saith Christ that I am come to destroy the Law I am not come to destroy but to fulfill it So Matth. 22. 37. Rom. 3. 31. Rom. 7. 22. Rom. 13. 9. Iam. 2. 8 10 11. Ephes. 6. 2. Revel 22. 14. which Scriptures make it clear that believers are under the moral Law Secondly If believers be not under the Law then they do not sin if they do contrary to the Law or neglect the things commanded in the Law For where there is no Law there is no transgression Thirdly Because the Lord when he doth promise in the Old Testament the new Covenant he doth in that Covenant promise to write his Law in their hearts there should be such a sutablenesse between their spirits and the Law of God that they should carry the counterpane of it in their hearts It is a presumptuous speech to say Be in Christ and sinne if thou canst for Davids murder after he was in Christ was a sinne 2 Sam. 12. 13. In many things we offend all Jam. 3. 2. 1 Joh. 1. 8. Some object and say that this is an argument we are freed from it Because their heart is so willing to conform to Gods will that they shall need no other rule to walk by but their own Spirit Answ. If there be that conformity in them yet the readinesse of the childe to obey his Fathers will doth not take off the command of the Father Fourthly The moral Law is in effect nothing but the Law of nature we owe it to God as our Creator Beleevers are freed from the Law 1. As a Covenant of life Do this and live they have no need to look for life that way they have it at a better hand and a cheaper rate for eternal life to them is the gift of God and the purchase of Jesus Christ. 2. From the rigour of the Law 3. The irritation and coaction of it 4. From the condemning power and the curses of it The Law is 1. A glasse to reveal and make known unto us the holinesse of God and the will of God and secondly to make our selves known to our selves by the Law comes the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 20. 2. It is a Foil to set off Christ it drives them out of their own righteousnesse and makes them highly prize Christ and the benefits by him Rom. 7. 24 25. 3. It is a perfect Rule of all our obedience 4. The meditation of the terrours of the Law and the threatnings and curses which the Lord hath denounced against them that break it are one of the sanctified means of grace for the subduing and beating down of corruption Luk. 12. 5. 1 Cor. 9. 29. The Antinomians cry Away with the Law and what hath the Law to do with a Christian and they say that such a one who preacheth things out of the moral Law is a legal Preacher they say the love of God shed abroad in our hearts and the free Spirit is our rule None ought to be legal Preachers that is to preach salvation by keeping of the Law only the Papists are such See Rom. 6. 14. Col. 2. 24. But the Law must be preached as a rule of obedience and as a means to discover sin and convince men of their misery out of Christ Gal. 3. 23. The Law habet rationem speculi fraeni regulae The moral Law is a glasse to reveal sinne and the danger of it a glasse to discover it and a Judge to condemn it 1. A Glasse to reveal sin 2. A Bridle to restrain it 3. A Rule both within and without First A Glasse to reveal sin It discovers 1. Original sin I had not known lust but by the Law 1. It sets before us the Primitive righteousnesse wherein we were created 2. That there is something in us perfectly contrary to all this Colos. 1. 21. Acts 13. 10. 3. It discovers to us the dominion that this sinne hath over us Rom. 6. 12 14. 7. begin 4. Shews a man the filthinesse of this sinne 2 Corinth 7. 1. Iames 1. 21. Titus 1. 15. 5. Shews that this sin hath seminally all sins in it Iam. 1. 14. 1 Iohn 2. 15. 6. It discovers the deceitfulnesse of this sinne Ier. 17. 19. Iam. 3. 15. Act. 13. 10. Iude v. 11. 7. Shews a man the demerit and miserable effect of this sin Rom. 8. 12. 2. Actual sin it shews 1. Every sin dishonours God his glory is denied debased 2. The perfection of the Rule Rom. 7. 12. 3. The harmony of the rule Iam. 2. 10. 4. It s spirituality it discovers the thoughts and intents of the heart 5. The infection of sin to a mans self if it be inward to others if outward it is called rottennesse plague leprosie 6. That one act of sin
adultery when one alone either man or woman is married and the other not married as if Ioseph had abused his Mistresse here if the woman were either married or contracted both were to die if the woman be single we reade no Law of death there is also a double adultery when both the man and woman are married as David and Bathsheba which deserves death also by the Law so married folks do break this Law in regard of others Also secondly in regard of themselves both for the entrance into matrimony and use of it for entrance by a sinfull choice and a sinful proceeding Choice if one choose one within degrees prohibited as he in Corinth his fathers wife his step-mother or one formerly contracted and not justly severed from another Also for manner of proceeding when it is without consent of parents such a marriage is unlawful And so much for the breach in the entrance in the use it is by aversnesse to each other and by abuse These are the things directly forbidden in this Commandment indirectly there are forbidden all occasions of filthinesse and all appearances of it occasions to ones self and others To others by garish and overcostly attire especially the manner of the attire when it is light and fantastical also by impudent and immodest carriage Occasions of lusts to ones self are chiefly three 1. Idlenesse and sloth when men do give themselves leave to neglect their calling this we have examples of in Sodom David and this the Heathens by light of nature have discovered Quaeritur Aegystus quare sit factus adulter In promptu causa est desidiosus erat Secondly Intemperance provokes and nourisheth lust whether it be in meat or drink the Sodomites after fulnesse of bread fell to strange flesh especially drinking wine and strong drink to the inflaming of the body Drunkennesse and uncleannesse commonly go together Hosea 4. 11. Ephesians 5. 18. Iames 5. 5. 1 Pet. 4. 4. Reasons 1. The body is enflamed and the minde then made uncapable of those wise and holy considerations which should resist Satans temptations wine takes away the heart the reason turns a man into a Swine and then into a Goat or Horse 2. Intemperance banisheth modesty which is the keeper of chastity Prov. 47 8 13. Tit. 2. 3. Thirdly Another occasion of lust to ones self is indiscreet venturing upon solitary places chiefly in the dark and conversing with such persons as a man findes himself inclin'd unto in this affection for then is a man out of Gods protection then the Angels cease to guard him and the Spirit to confirm him These be occasions of evil appearances also are light behaviour light attire suspected company Lust is 1. Unseemly for man it makes us unlike God and the holy Angels Alexander knew by two things that he was not God by his lust and sleep 2. It makes us unlike Christians and like Heathens 1 Thess. 4. 5. The Turks keep their Festival-day on Venus-day and the happinesse they did look for is a Paradise of bodily pleasures nay this makes you like the beasts 2. Full of vanity it doth not satisfie Ezek. 16. 18 29 30. Messalina was tired but not satisfied with her lust 3. Full of vexation how many are the fears jealousies and quarrels in the pleasures of lust CHAP. IX The eighth Commandment THou shalt not steal THe sixth Commandment gave charge for preservation of mans life the seventh for the honesty and chastity of the body to keep it holy and undefiled now the Lord cometh a degree lower and sheweth that he doth not onely care for our lives and for our bodies that they may be kept holy but also for our goods and cattel our corn our wares our gold and silver and whatsoever they have that they may be in safety This Commandment enjoyneth men a due carriage in regard of worldly goods This carriage is 1. Inward in judgement will thought affections 2. Outward which concerns the goods of every mans self and of others For our own goods in regard of getting keeping using For getting here is required the having of a lawful Calling and using it lawfully with diligence discretion cheerfulnesse and moderation For keeping is required thrift for using liberality Now for the goods of others there is required justice that is the vertue of giving every one his own The common rules of which are Do as you would be done to and Serve each other in love and the parts are truth and fidelity plainnesse and equity There are several kinds of Iustice. 1. Commutative consisting in a right exchange of one thing for another the principal sorts of which are 1. Buying and selling 2. Setting and letting with taking 3. Borrowing and lending 4. Hiring and labouring for hire 5. Partnership 2. Distributive Iustice stands in a right division and parting of things all things civil in four chief things Matter of Law about meum and tuum publick Lands and Stocks publick Payments and forfeitures and in things sacred Things profane and common wherein we have to deal with man must be rightly distributed and so must things sacred wherein the Lord of Heaven is interessed But one observes that it is an error to be noted among the Expositors of the Decalogue that they rank Sacriledge as a sin of the eighth Commandment when it is a sin of the first Table and not of the second a breach of the loyalty we immediately owe to God and not of the duty we owe to our neighbour To steal or alienate that which is sacred is to rob God not man for he is the proprietary of things sacred Mal. 3. 8 9. He that commits this sin indirectly and by consequent robbeth men too viz. those who live of Gods provision Iulian the Apostate robbed the Church of the Revenues thereof and took away all contributions to Schools of learning that children might not be instructed in the liberal Arts nor in any other good literature He exaggerated also his Sacriledge with scornful jests saying that he did furth●r their salvation by making them poor seeing it was written in their own Bibles Blessed are the poor for theirs is the Kingdome of Heaven All manner of stealing is expresly forbidden Ier. 7. 9. Ephes. 4. 28. Theft is a taking away secretly of another mans goods the owner not knowing of it One is guilty by consenting and agreeing with a thief Rom. 2. or giving him counsel or hiding his fact This is so peculiar a sin in servants as the Latine words which now signifie theeves did at first signifie servants onely as fur was a servant Quid facient Domini audent cum talia fures So latrones robbers were first those which did à latere stipari Object God commands the Israelites to borrow of the Egyptians Exod. 3. 22. to borrow and not to pay is a sin against this Commandment Psal. 37. 21. Answ. 1. The use onely of things is in us the propriety is
still in God 1 Sam. 2. 7. Hos. 2. 9. therefore God may take away one mans Estate and give it to another 2. The Egyptians had forfeited what God had given them therefore it was just with the Lord to take it away 3. He might do it not onely as an act of vindicative justice to the Egyptians but as an act of remunerating justice to the Israelites there being no Magistrates to do them justice and reward them for their service Gen. 31. 9 16. 4. The Hebrew word there used signifies to ask or desire and Iunius and Ainsw on 12. 36. render it not to borrow It may be questioned whether it be just to punish theeves with hanging when the Law of God hath not appointed this punishment Exod. 22. Some therefore think our Law hath been too severe that way and too remisse in case of Adultery Chrysostome saith Ubi damnum resarciri potest non est homini adimenda vita yet by the Law of Moses he that stole a man though he could restore him was punisht with death But there is no comparison say some between goods and the life of a man yet those thieves that either assault a mans person on the high-way or break open a mans house to rob him are great offendors Draco the Law-giver of Athens appointed death to be the punishment of theft Solon mitigated that rigour and punished it with double restitution The Locrians put out his eyes that had stolne ought from his neighbour The Hetrurians stoned them to death There was no Common-wealth where this sin was not highly detested and sharply punished except the Lacedemonians where it was permitted and tolerated for their exercise of warlike Discipline Mr. Gage in his Survey of the West-Indies c. 12. saith in Nicaragua they adjudged not a thief to death but to be a slave to that man whom he had robbed till by his service he had made satisfaction A course saith he truly more merciful and not lesse just then the losse of life Mens excuses for it First It is but a small matter 1. Thou art the more to be condemned is it but a little matter and wilt thou venture that which is more worth then all the world thine own soul for it 2. Thou then maist the better forbear it 3. Hadst thou a tender conscience it would much trouble thee Austin was troubled for his stealing of apples when he was a boy and this he records in his Confessions too he thought it so much 4. By this little the Devil will carry thee to greater it may be in consequence great a great tree groweth from a little Mustard-seed Secondly They do it for necessity Solomon saith If a man steal for necessity men will not much condemn him but he speaks it comparatively with the sin of adultery there can be no necessity to sin though when a man steals that hath enough it is a greater offence Thirdly They have enough from whom they steal This doth not therefore warrant them to pervert all right and justice as if they were Magistrates or God himself to appoint how much every one should have Fourthly They do it secretly they shall not be known nor discovered God and thy own conscience are enough to manifest it to all CHAP. X. The ninth Commandment THou shalt not bear false witnesse against thy Neighbour Hebr. word ●or word Thou shalt not answer about thy neighbour a testimony of falshood That is thou shalt not answer in judgement ei●her for or against thy Neighbour falsly THe word answer is sometimes in Scripture taken more generally for speak as Prov. 15. 1. Matth. 11. 25. and so it is here to be taken as if it had been said Thou shalt not speak any thing whereby thou maist hurt the good name and credit of thy neighbour The former Commandment was concerning our own and our neighbours goods this requireth that we hurt not our neighbours nor our own good name but as occasion shall be given maintain and increase it By neighbour he understands any man for every man is neer to thee by nature of the same blood and flesh Act. 17. 26. Isa. 58. 7. The secret and inward breach of this Commandment consisteth in ungrounded suspition and unjust judging and condemning of our neigbours contrary to the expresse commandment of our Saviour Matth. 7. 1. The outward breach of it is either without speech or with speech Without speech either by gesture or silence By gesture when one useth such a kinde of behaviour as tends to vilifie mock and disgrace his brother Psal. 22. 7. By silence when one holds his peace though he heareth his neighbour slandered and he can testifie of his own knowledge that the things spoken are false and injurious By speech this Commandment is broken either by giving or receiving By giving out speech either true or false One may slander another by reporting the truth if one speak it unseasonably and his end be evil and malicious this was Doegs fault 1 Sam. 22. 21. In speaking that which is false either concerning ones own self or another Concerning himself 1. In boasting and bragging Rom. 1. 30. 2. By excusing those faults we are charged with or are guilty of 3. By accusing as when men in a kinde of proud humility will deny their gifts with an intent to get more credit So much for breaking this Commandment by speaking that which is false concerning themselves Now it follows concerning others and that is either publick or private Publick when the Magistrate or Judge passeth false sentence in any cause that comes to be heard before him Herein also may Counsellors offend when they uphold and maintain an evil Cause for their fee. Witnesses also do offend this way when they come before the Judges and give a false and lying testimony This is a hainous sin as appears by the punishment Deut. 19. 18 19. 2. Private either in unjust accusing or unjust defending That unjust accusing privately is called slandering and back-biting when one will speak ill of his neighbour and falsely behind his back The causes of detracting or back-biting are 1. Want of consideration of our selves Gal. 6. 1. We are not humbled for the world of corruption that is in-bred in us 2. Uncharitablenesse and malice Iam. 3. a malicious heart and reviling tongue go together 3. Pride and envy the Pharisees could not give our Saviour one good word because of their en●ie against him whose way Doctrine and conversation did contradict and obscure theirs 4. An hypocritical affectation of holinesse above others Ex hoc uno pij sumus quod alios impietatis damnamus so the Pharisee dealt with the Publicane so the Papists traduce us as vile they are the onely Saints There are divers waies of back-biting or detracting 1. To impose falsely a fault upon the innocent party as when the Pharisees charged Christ that he was an Impostor and wine-bibber so when Potiphar's wife forged that tale against
influence upon the act and function of Christian life Principia Theologia or Fundamentalia dogmata fundamenta salutis are not the same but differ formally though some of them may be materially coincident Mr Mede in a letter to Mr Hartlib As there are in points of saith fundamental Articles so there are in points of practice fundamentall Duties Master Raynolds on Hosoa 14. 2 3. The foundations of religion must 1. Be held with great certainty 1. Speculative foundations John 17. 3. We must hold one God in three Persons Christ the Mediator 2. Practical John 16. 8. We must be convinced of the sinne of nature the righteousnesse of Christ and the necessity of a holy life and suspect those opinions which advance nature depresse Christ decry good works 2. We must be earnest about the particular explication of these truths 1 Cor. 5. 6. Errour in matter of Justification is dangerous Corollaries n Haeresis est pertinax defensio erroris in fide opinionem aliquam pugnantem cum fundamento ejus ponentis Voet. Haereticus non est nisi qui inverbum fidei peccat Luther in Epist. Galat. c. 1. v. 8. Haereticum tota Ecclesia Christiana inde ab initio in hunc usque diem vocavit cum qui haeresiarcham aliquem sequ●tus negat doctrinam aliquam fundamentalem ad salutem necessariam inter Christianos controversiam Vedel de Arcan Armin. lib. 1. cap. 1. Vide plura ibid. There are damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2. 1. and errours that are capital Not holding the head Col. 2. 19. and such as destroy the faith 2 Tim. 2. 18. o Vide Altingii loc com part 2. p. 262. et Z●nc misc de Magist. Non omnis error est baeresis sed illa tantum quae est contra fundamentum a●t in fundamento fidei pertinaciter defenditur Voet. Some errours do not touch the foundation others do concutere and others do evertere We hold the Lutherans to be true Churches agreeing with us in fundamental points of faith and likewise in being free from Idolatry for albeit they have Images in their Churches which we conceive to be a very dangerous thing yet they do not worship them and although they hold reall presence in the Sacrament yet they do not adore it Dr Twiss his doubting conscience resolved My Lord Faulkland in his Reply to him that answered him about the Romane Infallibilitd pag. 220. to 231. seems to hold the negative Bellar. Tom. 2. l. 3. c. 21. T. Aquin. part 2. Quaest. undecima Articulo tertio Vide Gerhardi loc commun de Magistratu p Part. 3. Philos. Sob Sect. 2. q. 6. Zanch. tom 2. Misc. in cap. de Magistratu Aretius hath written the history of Valentinus Gentilis put to death at Bern. There was a Statute against Lollardi in England and Hugonots in France Haereticus ego tibi tu miht See Statut. of Qu. Eliz. c. 1. Propriè Heretici vocantur qui ea pertinaciter rejictunt quae in sacris Scripturis docentur Daven de judice controv Haeresis est error pugnans cum ●undamento religionis Christianae isque pertinax Altingius Tom. 2. Problem Theol. part 2. Prob. 14. Heresie is an errour in the foundation of Christian Religion taught and defended with obstinacy Perk. on Gal. 5. 20. See more there q Lib. 3 of the Church ch 3. See D. Prideaux his Sermon on 1 Cor. 11. 19. Vide Grotium in Tit. 3. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicuntur ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eligere praeferre est enim haeresis priv●●a aliqua opinio quam quis prae dogmate Christiano fide Catholica sibi amplectendam eligit eamque pertinaciter defendit Gerh. loc commun de ministerio Ecclesiastico c. 8 Ut quis sit propriò dictus haereticus requiritur 1. Ut sit person● in Ecclesiam visibilem per Baptismi Sacramentum recepta 1 Cor. 11. 9. Act. 20. 13. 2. Ut erret in fide sive errorem illum noviter introducat sive ab alio acceptum amplectatur quamvis illud haeresiarchae hoc vero haeretici proprium videri possit 3. ut error directè in ipsi fidei fundamentum impingat 4. Ut errori conjuncta sit malitia ac pertinacia per quam etiam aliquoties admonitus nihilominus obstinatè errorem suum defendat 5. Ut dissensiones scandala in Ecclesia excitet ejusque unitatem scindat Id. ibid. Haeresis consideratur vel in doctrina vel in persona haeresis doctrinae est quando id ipsum quod proponitur est contra sidem Catholicam Orthodoxam Haeresis autem personae quum quis haeresin doctrinae ita proponit ut asserat etiam convictus Cham. de Occ. Pontif. l. 6. Errours are practical or doctrinal onely fundamental or circa-fundamental or neither of the two r See Master Clarks Sermons on Matth. 8. 13. and Master Cranfords Haereseomachia on 2 Tim. 2. 17. s Arius in Alexandria una scintilla fuit Sed quoniam non statim oppressus est totum orbem ejus flamma populata est Aquin. t Ubi supra Cum agitaretur de ista quaestione An morte mulctandi cogendi haeretici in Synodo quadam Londini perrogarentur singulorum sententi● surrexit quidam senex Theologus atque hoc planum esse asserit ex ipso Apostolo Haereticum hominem post unam aut alteram admonitionem d● vita De vita inquit ergo manifestum est haereticos istos homines post unam aut alteram admonitionem ● vita tollendos Erasm. Annotat. in Tit. 3. Vel sola modestia potuisset vitam redimere said Galvin of Servetu●●n opusc Here the Spirit of God sets forth 1. The office of a Magistrate to bear the sword 2. The end which is double 1. The Minister of God for thy good in general 2. To execute wrath on him that doth evil God never committed to any that charge of the body onely and not proportionably the charge of the soul as to Masters Parents Heirs Judg 7. 10. u Magistrates in the Scripture in the Hebrew are called Masters of restraint Qui non vetat peccare cum potest jubet Sene. x M. Hildersam on Psal. 51. 7. Lect. 146. As all blasphemous hereticks Levit. 24. 16. so seducing hereticks are to be put to death The whole 13 Chapter of Deut. is spent about the seducing of false prophets Are not Moses moral Laws of perpetual equity and therefore to be observed in all ages Is blasphemy more tolerable in the New Testament Mr. Cotton on Rev. 16. third Vial. We are not obliged saith Beza to the judicial Laws as they were given by Moses to one people yet so farre we are bound to observe them as they comprehend that general equity which ought to prevail every where By the judicial Laws of the Jews the false prophets and Idolaters were to be put to death Deut. 13. 8 9. 17. 5 6. where there is a moral equity in the precept it is perpetual 1. That
man the more bloudy because they extinguish the light of nature and choak the check of conscience * The Plague Pox Vengeance the Devil take thee The mention of the Devil makes it appear how devilish thou art See Dr Gouges Whole Armour The Sichemites Judg. 9. Goliah 1 Sam. 17. 38. Sbimei the mother of Micah Those rash and vulgar maledictions are very sinful Pestis te abripiat abi in malam rem utinam suspensus esses Dr Ames Cas. of Consc. Est propriè per dolum in verbis per fraudem in factis All the Latine Lewis the eleventh would have his Son Charls the 8th to learn was this Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnare Fraus oritur ex similitudine Alchimy is like gold The Italians have a Proverb He that deceives me once it s his fault but if twice it s my fault De divinationis nomine nolim multum contendere Tantum dico divinationis nomen mihi quoque videri impropriè Astrologicis praedictionibus tribui quoniam is verè dicitur divinare qui interno quodam impulsu non autem ex causis aliqua praedicit Beza Epist. 29. Augurium est divinatio quae ex avium volatu cantu aut pastu capitur diciturque augurium quasi avigerium quia ex gestu avium sumebatur inde tamen transfertur ad quamlibet divinationem Cornel. a● Lap. in Num. 23. Modu● quo exequuntur has divinationes ineptus est meritò à maximis ingeniis etiam inter tenebras derisus per garritus aut volatus avium per pastum pullorum per exta animantium per stridorem soricum per voces temere jactatas Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 13. Vid. Thom. Aquin. 2● 2ae Quaest. 95. Artic. 1 2 3 c. Primum bonum summae Trinitatis est indivisio The Unity in the Trinity is the chiefest thing and the Devil among the vulgar is known by his cloven foot The Pythagoreans have set a note of infamy upon the number of two because it was the first that durst depart from unity Numerus binarius infamis est quia primus ausus est discedere ab unitate elegantly for nothing is so diabolical as division nothing more divine than unity Dr Stoughto●s Happinesse of peace p. 5. Studium partium est maxima pars studiorum See Isa. 9. 21. Ierusalem was destroyed by division of them into parties Iosephus Dum singuli pugnant universi vincuntur Tacitus It was Machiavels maxime Divide Impera See Mr Calamies Sermon on Mat. 12. 25 There is no union or division like that in Religion The breach between the ten and two Tribes began on a State-businesse yet Ieroboam laid the foundation in Religion Speciosum quidem nomen est pacis pulchra est opinio unitatis sed quis ambigat eam solam Ecclesiae atque Evangeliorum unitatem esse quae Christi est Hilarius adversus Arianos Sect in quas Iudaei divisi scindebantur quasi Scholae oppositae tres olim ex●●●erant nomina●●ssimae Nam si quae erant aliae ab istis tribus Inde velut propagines effloruere Erant autem illae tres Phari●aeorum prima Sadducaeorum secunda tertia Essenorum Montac Analect Exercit. 3. Sect. 1. Hos. 4. 11. Luk. 12. 45 46. It is magna animae submersio August It is vitium maximae adhaerentiae as the Schoolmen say seldom left Proverbium est in Sa●●edri● in●rat vinum exit arcanum D●u● Adag 9. Decur 2. In vino veritas Drunkennesse doth both make Imperfections and shew those we have to others eyes D Halls Contempl. The Spartans to make their children loath it were wont to present to their view some of their vassals when drunk that seeing their beastly demeanour they might learn to detest it Plutarch Drunkards live like fishes in liquido in the water they make the Tavern their Temple Indian smoke their Incense Sack their Sacrifice I never heard other commendation ascribed to a drunkard more then the well-bearing of his drink which is a commendation fitter for a Brewers horse then for Gentlemen or Serving-men L. Cecil to his Sonne Germanorum bibere est vivere in practice as well as in pronunciation A Professor of Hebrew reproving another that was drunk he answered to him Ego ebrietate mea tantum meum caput turbo tu ebrietate tua turbas Israelem Arminius reproving Baudius a Professor of L●yden who would be often drunk and sometimes rendred this as a reason why he could not read his Lecture that day Prop●er ●●ster●am crapulam he said thus Baudi tu dedecories reipublicae tu Ecclesiae replied the other Germania tota super ebrietate malè audit Scalig. Orat. ● cont Erasm. Germani possunt cunctos tolerare labores O utinam possent tam benè ferre fitim Vide Lansii Orat. cont Germaniam Isa. 5. 22. 1 Pet. 4. 3. See Hackwels Apol. p. 337 339 344. Wards Woe to drunkards Ames de consc l. 3. c. 16. By Solons Law it was punished with death in every one though he were a Magistrate or Prince No civil State but have made severe Laws against it If Chrysostom were now alive the bent of all his Homilies should be spent to cry down drunkennesse as he did swearing in Antioch Vide Aquin. 2ª 2ae Qu. 150. Artic. 1 2 3. Aristotle said Every drunkard was worthy of a double punishment both because of his drunkennesse and the evils afterward In the Scripture we have two notable instances of Gods loathing this s●n in Noah and Lot Gen. 9. 21. 19. 33. though many excuses might be brought Consider 1. that the power of wine was not so well known 2. Noah used constantly to drink water 3. It was but once 4. He was aged Old men saith Aristotle are sooner drunk because of the weaknesse of their natural heat which is easily overcome by that of wine Lot being sad and solitary took wine perhaps to refresh him * Tul. l. 4. Tusc. Quaest. Invidia ab in particula intensiva video quod invidus oculos continuò fixos habeat in alienam foelicitatem Livor ● colore livido qui plerumque in invidis cernitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 veluti 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod invidus vel semet animi agritudine quodammodo interficiat vel necem optet ejus cui invidet Sanderson in Leo. Vide Voss. Instit. orat lib. 2 cap. 12. Cain kill'd his brother Esau threatned to kill his and Iosephs brethren intended to kill him Envy was the original and moving cause of it in them all See Rom. 1. 29. See Dr Willet on Gen. 37. 4. Exod. 37. 4. Par. on Rom. 13. 13. Cartw. on Prov. 27. 4. and Master Wheatleys Prototypes on Iacobs Wives The Spirit of a man lusteth after envy See the difference between envy and hatred D. Willet on Gen. 37. 4. Error in judgement is worse then in practice then the conscience takes part with sin and a man thinks he ought to do what he
far forth as children transgresse not any of Gods commandments in obeying their parents they ought to obey Rom. 1. 30. 2 Tim. 3. 2. Titus 1. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deut. 13. 13. Ever the blessing or curse of the parents hath a prophetique power joyned with it Flores Regij by King Iames Deut. 27. 16. The punishment which by the Law was appointed to disobedient and rebellious children was a publick shameful death Deut. 21. 18. to 22. Parentis effigiem filo corporis exprimere hoc omnibus cum aliis commune est virtutes patrum tam rarum natis est exprimere quam patribus virtutum suarum ac morum exempla suis relinquere posse Jos. Scalig. Epist. Christoph. Augustino Puteanis Postquam ex parentum consensu vel expresso vel tacito in sua potestate sunt constituti tum patria potestas propriè sic dicta cessat quamvis nunquam cessare possit debitum gratitudinis observantiae pietatis filialis Ames de consc lib. 5. c. 22. The four Cardinal duties of a parent are prayer admonition example correction a Gen. 22. 2. b Gen. 25. 28. Ibid. The childe set at liberty makes the mother ashamed Prov. 29. 15. See Dr. Gouges Domest duties on Ephes. 6. 4. Deut. 6. 7. See 2 Tim. 3. 15. and Master Baxters Saints Rest. part 3. See Dr. Gouge ibid. sect 46 47. Discant hic matres se debere per se suas proles nutrire lactare natura enim hoc illis onus imposuit Hinc Mammillas ubera veluti lag●nulas quasdam ad proles nutriendas aptas illis largita est Plin. l. 28. c. 9. scribit lac Maternum esse utilissimum naturae prolis convenientissimum Vide Aul. Gell. l. 12. noct Attic. c. 1. Scribit Lampridius Titum filium Vespasiani Imperatoris toto vitae tempore adversa valetudine laborasse eò quòd à nutrice infirma lactatus esset de Tiberio quoque Caesare fertur quòd fuerit magnus potator quia nutrix ipsius talis erat secundò ex eo quòd filius non lactetur à propria matre sit ut mater filium filius matrem minus amet Vnde naturalem parentum ac filiorum amorem majorem videmus in communi plebe quam in familiis nobilium quoniam ferè nobiles foeminae infantes suos per nutrices lactari curant à Lapide in Gen. 21. 7. Origo vocabuli servorum in Latina lingua inde creditur ducta quod hi qui jure belli possent occidi à victoribus cum servabantur servi fiebant à servando appellati quod etiam ipsum sine peccati merito non est Aug. de civit Dei l. 19. c. 15. Servitus conditionalis usualis See Ephes. 6. 5. Coloss. 4. 22. 1 Tim. 6. 2. Tit. 2. 15. Prov. 10. 26. See Dr. Willet on Exod. 21. Quest. 8. 9. Dr. Gouges Domestical duties on Ephes. 6. 5 6 7 8. Servants must obey their Masters but in the Lord and therefore the Apostle ever joyneth some clause of restraint Col. 3. 22. Ephes. 6. 6. 1 Cor. 7. 15. A servant is not sui juris must do his Masters work is a living instrument in the hand of another 1 Pet. 2. 18. Servus non est persona sed res saith the Civil Law one describes him thus A servant is a person that yeelds himself to the command of a master and submits to his authority to do his will Rom. 6. 16. So the Centurion describes a servant Matth. 8. 9. Psal. 101. 6 7. 1 Tim. 3 4. See Dr. Gouges Domest duties on Ephes. 6. 9. Naamans servants called him Father Deut. 15. 13 14. See Dr. Gouges Domest duties part 2. Without their union of hearts their uniting of bodies and states will be a death Ephes. 5. 25. Love is such a natural property of that relation that God to shew his affections to his Church when he would comfort her saith that he is her husband See a rare example of wively affection Speed in Edw. the first p. 542. 1 Cor. 7. Not beauty wit wealth kindnesse received these things may alter Matrimonial love that is such as beseemeth that neer knot and conjunction Where the bond is closest the love must be strongest His soul must rest it self in her as the onely woman under Heaven for him and hers upon him as the onely man under Heaven for her Prov. 5. 19 20. As if he had said If thou do not love thy wife thou wilt look after Harlots or at least art in danger so to do * Religio à religando Gen. 2. 18. It is not said a help onely for so are the living creatures and therefore called jumenta à juvando but a fit or meet help In the Original it is before him and with a note of similitude as before him that is answering to him Prov. 31. 1. The wives relation-grace is subjection in the Lord the Apostle twice or thrice cals for this subjection and obedience 1 Pet. 3. 5 6. 1. This is there made the great ornament 2. The Apostle shews there the benefit of this subjection The titles and names whereby an husband is set forth do imply a superiority and authority in him as Lord 1 Pet. 3. 6. Master Esth. 1. 17. Guide Prov. 2. 15. Head 1 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Pet. 3. 2. Sarah called Abraham Lord. Ephes. 5. 24. 1 Cor. 11. 7. 1 Cor. 14. 25. Men are commanded to receive them in the Lord to hold them in reputation to know them as over them in the Lord to esteem them very highly in love for their works sake to hold them worthy double honour and to obey them Phil. 2. 29. Ministers must be faithful in their Calling Faithfulnesse is a constant and diligent performing of all the parts of the duty of a Minister from the right grounds and for the right ends sincerely because God requireth and for his glory and the salvation of the people It was a wonderful thing in Paul 1 Cor. 4. 4. that he knew nothing by himself that is no notorious defect in regard of his Ministry He should have Thummim integrity of life as well as Urim light of learning It was said heretofore Stupor mundi Clerus Britannicus The wonder of the world is the Clergie of Britain 1 Tim. 4. 13. Ieroboam made the basest of the people to be Priests 1 Kin. 12. 31. 13. 33. and some would make the Priests to be the basest of the people Prov. 24. 2● 1 Pet. 2. 17. See Tit. 3. 1. Rom. 13. 5. What one doth for conscience sake he should do willingly A great burden lies on the Magistrate Unicus tantum est subjectus in civitate Magistratus Luth. Psal. 82. 5 10. Zach. 7. 4. Acts 4. 19 20. Iulianus Imperator quamvis esset apostata habuit tamen sub se Christianos milites quibus cum dicebat Producite aciem pro defensione Ecclesiae obediebant ei cum autem diceret eis Producite arma in Christianos tunc
word all wanton and uncleanly speeches phrases songs that may be and is called wanton which tends to satisfie unlawful lust in ones self and to provoke it in another Words that may enkindle and enflame grosse words tales of unclean acts and sonnets that have such a kinde of description of those actions as tend to set the minde on fire with them This is that which the Apostle cals rotten communication when he saith Let no corrupt or rotten communication come out of your mouths and again It is a shame to name the things that are done of them in secret When a man talks of any impure action with delight when he maketh mention of any impure part or deed with intent to stirre up others especially when he doth sollicite another unto this deed by such speeches or means this is an horrible sinne for nothing then stands betwixt words and deeds but want of opportunity This is the breach of this Commandment in Word Now follows the breach of it in Act or in Deed. And that is in regard of things leading to the action or the action it self 1. In regard of things leading to the action there is wantonnesse or lasciviousnesse so the Scripture cals it in the several parts of the body the eye the ear the foot the hand And 2. In the whole body as all impure imbracings and kissings which is called by the Apostle dalliance or chambering and mixed dancing of men and women especially if it be a wanton dance with a wanton ditty Thus is this Commandment broken by actions leading to the leud deed Now by the deed it self either out of Matrimony or in Matrimony Out of Matrimony by two sins 1. Uncleannesse 2. Fornication Uncleannesse is all strange kinde of pleasure by this act where it is done otherwise then according to the rule of nature this is either with others or with ones self There is a self-pollution 1. Speculative in wicked and unclean thoughts therefore God is said to be The searcher of the heart and reins which are the center of those lusts Matth. 5. 28. 2. Practical in unclean acts Some Divines say polluting of ones self is a greater sinne then the polluting of others because it is against a greater relation but in polluting others they pollute themselves therefore that is the greatest sinne Fornication is when two single persons that have not entred into a Covenant of Marriage do abuse each others bodies It is called Fornication à fornicibus in quibus Romae solebant meretrices prostrare from the vaulted houses where such strumpets used to prostitute themselves 1 Cor. 6. The Apostle hath several arguments there to prove fornication to be a great sin vers 13. 1. It crosseth the end of Gods Creation The body is not for fornication but for the Lord. A third Argument is drawn from the glorious resurrection vers 14. glory and immortality shall be put on the body therefore it should not be polluted here A fourth Argument is drawn from the spiritual relation between the body and Jesus Christ it is a member of his mystical body ver 15. A fifth from the spiritual Union between the body and the Lord vers 16 17. A sixth from the intrinsecal pollution that is in the sinne of fornication above other sins vers 18. No sins are more against ones own body A seventh Argument is taken from the inhabitation of the Spirit in them vers 19. They are dedicated to the Lord no unclean thing might come into the Temple when it was dedicated to the Lord 1 Cor. 3. 17. The eighth is drawn from the voluntary resignation that the people of God have made of themselves soul and body unto God Ye are not your own vers 19. therefore Gods it is an act of justice suum cuique tribuere The ninth is drawn from the act of redemption v. 20. You are bought with a price Christ hath purchased the body as well as the soul therefore you should gratifie God with both It is a fearful sinne No fornicatour shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Cor. 5. 11. 6. 9. Reasons 1. It is a cause of many other sins Prov. 23. 28. 2. A punishment of other sin Eccles. 7. 26. Prov. 22. 14. Rom. 1. 24 26 28. 3. It is directly opposite to sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 3 4 5 7. 4. No sinne is committed with such delight and pleasure as this is and therefore it must bring in the end more bitternesse to the soul therefore the Scripture speaks so often of the bitternesse of this sinne Heb. 12. 15 16. Iob 13. 26. These tricks of youth will be bitter to men one day Prov. 5. 3 4. Eccles. 7. 27 28. See Iob 3. 12. Prov. 6. 30 31. Heb. 13. 4. Rev. 21. 8. The Turks thus punish whordom they take the pa●ch of a bea●● new killed and cutting a hole thorow thrust the adulterers head in this dung-wallet and so carry him in pomp thorow the streets Some Countreys punish it with whipping others with death The punishment which in the Old Testament was appointed to be executed against it by the Civil Magistrate was death Levit. 20. 10. Thus is this Commandment broken out of marriage in marriage it is broken by the married in regard of others or themselves In regard of others by the sinne of adultery which is coming near another mans husband or wife For whoremongers and adulterers God will judge and those that do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of Heaven He that committeth this sinne doth his neighbour greater wrong then if he had robbed and spoiled him of all other his goods and possessions whatsoever Therefore the Lord in the Decalogue hath placed that Commandment as a greater before that of theft and Salomon Prov. 6. 30 35. maketh the Adulterer farre worse then a thief because he may make satisfaction to a man for the wrong he hath done him so cannot the Adulterer That is a dreadful Text Prov. 2. 19. The mother of Peter Lombard the Master of the Sentences and Gratian the Collector of the Decrees and Peter Comestor an Authour of School-Divinity was but a whore and she being near unto death confessed her sinne and her Confessour reproving the crime of her adultery committed and exhorting her to serious repentance she answered she confessed adultery was a great sinne but when she considered how great a good followed thence since those her sons were great lights in the Church she could not repent of it A Papist in Queen Maries time taken in adultery in Red-Crosse-street said Yet I thank God I am a good Catholick Sylla sirnamed Faustus hearing that his Sister had entertained two adulterers into her service at once which were Fulvius Fullo and Pomponius whose sirname was Macula he put it off with a jest upon their names Miror inquit sororem meam Maculam habere cum Fullonem habet Of this sinne there are two kindes First Single