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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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Quest 6 in us as it was By these plaine markes namely Answer 1. Are thy affections as strongly set upon sinne as ever they were dost thou love sin as well as ever thou didst then certainely thou art yet sinnes slave 2. Are thy temptations as frequent as ever they were doth the devill tempt thee as often as ever he did then it is an argument that hee hath too much in thee 3. Art thou as stupid dull and blinde in seeing the craft and subtlety of Sathan as ever thou wert art thou still as ignorant of his devices as ever it is a signe then that sinne hath a commanding power in and over thee 4. Art thou as unable to resist sinne as ever thou wert as weake as ever as naked as ever as feeble and faint-hearted as ever this showes that corruption is too strong in thee On the contrary if wee finde that our love is not so much unto sinne as it was but that the edge of our affections is taken off if temptations be more rare in us and we more quick sighted unto Sathans subtlety and more strong to resist him both by Faith Prayer and the Word then it is a comfortable signe that sinne is growne weaker in us and our feet reduced from this broad way § 3. That leads unto destruction Sect. 3 Our Saviour in these words showes that the broad way of sinne brings at last unto perpetuall paine How doth it appeare that sinners shall perish Question 1 for there are many who thinke otherwise perswadeing themselves that they may walke in this way and yet at last come unto salvation First it appeares evidently from Christs owne Answer 1 words in this place where hee showes that the end of the Broad way is perdition Narrow way is salvation And therfore it matters not what others thinke Secondly it appeares from other plaine and positive Answer 2 places of Scripture reade Psalm 9.17 and 11.6 and 83.10.13 and Jsa 5.24 and 1 Corinth 6.9 Thirdly sinne is the foundation of condemnation Answer 3 or all and onely sinners shall bee damned And therefore it is cleare that the broad path leades to perdition reade Isa 50.1 and 59.2 and Ierem. 5.25 Hose 13.1 Rom. 6.23 Psalm 1.5 and 5.4 and 34.16 Prov. 16.4 Isa 3.10 11. Fourthly the arrowes of the Lord are levelled against Answer 4 such as walke in the broad way And therefore they must needs come to destruction at the last Psal 34.16 Fiftly the reward of sinne is death The locusts Answer 5 having brought forth their young die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist so lust having conceived brings forth sinne and sinne when it is finished brings forth death Iames 1.15 and Rom. 6.28 Sixtly otherwise God should not bee just For Answer 6 1. Hee hath made a law that if we sinne we shall dye Genes 2.17 In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Pope Iulius the third caused this sentence to bee written about his coyne That nation and people shall perish which will not obey me so the Lord hath made a law and threatned to inflict condigne punishment upon all those who disobey it Rom. 3.23 2. Mankinde hath broken this Law in Adam and wicked men daily breake it themselves in their owne persons And therefore the justice of God requires that they should be punished whose sinnes are not done away in Christ Question 2 Shall no wicked men at all escape this destruction None who continue to walke in this way untill they come to the end thereof For Answer First Kings and great men shall suffer if they run with the common sort Isay 41.2 Daniel 5.27 Secondly Wisemen shall bee punished if they thus play the fooles Exod. 1.10 and 15.7 and Rom. 1.22 Thirdly Proud men shall be ruined notwithstanding all their high conceits of themselves Malach. 4.1 Fourthly Hypocrites shall perish who walke in this broad way secretly and unseene Matth. 23. Question 3 Why must wee thus labour by all meanes to renounce sinne Answer 1 First because there can bee no true repentance without the reformation of the life from sinne Answer 2 Secondly because there can bee no true faith without this Faith purgeth and purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 and the heart being purged the life must needs bee pure Wherefore there is no truth of faith where sinne is not forsaken Answer 3 Thirdly wee cannot bee made partakers of the blessed Spirit of God untill wee have left sinne for the Holy Ghost will not come to a polluted soule And therefore it is to bee renounced Answer 4 Fourthly there is no way to escape the wrath of God or eternall destruction without the forsaking of sinne And therefore wee should bee carefull to leave it Question 4 How may wee avoid and leave sinne Answer 1 First shunne and beware of all the occasions of sinne Answer 2 Secondly use all holy meanes to bee good and pure and sincere Answer 3 Thirdly deplore thy infirmities speedily and heartily wash thy soule with teares for thy former transgressions sorrowing with a godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.10 Answer 4 Fourthly promise unto God to fight manfully against thy former sinnes and all sinnes for the time to come and labour to performe thy promise Answer 5 Fiftly Pray fervently unto God to free thee from the commanding power of sin and to preserve thee from sinne and to make thee the free-man of Jesus Christ Question 5 What things hinder us from turning aside out of this broad way of sinne Answer And what are the remedies against these impediments The Impediments are these First insensibility when a man is not sensible of his sin he is not carefull to forsake it Secondly presumption when men either presume that they are not sinners or that their sinnes are small or that though great yet they shall be pardoned it makes them more carelesse and fearelesse of sin and more slack to leave it Thirdly Procrastination and delay when wee promise repentance but put off the performance thereof from day to day Fourthly key-coldnesse in performing perfecting of the worke not striving against sin unto blood Hebr. 12.4 The Remedies are these First a tender circumcised heart which is sensible of the least touch of sinne Secondly a godly feare remembring that wee are sinners yea great sinners and neither able to satisfy for our sins our selves not sure that they shall bee pardoned in Christ except wee strive to forsake and leave them Thirdly not to deferre but while it is said to day to turne from our sins and turne unto the Lord our God Fourthly zeale alacritis and industrie in the resisting of sinne striving against it with manfull wrastlings till wee have prevailed § 4. And many there bee which goe in thereat Sect. 4 What is the meaning of this word Many Question 1 Our Saviour shewes hereby Answer that there are not onely Many simply which walke in the broad way but that there are so many that in comparison of them they who
of what they were at first before the fall II. Divertuntur a vero objecto All the members of our bodies and faculties of our souls are now as so many instruments of the service of sin and satan man by nature rebelling against God both in soul and body Secondly our spirituall faculties and graces whereof the present Text speaks are wholly and altogether killed and that in this order I. Adam by sinning forsook and left God a August civit Dei 13.13 ●ence Thomas calls originall sin Ablationem men●s à Deo aversionem voluntatis Aq. 1.2.82.2 An alien●tion of the soul and aversion of the will from God II. Adam having forsaken and left God loseth originall righteousnesse Hence Aquinas o Thom. 1.2.82.1 ex Ansel saith Originale peccatum est carentia justitiae originalis Originall sin is a deprivation of originall righteousnesse III. Adam having lost his originall righteousnesse is then forsaken of God Desertus ab eo prius p Aug. civ Dei 13.14 whom first he forsook for as God was primus in Amore so he was ultimus in desertione that is God loved us before we loved him q 1 Ioh. 4.10 but God left us not untill we had left him Deseruit Adamum Deus id est abstulit gratiam quâ stare potuit r Aug. de corr gratia God forsook Adam that is withdrew from him his grace whereby he might stand And this was true death Illud Gen. 2.17 intellige cum anima deseritur a suâ vitâ viz. Deo ſ Aug. de civit Dei 13.15 That death which is threatned Gen. 2.17 is a spirituall death when the soul is separated from her life that is God t Ephes 4.18 IV God having left and forsaken man hence followeth these two things to wit First corruptio impacta sin and uncleannesse doth seaz upon man radically and hereditarily insomuch as the Father now doth derive sin as well as life unto his childe as Gehazi did leprosie to his posterity u 2 Kings 5.27 yea every man is contaminated and corrupted from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot Esa 1.6 the very imaginations and cogitations of man being evill Gen. 6.5 and 8.21 Omnes animae partes inficit Sin hath now tainted and polluted all the parts of the soul saith w Thom. 1.2.82.8.3 3.3 Thomas yea four deadly wounds did man receive by sin said Beda Glos ordin s Luc. 10 In ratione ignorantia In voluntate infirmitas In irascibili malitia In concupiscibili concupiscentia I. In his reason II. In his will III. In his irascible faculty IV. In his concupiscible He was wounded with Ignorance Weaknesse Malice Lust and concupiscence Secondly Potestas boni ablata God having lef● man he left grace and the power of doing good so that now though he would do good he cannot and though he would not do evill yet he doth it daily Rom. 7.18 19. Postquam anima Deum deseruerat samulam carnem subditam omninò non habebat x Aug. ●iv Dei 13.13 After the soul ran away from the Lord her God her servant the flesh would be no longer subject or obedient unto her but as she rebels against her Master God so the flesh rebels against her Mistris the Soul So that now Man by his own strength can neither I. Do any thing that is good Rom. 7.14 19. Neither II. Have any good desires for God gives the will as well as the deed Phil. 2.13 Neither III. Think a good thought 2 Cor. 5.3 Answ 3 Thirdly that which hath been said that all men naturally are spiritually dead in sin will most evidently appear by a plain observation of the D●grees of Adams fall which were these I. Sathan under the form of a Serpent tempts man Gen. 3.1 c. Heb. 2.14 II. Adam is overcome by the Tempter and sins against God Gen. 3. and Rom 5.12 14. III. Adam by eating of the forbidden fruit violates and tramples the Law of God under his feet Gen. 2.17 IV. From the violation of the Law springs up corruption that is the Law being broken man became to be corrupted Iob 15.14 and 25.4 Psalm 51.7 V. Mans nature being corrupted sin presently shews it self in the life and actions growing and encreasing in strength daily more and more VI. Hence we were detained in the chains of death and sate in the shadow of death Luke 1.79 as condemned persons are reserved unto the day of execution Object Against that which hath been said that naturally men are dead unto all good it will be objected The Morall man performs many good works yea doth many duties which the Law of God enjoyns And therefore we are not killed out-right in our spirituall faculties Answ In every good action there are two things to be considered namely Instrumentum operans Anima movens First the work wrought then secondly the first mover of the work The action performed must be good and such as the Law commands and the intention must be good also in the performance of the work for otherwise the action is not accepted Simon Magus made a dead body to stir the eyes head and body but it was far from true life so a Morall man may perform a Morall good work but yet it is but a dead work because it proceeds not from the life of Grace Heb. 9.14 Quest 5 How or wherein are naturall men dead Answ 1 First they are dead in regard of Grace and that in a double respect viz. I. They can do nothing that good is Rom. 7.14 18. All their works being either foolish or proud or counterfeit or hypocriticall or pharisaicall or weak or performed for fear of God or man II. They cannot cease to sin 2 Pet. 2.14 Rom. 7.5 Answ 2 Secondly they are dead in regard of life eternall for so long as they are naturall there is no hope of heaven or salvation Iohn 8.21 and Rom. 6.16 21 23. Answ 3 Thirdly they are dead in regard of joy and comfort for to the naturall man there can be no true peace indeed a man may sleep in a wildernesse amongst wilde beasts or in the ships Mast y Prov. 2● 34. and neither perceive nor conceive nor fear danger but when he awakes he will with terrour and amazement consider of his perill so Naturall men may lull themselves in a carnall security and cry peace peace unto themselves but if ever they awake they will have an horrible expectation of wrath to come z Heb. 10. ●7 Fourthly they are dead in regard of sense for Answ 4 I. They are not sensible of their evill condition nor perillous estate Esa 28.14 Revel 3.17 Nor II. Are sensible of their wants or of those good things which they are deprived and disinherited of and therefore not being sensible of the lack of them do not earnestly endeavour for them or seriously desire them Psalme 42.1 and 63.1 and Iohn 3.19 What things must not the naturall
fasting is to corroborate and strengthen the Spirit First unto Prayer t Dan. 9.3 Secondly unto spirituall Meditations Thirdly unto the hearing of the word of God Prayer is the end of fasting and fasting is the meanes unto prayer and therefore it doth not consist in an abstinence from meate onely but thereunto is to bee added prayer and pious meditations and the hearing of the word if it may bee had that the Lord may vouchsafe to heare and helpe us in that which we desire Secondly the extraordinary end of fasting is either for The removing of evils that either from Our selves which are either Temporall and that is either That we might be humbled if the evill bee past already That wee might be freed if the evill bee either Present upon us Or Threatned to bee brought upon us Or Hanging over our heads and feared by us Spirituall that is the perill danger and pollution of sin Others and that Temporall Or Spirituall The procuring of good things which are either Civill Religious and that either The remembrance of those things which are by-past Or The corroboration of those things which are desired viz. Of the preaching of the word Of the administration of holy things That this may be the better understood we will explaine it more particularly Evils are either Temporall Or Spirituall Temporall evils are removed from us by fasting two manner of wayes Humiliando Nosmet Liberando Nosmet First by humbling of our selves truely if the evils be by-past and this is performed and practised for a double end The first is Religious and this is two-fold I. That the sinne may not bee layd unto our charge thus a Father ought to humble himselfe for some notorious offence committed by his childe II. That the remembrance of sinne may bee the more deeply imprinted in the minde and wee learne thereby to hate it so much the more Thus we may conceive that David fasted when the young man brought him word that he had slaine Saul For first it is sayd David fasted and mourned and then hee sayd unto the man how wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thy hand against the Lords annoynted a 2 Sam. 1.12.14 This pious Prince hereby shewing both his sorrow for the fact and his detestation of it The second end is Civill to wit that wee may condole with those that are afflicted or mourne for those that are dead Thus the men of Iabesh Gilead fasted for the death of Saul and Ionathan his sonne b 1 Sam. 1.31.13 but ne quid nimis this mourning must be moderate Secondly temporall evils are removed from us Liberando nosmet and that three manner of wayes either first by removing the evill which is present or secondly by with-holding the evil which is threatned or thirdly by averting that evill which we feare although it be not particularly threatned First sometimes some temporall evill lyes upon us as Famine Plague the Sword and the like Now these are to be removed according to Gods owne ordinance by fasting as may be proved by all those Scriptures mentioned before And thus the Pope himselfe advised c Decret liber Si evenerit fames pestis deprecemur Dominum jejuniis elermosynis obsecrationibus that is if dearth or pestilence afflict us we must give our selves to almesdeeds prayer and fasting for the removall of them When the Citie Hippo wherein Saint Augustine was was by the Vandals besieged he gave himselfe frequently to fasting and prayer d Possidonius c. 29. Secondly sometimes God threatens for sin to bring some temporall judgement and one principall remedy to with-hold it is fasting and therefore David when God had menaced the childe with death hee gives himselfe to fasting e 2 Sam 12.16 Thus God having threatned the Ninivites by Ionah to destroy them within fourtie dayes they prevent it by fasting f Ionah 3.5.6 Thirdly sometimes our sinnes committed and Gods threatnings against sinne in generall makes us to feare some particular judgement or temporall evill although the Lord have not definitely threatned it now one chiefe remedy to remove these evils which hang over our heads or which we have some cause to feare is fasting Thus King Iehoshaphat being afraid of the children of Moab and Ammon that came against him proclaimed a fast throughout all Iudah g 2 Chron. 20.1.3 So Ezra being in feare of the enemy that lay in his way proclaimed a fast h Ezra 8.27.23 And the Jewes being afraid of Hamans decree proclaimed a fast i Hest 4.16 and were delivered Seventhly there are spirtuall evils to wit our sinnes hardnesse of heart obstinacy and the like which are removed by repentance prayer fasting for the proofe hereof reade these places 1 Sam. 7.6 Nehem. 9.1 c. Ioel 2.12 c. And this is the chiefest end of fasting that our prayers might be corroborated and strengthned for the appeasing of God who is angry with us for our sinnes and for the purging of our soules by repentance for both which the prayer of him that fasts aright is very prevalent and of great efficacy Thus we see how temporall and spirituall evills may be removed from our selves we may now in a word consider how profitable fasting is for the removing of evils from others and that first Temporall thus Nehemiah fasts for the removeall of the miseries which were in Ierusalem k Nehem. 1.4 and David for the afflictions of his neighbours l Psa 35.23 Secondly Spirituall thus Daniel fasts for the pardon of Israels sinnes m Dan. 9.3 As wee fast for the removeall of evils both Temporal and Spirituall both from our selves others so also for the procuring of good things whether they be I. Civill or II. Spirituall First sometimes wee fast for the obtaining of some civill or politique blessing as for example either 1 that just judgement may bee administred thus wicked Iezabel upon an hypocriticall pretence commands a fast to be celebrated when Naboth was falsly to bee accused a 1 King 21.9 Or 2 that Parliaments may succeed to the good of the commonwealth to the furtherance of religion and to the glory of God Or 3 that victory may be obtained in warre thus Saul commanded the people to fast until the evening least that the pursuit of their enemies had beene hindred b 1 Sam. 14.24 Secondly sometimes wee fast for the obtaining of some Spirituall blessing or grace which we desire to wit first the preaching of the word thus the Apostles fasted that the Gospel might be by the mercies of God the more published f Acts 13.2 Saint Peter being to contend with Simon Magus before the Emperour the Church in Rome did fast for his good successe g Aug. Epist ad Casulan Saint Iohn refused to write against Ebion the Heretike except the whole Church would fast h Hierom. prolog s Matth. Secondly we fast for the helping and furthering of the celebration of
3.11 and 5.4 For Christ is the end of the law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth Rom. 10.4 Direction the rule of good and this is immutable as God himselfe is because it is his will Answ 3 Thirdly wee being in Christ are freed from the law of sinne and of death Rom. 8.2 But yet wee are debtours not to the flesh to live after the flesh but to the law to be regulated thereby for the law is good holy just spirituall and to be consented unto Rom. 7.7.12.14.16 yea to be delighted in and that in the inward man Rom. 7.22 And therefore although the ceremoniall law be now disanulled and the conditions of the morall law abrogated we being freed from the curse and condemning power of the law and not justified by the law yet as the law is a rule of direction unto us so it is to be obeyed and submitted unto Teaching unto us this necessary instruction Obser that the Gospell doth not take away the obedience of the morall law Blessed are they saith David that are upright in their waies Ps 1.1 c. and if wee would enter into life our Saviour saith we must keepe the Commandements Mat. 19.17 c. whence S. Paul saith that those who are in grace are not without law to God but under the law to Christ v 1 Cor. 9 21. And againe the grace of God which bringeth salvation teacheth us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world u Titus 2 11.12 And therefore both the negative and affirmative part both of the first and second table is to be obeyed even of the deare members of Christ because this he did not by his comming destroy Quest 2 Why must the Morall law bee observed in the times and places of the Gospell Answ 1 First because God is unchangeable and therefore so is also his will Iames 1.17 But the Law as was sayd before is the will of God Answ 2 Secondly God requires of all persons in all times to live holily and unblameably as appeares by these places Luk. 1.79 and 1 Thessal 4.4 and Titus 2.11.14 and Heb. 12.14 and 1 Pet. 1.17 But the rule of holinesse goodnesse truth equitie and justice is no where laid down but in the Law and therefore the Morall Law is perpetuall Answ 3 Thirdly the Morall law is in force in the times of the Gospell and must bee obeyed because disobedience thereunto is severely punished Hee that sinnes against the law shall bee judged by the law although hee live under the Gospell as we may see in these places 1 Cor. 6.9 Ephes 5.3 Coloss 3.6 And therefore Bellarmine is most injurious unto us in saying that Protestants affirme Christian libertie to consist in an absolute freedome from the obedience and subjection of the Morall law Quod Moses cum suo Decalogo nihil ad nos pertineat and that Moses with his Decalogue belongeth not unto us w Bellar. lib. 4. de Iust cap. 5 initio How false and malicious this is all the world may know considering that wee subscribe to the truth of this present Scripture that Christ came not to dissolve but to fulfill the law Indeed the Muscovites doe hold that the Decalogue is abrogated by the Apostles x Theolog Muscovit cap. 5. But Protestants are far off from so grosse an opinion for we say That Christian libertie consisteth in these three things namely First that wee are exempted from the Ceremonies of the Law and the Judicials so farre forth as they concerned the politicke state of the Jewes y Act. 15.10 Secondly wee are freed from the curse and guilt of the law z Galath 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law when hee was made a curse for us Thirdly we are delivered from the servitude of sinne And therefere it is a shamelesse slander to avouch that wee hold Christian liberty to consist in a freedome from the obedience of the Law of God Sect. 4 § 4. The Law What Law is here meant There is a two-fold Law Quest Answ First the Law of the Gentiles which Saint Paul calleth the law of Nature They doe by nature the things of the Law Rom. 2.14 Secondly the Law of the Jewes which is three-fold viz. First Ceremoniall which is described and explained in the Bookes of Moses especially in Leviticus and prescribed rites and ceremonies unto the Jewes to bee observed and performed in the worship of God Secondly Iudiciall which prescribed ordinances for the government of the common-wealth of the Jewes and the civill punishment of offenders Thirdly Morall here meant and wherein 3 things are observeable viz. First the Morall Law is that which was written at first in the heart of Adam and in all men since by nature in regard whereof it binds all men Secondly it commands perfect obedience both inward in thought and affection and outward in speech and action Thirdy it bindeth to the curse and punishment every one that faileth in the least performance of holy duties b Gal. 3.10 Sect. 5 § 5. And the Prophets Who are meant here by Prophets Quest Prophets are of three sorts namely First of the Jewes Secondly of the Gentiles of whom Paul sayth One of your owne Prophets hath sayd Thirdly of the truth of whom Christ sayth Behold I send unto you Prophets and wise men Now our Saviour meaneth the Prophets that did foretell of him Faustus ex August lib. 19. cap. 7. cantr Faust Sect. 6 § 6. But to fulfill it Our Saviour here affirming that he came not to destroy the Law but to fulfill it may make some doubt whether there be any difference betweene the Law and the Gospell or not and how they differ Answ 1 The difference betweene the Law and the Gospell stands in five things namely The Law First is Naturall and was in mans nature before the fall Secondly sets forth Gods justice in rigour without mercie Thirdly requires perfect righteousnesse within us Fourthly threatneth iudgement without mercie therefore it is called the ministery of condemnation c 2 Cor. 3.7.9 Fiftly promiseth life to the doer d Rom. 10.5 The Gospel Is spirituall revealed after the fall in the covenant of grace Sets forth Justice and Mercie united both in Christ Revealeth our acceptance with God by imputed righteousnesse Shewes mercie to mans sinne in and by Christ if wee doe repent and believe in him with a lively faith To the believer Rom. 4 5. How did Christ fulfill the Law First by and in his Doctrine and that these Quest 2 two wayes First by restoring unto the Law Answ 1 it s proper meaning and true sence as Matth. 5. vers 21 22.27.28 which was depraved by the Pharisees as appeares plainly in the whole next chapter Secondly by revealing the right way whereby the law may be fulfilled Answ 2 Secondly Christ fulfilled the Law in his Person and that five wayes First by
verse Quest 1 Cannot a man obey God aright except hee acknowledge this obligation unto the Morall Law Answ No because if we be free from God wee are the servants of sinne and slaves unto our owne lusts and therefore so long as wee have not taken Christs yoake upon us and yielded up our selves to the service and obedience of God as bound in conscience to serve him and him alone and that with all our hearts wee have not performed any true faithfull or acceptable service unto him Quest 2 Have the children of God then under the Gospell no liberty Answ There is a two-fold liberty or freedome namly First Externall Secondly Internall First there is an Internall liberty when a man will not be taught or directed or reproved or compelled to performe any service unto God This is not granted unto any yea all must know that what they doe is not gratefull unto God except they pay it as a debt and do confesse that it is their duety to doe it There are three sorts of men that obey God First some acknowledge the obligation but are backeward to performe covenants they confesse it is their duety to obey God but they doe it unwillingly these must remember that God loves a cheerfull and ready service Secondly some freely and willingly doe that which God requires but will not acknowledge it as an obligation they are content to performe holy dueties but yet will not confesse that they are so obliged to the performance thereof that they had sinned if they had omitted them or that they have deserved nothing for the performance of them These must remember that God requires service of us and not will-worship Thirdly some confesse that it is their duety to serve the Lord and labour to obey him willingly and cheerfully readily and with a willing mind and the obedience onely of these is acceptable unto God It is too ordinary with many because the word is preached by poore and meane men to disdaine to obey it yea hence to doe whatsoever they will and to come to Church when they will but they must distinguish betweene the Messengers and Message Embassadour and Embassage for although the Ministers be poore or contemptible yet the word they bring is not to be despised because that comes from God q 2 Cor. 5.19 Secondly there is an Internall liberty when the conscience dares not resist the Law of God and this is twofold First Servile O derunt peccare mali formidine poenae When a man out of a slavish feare of punishment dare not transgresse the Law of God this is not praise-worthy in it selfe but yet these are much better then those who will not at all obey the Lord. Secondly Filiall when the love and reverence of God are so conjoyned together that we neither dare commit any evill or omit any thing that is good but of this elswhere § 2. One of these least commandements c. Sect. 2 Is any sinne small Quest is not every transgression against an infinite Law and an infinite God Sinne is esteemed small in a threefold regard Answ First in respect of the degree thereof because all sinnes are not equall as for example Incest is a greater sinne than a lascivious word or wanton thought Secondly in respect of Difficulty therof because it is more easie to abstaine from some sinne than from other as for example a man doth easilier forbeare murder and theft than lesse sinnes And hence the Pharisees tithed Mints but left undone the greater workes of the Law r Mat. 23.23 that is they performed easie duties but those which were hard to bee obeyed they omitted Thus some sinnes may bee called lesse than other because wee can more willingly forbeare more easily abstain from some sins than from other some being more pleasing unto our nature and sutable to our dispositions than others Thirdly sinne is said to bee small or little in regard of our Estimation and thus the Scribes and Pharisees thought it a lesse sinne to violate the commandements of God then their owne traditions ſ Mat. 15.9 And this is that which our Saviour meets with and condemnes in this verse proving that there is no sinne little or small because 1. every sinne is against an infinite law which is both the rule of true good honest and profitable things 2. because every sinne is against the Majesty of God the true Lawgiver and 3. because the least sinne workes death and condemnation for sinne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the prevarication of the Law and the breach of the Law is death Hence some sinnes which seeme small unto man have beene severly punished by God as Adams eating of an Apple was punished by expulsion out of Paradise Acheus preserving the gold and garment out of the fire was punished with the death of himself his family Sauls sparing of the best of the Cattle was the cause of his rejection from the Growne and for gathering a few stickes upon the Sabbath day the poore man was stoned to death Numb 15.32.33 § 3. He shall be called the least in the Kingdome of heaven Sect. 3 What is the meaning of these words Quest First they are diversely interpreted and Answ 1 therefore that wee may attaine unto the true sense of them observe that there are three words or voices in them First Vocabitur hee shall bee called that is he shall bee esteemed or he shall be indeede the least c. as before verse 9. he shall be called the Sonne of God that is not falsely but he shall be made Gods sonne Now in this word all the Interpreters agree Secondly Minimus the least First some understand this for Nullus so Calvin and Stapleton Minimus vocabitur that is minimè vocabitur Castalio he shall be called the least that is hee shall not bee called at all one of the kingdome of God Secondly some understand by Minimus Infimus he shal be called the least c. that is he shall be the lowest and most inferiour in the kingdome of heaven as if our Saviour would say he shall bee admitted into the Kingdome but he shall not be honoured therein thus the Papists expound generally the words as followes by and by Thirdly in regno caelorum in the kingdome of heaven this I. some expounds of the kingdome of the Church and of Grace as Calvin and Beza because thus Iohn Baptist was called the least in the kingdome of heaven Luke 7.28 II. some expound this of life eternall and so Aretius and Stapleton Answ 2 Secondly we may perceive here a difference Object 1 then in this word Minimus the least For from hence the Papists collect and hereupon establish their Evangelicall Counsels unto perfection He say they that breakes the least Counsell not Precept shall bee called least that is of least esteeme as the Laicks or Plebeians But he that keepes the least that is the Monkes and Friers and Nunnes shall be highly esteemed and greatly
those who offend And thirdly necessary for our selves because Non irasci ubi irascendum est peccatum peccato addere b Chrys s Not to bee angry when we should is to adde one sinne unto another Secondly is an anger against sin to wit either against Our owne proper sinnes or our selves for our sinnes and thus Bern. s 4. Psal 4.26 Bee angry and sinne not that is saith he bee angry with thy selfe for thy sinnes committed and sinne no more Our brothers sinne Oportuna est ira quae increpando convertit c Chrys s that anger is seasonable and commendable that reduceth a brother from his evill way Object Against the last particle it may bee objected He that is angry with his brother for sinning is angry with his brother which is here forbidden by Christ Answ To this Augustine answers Non fratri qui peccato fratris irascitur Hee is not angry with his brother who is angry with the sinne of his brother for sinne and the sinner are two distinct things and therefore a man may hate his brothers sinne and yet love his brothers person he may bee angry with the offence committed and yet not breake the bond of Christian charitie with the offender Chrysostome upon this place gives us these examples hereof first of Moses whose anger waxed hot for the peoples idolatry and yet hee hated not their persons d Exod. 32.19 And so againe in the matter of Korah Dathan and Abiram it is sayd that meeke Moses was very wroth e Numb 16.15 Secondly of Paul who seemes to reproach the Corinthians I speake it to your shame and yet through his whole Epistle he shewes how he loves them f 1 Cor. 6.5 And againe he calles the Galatians fooles g Gal. 3.1 but hates them not Wee may adde how his spirit was stirred in him when he saw the Idolatry of the Athenians h Acts 17.16 And thirdly the example of Christ who was angry when he saw the hard-heartednesse of the people i Marke 3.5 and scourged some at another time out of the Temple k Iohn 2.16 And this Anger is called Zeale Yea fourthly we have an example of Gods anger kindled against a holy man for want of this anger Eli hearing of his sonnes impietie admonisheth them Why doe yee such things your dealings are evill and it is no good report I heare of you l 1 Sam. 2.23 but yet notwithstanding this what sayth the Lord I will judge his house for ever for the iniquitie which he knoweth because his sonnes made themselves vile and he restrained them not or according to the Hebrew he frowned not upon them m 1 Sam. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God did not thus threaten Eli because hee would not hate the persons of his sonnes for that had beene unnaturall but because hee was not zealously moved against their sinnes And therefore there is a godly anger against our bretherens sinnes Wherein doth this anger consist which is to Quest 3 be kindled against our brothers sinne It consists in foure things Answ or is it to be moderated according to these foure Rules First let the object of this anger be lawfull or Rule 1 let it be for a just cause namely some publik evil and not a private let it bee for the honour of God of Christ of the Gospel of Religion and of profession or for something that is hurtfull to the Common-wealth or for the perverting of Justice or for the slandring or calumniating of good men or the oppressing and injuring of the poore and godly Thou must not be angry with thy brother for thy owne private cause and patient in a common evill for it is a vile thing to be provoked unto rage for a private injury and not to bee moved at all for a publike Secondly let thy anger be against Satan not Rule 2 against thy brother Cum Sathan instigat frater instigatur ad malum in illum converte iram in hunc autem mi ericordiam n Basil hom de Ira. When Sathan doth instigate and thy brother is perswaded by him unto evill be angry with him that tempted but mercifull and pitifull unto him that is tempted Be angry with the Divell as the cause of thy brothers sinne but not with thy brother who is overcome by his subtilitie and strength Thirdly this anger must arise from love not Rule 3 envie or malice because we love our brother therefore wee must bee angry with his sinne it being pernicious unto his precious soule Fourthly let this anger never be immoderate Rule 4 or unbridled anger must bee curbed as a head-strong horse with a bridle Sit ira instrumentum virtutis non domina mentis sed ancilla ad obsequium parata o Gregor Mor. 5.33 Anger must be the instrument of vertue not the instigator unto vice it must be as a dutifull hand-mayd alwayes prepared to obey not a mistresse of the minde to dominiere or command When the cause of thy anger is not good then restraine it when the cause is good then loose the reines but doe not cast the bridle out of thy hands but still restraine it that so thou mayst never breake forth into intemperate rage Sect. 4 § 6. Shall be in danger of the judgement Quest Answ What is meant here by Iudgement The word being expounded before § 3. quest 1. I here onely adde that there is a three-fold judgement Namely First Discretionis of discerning or separating the good from the evill For judgement sayth Christ am I come into the world p Ioh. 9.39 that is to divide the good from the bad Secondly Punitionis of punishment either Particular at the houre of death Or Generall at the last judgement Thirdly Remunerationis of reward when the Lord shall judge the Saints This verse neither speakes of the first judgement of Separation or of the last of Remuneration but of the second and second particle thereof the judgement of the last day For these words Hee shall hee in danger of judgement do containe the reward and punishment of unlawfull anger as if our Saviour would say anger shall not escape just punishment but shall bee arraigned and summoned before Gods Tribunall at the dreadfull day of judgement when the angry man shall not be able to answer one word of a thousand Sect. 7 § 7. Whosoever shall say to his brother Racha shall be in danger of the Councell Object Bellarmine lib. 1. de amiss grat cap. 9. objects this place to prove that all sinnes deserve not eternall death Christ sayth hee makes three degrees of anger proportioning also three degrees of punishment thereunto to wit of Iudgement Counsell and Hell fire which is threatned onely to bee inflicted upon him that calles his brother Foole Therefore there are some sinnes which doe not deserve hell fire Answ 1 First this place doth shew a difference and degree of everlasting punishment according to the qualitie and
cap. 7. and Reuchlin in lib. 1. Cabalae pag. 456. and Otho Gualtper syllog pag. 81. 82. 83. This place is strongly urged by Peltanus Object and Bellarmine lib. 1. cap. 1. and lib. 2. cap. 6. de Purgatorio and divers others for the proofe of Purgatorie Some of them briefly arguing thus If in the world to come the first and second degrees of anger here expressed shall not be punished with hell fire and yet shall bee punished with some torments then it remaines that they must bee punished in Purgatorie because after this life there is no other place of punishment but either hell or Purgatorie Bellarmine and Peltanus they dispute thus First our Saviour speakes here of punishments which are to be enjoyned unto and inflicted upon sinners by the judgement and sentence of God after this life Secondly that there are here distinguished by Christ three sorts of sinnes and three kindes of punishments and that hell fire and eternall condemnation is attributed onely to the third kinde and to the first and second more light punishments that is temporall And therefore some soules shall be punished after this life with temporall punishments to wit in Purgatory because there is no other place of punishment after death but either hell or Purgatory First wee grant that our Saviour speakes Answ 1 here of punishments which shall bee inflicted upon sinners by the judgement and sentence of God after this life But it followes not from hence that hee speakes of the temporall paines of purgatorie Chamier tom 3. fol. 1160. de Purgat cap. 6. Sect. 3. lib. 26. Scharp curs Theolog. de Purgat pag. 557. resp 2. Secondly wee deny that there are three distinct Answ 2 sorts or kindes of sinnes or punishments but rather three degrees of punishment in hell which although they bee unequall yet are all eternall as evidently appeares by these reasons First every transgression of the Law is sinne and the wages of every sinne is death Rom. 6.23 and 1. Ioh. 3.4 But to be angry rashly and to raile are transgressions and consequently sins as was shewed before And therefore in themselves are worthy of everlasting death Secondly he that loveth not his brother abideth in death that is hath no eternall life i 1 Ioh. 3.14.15 But hee that is angry with his brother unjustly loveth him not therefore he hath no part in eternall life Thirdly no raylers shall inherit Gods kingdome that is without repentance k 1 Cor 6.10 But he that sayth to his brother Racha that is idle-braine or light-head raileth therefore this sinne without repentance excludeth from heaven and consequently in it selfe is worthy of hell Willet Synops 408. Fourthly Christ speaks here of the sinne not of the punishment for to bee angry with our brother and to harme him with some opprobrious words is the fault of the sinne not the punishment thereof but every fault and guilt of sinne not pardoned doth bring upon the sinner eternall condemnation as shall elsewhere be shewed And therefore all these three degrees of sinne are guiltie of hell fire Fiftly Christ concluding this discourse commands every one to be reconciled unto his brother lest he be delivered unto the Judge and by him sent into prison from whence hee shall not come out untill hee have payd the uttermost farthing that is never as shall bee shewed by and by And therefore although there be divers unequall degrees of punishment in hell yet all are equall in regard of the eternitie and perpetuitie thereof Chamier de Purgat fol. 1160. § 5. Answ 3 Thirdly an Argument drawne from a Metataphor similitude or a resemblance is not to be stretched or urged beyond the scope or intent of him that propounds it But Christs scope here was to correct the false interpretations and expositions of the Decalogue the Pharisees restraining the transgressions of the Law onely unto the outward and more weightie commissions and acts and therefore our Saviour teacheth them that those sins which they account light and veniall as to bee angry with their brother or to reproach him by some disgracefull words are indeed great and mortall sinnes deserving hell and damnation it selfe Scharp de Purgat fol. 557. resp 2. Sadeel pag. 258. error 2. Answ 4 Fourthly if our Saviour speake here of Purgatorie where he represents divers judgements or jurisdictions of the Jewes whereof some were superiour some inferiour as the Judgement Councell and great Synedrion then it would follow hence that there are many severall jurisdictions in Purgatorie and appeales from the inferiour Judges to the superiour as was in them But this is so absurd that I never heard nor read Papist maintaine it and therefore I could wish they would thinke Purgatory it selfe as grosse Answ 5 Fifthly neither of these words Iudgement or Councell can in any respect agree or be applyed to Purgatory there not being in them the least mention or insinuation of any purging more than there is in the word Gehenna Amesius tom 2. pag. 201. Answ 6 Sixtly from this place they must either prove two distinct Purgatories or none at all for Bellarmine himselfe observes two kindes of punishments distinct from the eternall torments of hell fire And therefore if this argument bee worth the owning or maintaining he must grant two Purgatories distinct in place and situation For as the Councel is a distinct place and jurisdiction from the place of the fire of Hell as he saith so also is the place of Judgment a distinct place frō the Synedrion or Councell And therefore if the Papists contend for this that the Synedrion or Councell differs from the fire of Hell wee doe no lesse strive for this that in like manner Judgement differs from Councell and so cannot be numerically one Wherefore either they must goe set up a second and new Purgatory from this place or pull down the old one which they have so stoutly heretofore maintained from hence because this Scripture we see must either support two Purgatories or none Seventhly if this conclusion of the Papists be Answ 7 good our Saviour speakes of punishments after this life because mention is made of Hell fire then this will follow also that he speakes of the punishments of civill judgements or Courts in this life because he makes mention of a Judgement and a Councel which belong unto this life and are not in Purgatory and therefore if this be absurd and deformed so is also the former being both cut by one Last Eighthly what Fathers can they finde who Answ 8 interpret this place of Purgatory Theophilact upon these words by councell understands the consent of the Apostles in the great and generall judgement And Saint Augustine de serm Dom. in monte from this place concludes that there are different degrees of punishment in Hell Ninthly to prove Purgatory from this place Answ 9 cannot stand with some other opinions of the Papists and therefore if they could prove Purgatory hence yet they would lose
hath beene reprehended and refused Therefore their consent and agreement is not the true rule of interpretation The Minor proposition is proved from this verse 21 31.33.38.43 where our Saviour doth plainely and directly oppose himselfe against the expositions of the Ancients It hath beene said of old thus but I say thus unto you Sect 4 § 4. Thou shalt not commit adultery Quest 1 Whether did the Law of Moses only restraine and forbid the outward act of sinne A sw The law did not onely restraine the body but the mind also not onely the outward action but also the inward affection Against this it is ob ected Object our Saviour faith here it was said unto you of old Thou shalt not commit adultery But I say c so that it appeareth the law onely restrained the outward act but Christ doth forbid more even the inward affection and desire First our blessed Saviour speaketh according Answ 1 to their opinion because they thought they were onely obliged and tied to the outward act and therefore he doth deliver the law from their corrupt interpretations n●t giving a new exposition as appeareth plainely verse 43. ye have heard that it hath beene said thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thy enemie but in all the old Testament there is no such precept given by God or liberty for any to hate their enemie our Saviour then meaneth not such sayings as were found in the law but such expositions as they made among themselves Secondly the law of Moses did bind not only Answ 2 the hand and externall act but also the inward will and desire as appeares thus First none are said to repent but of that which is evill but they under the law were to repent and to shew themselves contrite even for the internall acts of their minde as appeares Psalme 4.4 Tremble and sinne not examine your hearts upon your bed c. Therefore the law did restraine the inward will and desire Secondly it is directly forbidden Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart z Levit. 19.17 which was an internall act and many other such like sinnes of the heart are reprooved by the Prophets Ierem. 14 4. Thirdly the Law doth not just●fie that which is naturally unjust but forbiddeth it Therfore the extends law it selfe to the hidden man of the heart not only tying mens hands The assumptiō is proved thus First he that coveteth his Neighbours wife faileth in the end coveting her onely out of lust not for procreation which was the principall end of the institution and ordination of marriage Secondly Matrimonie is grounded even upon the law of nature if then to breake and violate matrimonie bee against the law of nature then to will and purpose so to doe is against nature also yea the will and purpose is rather sinne then the act it selfe for it may fall out that the externall act is sometime without sinne as when a man ignorantly lieth with another woman taking her to be his wife as Iacob tooke Leah for Rachel but the will and desire is never without sinne as saith Tostatus himselfe s exod 20. praec 7. Fourthly our Saviour saith that this precept Thou shalt not kill is transgressed by the anger and hatred of the heart verse 22. Therefore the law intendeth even by the externall act to forbid the internall also How doth Christ oppose himselfe to this precept Quest 2 Thou shalt not commit adultery Not by denying it Answ but by adding something unto it not by retracting it or by adding a bridle unto lust and uncleannesse but by spurring them forward to a spirituall sense which is to be extended beyond the literall as if our Saviour would say It was said of old Thou shalt not commit adultery and this is true but this is not the whole truth for there is mo●e then this here meant What uncleanenesse is here meant Quest 3 Vncleannes is twofold either Internall in the heart Externall which is either Circumstantiall in gesture and voice Substantiall which is Indirect Direct viz. Against or contrary to nature namely Sodomy either with Brute beasts called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men that is Males called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 According to nature is committed either Uiolently and is called a Rape Uoluntarily and is either Cōplicata because it is With a kinsewoman is called Incest With a married woman and is called Adultery Simple and that either With a strumpet called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With a Uirgin called Stuprum I will not here speake at all either I of the Internall uncleannesse or II of the Circumstantiall or III. of the Indirect because I will understand the place as the Pharisees understood it namely onely of actuall uncleannesse and for the horrour odiousnesse of the name I will omit Sodomy Thou shalt not commit adultery Quest. 4 Why must Christians hate avoide and shun fornication and adultery Answ Because God hath forbidden it Reade Exod. 20.14 Deut. 23.17 Prov. 5.8 Heb. 13.4 Obie 1 It may be objected simple fornication is no such great matter Adultery indeede is a great sinne but fornication is but a swall evill yea this the heathens could see by the light of nature Answ 1 First certainely fornication is a most greevous sinne in it selfe although not so great Answ 2 as adultery if therewith compared Secondly true it is fornication by no positive law of God was punished with temporall death but what was that seeing by the word of God it shall bee punished with eternall Bee not deceived saith the Apostle for neither fornicators nor adulterers shall ever enter into the kingdome of heaven Answ 3 Thirdly although simple fornication with an harlot whereof the former answer speakes were not by any positive law adjudged to bee punished with temporall death yet there was a simple fornication which was If a damosell play the whore in her Fathers house they shall bring her out to the doore of her fathers dwelling and the men of her citie shall stone her with stones that shee die because shee hath wrought folly in Israel a Deut. 22.21 Answ 4 Fourthly although by no positive law God commandeth Moses to punish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fornication with a strumpet with death yet the Lord himselfe doth cutting off foure and twenty thousand in one plague for this simple fornication Numb 25.1 and 1 Cor. 10.8 And therefore wee should not thinke that a light thing which the Lord who is just in all his judgements punisheth so severely Obie 2 Harding objects here that it is no great matter to permit stewes or brothell houses or to goe unto them for they had better doe that then deflower virgins yea their countrey of Italy being hot there is a certaine necessitie of suffering them First certainely it is most false that the permitting Answ 1 of those publique places of uncleannesse doth prevent greater mischiefes for experience teacheth that it makes men more
have addicted unto death and destruction as much as in them lieth Fifthly the uncleane person sinneth against the Church and Common-wealth wherein hee lives because hee corrupts it by his example as did Zimri Numb 25.6 And thus we see how woefull the effects of adultery and fornication are both in regard of God the wife of the partie offending the neighbour whose wife is abused the neighbours wife who is defiled the children that are begotten in a polluted bed and the Church and Common-wealth wherein the offender lives What punishments are due vnto the violaters Quest 6 of this precept Thou shalt not commit adultery The punishments are either Humane Divine which are either Corporall which are either Ordinarie Answ Extraordinarie Spirituall First there are Humane punishments which are inflicted by the lawes of the Gentiles or by the Civill law or by the Canon law First by the lawes of the Gentiles a three-fold punishment was inflicted upon such offenders I. Some of them punished it with death thus did the Arabians Eusebius and the Parthians m Alex. ab Alex. 4.1 and the ancient Saxons who hanged both parties n Carion and Nau. clerus Plato leg 3. ordained also death for such transgressors Charles of Burgundy caused an Earle first to marry a countrey wench whom hee had forced and then made him to be beheaded o Spandenberg Sesostres King of the Egyptians caused many uncleane adulterous women to be taken and shut up in a little village then burnt the village and them togetherp. q Diodor. Sic. 1. II. Some of them inflicted corporall punishment but not death Thus Zalenchus ordained that hee who was taken with a married woman should loose both his eyes and after in part inflicted the same law upon his owne sonne taken tardie in that sinne q Valer. The Egyptians in this case appointed that the man should have a thousand stripes and the woman her nose cut off that wanting the chiefe grace and ornament of her face shee might enflame and allure no more r Dioder Sic. 1.6 The Germans were accustomed to shave the mans head to strip him out of his garments and then to scourge him through the streets ſ Alex. ab Al. 4.1 Mahomet himselfe commanded that an adulterer should receive an hundred lashes in a great assembly forbidding any man so much as to pitty him III. Some of the Gentiles punished this sinne with infamie and shame The Cumani set such as were either taken in the act of uncleannesse or were convicted of it upon a stone in the market-place and after they had sitten there a while to be a spectacle unto al they were set upon an Asse and carried up and downe the market place and some chiefe streets that they might bee a laughing stocke unto all and then afterwards were set upon the stone againe and held as infamous varlets all their lives after whereupon it was called lapis detestabilis t Erasm chil the abominable stone The Ostrogothes caused the man to be drawne about the market by the privie parts and then banished him u Olatis Magn. 14.16 If any desire to know the customes of divers other nations in this particular let him reade Rhodingin 27.4 and Alexander ab Ales. 4.1 and St●baus Thus wee see how adultery and fornication was punished by the Gentiles either with death or some other corporall punishment or disgrace Secondly the Civill law punisheth this crime thus The Iulian law punished it with death Aurelian hanged those that were herein guilty v Rhoding 10.6 P. Attilius slew his owne Daughter because she had suffered her selfe to bee defiled w Valer. max. 6.1 Augustus banished for this his daughter Iulia. Tacit. Dion Thirdly Canon Law punished it thus first with seven yeares Penance Concil Ancyranum l. Can. 20. and Concil Wormaciense Can. 9. Secondly others Concil Elibertinum can 64. 69. punished it thus I. if the woman committed adultery but once shee was to doe penance five yeares II. If she continued long in adultery but left it at length shee was injoyned ten yeares penance III. If she continued in her sinne she was never to be admitted to the communion nor injoyned any penance Secondly there are besides these Humane Punishments others which are called Divine and these are either Corporall or Spirituall and the Corporall are either Ordinary or Extraordinary The Ordinary punishments are those which are injoyned by the law of God as for example I. Adultery was punished by the death of both parties Levit. 20.10 II. Vncleannesse committed with one that was espoused or contracted unto a husband but not as yet knowne by him was punished with the death of both parties also Deut. 22.24 III. He that lay with a woman in her monethes must die and she also Levit. 20.18 IV. He that defiled the daughter of a Priest must die V. The damosell that workes folly in her fathers house and is afterwards married unto another must die Deuter. 22.21 Thus wee see how the law of God punished this sinne with death Thirdly there are Extraordinarie punishments here observe I. God approves sometimes of severe punishment which is inflicted by others upon this sinne thus he approues of Phineas Act who slew that couple Zimry and Cozbi Numb 25.10 By which it appeares how odious and detestable this sinne of uncleannesse is unto God II. Sometimes God shewes and reveales his severe anger against this sinne by inflicting many severall punishments upon the transgressors thereby and that either in regard of the estate or of the credite or of the body First God punisheth uncleane persons in their estates for it rooteth out all the encrease of our substance x Iob 31.12 it brings a man to a crust of bread Prov. 6.26 and 23.27 because he that keepeth company with harlots spendeth his substance Pro. 29.3 Strumpets for the most part are costly and therefore quickly consume and wast those who maintaine them And againe God by a just vengance doth not blesse any thing that such a person takes in hand And therefore those who desire to be blessed in their estates let them take heede of Adultery and fornication Secondly the Lord punisheth such in their good name credite and reputation whence the Apostle entreats both the Corinthians and the Ephesians not to be companions of fornicators y 1 Cor. 5.9 and Ephes 5.7 because that would be a blemish to their reputations this evidently appeares thus I. none can endure to be called Adulterers or Adulteresses whatsoever they are shewing thereby that it is a disgrace to be such II. Whatsoever men are yet they would not be knowne to be such thus they that are wicked in this kinde doe yet desire that their sinne might be concealed from others because it were a shame for them to bee knowne to be such III. Those are chast will not associate themselves with such yea though they be but suspected to be such IV. Except
and the effect the sinne and the punishment the one being blotted out he will remember the other no more How doe we owe the debt of obedience unto Quest 6 God First wee owe it out of duty Because the Answ 1 Lord For this end hath I. Created and made us Ephes 2.10 Rom. 9 21. We were made men for his service II. Redeemed us that we might serve him in righteousnesse and true holinesse Luke 1.74 Tit. 2.14 III. Elected us and predestinated us unto the adoption of sonnes that as children wee might obey him i Ephes 1.4 IV. Called us that wee might obey him in sanctification and honour 1. Thess 4.7 V. Enlightned us that wee might increase in his service 2. Corinth 3 18. VI. Sanctified us in Christ that as members of Christ wee might performe his will Ephes 5.27 Answ 2 Secondly we owe obedience unto the Lord by command God hath given us a Law to obey and Christ hath renewed it Ephes 4.24 Wherefore S. Iames cals it the Law of liberty Iames 1.23 Now this command is that wee should serve him in Righteousnes towards man and Holinesse towards himselfe and that all our dayes Answ 3 Thirdly we owe obedience unto God for his benefits which wee daily receive from him Answ 4 Fourthly we are debters unto God by covenant and contract And that both First in Baptisme wherein wee promised fealtie and new obedience unto the Lord. Secondly in our profession and vocation unto Christianity as we are Christians wee have promised to put on Christ and serve God as the members of Christ all our dayes Thirdly in our daily Prayers wherein we make new promises unto God of new obedience Fourthly in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper wherein wee receive a pledge from God which is as a seale of that covenant which is made betweene us and God Quest 7 Is every man obliged to pay this debt unto God Answ Every man is obliged either to the debt of obedience or to the punishment of sinne whether they be Heathens or Christians or great men or the inferiour and ruder sort or prophane persans or ignorant or servants or children yea every one of what nation ranke or quality soever Sect. 2 § 2. Forgive us Obiect 1 Some object this place against the certaintie of remission thus Wee are here taught to pray for the pardon of our sinnes day by day al which were needlesse if we could be assured of pardon in this life and therefore there can bee no certaine assurance that our sinnes are remitted Answ 1 First this fourth petition must bee understood not so much of our old sins as of our present and new sinnes for as wee goe on from day to day so we adde sinne to sinne and for the pardon of them wee must humble our selves and pray Answ 2 Secondly wee pray for the pardon of our sinnes not because we have no assurance thereof but because our assurance is weake and small wee grow on from grace to grace in Christ as little children doe to mans estate by little and little and therefore we pray daily for more The Papists say Argu. that a man by good workes is justified Against this wee thus argue from this place Our Saviour teacheth every man though never so just to pray forgive us our sinnes And therefore no man is just by his workes To this Bellarmine answers Answ This petition of the Lords Prayer is to bee understood onely of veniall sinnes which are mixed with our good workes Bellar. de Iustif. lib. 6. cap. 20. resp ad loc 5. First the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Debts so that Reply 1 herein wee pray to have all our debts forgiven now wee are more endangered and endebted unto God by great sinnes then by small And therefore veniall sinnes onely are not here meant Reply 2 Secondly S. Luke readeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sinnes and S. Iohn defineth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sinne to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transgression 1 Iohn 3.4 But great sinnes are transgressions of the Law more then veniall Therefore they are not excluded Thirdly if good workes be tempered with Reply 3 veniall sinnes how can they being imperfect make us just and perfect before God But of this more by and by The Papists say good workes are meritorious Object 2 and satisfactory and from this Verse goe about to prove that Prayer satisfieth for sinne wee pray saith Bellarmine for forgivenesse of sinnes and by thus praying we satisfie for our veniall sinnes The Lords Prayer overthroweth their doctrine of satisfaction wee therein concluding Answ for thine is the glory wee take not the glory to our selves but ascribe all unto God Forgivenesse of the debt is of mercy where then remission is of grace there can bee no satisfaction of worthinesse Stand all sinnes in need of remission art not Quest 1 some veniall and pardonable of their owne nature First the Papists say some sinnes are veniall Answ 1 and that either I. Of their owne nature because they are not ontra legem sed praeter legem Dei against the Law of God but besides it as the hatred of our enemie in some degree or not to be silent when an Elder commands and the like Or II. for the littlenesse and smallnesse of the sin because they are not equall to eternall death neither deserve it l Staple● Antid Evang Secondly the Papists agree but jarringly amongst themselves in this particular some saying Answ 2 they are veniall sinnes because they are not against the Law of God some saying that they cannot properly bee called sinnes thus Bellarm. Thirdly that which is not Answ 3 Contra legem Dei against the Law of God is not sinne For the Law is the Rule both of good and evill And every sin is sin in as much as it is a violation the Law Answ 4 Fourthly what is lesse then the eating of an Apple Gen. 3 then an idle word Mat. 12.36 Then a corrupt thought Gen. 6.5 And yet these are threatned with judgement and punishment Answ 5 Fifthly because Stapleton saith these sins are not paria aeternae morti that is there is no resemblance analogy or proportion betweene these small sins and eternall death I adde therefore this one answer more That there is a parity resemblance and equality I. In the affection of the person offending who would for ever have given way to these if he had lived II. In the person offended who is an infinite God And III. In the choise of sin before life eternall And IV. In the guilt and staine of sin because it can never be blotted out by time or torment Object 3 The Fathers speake of veniall sins and the Scripture of mortall And therefore some are veniall Answ Sinne is called veniall or mortall foure manner of wayes namely First comparatively as a sin which is lesse evill Thus there are seven deadly sins as the Schoolmen say which are greater then a sin of ignorance because
to be feared that thou art yet alive in nature but dead in grace Wherein must naturall men labour to acquire Quest 11 life First in generall in the whole man that is Answ 1 both in the body and soule in the outward life and in the inward man in the will and memory and reason and spirit and mind Ephesians 4.24 and 1 Thess 5.23 Answ 2 Secondly more particularly we must labour to acquire life in three things to wit I. In sensu in our sense and apprehension Nothing comes unto the understanding which was not first in the sense and therefore we must labour that our understandings may be enlightned and that the scales of ignorance may fall off from our eyes because sense is the outer gate of the soule Ephes 1.18 Rom. 11.8 and 1 Iohn 2.11 In a word he that desires the light of grace must labour first to be sensible of the blindnesse of nature and he who longs for spirituall life must strive to be sensible of that spirituall death wherein he lies buried Luke 11.34 II. In fide in our faith and confidence faith is the eye wherby wee see God Mat. 5.8 faith brings us to saving knowledge Iohn 17.3 and workes in us true experience of the love of God c Philip. 3.10 And therefore let us not content our selves with dead dreams or carnall conjectures but labour for a true lively working and applicative faith III. In robore in our strength and power that is labour that wee may bee strengthned with might and power in the inward man d Ephes 3.16 not contenting our selves with the power of nature which is but impotency it selfe Now this living or lively power which we must labour for is three-fold namely First Potestas pugnandi power to fight against sinne and Sathan manfully untill we have prevailed e Heb. 12.4 and 1 Pet. 2.11 Secondly Potestas obediendi power to obey God in some good measure in that which he requires of us in a new life Thirdly Potestas amandi gaud●ndi power to love God and good duties and to rejoyce in the performance thereof Esay 58.13 Quest 12 From whom is this life to be acquired Answ 1 First we must seeke it of God the Father Esay 25.8 Hos 13.14 Rom. 4.17 Answ 2 Secondly we must seek it of God the Sonne Luke 1.78.79 Iohn 1.4 and 2 Cor. 5.15 and 2 Tim. 1.10 Answ 3 Thirdly wee must seek it of God the Holy Ghost Iohn 6.63 Rom. 8.10 11. and 1 Cor. 6.11 And therefore let us invocate God the Father in the name and mediation of God the Sonne to infuse this spirituall life of grace into us by the operation of his blessed Spirit Quest 13 What means must we use for the obtaining of this spirituall life Answ 1 First wee must be watchfull and circumspect over our wayes Ephes 5.15 for grace is not found in the way of security or with sleeping upon the bed of case Colos 3.1 Answ 2 Secondly we must be diligent in hearing Iohn 5.24 25. and 2 Tim. 1.10 Now there are two things to be heard namely I. The Law this wee must hear that we may be humbled therby Rom. 7.9 II. The Gospel this we must hear that we may be counselled and comforte therby 2 Cor. 2.16 Answ 3 Thirdly we must die unto sin Generatio unius est corruptio alterius the vivifying of grace is the mortifying of sin And the more grace increases the more sin decreases Rom. 6.11 and 1 Cor. 15.36 Now there are two kinds of death namely First Concupiscentiae of sinne and lust Colos 3.5 for all sins evill affections and lusts are to be mortified Secondly Confidentiae of hope and confidence for wee must deny our selves not trust at al in any thing we do Fourthly wee must labour to beleeve Iohn 8.24 Answ 4 And that by a faith not of our own framing but of Gods infusing Colos 2.12 Fifthly we must persevere in all these as long Answ 5 as we live that is both in watchfulnesse and hearing and mortifying of sinne and beleeving with a faith approved by works Revelat. 2.11 Ephes 6.13 What shall wee gaine by this spirituall life Quest 14 that we must take so much paines for the procuring of it First if wee be made partakers of this life Answ 1 of grace then we shall bee made fellow Citizens of the Saints yea the Heirs of God Rom. 8.17 Ephes 2.6.19 Second by this spirituall life we gain spiritual Answ 2 liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 from sin Rom. 6.14 8.11 Thirdly by this life we gain light and knowledge Answ 3 and spirituall rejoycing Esay 9.2 Luke 1.80 and 1 Pet. 1.8 And therfore it is worth al the paines VERS 25. And his Disciples came to him Vers 25 and awoke him saying Lord save us wee perish § 1. His Disciples came to him Sect. 1 This action of the Disciples in comming to Christ may teach us the degrees of our comming unto Christ How do we come unto Christ Quest or by what steps First the carnall man is absent from Christ Answ 1 and a stranger unto him Mat. 18.11 Luke 15.13 Ephes 2.12 and 1 Pet. 25. Secondly therefore God sends affliction as Answ 2 to the prodigall poverty and to the Jews misery Psalme 107. Thirdly and then we come to him Psal 119.67.71 Answ 3 One of these two wayes either I. By prayer as the Disciples here did crying Lord save us Or II. By repentance as the Prodigall did Father I have sinned against heaven and against thee § 2. They awoke him Sect. 2 Christ indeed is sometimes absent from his children which is here expressed by his being asleep How is Christ absent from his children Quest First sometimes he is absent from them by Answ 1 withdrawing his grace from them and permitting them to sin thus he absented himselfe from Peter and David for a time Secondly sometimes he is absent from them Answ 2 in comfort when hee permits them to fall into grievous afflictions thus hee absented himselfe from Iob for a time and from David Psal 22. Sect. 3 § 3. Save us or wee perish The Disciples here in their distresse pray unto Christ and are preserved whence we may learn Observ That the prayers of the righteous shall certainly be heard Object But many pray whom God answers not Answ 1 First God is alwayes able to heare and helpe us if he please Daniel 3.17 Answ 2 Secondly if he do not helpe us when we pray yet he will turn his deniall and our distresse unto our good for all things worke together for the best unto the righteous Rom. 8.28 Answ 3 Thirdly and although hee do not helpe us at the first yet he can afterwards as we see in Israels fighting against Benjamin who was overcome once againe Iudg. 20.21.25 although God bad them fight verse 18.23 but at length they wholly overcome them verse 35. c. Vers 26 VERS 26. And hee saith unto them why are yee fearfull O yee of
is borne of a woman and begot by a man is impure and polluted Iob 14.4 and 15.14 and 25.4 Psal 51.7 And therefore it is evident that all men are defiled Answ 3 Thirdly this further evidently appeares by the consideration of parts For I. The Body is but a dead Organ except only as it is quickned and enlivened by the soule II. All our senses are both direct Traytors letting in temptation into the soule and also the servants and handmaids of lust and concupiscence III. The bruit part of man is wholly set upon evill and runs after and pursues nothing else that is both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Irascible and concupiscible parts or faculties IV. The Imagination doth continually present some evill or other unto the soule Ephes 4.18 V. The will of man alwayes naturally assents to the worse part Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor I see what 's best but oh accurst I follow still what is the worst This was the bitter plaint of blessed Paul The evill which I would not doe I doe daily Rom. 7.15 VI. Naturall reason and carnall wisedome are enemies and opposite unto God and averse from him Rom. 8.7 VII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mind it selfe which the Platonicks thought did partake of the divine nature stands in need of reformation and renovation Ephes 4.23 Rom. 12.2 And thus wee see by an Induction of parts how the whole man of all mankind is corrupt Answ 4 Fourthly it will most evidently appeare that we all naturally are contaminated with sinne if we consider the nature of the leprosie and together therewith the resemblance of sinne thereunto I. Leprosie is an universall disease it begins and breeds first in the humours then breakes forth in the skin and within a while overspreads the whole man Thus sinne seizing first upon the soule by and by corrupted and tainted both soule and body And therefore wee should consider how necessary it is that wee should be changed and renewed who are thus corrupted and defiled We are easily perswaded to confesse and acknowledge that a change is necessary but very difficultly perswaded to goe about the worke being herein especially enemies to innovations wherefore wee should so much the more earnestly and industriously undertake the taske by how much the harder and contrary to our naturall affections it is II. Leprosie is hereditary as was shewed before Chap. 8. And so is sinne derived from the father to the sonne III. Leprosie is an uncleane disease For First the humours in Lepers are intemperate And Secondly altogether corrupt and poisonous so that the humours in the Leper and in him who is taken with the French or Neapolitane disease are much like And Thirdly it is an infectious disease and therefore by the Leviticall Law Lepers were to live alone Thus sinne doth pollute and infect our selves and endangereth others And therefore why should we presume thereof Let us rather remember that I. Sin cast us out of Paradise And II. Brought death upon Christ who knew no sinne in himselfe neither deserved any death or punishment at all for any offence of his owne And III. Hinders our prayers from being heard for God heares not sinners Iohn 9. And IV. Hinders the Lord from saving us because it is contrary to his Iustice to save sinners Yea V. Is of that nature that one sinne is enough to destroy us yea the whole world as we see in the sinne of Adam Achan Saul David Ionas Hezekiah yea if Christ had but broken the least commandement hee could not have saved us IV. The Leprosie leaves its scarres and markes and relickes behind it So sinne leaves its remainders and a pronenesse unto concupiscence behind it and a certaine weaknesse and inability in nature to do the will and worke of God V. Hence the Leper although he be cured of his Leprosie and pronounced clean is prone to relapse and fall into this disease againe So by reason of the remainders and relickes of sinne in us wee are prone to relapse and fall into sin even after our regeneration And therefore wee must be watchfull and circumspect over all our wayes standing alwayes upon our Watch-Tower and labouring and praying that the Lord would sanctifie us throughout both in body soule and spirit 1 Thess 5.23 And thus we have heard that wee are by nature polluted with the leprosie of sinne It remaines now Secondly to shew that by Christ wee are purged from sinne Or That those whom Christ receives hee cures Observ 2 from the pollution of sinne This wee have handled before and therefore I will adde but one Question to what hath beene spoken and proceed to the next Section How may wee know Quest whether we be cleansed from the leprosie of sinne Examine seriously these five things viz. First Answ whether doe wee strive and struggle against our owne proper sinnes or not Secondly whether doe we hate all sorts and kinds of sin whatsoever or not whether great or small whether publike or private whether beloved or not beloved Thirdly whether have wee strength to walke in the wayes of God have we received health and strength and new humours from the Lord in so much as now we can serve the Lord in purity of heart Fourthly whether have wee tender consciences and awakened consciences or not which will not endure the least touch of sinne but carefully watch against all Fiftly whether doth the Watch-man of Israel which neither slumbers nor sleepes preserve and keepe us that is both watch over us himselfe and also excite us to bee watchfull over our selves Certainely if we find these things in us we may then be confidently assured that the Lepers are cleansed And therefore enquire diligently whether 1. We hate all sinnes in generall and 2. Strive more particularly against our owne sinnes And 3. Are afraid to commit any and watchfull against all And 4. Perceive the holy Spirit to prevent us from sinne and to helpe us forward in the performance of what is good And 5. Find new strength in our bones and joynts to serve the Lord For by these wee may know whether we be freed from the pollution of sinne or not Sect. 4 § The deafe heare First wee must here consider the estate of nature And then Secondly the state of grace First by nature wee are deafe untill wee bee cured Quest 1 How many sorts and kinds of deafenesse are there Deafenes is two-fold Answ to wit either of the Body of which I here speake not Or Mind it is an incapacity of things either Naturall but we heare the clamours of nature which desire meat drink sleep rest health pleasure and the like Or Morall but wee can learne worthy wisedome and crafts the like Or Scientialium of things belonging to Arts sciences but the naturall man can learne liberall arts and sciences professions yea even the most deep profound arts Or Spirituall Now these things are understood either I. In others here our eares
begets both paine in the Eare and duls the hearing Now Christ cures this by taking away our hard and stony hearts and giving us hearts of flesh Ezech. 11.19 Acts 2.38 Thirdly there is the infirmity it selfe or deafenesse this Christ cures by opening and boring our Eares Iob. 33.16 Esa 50.5 c. Acts 16.14 Esa 55.10 and enabling us to heare the word of God with joy and comfort II. The next impediment of the Eare which Christ takes away is drynesse or want of moysture in the Eare This hee cures by sending rain and watring our hearts with the deaw of Heaven and with the grace of his holy Spirit Reade Deuter. 32 2 Esa 30.20 c. and 44.3 and 55.10 Thirdly the ringing and tinckling in the Eare hinders the heareing this is blind zeale and is cured by Christ who enlightens our understandings and enformes our judgements and suffers us no longer through a false zeale with Saul to persecute Christ and his members Acts. 9.4 or in his members but with Paul to suffer yea to dye If God require it for the glory of Christ and the good of his body the Church IV. The weakenesse of the braine is a great impediment to the hearing Now this Christ cures by enabling us to heare the word of God profoundly that is as he did to Eze●hiel enabling us to hear with our eares to receive in our hearts al the words that the Lord speaks unto us Ezec. 3 1● and not like the seed in stony ground who for want of depth of roote and ground withered and died Mat. 13.5 V. Sleepe and Lethargie hinders the hearing this Christ cures by enabling us to heare the word with delight as Esay commands us 58.13 And with joy as Ieremiah did Thy words were found and I did eate them and they were the very joy and rejoycing of my heart Ierem. 15.16 Secondly Christ doth not onely take away the impediments of hearing but repaires and restore the losses of the Eare which are principally Answ 2 Life and Spirit I. Christ gives life unto us Iohn 1.4 and 14.6 Dead men cannot heare and therefore he quickens us as follows in the next Section II. Christ gives his Spirit unto us Cantie 4.16 Ioel 2.28 c. Esa 44.3 whereby wee are enabled to understand what wee heare and to practise in some measure what we understand § 5. The dead are raised up As in the former Section so also in this wee Sect. 5 have two things to consider of namely I. That by nature we are dead II. That by grace we are quickned First by nature we are dead Quest 1 Who are here meant by the dead Answ 1 First there is a three-fold death namely Temporall Spirituall and Eternall Answ 2 Secondly there is a two-fold Spirituall death viz. I. A death to sinne in the Dative case now this is Mortification II. A death in sinne in the Ablative case And this is the death here spoken of Answ 3 Thirdly the meaning therefore of these words The dead are raised is this that all men by nature are spiritually dead in sinne but the children of God are restored unto life by Christ Now of these in their order and first of the first the state of nature Observ 1 First I say wee learne hence that all naturall men are dead in sinne Quest 2 How doth this appeare Answ 1 First from these places Rom. 3.23 and 5.12 Colos 2.13 Ephes 2.1.5 c. Answ 2 Secondly because otherwise Christs death had beene needlesse Rom. 5.6.8 and 2 Cor. 5.14 but of this by and by in the state of grace Answ 3 Thirdly it appeares plainely that all men naturally are dead in sin because all were killed in Adam Rom. 5.15.17.18 and 1 Cor. 15.21.22 For I. The Image of God which was in us at first is now lost Gen. 2. But is renewed by Christ Ephes 4.24 At first the heart was converted unto God And the beames of love did inflame and kindle the hearts to love the Lord above all Psal 63.1 But now we are averse from the Lord. II. Wee are now guilty of death 2 Cor. 3.7 And subject to the Law which is the Minister of death and therefore wee are called dead men because by the Law wee are condemned and adjudged unto death III. Wee are by nature subject to the wrath and anger of God And his Iustice will not suffer us to goe unpunished Colos 3.6 IV. Our nature is so polluted that it produceth nothing but sinne and impurity Colos 2.13 V. Wee are by nature the servants of sinne and Sathan Rom. 6.20 and 2 Tim. 2.26 and 2 Pet. 2.14 And hence the body was called by the Ancients Tartara Sepulebrum mortuorum Pistrinum animae b Rhod. 287. And therefore these things considered wee may safely conclude that all men by nature are spiritually dead in sinne Observ 2 Secondly wee have now to consider of the state of grace Suscitantur namly That Christ frees all those who are his from the death of sinne Iohn 5.24 c. Esa 9.2 and 2 Tim. 1.10 Quest 5 From what death doth Christ free his Answ 1 First hee freeth them from eternall death Ioh. 5.24 and 2 Thess 1.9 Revel 2.11 and 21.8 Answ 2 Secondly he freeth them from spiritual death and this is that which is here meant and is understood either I. Of our fredome and deliverance from our enemies Rom. 7.2 that is First from sinne and the kingdome thereof Rom. 6.2 Or Secondly from the Law and the curse thereof Rom. 7.4 How or by what meanes may we or are wee Quest 6 raised from death unto life First by God and Christ Psalme 90.3 Rom. 4. Answ 1 17. and 7.25 and 11.15 Secondly by the preaching of the Gospel 1 Answ 2 Pet. 4.6 Thirdly by faith in Christ Iohn 5.24 c. Answ 3 Fourthly by a spirituall death of sinne Rom. Answ 4 6.2.5.8.11 and 8.10 and 6.3.6 Fiftly by charity and love wee know that Answ 5 wee are translated from death unto life because wee love the brethren 1 Iohn 3. VERS 7.8.9 And as they departed Verse 7.8.9 Iesus began to say unto the multitudes concerning Iohn what went you out into the wildernesse to see a Reed shaken with the wind But what went you out for to see a man clothed in soft raiment Behold they that weare soft clothing are in Kings houses But what went you out for to see a Prophet yea I say unto you and more then a Prophet § What went you out for to see Sect. 1 What use is there of an Interrogation or Quest 1 why are questions asked First some aske a question that they may bee Answ 1 instructed and thus the Disciples propound many questions unto Christ Secondly some aske questions for this end Answ 2 that thereby others may be instructed and thus our Saviour here interrogates the people Thirdly some aske questions to see or try Answ 3 whether others know that which is enquired And this is ordinary
and despiseth that inestimable sacrifice offered up by him yea there is no name for him to bee saved by who blasphemes the name of the onely Mediator and Redeemer Iesus Christ our Lord. III. Because God in his justice will not suffer that his holy Spirit which is the Spirit of truth should be taxed with lying and falshood which is the direct sin of those who commit this unpardonable offence IV. This sinne is called irremissible because it so casts them into the power of Sathan that they can never returne from that captivity and bondage For as the Saints and faithfull have the testimony of the Spirit which assures them that they belong unto God not unto Sathan So these blasphemous Apostates have a certaine testimony of their owne hearts and consciences that the Devill holds them and will hold them unto the end Now that testimony given unto the Saints may bee called the seale of the Spirit and this given unto these blasphemers the signe or Character of Sathan How many things concurre to the making Quest 4 up of this sinne against the Holy Ghost or how many things are required in him who commits it First three things concurre to the making up Answ 1 of this sinne namely I. Abnegatio veritatis a deniall of the truth against knowledge and conscience II. Apostasia universalis an universall apostacy and falling away from Christ and not some particular sinne committed against the first or second table of the Law III. Rebellio a rebellion arising from the hatred of the truth conjoyned with a tyrannicall sophisticall and hypocriticall opposing thereof both in the doctrine and profession thereof Hence it appeares Secondly that in him who commits this sin Answ 2 unto death it is necessary there should be these foure things to wit I. Hee must have a knowledge of that truth● which hee opposeth Hence every sinne though never so great committed of ignorance is excluded yea although it arise from a certaine malice against the Sonne of man himselfe as did that sinne of Pauls in persecuting his members For blasphemy against the Holy Ghost cannot be forgiven but that great sinne arising from an ignorance of the truth committed against the Sonne of man was pardoned 1 Tim. 1.13 II. It is necessary that this knowledge of the truth doe not onely swim in the braine but so sinke into the heart that there be a full and deliberate assent to the truth And hence all sinnes are excluded which are not committed and acted of set purpose and out of deliberation against the knowne and acknowledged truth For blasphemy shall never be forgiven but sinnes suddenly fallen into may be pardoned as wee see by Davids transgressions Psalme 32.5 c. and 51. III. It is requisite that this knowledge which is opposed bee not acquired by study meerely or by strong and undeniable arguments or principles but by a supernaturall perswasion of the Holy Spirit Hence then all sinnes are excluded which may be in a Gentile or any man simply Atheisticall as the obduration of Pharaoh the presumption of Manasses and the finall impenitencie of the wicked For the sinne against the Holy Ghost presupposeth the operation of the Holy Ghost in the heart and therefore cannot be pardoned but there may be obduration presumption gloriation in sinne yea finall impenitencie in those who never were made partakers of any such grace or light or knowledge or operation of the Spirit and therefore if any such would but repent as Manasses did they should be pardoned as he was IV. It is necessary that this perswasion bee not only of the truth of the word but of the goodnesse thereof also when wee perswade our selves that the Gospel is true yea that it is good in it selfe and so good that happy shall we be if wee receive and obey it but miserable if we reject and sleight it Hence the sinnes of hypocrites and all formall Professors who have onely some knowledge of the truth and make only some out-side shew of Religion but are not affected with the goodnesse and sweetnesse thereof are excluded from blasphemy which never can be forgiven for those may repent and find mercy but this blasphemer cannot Quest 5 How many things are included in this sinne against the Holy Spirit Answ 1 First it includes not onely a contempt and neglect of the Gospel but also a rejecting thereof yea Answ 2 Secondly it containes a contumelious and reproachfull rejecting of the Gospel which is called the trampling of the Sonne of man and the blood of the Covenant under feet as an impure thing Now under this particular are comprehended malice hatred blasphemy and persecution and hence these Apostats are called Adversaries Heb. 10.27 From blasphemy then by this particular are excluded all back-sliding and denying of Christ and sinnes of presumption which arise either from infirmity or passion For Peters denying of his Master may be called properly Apostacie but not properly blasphemy because it proceeded from weakness not from malice Answ 3 Thirdly it includes a contumelious rejection of the Gospel against knowledge Hebr. 10.26 whereby are excluded sinnes of malice which spring from ignorance as Pauls did Answ 4 Fourthly it comprehends a contumelious rejection of the Gospel against conscience which Paul cals voluntariè to sinne willingly And hereby are excluded sinnes arising from carelesnesse or presumption or a perswasion of impunity or from a sleepie conscience as the sinnes of Manasses did Answ 5 Fiftly it includes a voluntary contradiction and opposition of the internall and supernaturall worke of the Spirit Heb. 10.23 for this is to reproach the blessed Spirit and the grace of the same Quest 6 How doth the greatnesse of this sinne of blasphemy appeare Answ It appeares by a serious consideration and view of the nature thereof Here then observe First of all other sinnes this harmes nature most because none casts men so farre from pardon as this doth which utterly takes away repentance the only way unto salvation As that is reckoned the greatest sicknesse which doth not only deprive a man of health but also debars and shuts the doore against all meanes unto health Secondly of all other sinnes this is the most grievous by reason of the hurt it doth and of all other the most abominable by reason of the defect of excuse For it takes away all excuse from men and makes them inexcusable They cannot excuse themselves by ignorance because their sinne was against knowledge nor by infirmitie and weaknesse because their consciences will tell them that they sinned out of obstinate and wilfull malice And therefore these mitigations and extenuations of ignorance and weaknesse being taken from them which other great sinners may plead their judgement certainely shall be the more grievous and insupportable Thirdly of all other sinnes this harmes the will and mind most for it makes a man unable to worke the workes of uprightnesse and holinesse That sicknesse is the most dangerous which doth so infect and corrupt
and danger but also the turpitude and filthinesse of sinne and doth teach us not onely to detest the punishment of sinne but even sinne it selfe yea not to hate God who is the avenger of sinne or righteousnesse and holinesse which are contrary to sinnes but to hate our selves for the violation of the rules of righteousnesse and the provocation of so gracious and good a God I might enlarge this particular but I will but onely briefely branch it out into a double worke of the holy Spirit to wit I. The Spirit of God doth shew us three things namely First our guilt that is how wee have transgressed and violated the whole Law of God and therefore if God should call us unto judgement or enter into judgement with us wee must needs accuse our selves and confesse that wee are guilty of the transgression and breach of the Law And Secondly our danger wherein wee are by reason of our sinnes the wages of sinne being death Rom. 6.23 and the reward of the violation of the Law eternall condemnation And Thirdly the pollution and filthinesse of sinne how that it is out of measure sinfull and a thing most loathsome both in it selfe and unto the pure eyes of our heavenly Father II. The Spirit of God doth negatively not teach unto us these two things viz either First to hate God because he is the punisher and avenger of sinne or because he will not suffer us to sinne without punishment for this the malignant Spirit teacheth to men who have given themselves over unto sinne Or Secondly to hate righteousnesse and true holinesse because they are contrary unto our sinnes lusts and vile affections and because for the violation of the rules of righteousnesse and holinesse wee are punished and plagued For this Sathan and our owne corruption teacheth unto us and not the good and blessed and holy Spirit of God III. The Spirit of God affirmatively teacheth these three things unto us namely First to hate the punishment of sinne the Spirit teacheth us that it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of God because he is a consuming fire and that those who continue to transgresse an infinite Law and to offend an infinite Law-giver shall be infinitly punished with torments intollerable though alwayes tollerated and borne and therefore wee are taught by the Spirit to hate these punishments which are the reward of sinne And Secondly to hate sinne it selfe which is the cause of this punishment and that with a perfect hatred yea not onely in regard of the punishment of sinne but in regard of sinne it selfe it being in its owne nature a thing worthy to be detested and abhorred Yea Thirdly the Spirit teacheth us to hate our selves for our folly and madnesse that have loved and delighted in those things which are both infinitly evill and ougly in themselues and shall be so severely and unspeakably punished without repentance And this is the first degree and steppe unto Regeneration Answ 2 Secondly the Spirit of God doth excite and stirre vp in us an unfained desire of the remission and pardon of all our sinnes and this is the second step and degree of Regeneration Now because a wicked man may desire to have his sinnes forgiven him it will not be amisse to observe the difference betweene the desire of the Regenerate and unregenerate man I. The desire of the Regenerate is serious and solide they conceive sinne to bee an infinite evil and a thing so odious unto God that it separates him from man Ierem. 5.25 And therefore so long as they are not certaine that their sinnes are remitted they are uncertaine of the presence of God in them or of his love unto them or of their reconciliation unto him yea untill they are sure that their sinnes are done away they cannot have any true peace of conscience or spirituall rejoycing Now as they earnestly and unfainedly desire to be certaine of all these viz of the presence and love of God and reconciliation unto him and peace with him and with themselves and of the joy and consolation of the Spirit in themselves So they incessantly and heartily desire the assurance of the pardon of their sinnes without which assurance they cannot be assured of the other II. The desire of the unregenerate is a confused and fleeting desire he wisheth often that his sinnes were pardoned but the desire thereof doth not constantly possesse his heart hee may desire remission remissely sleightly and casually but not seriously and solidly or vpon those grounds whereby it is desired by the Regenerate man III. The Regenerate man desires rather to be purged from the evill of sinne then freed from the evill of punishment When the child of God groanes both under the burden of sinne and of punishment and is sensible of both the Evils then he desires to be freed first from the guilt and filth of sinne as the greater evill and prayes unto God more heartily to wash him and purge him and cleanse him from his pollution then to ease him of his paine IIII. The unregenerate man is more sensible of the evill of punishment then of sinne and more desirous to be freed from that then this Thus this earnest and unfained desire of the assurance of the pardon and remission of sinne is the second degree of Regeneration Thirdly the next step and degree of Regeneration Answ 3 is the Spirit of supplication and prayer now three things are here to bee examined by us namely I. Whether pray wee daily unto God to pardon our sinnes and to regenerate us And with David cry unto the Lord to create cleane hearts and renew right Spirits within us Psal 51.11 And II. Whether can wee commit our selves unto the Lord and expect with willing obedience the revelation of his will can wee when wee pray say unto the Lord I flee unto thee O Lord doe unto mee as shall seeme good in thy eyes And III. Whether doe wee obtaine our requests at Gods hand or not wee should marke the returne and fruit of our prayers and see whether with the King of Niniveh and the prodigall Child our prayers be heard and our suites granted For if wee can fervently pray and faithfully commit and commend our selves unto the good will and pleasure of God and obtaine our suites at his hands we may be comfortably perswaded that we are regenerated because God heares not sinners Iohn 9.31 Fourthly the last degree and highest step of Answ 4 Regeneration is the testimony evidence and pledge of the Spirit whereby is sealed unto us and wrought in us the certainty of tho love of God together with a full purpose of heart to walke before the Lord all the dayes of our lives And therefore wee should examine our selves whether the Spirit of God witnesse unto our spirits that God loves us and that in love unto him wee purpose to give our selves wholly up unto him Who are Regenerated Quest 3 Onely those who are endued with the
successors the Bishops doth onely forbid them to use a Regall or Lordlike power either over CHRISTS Ministers or Gods people who are under their rule and government Bp. Daven Determ qu. 42. page 193. VERS 28. Vers 28 Even as the Sonne of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a ransome for many § 1. Even as the Sonne of man came not to be Sect. 1 ministred unto but to minister CHRIST having before disswaded his Apostles from ambition and the desire of ruling and domineering over others doth now further enforce it by his owne example and humility Wherein did the humility of Christs ministery shew it selfe Quest First in the assuming and taking upon him Answ 1 the forme of a servant 2. Corinth 8.9 Philip. 2.7 Secondly in his life and ministerie he not Answ 2 ceasing to teach the ignorant and heale the sicke and worke miracles for the winning of unbeleevers unto him so long as he was here on the earth Thirdly his humility shewed it selfe in his Answ 3 death and suffering for the redemption of his Church § 2. And to give his life for a ransome Sect. 2 What is the meaning of these words Quest 1 That he gave himselfe to be a sacrifice for our guilt Answ and our sinnes being derived or laid upon him he underwent for us death and malediction that is he gave himselfe to be the price of Redemption for us and thereby he redeemed us from death and malediction CHRIST therefore hath not onely freed us per modum Redemptionis by paying our ransome but also per modum Satisfactionis for he who undergoes death for one that is guilty thereof and by his death frees him from punishment doth redeeme him Per modum satisfactionis and thus CHRIST hath redeemed his children Per modum Redemptionis because he hath freed them from the captivity of Sathan and also Per modum satisfactionis because he hath delivered them from that punishment which they were subject unto Lubertus contra Socinum If the Reader would see how this verse is urged for imputed righteousnesse and how it is excepted against by Bellarmine and his exception answered let him reade Bp. Davenant de justitia habit Cap. 28. Pag. 364. Our Saviour in this place speaking directly and clearely of the Redemption of his children from sinne Sathan the curse of the Law and the wrath of the Lord it will not be amisse to answer briefely a question or two concerning Redemption How manifold is Redemption Quest 2 Twofold viz. First of the Soule from sinne Secondly of the body from death Iohn 1.29 Answ Revelat. 20.5 6. To this purpose Bernard saith Qui enim resurgit in anima resurget in corpore ad vitam He that ariseth in soule from sinne shall arise in body unto Salvation Wherein doth our Redemption consist Quest 3 In satisfying of Gods justice which the Law requires Answ for the violating of his commandements for the better vnderstanding hereof observe that Gods justice is satisfied by these two meanes namely First by suffring the punishment due to sinne which is the curse of God And Secondly by the perfect keeping of the Law without which there can be no deliverance from sinne and Sathan Galath 3.10 12. And therefore we cannot redeeme or free our selves from condemnation Hebr. 9.22 and. 12.14 And consequently the opinion of popish merit is quite overthrowne Quest 4 By whom was our redemption wrought Answ By CHRIST onely God and man Iohn 3.16 Acts. 4.12 Rom. 5.8 and. 1. Iohn 5.12 Quest 5 How is this our redemption revealed or made knowne unto us Answ By the word of God Read for the proofe hereof Matth. 11.12 Luke 2.10 Rom. 1.16 Object Against the 4th question it is objected God is said to redeeme us and therfore not Christ onely Answ 1 First I deny the consequence God redeemes us therefore not Christ onely followes not for CHRIST is God and therefore when indefinitely it is said that God redeemes us we may vnderstand Christ because he is God But Answ 2 Secondly it is true that both God the Father and also God the Sonne doth redeeme us but it is Alia atque alia ratione not after one and the same but after a diverse manner For I. God redeemes us but is by Christ But II. Christ redeemes us by himselfe Answ 3 Thirdly CHRIST hath paid the price of redemption for us and hath freed us from death by his death which cannot truely be affirmed of the Father or the blessed Spirit and therefore Christ properly and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to bee our Redeemer Quest 6 How many things are necessarily required unto a reall and a Redemption properly so called Answ To this Socinus answers that five things are necessarily required unto a true proper and reall Redemption and if that one of these five conditions bee wanting it is no Redemption properly His necessary conditions are these viz. First there must be some who are redeemed Secondly there must be some who doth redeeme Thirdly there must be some from whom or from whose power the captives are redeemed Fourthly there must be some price paid And Fifthly this price must be paid to him who keepes the Captives in captivity These things saith Socinus are necessarily required in a proper and reall Redemption and we gainesay it not because all these are found in our Redemption by CHRIST For I. It is man who is redeemed and to this purpose St. Paul saith Hee hath redeemed VS Gal. 3.13 Titus 2.14 II. It is Christ who redeemes us as is laid downe in the same places of St. Paul III. It is principally the Lord from whose curse and malediction man is redeemed and lesse principally he is delivered from Sathan an evill conversation iniquity death and malediction as it is taken for the punishment of sinn Read for this purpose Rom. 11.32 and .1.24 Galath 3.22 Revel 14.10 and. 20.2.14.15 where it is said Death and hell and whosoever was not found written in the booke of life were cast into the lake of fire By whom were they cast by God therefore God not the devill holds men in captivity For he properly keepes captive who hath power to inflict the punishment of death condemnation upon him who is in captivitie Now this power onely the Lord hath IV. Christ himselfe who was slaine and offred for us is the price of our Redemption Matth. 20.28 and. 1 Tim. 2.6 V. And lastly this price must be paid unto God not unto Sathan whose debters we are and whom we have offended Hebr. 9.14 and. 10.9 For the price and debt is to be paide to him that layes in Prison and not to the Jaylor that detaines and keepes in prison Lubertus contr Soc. VERS 30 31. Verse 30 31. And behold two blind men sitting by the way side when they heard that JESVS passed by cryed out saying Have mercy on us Oh Lord thou Sonne of David And the multitude rebuked
our duty in regard of these and other good meanes is to trust him no lesse when we have them then when we want them Iohn 13.15 Now from this Confidence proceeds hope 2 Chron. 20.1 and Isa 8.17 and Psal 27.14 which brings forth spirituall courage which courage consists in these things namely First in spirituall security Psal 3.5 6. And. Secondly in constancy in good things And Thirdly in patience in time of trouble and adversity as 2 Samuel 15.10 11 12. and Iames 5.11 and Hebr. 11.27 Thirdly we ought to have God in our Affections and that I. By loving him as Deuter. 6.5 Luke 10.27 and in this place that as we know and beleeve him to be good yea the chiefest good so wee love him above all and this love is then in truth in us when we love his word and Commandements Iohn 14.15.21.23 Psal 119.55.97 and discover our love in often thinking and speaking of God to his glory Psal 119.55 Acts. 17.28 Iames. 1.17 Malach. 3.16 and by desiring of his presence 2 Tim. 4.8 Psal 27.4 and 422. and by being zealous of his glory above all things and doing his will cheerefully Psal 16.3 and 119.97 ●31 Contrary to this love is such a love of our selves and wordly pleasures as causeth us to leave those duties undone which God requireth of us 1 Ioh. 2.15 16. and spirituall slothfulnesse Revelat. 3.15 and inconsiderate zeale Luke 9.54 whereas the true love of God will move us with Moses and Paul to wish our selves accursed rather then that the glory of God should any thing at all be stained by us Exod. 32.32 Rom. 9.3 II. Wee must have God in our Affections by fearing him above all other things because he above all others is most powerfull and just Matth. 10.28 Esa 8.13 Hebr. 12.28 29. Gen. 18.27 Iob. 31.23 Now this feare workes in us a care to approve our selves unto God in all things Proverb 8.13 Gen. 20.11 Rom. 3.18 and is a child-like feare Psal 130.4 Gen. 39.9 and 1 Peter 1.17 Opposites unto this feare are the servile and slavish feare 1 Iohn 4.18 and presumption 2 Samuel 4.5.7 Eccles 11.6 Deuter. 29.19.20 Iude 4. and desperation Gen. 4.13 and 1 Kings 19.4 Acts. 16.27 and 2 Cor. 2.7 Now this good feare of God is then in us when it is stronge● to move us to good then the feare of men is to keepe us from good or to move us unto evill And when we doe not the good we doe onely or principally for feare of men but of God Now from this good feare proceeds Reverence of the Majesty of God in regard whereof we should carry such holy shamefastnesse in all our actions that no unseemely behaviour proceed from us that may any wayes bee offensive to him This holy Reverence was specially prefigured Deut. 23.12 14. Where men are enjoyned when they would ease themselves to goe without the Hoast and carry a Paddle with them to cover that withall which came from them because saith the Lord I am in the midst of them whereby the impurity and filthinesse of the Mind was forbidden more then of the body and the equity thereof reacheth also unto us Contrary hereunto is irreverence and prophanesse when men regard not how basely vilely and unseemly they behave themselves before God Quest 2 How is the love of God called the first Commandement Answ Because it is the Spring and fountaine of the rest Now it is the Fountaine of the rest in a double regard to wit First because it is the efficient and impulsive cause And Secondly because it is the finall cause or end which the rest propose which is for to declare our love towards God That is the love of God constraines us to obey him Quest 3 Why is the love of God called the great Commandement Answ 1 First because it is the end of all the rest of the Commandements and of our whole Obedience for therfore we ought to doe well unto our Neighbour because we love God and that we may shew our obedience to him thereby Answ 2 Secondly because that is the principall worship for which the Ceremoniall lawes were ordained and so is opposed unto the Ceremoniall worship which was appointed for this Morall law § 4. And the second is like unto it Sect. 4 Why is the love of our Neighbour called the Quest 1 second Commandement First because it containeth the summe of the Answ 1 second Table for if wee love our Neighbour as our selfe wee will neither murther nor hurt him Secondly because the love of our Neighbour Answ 2 must rise out of the first Table even from the love of God How is the second Table like unto the first or Quest 2 Why is it said to be like unto the first First because the second Table of the Morall Answ 1 law as well as the first hath a preheminence and excellency above the Ceremonials and therefore in regard of this dignity and priority it is like unto the first Secondly because the same kind of Punishment Answ 2 even everlasting Death is threatned against every transgression as well of the second as of the first Table Thirdly in regard of the coherence and dependance Answ 3 which the one hath of the other as the cause and the effect for a man cannot love his brother unlesse hee first have the feare of God whose Image he reverenceth in his brother Fourthly in regard of the Law-giuer which was one and the same of both Iames 4.12 And Answ 4 therefore as often as we sinne against our brother we sinne against our Father whose Lawes we transgresse and violate Fifthly the second Table is not like unto the Answ 5 first in order or quantity or dignity But Sixthly in regard of the subject matter or qualities Answ 6 which is Love in both and of the condition which is one in both for a true sincere and perfect Love is required both towards God and our Neighbour And Seventhly because as the Love of God is the Answ 7 head or chiefe of all those things which we owe unto him so the love of our Neighbour is the head of all those things which we owe unto him Here against the words of the text it may be Object 1 objected The second Commandement is like unto the first therefore the first is not the greatest The love of our Neighbour is like unto the love of God Answ because it appertaineth to the Morall worship which is described in the first and second Table The Answers of the former question solve this Objection and therefore I enlarge it not It may be objected againe If the second Table Object 2 be like unto the first then our Neighbour is to be made equall with God and is to be equally worshipped and loved First the love of our Neighbour is like unto Answ 1 the love which we owe unto God in respect of the kinde but unlike in respect of the degree Secondly the love of God and of our neighbour Answ 2
the truth of his humanity to judge the world Reade Acts. 1.11 Iob. 19.25 Quest 3 Secondly Quid what shall CHRIST doe Veniet He shall come Whence we may learne That the comming of Christ unto judgement is most certaine when there shall be time no longer Obser 2 Against this Atheists object The world hath Object 1 bene alwayes as it is therefore it shall not be changed or destroyed by any judgement I. It is false that the world hath bene alwayes Answ 1 for the continuance thereof from the Creation to this present yeere of our redemption 1638. is but 5612. yeares as may be proved by Scripture and is proved by Mr. Perkins from Scripture II. The world was destroyed by the Flood Answ 2 and therefore it is false that it hath alwayes bene as it is III. As the world was first destroyed by water Answ 3 so it shall at the last be destroyed by the other active element the fire The Atheists object againe It is a thing unbeseeming Object 2 the Lord to create those things which hee shall and which he will destroy especially considering that all things which he created were good Gen. 1.13 yea perfect Deut. 32.4 All things which the Lord created were good in a threefold regard Answ namely First in respect of their beginning and originall for they were good as God created them but man hath fallen from God and is now become evill And Secondly in respect of their end viz the glo-of God for all things were made for his glory And Thirdly in respect of their perfection as they were Gods workes for anger revenge drowning of the world burning of the world yea the condemnation of the world and whatsoever the Lord doth or shall doe is perfectly just and consequently good in respect of God How doth it appeare that Christ shall come unto Quest 4 judgement when the world shall be destroyed or how may it be proved that the world shall have an end I. Against the Philosophers it may be thus Answ 1 proved namely First from this reason because that which is moved by another is not eternall and therefore the world is not eternall either a parte ante or a parte post To this I. Some answer that the world is a living thing and that the Sunne is the life thereof But what can be more foolish then this II. Others answer that Heaven is a living thing and Aristotle cals it The first mover and Plato The God of nature yea Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The beeing of all things which can be no other then God and consequently he is the Mover and moderator of all things And Secondly from this reason because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 happinesse is the perfection of man as Aristotle saith but in this life there is no true happinesse therefore it is necessary that there should be another life besides this Solon said truly to Croesus dicique beatus Ante obitum nemo supremaque funera debet That is None perfect joy and blisse can have Till death have shrowded them in Grave Thirdly from these testimonies to wit I. Of all Nations who dreame of some Religion some kind of Eternity some God some supreme Power and some manner of life after death And II. Of the Philosophers to name but one or two Zoroastres who lived 400 yeares before the Trojane warre and Athenagoras and Pythagoras and others Tunc ille Dominus mundi Monarcha malignitatem vel illuvione diluens vel igne consumens vel c. Hermes trism de mundo Et Sybilla Exuret terras ignis pontumque polumque post Sanctorum sed enim cunctae lux libera carni Tradetur sontes aeternaque flamma cremabit Tunc quisque loquetur Secreta atque Deus reserabit pectora luci Tunc erit luctus stridebunt dentibus omnes August de Civit. Dei 18. 23. Answ 2 II. Against the Atheists or Atheisticall Christians it may be thus proved namely First from these ensuing reasons to wit I. From the end of Christs comming which was to destroy the workes of Sathan 1 Iohn 3.8 Now his chiefest workes were Sinne and Death and therefore the time shall come when the faithfull shall cease from Sinne and when Death shall be swallowed up in victory II. From the justice of God who hath threatned in Justice to recompence tribulation and anguish and wrath c. to every one that is wicked Rom. 1.6 c. But this is not fulfilled upon them in this life and therefore necessarily there must be another Luke 16. Secondly from these Testimonies to wit I. Of many who either dyed not or else have risen againe and have beene restored againe unto life as Henoch Elias Lazarus and many who arose with CHRIST as witnesses of his Resurrection and divers who were raised up by the Apostles II. Of many plaine places of Scripture Read Iob 19.25 and 1 Corinth 15. Dan. 12.2 and Iude 4. and 1 Thess 4. And therefore seeing undoubtedly the world shall end and that at the end thereof CHRIST will come unto Judgement let us watch and be ready and examine our selves Quest 5 What must we examine in our selves for the better fitting and preparing of us against this dissolution of all things and comming of CHRIST Answ 1 I. We must carefully examine our Regeneration and internall spirit and herein inquire after these three things namely First our change whether we be changed or not whether we hate sinne with a perfect hatred or not and whether ingenuously we condemne our forepassed life And Secondly our cheerfulnesse whether we forsake our sinnes with the consent of our hearts yea rejoycing in the leaving of them as a Conquerour rejoyceth in his Triumph And Thirdly our humility whether we boast of what we doe or worke out the worke of our salvation with feare and trembling II. We must carefully examine our repentance Quest 6 and newnesse of life for otherwiise all other things are in vaine Thirdly Answ concerning the effects of CHRISTS Comming it will be demanded Cur venie● Why he will come I answer he will come first to judge the world and secondly to end and destroy the world Now here three things are laid downe in this history viz I. That this Comming will be full of horrour and terrour unto the wicked verse 30. And II. That at this Comming all the Saints shall be gathered together verse 31. And III. That then all these things shall be dissolved verse 35. and 1 Peter 4.7 Concerning the day and houre of CHRISTS Quest 7 Comming it will be demanded When hee will come First the day and houre is unknowne Daniel Answ 1 12.4 and verse 36. of this Chapter and Marke 13.32 and Revel 10.14 Acts. 1.7 Secondly this day whensoever it comes will Answ 2 come suddenly in the twinckling of an eye 1 Cor. 15.52 and 1 Thessal 4.17 yea so suddenly that we shall then have no time to prepare our selves Matth. 25.10 Because this is the time of preparation
many things Answ First from the phrase of Scripture used in this former verse where she is called his wife he tooke unto him his wife Hereunto I answer There may be matrimony without carnall knowledge this appeares most plainely from the law y Deut. 22 23.24 If a Damosell that is a Virgin be b●tr●●●ec● unto a husband and a man finde her and lie with her he shall be stoned to death because he hath humbled his neighbours Wife Besides Marriage is not congressu● carnis but cons●nsus voluntatum z August not the conjunction of the flesh but the mutuall consent of wills Object 2 Secondly from the phrase of Scripture used in this verse where Christ is called her first borne implying thereby that Mary had more children afterwards Answ 1 To this I answer first it is not simply said priu●●genitus the first borne but primogenitus i●●e that first borne to wit of God a Gualter Secondly primogenitus the first borne is one before whom none was before not one after whom some others were borne b Danaeus è Iustiniano Hier contra Helvid Reply Primogenitus est non post quam alij sodante qu●m nullus alius genitus est But they instance here This Vntill is a relative word and therefore cannot goe alone a man cannot properly bee called a first borne sonne and an onely sonne Answ It is true but withal know that there is a double relation viz. in esse in posse in entity or being or in possibility thus the child that first opens the wombe is called Pri●●g●nitus the first borne because although there bee in being but one Obiect 3 yet in Possibility there may be more Againe from hence they object He knew her not Vntill she had brought forth c. this Vntill implies Answ 1 that afterwards he did know her First it may be answered Cogn●stere est i●●elligere mysterium c Gualt ex Epiphanio to know is to understand the mysterie revealed unto him by the Angel that is untill Christ was borne he did not truely and fully understand this wonderfull and profound mystery Secondly Donec untill doth denie the time foregoing not imply the time following it doth exclude all time by-past but not include the time to come he knew her not untill she had brought f●●●h her first borne this doth plainely prove that he knew her not before but not inferre that he knew her afterwards for Do●●● is often a note of perpetuity as donec pona● inj●●co● scabell●̄ d Psalm 110. ● untill I have made t●ine enemies thy f●●●st●●le i. e. for ever I am with you saith our Saviour usque ad sinem secu●● e Matth. 28.20 untill the end of the world that is in seculum seculorum World without end The Papists very well like and allow of this exposition of Donec ●●●ill and therefore I would entreate them not to urge that Donec in the parable so vehemently as they do f Matth 5.26 Thou shalt not come out Donec untill thou haue paid the utmost furthing the Papists urge this Donec against us for the proofe of Purgatorie in the same manner that Helvidius Nestorius and their adherents doe both against us and them urge Donec here to prove that Ioseph carnally knew Mary And therefore it is not fit for them to make of the Scripture a nose of waxe But I shall consider of that in his proper place The forenamed Heretikes object againe from Object 4 the testimonies of the ancients who say that afterwards Ioseph knew Mary g Danaeus Answ To this I answer Clavus clavo pellendus wee have more of the ancients that deny this then affirme it And therefore if their Testimony be of value it will be concluded on our side Further they object Christ had brethren Obiect 5 Iames and Ioses Simon and Iude and it is said unto Christ thy brethren seeke thee therefore Ioseph afterwards knew his wife I answer first the Scripture usually calls Cosen Answ 1 Germans Brethren So Lot is called the brother of Abraham and so Iames was the sonne of Mary Cleophas And thus Iosephs brothers or sisters children or Maries sisters children are the brethren of Christ Secondly others answer that Ioseph married Answ 2 after the death of Mary and that the sonnes he had by that wife were called Christs brethren of this opinion is Danaus h De haeres f. 166. But if Ioseph were according to Epiphanius 80 yeares old when he was contracted unto Mary who was alive when Christ was crucified 34 yeares after it is not probable that hee married or had children Answ 3 when he was 114. yeares old at the least h Danaeus de haere f. 224. Thirdly others thinke to which I rather subscribe that Ioseph had another wife before Mary by whom he had fixe children Obiect 6 Lastly they object Ioseph tooke her home in stead of a wife verse 24. therefore it is likely Answ that he knew her I answer he tooke her not home for carnall copulation but first that he might defend her both from the lash of tongues and humane lawes Secondly that he might provide for her and the infant as is foreshewed verse 18. And therefore I conclude this verse Chapter and controversie That although it bee not Determined by Scripture yet because first there is no Scripture against it Secondly because there is in a manner a generall consent and agreement of Fathers for it And thirdly because it is very agreeable unto reason it is not therefore lightly to be denied or gainesayed by any CHAPTER II. Vers 1 VERS 1. When IESUS then was borne at Bethlehem in Iudea in the dayes of Herod the King behold there came wise men from the East to Ierusalem Sect. 1 WHY is Christ manifested as soone as ever hee is borne Quest yea and before hee was borne as the Angell reveales it to Ioseph and Mary before the Holy Ghost to Elizabeth and Iohn Baptist in her wombe the Angels to the Sheepheards the starre to the Wisemen and they to the Jewes presently after hee was borne Answ I answer This was done for these causes First that the Gospell might be manifested or that the message of Christs Nativitie might bee confirmed by many witnesses Secondly that the Jewes the people of God might bee admonished of it the Messias long before was promised unto them and therefore by the testimonies of many God will have them to know that now he is come Thirdly that all might bee left without excuse seeing that it was so plentifully confirmed Fourthly this was done for the comfort and consolation of those who did expect the Messias as Simeon b Luk 2.25 and Anna c Luk. 2.36 Sect. 2 § 2. In Bethlehem Why was Christ born in Bethlehem Quest Answ Answer For three causes the first is Historicall that they might bee taxed d Luk. 24. Ioseph being of the linage of David comes to Bethlehem the Citie
povertie Or II. because although they have enough in regard of necessary things that is sufficient for food and rayment yet they are not content but with an unsatiable desire wish for more and grieve for the want thereof The mourning of these shal not bee turned into mirth neither Thirdly some mourne and grieve Carnaliter these are they who sorrow for the punishment but not for the sinne as Pharaoh Cain and Iudas did and therefore shall be no more comforted than they Fourthly some sorrow Impiè wickedly these are they who mourne because it is not lawfull for them to sinne freely and without any punishment either humane or divine Many grieve that there are lawes forbidding drunkennesse fornication stealing and the like and wish that there were no sinnes forbidden or duties enjoyned because then they might live merrily whereas now they mourne by reason of restraining lawes This is a most infallible token of a wicked man and therefore such mourners have neither promise of blessednesse nor of comfort Fiftly some sorrow Diabolicè with a Divellish sorrow these are they who grieve unto the death that is unto desperation thus Achitophel grieves that his counsell is not followed and to put an end thereunto puts an end unto himselfe thus Iudas mournes that he hath betrayed his innocent Master and in his agonie hangs himselfe These mourners are utterly deprived of all comfort both here and hereafter Sixtly but we must doe thus if wee desire consolation in our sorrow to wit I. lament our owne sinnes and the sinnes of the Church land and common-wealth wherein we live II. let us hope for mercy upon the condition of true and unfained repentance III. and then it is lawfull for us to weepe and mourne for our afflictions which wee groane under because they are the fruits of sinne and occasioned thereby and blessed are they that thus mourne for they shall be comforted What comfort or consolation is it that shall Quest 4 be imparted unto these mourners First the world hath many solaces for those Answ 1 that are in distresse to wit honour riches pleasure security false counsell vaine comfort fained freedome and the like which I omit to enlarge because these are not the comforts here promised Secondly the comfort of these blessed ones Answ 2 doth consist in the Holy Spirit that true comforter What comfort or consolation doth this Paracletus or Comforter give unto these mourners Quest 5 Answ Three viz. First Temporall Secondly Spirituall Thirdly Eternall First the Holy Ghost gives unto the mourners in Zion Temporale solamen temporall comforts first Providence hee will so provide for them that they shall want nothing although it bee with them as Bias said Omnia mea mecum porto that they carty all they have about them as Hagar and Iacob who had no more then the cloathes upon their backes and the water in their bottles yet when those are spent and gone hee will provide more Secondly Protection and Deliverance he will protect defend and deliver them from all evill as carefully as hee doth provide for them what is good Many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord delivers him out of all that is either 1. takes away the affliction wholly or 2. takes away the sting thereof as he did unto Paul giving him sufficient grace to endure the temptation though he tooke not the buffet from him and therefore let us place all our hope and confidence upon God let us depend first upon him for whatsoever good temporall blessing wee stand in need of And secondly for deliverance either from the affliction if the Lord may see it good for us or from the evill of the affliction Quest 6 These are ordinary and generall things What particular temporall comforts doth this Blessed Comforter afford unto these true mourners Answ The Lord hath particular consolations First for all men Secondly for all dangers First for all sorts of men the Lord hath sundry sorts of comfort as we may instance in some few to wit Ministers Magistrates Poore men Godly men Professours First the Lord hath comfort in store or store of comforts for Ministers who are painefull and faithfull in their calling notwithstanding those many discouragements that they meet withall therein as for example First few will beleeve their doctrine this is irksome unto them and makes them in the anguish of their heart cry out Lord who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed o Esa 53.1 Secondly they are made a spectacle unto the world and to Angels and to men p 1 Cor 4.9 Thirdly sinne which by their preaching they labour to beate downe doth grow up and abound more and more Fourthly hence they grow weary of their lives as we see in Elias who desires that he may die because of the wickednes of the world q 1 King 19.4 so holy Ieremiah cries out Woe is me my Mother that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth r Ierem. 15 10. Yet let them lift up their heads and listen unto the comforts pronounced unto them For First God saith to Moses and Samuel and under them to all his Prophets and Christ to his Apostles and under them to all faithfull preachers They have not dispised you but me Secondly the Lord saith unto them feare not I am with you ſ Ierem. 1.8 Thirdly their labour shall not bee altogether in vaine in regard of others for some shall be stil converted wheresoever the Gospell is preached t Acts 17.34 Fourthly their paines shall not be at all in vaine in regard of themselves for they shall bee crowned Thus the Lord is pleased to comfort the sad hearts and lift up the drouping and hanging downe heads of his faithfull Ministers Secondly Magistrates they watch when subjects and inferiours sleepe they take care for all and yet though they bee thus faithfull and zealous they are not respected but rather disobeyed hated and sleighted by the vulgar sort of the sonnes of Beliall This is enough to make them mourne and a just cause of sorrow and therefore to comfort them the Lord bids them not to feare for hee will bee with them u Iosh 1.5 9. and their worke shall bee rewarded Thirdly poore men want in a manner all necessary things which makes them grieve but for these if good the Lord hath these comforts that 1. hee will give them needfull things though not superfluous to the supplying of their wants though not of their desires and 2. those things that hee with-holds from them hee detaines because hee sees them to bee poyson and hurtfull unto them Fourthly Godly and pious men dare not lye nor defraud nor cosen by false weights or false measures and therefore their gaines and meanes is very small but here is their comfort God will provide for them Secondly the Lord hath comforts and consolations for all perils and dangers and
Law of God neither indeed can bee Rom. 8.7 Secondly because the Commandements of Answ 2 God are grievous to a corrupt and polluted heart which cannot cease to sinne And therefore doth oppose them § 3. I came not to destroy the Law Sect. 3 The Jewes object this place to prove that the Object 1 Law shall not be abrogated when the Messiah comes thus The Christians say that Christ was the true Messias and yet he both obeyed and fulfilled the Law himselfe and both by example and Doctrine did move others also to the obedience thereof In this verse he saith I came not to destroy the Law but to fulfill it and afterwards vers 19. he saith Whosoever shall breake one of these least Commandements and shall teach men so to doe he shall be called the least in the kingdome of Heaven And therefore say the Jewes that both by the words and deedes of Christ it evidently appeares that the Mosaicall Law shall not cease or be abrogated That we may truely see how Christ fulfilled the Law and the Prophets Answ we must remember that in the Law and Prophets were principally contained five things namely things morall ceremoniall judiciall Sacramentall and promises and threatnings First in the law and Prophets there are Morall things to wit the ten Commandements which are necessarily to bee obeyed unto salvation by all those who are of yeares of discretion and therefore were not to cease at the comming of Christ nor to bee abolished by him but fulfilled Secondly in the law and Prophets there were Judiciall things as an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth and divers the like in these there was judgement without mercy and therefore they were to bee mitigated and allayed by the sweetnesse of mercy at the comming of the Messiah Thirdly in the Law and Prophets there were Ceremoniall things to wit all the sacrifices and many more which being but figures of things to come were to vanish when Christ unto whom they all pointed came into the flesh now even these Christ did obey fulfil literally until the determinate time of their cessation and then by himselfe and his Apostles did reduce them unto a spirituall and mysticall sense Fourthly in the law and Prophets there were Sacramentall things as circumcision the Paschall Lambe and the red Heifer these were figures of Christs suffering death and blood-shed and therefore were necessarily to cease when Christ came And these were fulfilled by him in his death and suffering Fiftly in the law and Prophets there were Promises of the comming of the Messias and withall of the conversion of the Gentiles of remission of sinnes and eternall salvation and these our Saviour perfectly fulfilled t Galatinus lib. 11. cap. 2. fol. 400. The Manichees as was said before rejecting the law of God and the Old Testament are urged by Saint Augustine to give over their opinion considering what our blessed Evangelist hath positively avouched in this verse why doe yee not O Manichees receive the law saith the Father and the Prophets which Christ came to fulfill Here Faustus in the behalfe of them all takes the quarell in hand disputing thus Object 2 First none make mention of this saying but onely Matthew who followed Christ when he came downe from the mount and was called to bee an Apostle after this Sermon was preached namely Chap. 9.9 but Saint Iohn saith nothing of it who was alwayes with him Answ Hereunto Augustine answers that though Matthew heard it not from Christ upon the Mount yet hee might either heare it from his owne mouth at some other time or hee might heare it from Iohn who was present Object 3 Secondly Faustus objects againe this Gospell was not written by Matthew but by some other for of Matthew it is written in the third person Hee seeth a man sitting at the receit of custome whose name was Matthew Mat. 9.9 Answ Hereunto Augustine answers that by the same argument Faustus may as well conclude that Saint Iohn writ not his Gospell for he speaketh of himselfe saying Peter turned him about saw the other Disciple whom Iesus loved Object 4 Thirdly Faustus objects to beleeve the new Testament is nothing else but to acknowledge the disanulling of the old and therfore the law is not now to be observed Answ In the old Testament were figures which must needs cease when the things figured out are present and even herein are the Law and Prophets fulfilled in which it is written that God would give a new Testament Ieremiah 31.31 Fourthly when a Jew shall aske thee saith Object 5 Faustus why thou dost not keepe the precepts of the Law which Christ came not to dissolve thou either 1. must confesse this verse to be false or 2. deny thy selfe to bee Christs Disciple or 3. yeeld to observe the ceremonies still The faithfull saith Augustine doe keepe the Law and the Prophets when truely cordially Answer and unfainedly they love God and their neighbour and as for figures and ceremonies they know that things shadowed out by them are now fulfilled in Christ August contra Faust lib. 19. Cap. 7. How is the Law destroyed because our Saviour Quest 1 saith here he came not to destroy the Law First the Law is destroyed Malè explicando Answ 1 by a wrong interpretation thereof and thus Christ gives the true sense of the Law and refutes the impious expositions of the Scribes and Pharisees vers 21. c. Secondly the Law is dissolved Malè explendo Answ 2 by a false fulfilling and accomplishing thereof And thus Christ doth not teach that obedience unto the Law is to bee neglected but rather urgeth it Either by the comming of Christ the Law is Object 6 destroyed or else the Scripture is contrary to it selfe but the latter is false therefore the former is true The necessity of the connexion is proved thus Saint Paul urgeth first that by the workes of the law wee cannot be justified Rom. 3.20.21 and Gal. 2.16 and Rom. 4.14.15 Secondly that it is impossible for the law to save us Rom. 8.3 Gal. 3.21 Thirdly that wee are not now under a pedagogue Gal. 3.24.25 that is not under the law but under grace Rom. 6.14 we being dead unto the law Romans 7.4 Galat. 2.19 First the ceremoniall law is abolished for that Answ 1 was our pedagogue unto Christ daies and meats and moneths and feasts and ordinances and circumcision were but shadowes of things to come and therefore the substance and thing typified being come the types and shadowes vanish out of sight Read Heb. 10.1 Gal. 5.2 and 4.10 and Ephes 2.15 Colos 2 16. Answ 2 Secondly in the Morall law we may observe the Condition which is either of Death which is Malediction and a curse and this Christ tooke away in his crosse and abolished it as appeares by these places 2 Cor. 3.7 Gal. 3.10.13 Deut. 27.26 and 1 Cor. 15.56 Life which is Justification and this also is abrogated Rom. 3.20 Gal. 2.16 and
becomming accursed to the Law in suffering death upon the Crosse for us for although the Law could not condemne Christ who was innocent and unspotted yet because hee had put on our person which the Law had condemned by a curse e Deut. 27.28 and also taken upon him our curse and malediction he fulfilled that crying Law cursed is every one that doth not abide in all that it written in the law f Gal. 3.13 He was made a curse for us that we might obtaine and partake the blessing of Abraham in him Secondly hee fulfilled the Law in his person by enduring and undergoing human things although hard to bee borne and unjustly commanded Thus hee payes tribute when it was required although it were proper unto strangers the children being free Thirdly Christ fulfilled the Law in his person by observing the ceremonies and shadowes of the Law Fourthly by fulfilling all the predictions and prophesies of the Law concerning himselfe whether they were I. the Types of the Law or II. the promises of salvation as for example Iacob saith The Scepter shall not depart from Iudah c. untill Shiloh come g Gen. 49.10 Moses sayth The Lord will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy brethren unto him shall yee hearken h Deut. 18.15 Isaias saith The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee therefore the Lord hath anoynted me and sent me c i Esai 61.1 Read further Isai 53 4-6 Ezech. 36.25.26 Zach. 12.10 Psalm 110.1 In all which places and many more wee may see the Oracles and predictions of the Law and Prophets concerning the Regall Sacerdotall and Propheticall offices of Christ really and verily fulfilled by him and therefore he doth most truely affirme that hee came not to dissolve the law but to fulfill it Fiftly Christ fulfilled the Law in his person by performing perfect obedience unto the Morall law doing all that was therein required of him either in regard of God or man in which respect hee was sayd to bee made vnder the Law k Gal. 4.4 There was in him such a perfect obedience and conformitie unto the Law of God that he did observe it fully and fulfill it without the least defect yea herein dares challenge his adversaries the Jewes Which of you can reprove mee of sinne l Ioh. 8.46 and Heb. 7.26 And thus Christ in his person fulfilles the Prophesies Ceremonies Types Shadowes and Promises of the Law yea after his resurrection telleth the two Disciples that it was necessary that hee should fulfill all things which was written of him in the law of Moses and of the Prophets and Psalms Answ 3 Thirdly Christ fulfilled the Law in men three wayes namely First by creating faith in their hearts whereby they lay hold on Christ who fulfilled the Law for them Secondly by writing the Law in their inward man Ierem. 31.33 I will write my law in their hearts Thirdly by giving them his owne blessed Spirit which makes them endeavour to fulfill the Law which endeavour Christ accepts for perfect obedience though it be imperfect For Christ infusing the grace of his Spirit into us by the vertue thereof wee are quickned and begin to fulfill the Law in performing new obedience unto God according to all his commandements And thus we see the truth of this assertion or sentence I came not to destroy the law but to fulfill it VERS 18. Verily I say unto you Vers 18 till heaven and earth passe one jot or one tittle shall in no wise passe from the law till all be fulfilled § 1. Till heaven and earth passe Shall the Sect. 1 Law end when heaven and earth doth passe away First some answer that the written Law and Answ 1 Prophets shall passe away but not the Law it selfe thus Bucer Secondly some say that the yoake and coaction Answ 2 of the law shall passe away but not the rule or truth thereof Thirdly some say the phrase is figurative and Answ 3 this I conceive to bee the truth They shall feare thee Oh Lord saith David Donec Sol so long as the Sunne and Moone endure m Psal 72 5. where Donec doth not include a set time so our Saviour saith unto his Apostles Lo I am with you Donec even unto the end of the world n Matth. 28.20 that is for ever Yea Saint Luke thus alleadgeth this verse It is easier for heaven and earth to passe then one tittle of the law to faile o Luk. 16.17 Wherefore Gualter concludes Est argumentum ab impossibili As it is impossible for heaven and earth to passe so it is impossible for any part of the law not to bee fulfilled or to bee made voide Observ Teaching us that the Morall law is alwaies to be observed by all men in all ages Christs word shall not passe away Mat. 24.35 and the word of our God is perpetuall enduring for ever That which was sinne in it selfe once is sin alwaies for there is no mutation with God at all Jam. 1.17 § 2. One jot or one tittle shall passe Sect. 2 If the studious Reader desire a learned exposition of these two words Jot and Tittle let him read Senensis Biblioth sanct lib. 2. fol. 75. sine 76. What doth our Saviour meane by these words Quest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jot is the least letter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tittle Answ is lesse then Jota or Jot August s by which our Saviour meanes that there is nothing so little in the law that it may bee omitted hence he saith elsewhere that account must bee given unto God for idle words yea for thoughts God is wiser then men and hath commanded no vaine thing but all things are significant which are enjoyned in the law that being altogether just p Psal 12.7 God is holy in all his workes much more in all his lawes and therefore the least transgression of the law shall be punished Sect. 3 § 3. Vntill all things be fulfilled Object It may here bee objected that many things commanded in the law are violated and broken and therefore all things therein are not fulfilled Answ These words are not to bee referred unto the life of men but unto the truth of the doctrine for although many precepts are transgressed yet all the promises and threatnings shall certainely be accomplished in Gods appointed time Vers 19 VERS 19. Whosoever therefore shall breake one of those least commandements and shall teach men so he shall be called the least in the kingdome of heaven but whosoever shall doe and teach them the same shall bee called great in the kingdome of heaven Sect. 1 § 1. Whosoever shall breake one of these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word here used signifies to untie a knot or to loose a bond or chaine Observ Teaching us that the Morall Law is a Bond which binds the conscience and remaines still as a rule of obedience unto us as was shewed in the 17.
and desires were mortified in her And hence he concludes Vera voluptas ex virtute nascitur The fruits of true joy spring from the roote of vertue which conclusion is true although the true sense of the place be lost Allegoricall then hee who expounds it literally doth not onely pervert the true sense and meaning of the place but doth also establish a falsehood and untruth for thus a man might prove Christ to be bread yea to be a stone which none are so stony or blockish to beleeve Secondly observe whether is it a rule or an historicall narration we reade of Iephtah who offered his daughter of the Midwives who lied unto Pharaoh of the adulterie and subornation to drunkennesse and murder in David of Noahs drunkennesse and Lots incest Now if these historicall narrations should bee by some understood to bee rules of directions how diabolicall would their lives and conversations become And therefore we must not drawe a rule A facto ad jus from a deede done to the equitie thereof for by that rule all things were lawfull Thirdly observe if it be a Rule then whether is it given as a Command and Precept or as a counsell and advice Paul would have all to live unmarried t 1 Cor. 7.7.8 but this he speakes by permission onely that is by way of counsell and advice not by a positive command from God Verse 6. For concerning Virginity he had no commandement from the Lord but onely supposed it to be good for the present distresse to remaine unmarried Verse 25 26. Fourthly consider if it bee a precept and a command then whether is it generall or particular That is I. Whether was it given to one man onely or to all Thus God commands Abraham to slay Isaac and this precept is not to bee extended further then to him II. Whether doth the precept respect some one particular action which is onely once to be performed or a worke which is frequently to be practised Thus the Israelites were commanded to spoile the Egyptians which precept was neither to bee stretched unto any other nor unto them at another time that is by this command no other persons were allowed to robbe the Egyptians neither were the Israelits warranted to do it at any other time III. Whether were the Precepts given onely unto some one particular people or unto all nations Thus the judiciall Law was given unto the Iewes onely and not unto the Gentiles IV. Whether did the Command concerne some certaine time onely or was it to be extended also unto all times Thus Circumcision Sacrifices and the Ceremoniall law are not now to be urged because they were to continue but unto the death of Christ Thus we must carefully observe the scope of the Holy Spirit and urge nothing beyond that Thirdly in the reading and expounding of the Rule 3 Scripture take heede of all grosse consequences which are very frequent with the erroneous I. some thus expound positiva privativè positive things privatively Thou maist hate thy enemie because thou must love thy brother Mat. 5.43 Secondly some expound Confutativa confirmativè those things which are spoken by way of Confutation as though they were spoken by way of confirmation as for example Saint Paul saith The doers of the Law shall be justified u Rom. 2.13 From whence The Apostle concludes that none shall be justified The Papists conclude that we may bee justified by the workes of the law Thirdly some expound Scriptures so as that there is no consequence at all but a palpable non sequitur Thus Hooker observes the Separatists and Brownists to doe daily And thus the Papists doe hourely I have prayed for thee Peter saith Christ therefore the Pope cannot erre Master saith Peter here are two swords therefore the Pope hath both Ecclesiasticall and Civill jurisdiction both over King and People and many the like But wee must take heede of these sophismes and of this begging the question Fourthly be never obstinate in thy owne opinion Rule 4 but let the spirits of the Prophets bee subject to the Prophets v 1 Cor. 14.32 Great is the errour here of the Papists who will change nothing retract nothing lest they should seeme formerly to have erred Great are the blemishes hereof of the Lutherans with the Zwinglians concerning the corporeall Concomitancie who rather then they will ●●cant or confesse their errour will which is too grosse confesse the Ubiquitie of Christ● humanity Certainely this obstinacie in opinion in generall doth hinder the progresse of faith and of religion and therefore all Christians should be carefull to observe this rule not to bee too stiffe in their owne tenets or obstinate in their owne opinions Rule 5 Fiftly adde to the reading a frequent meditation of the word thou readest reade studie and contemplate the Scripture night and day be not a stranger in Israel he that frequenteth a path daily will not lightly goe wrong or erre therein David became wiser then his teachers because hee had respect unto the Testimonies of the Lord w Psal 119.99 And therefore if any th●ng be difficult suspend thy judgement reade it over againe turne unto other places like unto it and compare them together and haply God will reveale it unto thee at the last x Phil. 3.15 Rule 6 Sixtly to reading and meditation adjoyne prayer this was the Prophet Davids frequent practise Shew me thy waies oh Lord teach mee thy pathes leade me in thy truth and tea●h mee Psal 25.4 5. Againe Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes yea give thou me understanding and I shall keepe thy law Psal 119.33.34 And againe Make thou me to understand the way of thy precepts verse 27. yea Make thy face to shine upon thy servant and teach me thy statutes verse 135. for my lips shall utter praise when thou hast taught me thy precepts verse 171. Thus pray fervently unto the Lord to enlighten thy understanding to anoint thy blind eyes with the true eye-salve of the blessed Spirit and to leade thee in his truth and then rest certainely assured that faithfull is hee who hath promised who will at length reveale himselfe and his truth to him who doth his endeavour to know the Lord and the way and truth whereby he may be brought unto him by reading hearing meditating and a willing subjecting of his opinion and judgement to the word of God Sect. 3 § 3. Of old time The Papists say the consent of the Fathers is the true rule of interpreting the Scriptures Argum. or the word is to bee expounded according to the minde and judgement of the Ancients Against this Chamierus y Tom. 1. de interp script lib. 16 Cap. 11 Sect 1. f. 601. urgeth this place thus If the consent of the Fathers were a certaine rule of interpreting the Scriptures then it should never be reprooved and blamed this is manifest by it selfe But the consent of the Ancients in the expounding and opening of Scripture
after her in his heart hath committed Sect. 4 adultery Is the concupiscence of the heart sinne Quest 1 First the Papists say the second Concupiscence Answ 1 is sinne but not the first see before Math. 4.1 § 3. Object 1.2 Secondly the Father saith Answ 2 Non quicunque concupiscit sed qui aspicit ad concupiscentiam August It is not every one who lusteth or desireth his neighbours wife that commits adultery but he that therefore lookes upon her that he may lust after her And here Augustine makes three degrees namely I. Suggestion II. Delectation III. Consent resembling these three to the Serpent Evah and Adam or 1. to the motion of the flesh 2. to the delight of the minde 3. to the consent of reason and here it is perfect as Saint Iames sayth Concupiscence brings forth sinne z Iam. 1.15 Suggestion is the temptation of the Serpent ye shall not die but bee like God a Gen. 3.45 This was not sinne unto Eve Delectation resembles Evahs listening unto the Serpent and beleeving him shee saw that the tree was good for food and that it was pleasant to the eyes and a tree to bee desired to make one wise b Gen. 3.6 neither was this sinne unto her Consent resembles Adam and Eves eating of the Apple which was a sinne unto them And thus the Father seemes to meane That I. the motion of the flesh unto sinne is not sinne II. That the delight of the minde is not sinne neither But onely the III. the Consent of reason And Saint Hierome differs not much from him upon this verse saying that there is a difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 passio propassio the first being a sin the second not Answ 3 Thirdly it is most certaine that it is a sin as may thus be evidenced First the Scripture forbids it in the Morall law Thou shalt not covet Exod. 20.17 which Prohibition makes Paul know that it is a sinne which otherwise he had not understood Rom. 7.7 I had not knowne lust that is to have beene sinne except the law had said Thou shalt not covet Secondly Saint Iames speakes of sinne accomplished that is of externall and actuall sinne Thirdly the Fathers above mentioned imply as much For with Hierome Passio is a sin and Propassio hath the guilt and staine of sin in it although it bee not simply esteemed a sin in it selfe Now this Propassio he calles Titillationem carnis cum delectatione mentis The motion of the flesh accompanied with the delight of the minde Now is not this sinne Againe Saint Augustine hath three degrees of sinne but wee must here observe as hee himselfe doth there c de serm Dom. s That every suggestion doth not arise from Sathan but sometimes from the memorie sometimes from the senses Now as it comes from Sathan it is not ours and so is not sinne but as it springs either from our memorie or senses so it is ours and proceeds from the Originall corruption of our nature and is sinne unto us Yea Augustine himselfe condemnes all Concupiscence Quis dubitat omnem malam concupiscentiam rectè vocari fornicationem Who makes question but all evill Concupiscence may justly bee called Fornication And another d Hylar s most plainly In evangelicis motus oculi adaequatur adulterio illecebrosa affectio visus transcurrentis cum opere fornicationis punitur In the Gospell the lascivious motion of the eye is resembled and equalled with adultery And the enticing affection of a glancing looke equally punished with actuall fornication Fourthly it appeares that Concupiscence is sinne by this reason because sinne is not in the eye but in the heart or the motion or mover unto sinne Yea more plainly because our Saviour doth not here say hee hath committed adultery with a woman in his heart who lookes upon a woman that he may commit adultery but that lookes and lusts after her Teaching this unto us Obser that the concupiscence of the heart makes us guilty of the violation of the law and eternall death Why is the lust of the heart sinne before God and how doth it more evidently appeare to bee such Quest 2 First because God requires the heart Prov. Answ 1 23.26 and commands that the heart be circumcised Deut. 10.16 and 30.6 yea he requires the heart as his owne right because hee hath bought it 1 Cor. 6.20 and therefore hee will be glorified therewith 1 Cor. 7.34 Secondly the lust of the heart is sinne although Answ 2 it be resisted for the concupiscence of the flesh is condemned and reproved where the spirit strives against it e Gal. 5.16 yea we hence argue against the Papists It is praise-worthy strongly to resist concupiscence and the first motions unto sinne therefore that is evill which thus wee resist Thirdly originall concupiscence is sinne in Answ 3 the unregenerate as the Papists themselves confesse therefore in the regenerate it hath the same nature although it shall not bee imputed unto them as it shall unto the former Fourthly this appeares by the example of Answ 4 Paul who cryes out Oh wretched man who shall deliver me from this body of death and this law of my members Rom. 7.24 and yet hee solemnly protests that he would not sinne nor give way unto these corruptions vers 16.19 yea it appeares he would not because when he is assaulted he prayes many times against it 2 Cor. 12.7 And therefore give no place unto lust at all but remember that not onely they who consent unto sinne and commit it actually are guilty before God but also those who ruminate meditate and delight in the thoughts thereof How must we resist this internall lust or by Quest 3 what meanes must we withstand it First remember that it is the root of all sin Answ 1 for from the heart proceed adulteries c. Mat. 15.19 These thoughts and suggestions are the seeds of all manner of evill and therefore if thou wouldest not have thy life over-spread with the weeds of wickednesse root out and destroy this seed Secondly remember all is nothing thou doest Answ 2 so long as thy heart is not upright it is to no purpose to serve God outwardly or to draw neere unto him with thy mouth if thy heart be farre from him to what end serves a pure life and a polluted heart God cares not for painted Tombes although they be gorgeous without because they are within but filth and rottennesse Man cares not for Sodomes fruit although they be faire and pleasant to the eye because they are but ashes within And therefore if we desire that any thing we doe may be acceptable unto God we must be carefull to purge and purifie our hearts Thirdly remember that all thy thoughts are Answ 3 conspicuous unto God and when thou givest way unto any wicked thought hee stands by sees it observes it frownes at it and prepares the arrowes of vengeance against thee
adultery for the saving of a three-fold life namely 1. Of themselves because being assaulted they were necessitated either to satisfie the lust of some uncleane adulterer or to be slaine by him Many have rather slaine themselves then they would suffer themselves to be thus distained as did Pelagia Sephronia two Virgins with their mother whom Ambrose commends for it ſ Senens 426. And Hierome s Ionam thinkes that they should doe thus but Augustine de Civit Dei l. 1. doth piously confute it Senens ibid. True it is they must not to avoid one sin runne into another by killing themselves but yet they must rather suffer themselves to bee murdered than willingly prostitute themselves for the safety of their lives for the life of the body is ill saved with the destruction of the soule II. Sometimes women pretend a necessity of adultery for the saving of the life of some lascivious person because he sware to kill himselfe except they yeelded unto his lust this they must not doe because if they prostitute themselves that is their sinne but if the other murder himselfe being enraged for their constant and unmoveable chastity that is none of their sinne And therefore they must not redeeme the life of an adulterers body with the death of their owne soule III. Some pretend a necessity for the preserving of their husbands life because hee was threatned to be murdered except shee yeelded unto adultery Augustine upon this verse here staggers in his judgement not knowing how to resolve this question and seemes to incline unto this That if a man and his wife were laid in wait for and were betrayed and the man threatned to be murdered except his wife suffer her selfe to be defiled shee may lawfully doe it if her husband will permit and consent thereunto or command her to doe it because the man hath power over his wife but the man hath not the whole and sole power and therefore neither husband nor wife hath power lawfully to doe that which God forbids And a curse hangs over the heads of all those who doe evill that good may come of it § 2. Whosoever shall out away his wife Sect. 2 Whether was this Law enacted and ordained Quest 1 by Moses or not for a man upon any dislike to put away his wife and to give her a bill of divorcement First some absolutely deny that ever Moses Answ 1 established any such thing as a Law unto the Jewes but we reade that it was injoyned If a man hate his wife because hee hath found some uncleannesse in her then let him write her a bill of divorcement and send her away Deut. 24.1 And this our Saviour calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a precept Mark 10.5 Answ 2 Secondly some urge this as a positive Law commanded unto all as not lawfull for a man to retaine a wife whom hee hath found to commit adultery But the Pharisees themselves say Moses permisit Moses suffered or permitted to write a bill of divorcement t Mar. 10.4 not Moses commanded c. Answ 3 Answ 3 Thirdly it is the safest walking in a middle path and therefore I distinguish betweene Divortium and Libellum 1. There is divortium a separation or a putting away of the wife this is no where commanded by Moses at all 2. There is libellus a bill of divorcement and this is commanded Thus the Pharisees say Moses imperavit libellum Moses commanded to give a writing of divorcement u Mat. 19.7 And Christ saith Permisit non imperavit divortium Moses suffered not commanded you to put away your wives 3. And this Commandement was but politicall and civill not morall and therefore did not binde all Quest 2 Wherein did the Jewes offend concerning this putting away of wives Answ They erred herein that which Moses suffered for the hardnesse of their hearts they take for a morall precept Observ That which Moses permitted they thinke ought to be done as a thing good in the court of conscience Teaching us that many things are tolerated by humane and civill Lawes which are neither religious nor warrantable before God Men respect the greater evill and therefore tolerate the lesse for the avoiding of the greater according to that vulgar saying Ex duobus malis minus malum est eligendum of two evils we must chuse the least Quest 3 Is this lawfull is it not forbidden to doe evill that good may come of it Rom. 3.8 Answ 1 First that is a certaine rule wee must not doe that which is evill that some good may spring from thence we must not lye to save our brothers life Answ 2 Secondly we may distinguish between a command and a connivence no evill is to be commanded to be done by man or by humane and civill Lawes but a lesse evill may be winked at Although Magistrates in generall be commanded to punish sinners and transgressors yet it is lawfull for them sometimes to connive at some things and to spare the punishing of some degrees of sinne Quest. 4 Whether is usury lawfull or not for wee see the Lawes permit it and punish it not except it be above eight in the hundred Answ I will here only conferre usury with the Jewes putting away of their wives First this was suffered and tolerated for the hardnesse of their hearts Matth. 19.8 lest otherwise in their hatred unto their wives they should kill them So I. Because men are so hard-hearted that they will rather see their brother suffer yea perish then lend him gratis to supply his want And II. because a Land could not subsist nor trading flourish without borrowing and lending sometimes therefore the Lawes of Nations do permit Usury Secondly from the beginning it was not lawfull for a man to put away his wife w Mat. 19 8. And this is the case of Usury also as appeares thus 1. it was directly forbidden Thou shalt not lay usury upon thy brother neither shalt thou b● to him as an usurer Read Exod. 22.25 Deut. 23.19 Nehem. 5.7 8. 2. He is promised a place in the Lords Tabernacle who putteth not out his money to usury x Psal 15.1.5 as if the Kingly Prophet would say usurers shall never come unto Gods holy Hill 3. He is pronounced a just man who taketh not usury Ezech. 18.8 9. and an unjust who giveth forth his mony upon usury vers 13. 4. The Lord severely threatens to punish usurers Ezech. 22.12 c. All these shewe that usury was not from the beginning neither was ever lawfull by Gods Law among brethren as all Christians now are wherefore it is a great shame that the Jewes should refuse to take usury one of another and yet Christians hereby eate out the bowels one of another Thirdly Christ crosseth their ancient opinion concerning the putting away of their wives telling them it is not lawfull to doe it except it be for fornication So also in this our Saviour saith Lend looking for nothing againe y
1 Cor. 7.5 Therefore if the wife will not consent her husband cannot goe from her nay though there be consent yet they must be separated but for a time les● the Divell should tempt them Whether may the guiltlesse partie being lawfully Quest 6 divorced marry againe during the life of the adulterous or not For no other cause in the world Answ but onely for fornication may there be either a finall separation or cleane dissolution of marriage by way of divorce But for that cause our Saviour hath granted liberty both to dissolve matrimonie and to marry againe Because this is questioned or rather plainely denyed by the Papist I will first confirme it and then answer what they can object against it Our proposition is this In the case of fornication it is not unlawfull to marry againe that is those who are lawfully divorced for fornication and adultery may marry againe with others but never one with another The truth hereof appeares thus First the bond is broken they are not now one flesh d Hier. s and therefore may lawfully contract marriage with others Secondly because under the Law divorce was never without liberty of a new choise Deut. 24.1 2. all that were divorced had freedome to marry againe and therefore in a lawfull divorce this is not debarred under the Gospel Thirdly because otherwise the guiltlesse party should be punished and that grievously It is better to marry than to burne saith the Apostle thereby shewing that marriage is left us by God as a remedy against lust now if the guiltlesse party could not containe neither might marry another neither take her unto him who hath beene divorced Deut. 24.4 then he were necessitated to sinne which the Lord never doth unto any by any law Fourthly we might confirme this from the Fathers Ambros Tertul. 2. From the Councels Concil Mogunt Triburiens 3. From the consent of many Bishops in Origens time 4. From the opinion of the Papists Zach. Papa Cajetan Ambros Compsa 5. Of our men Pet. Mart. 2.10 § 37 38 58. But this I omit comming to the last and best proof Fifthly that it is lawfull for the guiltlesse partie to marry for I now meddle not with the guilty appeares plainly from our Saviours words in this verse and Mat. 19.7 8 9. Whosoever putteth away his wife except it be for fornication committeth adultery Therefore for fornication it is lawfull for a man to dismisse his wife Matth. 19.9 Whosoever shall put away his wife except it be for wheredome and marry another committeth adultery Therefore for adultery it is lawfull for the man both to put away and renounce his wife and the wife likewise her husband there being the like reason for both and for them to marry againe The Papists hold that married persons may dismisse one another for adultery but neither party may marry againe for any cause during life And because they are sore pressed with this place they object many things both against the place and point by us propounded Object 2 First Durand answereth that when Christ uttered these words the Law of the Jewes was that the adulterous woman should bee put to death and so the husband might have liberty to marry againe Bellarmine overthroweth this answer by a three-fold reason to wit Answ First because Christ here giveth a rule not onely to the Jewes but to all Christians not being ignorant how that in every Nation the law of putting the adultresse to death should not be in force Secondly Christ might as well have excepted other crimes that were punished by death as murder and the like that in those cases they might marrry againe because by the Law their wives were to die as well as in the case of fornication Thirdly Christ speaketh of dismission but properly the wife is not said to bee dismissed when she is put to death And therefore Christ is not thus here to be understood Secondly Bellarmine would have the exception Object 3 except it be for fornication restrained to the first clause in this sense Hee that putteth away his wife which is not lawfull to doe but for fornication so that the crime of fornication maketh it lawfull to dismisse but not after dismission to marry againe First the Jesuite is here contrary unto himselfe Answ 1 for he elsewhere alloweth a separation of matrimony in other cases as of heresie infidelity and vow of continencie but here he saith that separation and dismission is to be made in the case of fornication onely Secondly Christs answer had not satisfied if Answ 2 he had spoken onely of divorce and not of liberty to marry againe for the Pharisees moved the question concerning the manner of divorce permitted by Moses Law after the which it was lawfull for them to marry againe And therefore it was expected that our Savior should answer to both these points both in what cases they might dismisse their wives and marry aga●ne Thirdly the Apostle saith If a woman depart Object 4 from her husband let her abide unmarried or bee reconciled 1 Cor. 7.10 11. Therefore it is not lawfull after divorce to marry so long as both parties live The Apostle speakes not there of a lawfull departure or separation to wit Answ by reason of fornication and adultery for then he should diametrally have opposed his Master Christ saying here for adultery there may be a divorce and departure Paul there I command no discedat let not the wife depart from her husband but of a separation for Religions sake or for afflictions or for the cares of those times § 7. Causeth her to commit adultery Sect. 7 How Quest or how many wayes is that Divorce which is not for fornication an occasion of adultery First if she which is divorced being deprived Answ 1 of the company of her husband is not able to containe her selfe but falls unto whoredome her divorce is an occasion of adultery unto her for the separation not being lawfull the bond of matrimony is not broken wherefore her whoredome is adultery Secondly if she which is thus unlawfully Answ 2 that is not for fornication separated marry another husband she commits adultery because she is yet the former mans wife and thus also her divorce is an occasion of adultery Thirdly hee who marries a woman that is Answ 3 thus unlawfully separated from her husband commits adultery because he coupleth himselfe with another mans wife and thus this divorce is unto him an occasion of adultery Fourthly he who puts away his wife but not for fornication and joynes himselfe in marriage Answ 4 unto another doth commit adultery because he is yet the former womans husband and causeth her whom he secondly marries to commit adulterie because shee lyeth with another womans husband And thus we see how an unlawful separation is the cause of much mischiefe Sect. 8 and root of many evils and therefore is carefully to be avoided f Chem. Harm fol 569. fine Object § 8. Whosoever shall marry
Decreti Mandati Wee must now know that the will of God in this place may be taken for either or both of these for although the principall parts of this petition be meant de voluntate mandati of that which God would have done by us yet Christ elsewhere expresly expounds it de voluntate decreti of that which God hath decreed to doe Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me neverthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt that is as thou hast decreed f Mat. 26.39 Having to handle the former God assisting me in another place I here treat onely of this latter De voluntate decrati Thy will be done that is O Lord fulfill whatsoever thou hast decreed Quest 2 Is not this petition idle and vaine will not God fulfill whatsoever he hath decreed whether we will or not none can resist his will Rom. 9.19 Neither must wee enquire or search into Gods decrees g Act. 1.7 Answ 1 First certainly the decrees of God are like the Lawes of the Medes and Persians which cannot be disannulled or made void but shall surely in the appointed time be accomplished Answ 2 Secondly yet there are here two things required of us namely I. A subscription and assent unto the will of God II. A desire conjoyned with prayer that wee may freely submit our selves unto the will and decrees of God without murmuring Unto this willing subjection to the immutable will of God many things are required of us viz. 1. An acknowledgement of the providence of God 2. An acknowledgement of the goodnesse of God 3. An acknowledgement of the wisdome of God 4. A resting in the will of God 5. A carefull circumspection lest wee should tempt the providence of God First in the petition thus understood de voluntate decreti there is required of us Agnitio providentiae Dei an acknowledgement that the will of God governes the world He doth whatsoever hee will h Ps 115.3 both in heaven and earth i Psa 1 35.6 How doth it appeare that all things are ordered and disposed off according to the will of Quest 3 God Answ 1 First this is Gods prerogative to governe all things The Angels doe his Commandements and hearken unto the voyce of his word the Hosts of Heaven are his Ministers and doe his pleasure Psal 103.20 21 22. Secondly hee now rules and governes all Answ 2 things according to his decree from everlasting and his eternall purpose Answ 3 Thirdly this decree and purpose did arise from his will for except God and his will bee the first mover we must grant another God and another Mover which is blasphemously derogatory to so sacred a Majesty Who are faulty in this particular that is Quest 4 who deny either in opinion or practise that the will of God governes the world Answ 1 First the Stoicks who ascribed all things to Fate Certainly there is a connexion of causes but not depending upon Fate but upon the will of God Secondly the Heathens who ascribe things Answ 2 to Fortune Rotam volubilem Certainly this is the foundation of Atheisme Thirdly those who bridle and restrain the will Answ 3 of God saying that he did not thorowly narrowly and on every side view every thing from the beginning This is to measure God by our grosse conceits and to derogate from his Omniscience Fourthly those who say they will doe this or Answ 4 that when they should rather say if God please Iames 4.15 Secondly there is required of us in this petition Agnitto bonitatis Dei an acknowledgement of the goodnesse of God or an humble confession that the will of God in all things is just his will being the rule of goodnesse Reade Dan. 9 7. Rom. 3.4 from Psal 51.4 Who deny this either in opinion or practise Quest 5 First those who murmur against Gods dealing Answ 1 with them but of this by and by Secondly those who give themselves to humane Answ 2 atheisticall and blasphemous disputations and quaeres viz. I. Why hath God given man a Law which is impossible perfectly to obey II. Why will not God save all those whom he hath created III. Why did not God preserve Adam in his holy estate but permitted him to fall IV. Why were not all redeemed in and by Christ effectually seeing his death was a sufficient price for all V. Why did not God by his Prophets preach unto Tyre and Sidon seeing they would have repented if the word had been sent unto them And many more of this nature to which wee might answer many things as for example First that the Law is not impossible in it selfe for it is fulfilled in heaven but unto our corrupt nature Rom. 8.3 Secondly God is debter to no man God owes neither mercy nor salvation unto any for it is of his great mercy that we are not all consumed k Lam. 3.21 Thirdly it makes for Gods glory that those who are obdurate and hardened in their sinnes should be damned Fourthly we might answer with Augustine Fecit gehe●●nam curiosis that God hath a hell in store for such curious inquisitours as dare demand of him a reason of his actions Fifthly but that answer which becomes us best unto all these is this Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Injuria fit Deo l Mat. 11.26 cum causam voluntate Dei superiorem postulamus Aug. It is a great indignitie and injury unto God to seeke a further or higher cause of his actions then his owne will Paul durst not doe it but in the disputations of this nature cryeth out Oh man who art thou that replyest against God n Rom 9.20 And againe How unsearchable are his judgements and his wayes past finding out n Rom. 11.33 Teaching us to acknowledge Saepe occulta semper justa that is the judgments of God are alwayes just in themselves although wee are not able often to see the equitie of them nor to understand them Thirdly there is required of us in this petition agnitio sapientiae an acknowledgement of the wisdome of God or an humble confession that it is much better for us to yeeld our selves to be guided and directed by God then to draw him to our desires Wee must so highly prize the wisdome of God that we should rather desire to obtaine from him what he in his heavenly wisdome knows to be good for us then what we our selves should wish if wee might have whatsoever wee would But I reserve this unto chapter 26. verse 39. Not as I will Father but as thou wilt Fourthly we are taught in this petition to acquiesce in the will of God or whatsoever the will and providence of God shall bring to passe we must endure and undergoe patiently willingly and contentedly humbling our selves under the mighty hand of God o 1 Pet. 5.6 Quest 6 Why must we thus patiently brooke whatsoever the will and providence of God shall bring to
against God or Man shall none therefore enjoy this kingdome of God Answer There are three sorts of sinners namely First proud malicious obstinate and wilfull sinners who sinne against God with an high stiffe and a brazen face and a hand neck and an Adamant heart Secondly sleepy and secure sinners who although they sinne daily yet they lull themselves asleepe with the divels lullaby unto Eve thou shalt not die at all and thus through a bald and blind presumption and perswasion shake of all feare of punishment Thirdly there are humble and contrite sinners who sinne and sigh for their sins yea pray unto God with teares in their eyes and sob in their soule for the pardon of their sinnes These sinners and these onely shall be saved but the other who wilfully willingly and wittingly remaine in their sinnes shall never be made partakers of the kingdome of God or of Christ This appeares thus I. It is the condition of comming unto him to be holy and righteous in life to him who orders his conversation aright will I shew the salvation of the Lord Psal 50.23 And therfore those who are wicked and so remaine can never be saved II. Wicked men are not acceptable unto God but rather an abomination unto him y Psalme 1.5 and 5.5 And therefore he being the King and only giver and disposer of this kingdome will never give it unto those whom he hates III. Christ the authour of salvation is not acceptable unto them they thinke his yoake heavie and his saying hard John 6.60 and they neither can endure nor will submit unto his behests For First sinne is sweet and pleasant unto them and they will not leave it though Christ bid Secondly to professe Christ openly and to deny themselves is as bad as death it selfe and therefore they will not yeeld thereunto Thirdly Christ requires that they should blame and condemne their former wicked life this they are ashamed to doe and therefore refuse it Wherefore Christ the corner stone being unto them a stone of offence they must needes perish For hee will be a Saviour unto none but onely to those unto whom he was a King Section 5 § 5. And his righteousnesse or the righteousnesse thereof Question 1 What is the meaning of these words Answer Righteousnesse may bee referred either unto God or Kingdome Why is it called the righteousnesse of the Question 2 Kingdome Answer 1 First because this righteousnesse belongs only unto the children of the Kingdom that is none but the heires of heaven can shew forth this righteousnesse Secondly because righteousnesse is the Answer 2 way that leades unto this kingdome for there is a double kingdome of God namely I. Of glory in heaven this all men desire II. Of grace on earth this few desire this kingdome must bee within us a Luke 17.21 before ever we can bee made partakers of the other Why is it called the righteousnesse of Question 3 God First some by righteousnesse understand Answer 1 the righteousnesse of faith to be here meant and then the reasons of this denomination are these to wit I. Because it is freely given us of God to be our righteousnesse before him and man by any workes of nature cannot attaine unto it II. Because God will accept this obedience of Christs at the day of judgement for his elect as satisfying his justice and the rigour of the law which no righteousnesse of man can doe III. Because it is the righteousnesse of that person which is God for Christ is both God and man and though hee obeyed the law and suffered death as he was man yet that obedience was performed by that person who was also God Secondly some understand this of the Answer 2 righteousnesse of the life and conversation and as was said before I rather take this to bee the truth and the reasons why it is called the righteousnesse of God are these namely I. Because it is commanded prescribed and injoyned by God II. Because by this righteousnesse we imitate our God 1 Pet. 1.14 15 17. III. Because this righteousnesse leades unto God § 6. And all these things Section 6 What is meant here by all things Question 1 First the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things is not to Answer 1 be understood Completivè sed distributivè of every particular and numericall temporall blessings but of all sorts of needfull things yea it is not to be extended unto the great things of this life but onely unto foode and raiment and necessary things Reade verse 25.31 of this Chapter and Proverbes 30.8 and 1 Tim. 6.8 Secondly the indefinite phrase all Answer 2 things doth shew that God is ready and prepared to give us all things whatsoever wee stand in neeede of Question 2 What may we learne from this bounty of the Lord Answer The consideration of this bounty may teach us these things namely First to beware of sinne whereby wee doe displease and offend our God Secondly to depend wholy upon God both for foode rayment and protection in the sober use of lawfull meanes Thirdly to seeke for the helpe and succour from God in all distresse want who is very bountifull Jam. 1.5 Fourthly to love so bountifull a God and to inforce our hearts to all duties and expressions of love towards him Fifthly to bee thankefull unto God for all the good things we enjoy for whatsoever wee have comes from his bountie Psal 116.12.13 Sixthly labour continually in heart and life to walke worthy of God and to please him in all things being fruitfull in all good workes Colos 1.10 b Perkins sup Question 3 What is the summe of this promise made here by our Saviour Answer That the children of this kingdome righteous and holy men Observat shall lacke nothing that is good for them Reade for the proofe hereof Psal 23.1 and 34.8 c. and 37.3.22 Proverbs 10.6.7.8 For the better understanding of this answer observe these three things namely Note 1 First that there are three sorts of good things Temporall Spirituall and Eternall our Saviour here speakes onely of the first and therefore I speake not here any thing of the rest Note 2 Secondly that the Lord hath alwaies in a readinesse to give his children whatsoever they want although he doe not alwaies give assoone as ever they stand in neede Oh how great saith David is thy goodnesse which thou hast laid up for them that feare thee c Psal 31.19 reposuisti that is God hath treasures alwaies laid up for his children although they doe not alwayes actually possesse them Note 3 Thirdly good things are given two manner of waies by God namely I. Generally and Permissively and thus hee gives good temporall blessings to the wicked II. Ex beneplacito out of love or as arguments and pledges of his favour and thus hee gives good things to the righteous And of these the text speakes Obiection 1 It is here against the former answer objected that David
to the law as the comfortable promises in the old Testament to the Gospell Secondly the places alleadged doe prove onely Answer 2 that the law and the Gospell are joyned in use but it followeth not hence they have the same operation and effect Saint Peter Acts. 2. and 3. And the rest of the Apostles in their sermons tempered the threatnings of the Law and the comforts of the Gospell together by the one drawing the people to repentance by the other ministring hope of remission of sinnes the same course ought the Ministers of the Gospell to take in teaching the people now first in humbling them by the Law and then comforting them by the Gospell but all this sheweth onely a joyning of the Law and the Gospell in use not in nature or propertie Answer 3 Thirdly the Gospell worketh feare and terror per accidens not of it selfe but accidentally and improperly as Saint Paul saith the Gospell is the savour both of life unto life and of death unto death 2 Corinth 2.16 That is properly and of it selfe it worketh unto life but not so unto death for that is not the proper effect of the Gospell but is onely caused by the wilfull contemners and disobedient hearers of the Gospell by whose perverse nature the sweetnesse thereof is turned to bitternesse So then to the faithfull and believers the Gospell bringeth comfort and peace and if it doe not so unto others the fault is in themselves But the law brought terrour to all even to the righteous for Moses trembled and quaked at the delivering of the Law Hebr. 12.21 (e) Willet Synopsis fol. 101 3. P. Secondly this threatning may bee referred unto all that every tree which beareth not good fruit that is every man who doth not bring forth the fruits of righteousnes and religion in his life and conversation shall be cast into hell Wee have here two things to be considered of 1. The Persons Judged 2. The Judgement Section 1 § 1. Every tree Observat In these words Omnis arbor our Saviour teacheth That none of those shall escape judgement whatsoever they are whom God findes guiltie Every man shall bee judged by God at the last who will give to every one according to his workes 2 Cor. 5.10 and cast all that are guilty into hell (f) Psalm 9.17 Many are the examples which wee have to prove this trueth that none shall escape who are but corrupt and fruitlesse trees namely First he spared not Kings as we see in Ahab Saul Balthazar and Herod Neither Secondly Prophets as wee see in Balaam and 850. of Baals priests Neither Thirdly his most deare and beloved people as wee see in Ephraim and Iudah Hos 14.1 Isa 5. Neither Fourthly Apostles as wee see in Iudas For the Lord is no respecter of persons but when all shall stand before him will deale justly with all in judgement neither respecting the person of the poore nor of the rich Sect. 2 § 2. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit Quest 1 How many sort of evill trees are there Answer 1 Three according to the fruits to wit First there are some trees that beare obnoxious hurtfull and poysonous fruit Secondly some that beares onely leaves and no fruit at all Thirdly some trees beare idle vaine and unprofitable fruit Now these seeme to be the best because they endeavour to bring forth fruit but because their fruit is not good and profitable they are therfore destroyed also Our Saviour hereby teaching us That none can be secure from the wrath and vengeance of God Observat but onely those whose fruits are approved by him Reade Matth. 3.10 c. Act. 2.38 and 3.19 and Luke 13.6 and Isa 5.5 and Iohn 15.1.2 and Luke 3.8 Why shall none escape the anger of the Lord but Quest 2 those who bring forth good fruits First because a tree is good for nothing else but Answer 1 bearing of fruit Ezech. 15. This is spoken of the vine Secondly because Gods expectation is for fruit Answer 2 that is all that hee lookes for of the tree And therefore when hee lookes for that and findes it not hee curseth the tree as we see in the figge-tree Matth. 21.19 Thirdly God expects fruit and that good fruit Answer 3 and that onely And therefore hee who answereth not the Lords expectation therein shall bee hewen downe and cast into the fire There are three sort of Trees to wit 1. Some beare evill fruit as the wilde Olive and the wild vine These shall presently bee cut downe and cast into the fire Jsa 5.5 c. Heb. 6.8 2. Some beare no fruit these are spared a time to see if they will beare but if not at length they are cut downe also and throwne to the fire Luke 13.6 3. Some beare good fruit but it is but little and that little in part rotten And these are pruned and digged about and manured that they may bring forth better fruit and more plentifull Iohn 15.2 And therefore wee should examine whether wee be of this number or not How may wee know whether God will approve Quest 3 of our works or not By these foure signes namely Answer First examine thy estate and condition wherein thou art say thus unto thy selfe If God should now call mee to give account of my steward-ship what should I say what should I doe should I show my God my gold that I have heaped up together or my pleasure that I have so greedily followed or my land which I possesse what doe I daily doe I make it my chiefest care to glorify my God doe I thinke that day lost and grieve for the losse thereof wherein I doe not either bring some glory unto my God or some good unto my owne soule or some benefit unto my brethren Thus let us examine what wee doe daily and what our actions are if the Lord should call us to account Secondly examine thy by-past zeale if it have not vanished in leaves and vaine shewes hath not thy zeale been more for things circumstantiall and rituall then for substantiall and reall or more against an indifferent ceremonie then a direct sinne Thirdly examine whether thy obedience and fruits have encreased as thy knowledge did encrease or whether thou wert as carefull to performe thy duetie as to know it Fourthly examine thy present religion whether it leade thee unto constancie and encrease in holinesse and good workes that so thou maist bee ripe unto harvest or whether it make thee remisse or carelesse Certainely if wee bee carefull over our wayes and consider well how wee spend our time If wee bee truely zealous for the glory of God according to knowledge If wee labour daily to encrease in knowledge for this end that we might bee bettered in practise And lastly if wee strive daily to adde one measure and degree of grace unto another casting that behinde us which we have attained and striving hard unto the marke Then we may be comfortably assured that the
By some beginning Apopl●xie But none of these had place in this Maid she being truly dead Secondly some understand these words Miraculously Answ 2 as if our Saviour would say As yet after the course of nature she is dead but I will restore her unto life Thus the Prophet from the Lord saith Morieris to Hezekiah thou shalt die Esay 38.1 and afterwards vives thou shalt live 2 King 8.10 But these words imply something more for they doe not belong only to this D●mosell but also unto us Muscul s Offendit naturam mortis piorum Guali s Thirdly some understand these words Philosophically in regard of the soul which dieth not Answ 3 therfore neither the Maid because Mens cujusque est quisque And therfore death is called a dissolution because the soul dieth not but returneth unto God that gave it Eccles 12 7. And therfore David commends his soul unto God Psal 31.5 as doth also Christ Luke 23.46 and Stephen Acts 7.59 But these words imply something more than this because this opinion neither affirmeth nor proveth any thing concerning the Resurrection and therefore may be maintained by a Sadduce Answ 4 Fourthly these words The Maid is not dead but sleepeth may be expounded Theologically because the whole man shall live again hereafter in the Resurrection and that either I. Generally because at the last day the body of every one shall be raised and united again to the soul Or II. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because onely the godly shall live for ever a life of felicity and glory Ergo docet quae conditio mortis spem resuscitationis Gualt s In these words our Saviour teacheth us the condition of death namely Observ That death is not a finall dissolution but only as it were a sleep for a time Quest 2 How doth the truth of this appear The truth hereof appears by these particulars viz. Answ First because death is common unto all and hath ceazed upon all and therefore is not a finall dissolution nor totall destruction of soul and body Secondly because those who dye are said to sleep as appears I. By the godly before the Law Gen. 47.30 And II. By the godly under the Law as 2 Sam. 7 12. and 1 King 2.10 and 11.43 And III. By the wicked under the Law as 1 King 14.20 c. and verse 31. and 15.8 Esa 14.18 And IV. By the Saints under the Gospel Iohn 11.11 Acts 7.60 and 1 Cor. 11.30 and 15.18 Thirdly because sleep is like to death for so it binds all the senses that it makes the body seem to be livelesse because in sleep the body moves not perceives not regards not either wife or children or possessions or employments or affairs or pleasure or beauty or health Psal 76.5 And hence Sepulchers are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dormitories or sleeping houses Fourthly because death is like unto sleep for we sleep for a time and then awake and rise So we shall all arise from the grave of death Reade Iob 19.25 Psal 16.9 c. Daniel 12.2 and Mat. 25.32 c. Iohn 5.28 and 2 Cor. 5.10 Quest 3 What happinesse do they enjoy that sleep in the Lord Answ 1 First now they enjoy the sight of God that beatificall vision Mat. 5.8 and that in fulnesse B●●n ex Psal 34.8 Answ 2 Secondly now they are free from all mutation change danger and fear Thirdly and their very bodies at the last day Answ 3 shall awake unto glory 1 Cor. 15. What is required of us in regard of this sleep Quest 4 death Let us prepare our hearts for a happy Resurrection Psal 57.7 doing as men do Answ who are ready to lay themselves down to sleep namely First before they sleep they shut bolt and lock the doors for fear of Thieves so let us bolt and lock the doors of our hearts that sathan do not enter let us seek to be secure from him by Christ that is let us labour that we may be certainly assured that Christ is our Mediatour Intercessour and Advocate who will obtain for us at Gods hands remission and pardon of all our sins Secondly before men sleep they hide lock up or make sure their purses and money so we must be carefull to lay up our treasure in heaven Matthew 6. Thirdly before men sleep they provide and prepare something to cover them lest they should take cold so we must labour that we may be cloathed with the covering of Christs righteousnesse Rom. 13.12.13 Fourthly men before they sleep dispose and lay ready in order their garments that they may finde them and cloath themselves with them when they awake lest they be found naked so we must labour that we may have the garments of sanctity and sincerity otherwise we shall be found naked and like him without a wedding garment cast into everlasting fire And thus if we desire that death may be a happy sleep and our Resurrection a happy awakening we must be watchfull against sathan and carefull to adorn our selves with sanctity and piety but principally carefull that Christ may be our Mediatour and we cloathed with his righteousnesse and then death shall be but like a sweet sleep and the last Trump like a joyfull sound summoning us to our Coronation and everlasting inheritance § 5. And they laughed him to scorn Sect. 5 Christ we see here both speaks and does promiseth and performeth and yet is derided for which they are justly excluded and caused to depart to teach us That deriders mockers and scoffers Observ shall be shut out from Christs presence Gen. 21.9 Gal. 4.29 c. Why shall these be put out from Christ Quest 1 First because on their part it argues pride Answ 1 and insolencie that they will not hear Christ Prov. 13.1 Secondly because this scoffing and derision is Answ 2 terminated in God whether it be I. Against God himself as Gal. 6.7 Or II. Against Christ as Luke 22.63 and 23.11 Or III. Against Gods word as Act. 2.13 and 2 Pet. 3.3 Or IV. Against his Messengers as 2 Chron. 30.10 L●m. 3.14 15. Or V. Against the godly or the true Church as Psal 22.7 and 35.15 and 119.51 Esa 37.23 Or VI. Against the poor and weak who hath no helper 1 Sam. 17.42 Now against which soever of these derision be directed yet it is terminated in God and therefore no scoffers shall come or be suffered to abide in Christs presence Quest 2 Who is here blame-worthy Answ 1 First those who deride the dejected Here observe that there are two sorts of evils namely Culpae Poenae Now wicked men sometimes deride their brethren for evils either First Active of sin thus the Ammonites laughed because the Sanctuary of the Lord was prophaned Ezech. 25.3 Now Charity covers a multitude of sins n 1 Pet. 4.8 and therefore Christians should deride none for this kinde of evill Secondly Passive of punishment thus Iob complains that base persons disdained him when Gods hand was upon him
to speake unto in this verse and the former If yee will receive it this is Elias and he that hath eares to heare let him heare Answ 5 Fiftly As some went out to heare Iohn who returned back againe because his doctrine contradicted their lusts and opposed their lewd lives And as many approved of his preaching when hee reproved others but were offended with him when they were taxed themselves So many forsake the word because it crosseth their wils and although they allow Ministers to reprove others yet they doe not like that themselves should be reproved Answ 6 Sixtly some in outward shew would neither seeme to be adversaries nor contemners of the word preached but yet in themselves contemned the counsell of the Lord as the Scribes So many in heart despise the Gospel of Christ who shew no such thing outwardly at all Answ 7 Seventhly As the Disciples of Iohn attributed more unto him then unto Christ yea ascribed that unto Iohn which was proper unto Christ So some ascribe more to the Instrumentall then to the Principall or efficient cause that is often times more to the Minister then to Christ yea often sacrifice to themselves their own labours endevours more then unto Christ Answ 8 Eightly some have mens persons in admiration but their doctrine in contempt Many certainely admired both Iohn and Christ as appeares by the applause never any man spake 〈◊〉 this man speakes who would not obey the word preached Now none of all these are worthy our imitation or commendation but rather all of them deserve exprobration VERS 18 19. Iohn came neither eating nor drinking and they say hee hath a devill The Sonne of man came eating and drinking and they say Behold a man gluttonous and a wine bibber a friend of Publicans Sect. 1 and sinners But wisedome is justified of her children Quest § 1. For Iohn came neither eating nor drinking Answ How many sorts of Diet are there in Scripture Foure namely First Iohn Baptists diet who came neither eating nor drinking that is hee ate wild honey and the courfest things Secondly our Saviours diet who dranke wine but yet very moderately Thirdly the Epicures diet who saith Let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall die Fourthly the scrupulous mans diet who eateth nothing but herbes Rom. 14.2 Now the difference betwixt these is this Iohn the Baptists diet and Christs diet are both vertues but the Epicures diet and the Scrupulous mans are the two extreme For the Epicure taketh God to bee an indulgent Father to him in giving him the creatures to eate of them at his pleasure And the other taketh God to be a niggard who granteth not the liberall use of the creatures to his children § 2 And they say hee hath a Devill Sect. 2 What was the cause that provoked them thus Quest 1 to censure the Baptist The provoking and incensing cause was two-fold namely Answ First because he preached the Law Secondly because hee was abstemious and temperate First Iohn preached the Law and the threatnings thereof he proclaimed them to be a generation of Vipers Matt. 3.7 He preacheth that God can raise up children unto Abraham of stones Matth. 3.9 yea that now the axe is laid to the root of the tree verse 10. And therefore fruitlesse trees shall be cast into the fire verse 12. Now hence they were angry and in their rage said hee had a devill To teach us That the preaching of the Law is never acceptable to sinners N●hem 9.30 Prov. 1.24 Act. 7.54 Esa 30.14 Ierem. 44.5 and 25.4 and and 2 King 17.13 c. 2 Chronicles 24.19 Ierem. 7.13 How doth this further appeare Quest 2 Because the Law preacheth foure things Answ opposite to so many humane affections to wit First the Law teacheth that our condition by nature is evill desperate and miserable now this is opposite to the pride and selfe-love that is in our natures when Christ preached upon this head of the Law the Pharisees cry Are wee blind also Iohn 9.40 Because our proud natures will not brooke this doctrine Secondly the Law teacheth that punishment hangeth over our heads and will fall certainely at length upon us except wee repent Now this is opposite to presumption When Ieremy preacheth this point the people reply Thou liest Ieremie 43.2 They will not beleeve that they shall be punished although they have grievously offended So naturally we presume that no evill shall come unto us and make a covenant with death Iob 36.13 Esay 28.14 And therefore cannot endure the menaces and comminations of the law Thirdly the Law exhorts us to repent as Causa sine qua non and telleth us that without repentance wee must needs be brought to destruction at the last Now this is opposite to the love of sinne which is inherent in our natures and habituall unto us And therefore this doctrine of repentance is as harsh and unpleasant unto us as is a prohibition of meat to him that is hungry or of drinke to him that is thirsty Fourthly the Law perswades us to repent betimes speedily whiles it is said to day and to deferre it no longer Now this is opposite to that sluggish idlenesse that is in our bones and which makes us from day to day to cry yet a little sleepe á little slumber a little ●olding of the hands to sleepe And therefore the preaching of the law is as distastful unto us as it is to a sleepy sluggish man to be awakened and pulled out of his bed Quest 3 Why may wee not despise or lightly regard the preaching of the Law Answ 1 First because the Law is truth what would it profit a man to dye laughing or to be deceived If the Physitian should tell us that out bodies were in no danger or the Lawyer that our estates were safe and secure when as both are in apparent danger we would say they were Traytours to our bodies and possessions And yet we are angry with the Law when it telleth us truth and could wish that it were a Traytor to our soules The Law telleth us That for sins sake the wrath of God fals upon the children of disobedience Ephes 5.6 Now although this be an undoubted truth and that experience doth dayly prove it yet we had rather not hear it Answ 2 Secondly we must not despise the preaching of the Law because it is a necessary way we comming by death unto life as the sharp needle makes way for the smoothe thred and as the Prodigall by poverty is brought home unto his Father we must be wounded before we can be cured we must be humbled before we can be raised up yea we must dye before we can live And therefore seeing the threats of the Law are true yea and necessary to humble and wound us we must take heed that we do not slight them Quest 4 What things hinder us from regarding and loving the preaching of the Law Answ 1 First self-love Esa 65.5 And therefore we
preached Or Secondly that it may be heard But Thirdly that the seed of the Word may bee received And Fourthly that it may grow up and increase and become truely fruitfull Quest 3 Whether should a Minister be grieved when hee seeth his Ministery unprofitable amongst a people and that his Ministerie is like to prove the savour of death unto them Answ Without doubt he should be grieved for Ieremie wished that his head were a fountain of teares Ier. 9.1 that hee might weepe for that people And Christ himselfe wept over Ierusalem Mat. 23.37 Object Against this this place will bee objected Christ himselfe gave thankes to God his Father that hee had hid these things from the wise of the world and revealed them unto babes Answ Christ is considered two wayes namely First as he was the Minister of Circumcision And Secondly as he was Mediator of the new Covenant Now as hee was the Minister of Circumcision and sent to teach the Iewes no doubt it was a great griefe to him when hee saw them so hard hearted that they would not beleeve But againe if wee consider him as Mediator looking up to Gods wisedome and decree he giveth God praise for passing by some and chusing others Paul looking to his charge wished that the Iewes might be saved but when in a second consideration hee looketh up to Gods will and seeth that his preaching was to make fat the hearts of that people as was the preaching of Esay then he resteth in this and rejoyceth that God is glorified Although the Spheares have their owne particular motions yet they all follow the motion of the first mover So although Christ and Paul be sorry at first for the hardnesse of the Iewes hearts yet they must follow the motion of the first mover God himselfe and rejoyce when he is glorified Quest 4 From the Text it may be demanded who can come unto the knowledge of this saving truth which Christ here saith is concealed from the wise and revealed to babes Although men are by the Gospel called to the knowledge of the truth yet onely the Elect doe attaine unto the same and that because they are effectually called by the Holy Ghost When I say that all men are called I meane by an outward calling which is especially by the publike preaching of the Gospel for by this no man is excluded from the knowledge of the truth but are rather both generally all and severally each singular person invited thereunto But by that inward calling which is by the Holy Ghost and therefore effectuall I say that only the Elect are called according to the Apostles golden chaine Rom. 8.29 Whom he hath predestinated them even them alone hee called by an effectuall calling And this is that which our Saviour here saith I thanke thee Father Lord of heaven and earth that thou hast hid these things from the wise that is of this world and revealed them to babes that is onely the Elect which are contemptible in the sight of the world See to this purpose verse 11. and 13. of this Chapter and Iohn 12.38 and 17.6 and 1 Corinth 4.3 and 2 Timoth. 3 7. Only therefore the Elect come to the saving knowledge of the truth who for that cause are said to bee of the truth and to heare the voi e of Christ and onely the Church is called the Pillar and foundation of the truth for they onely retaine the truth and of them only doth the Church consist and so only must know the truth Hill lib. 3. pag. 237. of the true knowledge of God § 3. Oh Father Sect. 3 Why doth our Saviour turne his speech unto Quest 1 God First because his speech is a thankesgiving Answ 1 and thankes are to be given unto God Secondly Christ directs his speech unto his Answ 2 Father to shew that he is the directer of the world and Church Arcana Dei judicia suspicit ut in eorum admirationem alios trahat Calvin s Christ admires the secret judgements of God that hee may draw others to the like admiration Thirdly our Saviour converts his speech unto Answ 3 his Father that hee may excuse the meannesse and low condition of his servants and that both I. In regard of the Pharisees and world who despised them for their low estate And also II. In regard of themselves who were discouraged by this contempt For hereby hee would have them both to know that this proceeded of and from the Lord as followes in the next verse Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Why doth Christ call God Father Quest 2 That he may shew how great reason hee hath to congratulate or rejoyce together with God Answer when he is conjoyned in so neere and strict a relation unto him as if hee would say I rejoyce that God is thus glorified for he is my Father Hence then observe That none can truely rejoyce in God Observ except he be joyned unto him by a new Covenant of filiation Rom. 8.17 Gal. 4.7 and 1 Iohn 1.3 and 1 Corinth 1.9 Hos 1.10 Rom. 5 2. and 1 Pet. 1.8 And examples hereof wee have Rom. 8.15 Gal. 4.6 and 1 Iohn 3.1 How doth the truth evidence hereof appear It appeares by these three particulars viz. First the promises are not given by name to Peter Iohn or Andrew but only to those who are received into the fellowship of sonnes and called the sonnes of promise Rom. 9.8 Galat. 4.28 Secondly God professeth himselfe to be an enemy to the enemies of his children and therefore he is not the helper of all but only of his Psalm 8.13 c. And consequently none can rejoyce in him but those only who are assured that by a new Covenant they are made his Thirdly naturally we hate the Lord and his Law the Commandements of God being as bonds and chaines unto us which restraine us from doing that which wee greedily desire And therefore wee desire to cast off this bond and yoke and had rather the Lord would suffer us to walke in our owne wayes though the end thereof be death then constraine us to walke in the pathes of this Commandements which leade unto life Wherefore untill by a new Covenant we be united unto the Lord we cannot rejoyce in him or his service Quest 4 How may we bee made the children of God that so we may rejoyce in him Answ 1 First Pacem operando by making peace and appeasing jarres and composing strife betwixt man and man brother and brother Blessed are the Peace-makers for they shall be called the children of God Mat. 5.9 Answ 2 Secondly Benedicendo by blessing those that curse us c. Love your enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which despitefully hate you and persecute you That you may be the children of your Father which is in heaven Mat. 5.45.46 Answ 3 Thirdly Orando by praying unto God to give us that evidence and
Confession the use of the Crosse and Marriage which must be beleeved to be a Sacrament Thirdly Necessaria depravata things which are necessary in themselves but polluted and corrupted by them as the Sacraments good Workes Prayer and Fasting Thirdly there is Iugum Dei the Lords yoke Answer 3 and this is two-fold viz. I. Afflictionis the yoke of affliction now this God hath promised to take from the necks of his children Esay 9.4 10.27 47.6 And to put it upon the necks of the wicked that those who will not beare the yoke of obedience and service may beare the yoke of correction and punishment Ierem. 28.13 II. Legis the yoke of the Law and this is two-fold namely First Ceremoniall this was to continue only untill Christ came and by his death was abolished for when giving up the Ghost hee cried Consummatum est It is finished then was the Law of Ceremonies abrogated And Act. 16. the Apostles shew that wee are free now from this yoke Secondly Morall which must continue for ever Psalme 1.19 And herein are two things viz. I. The matter of this yoke namely Obedience And II. The manner of this yoke namely In the feare of the Lord that is wee must not onely labour to doe whatsoever the Law enjoynes and eschew what it prohibits but wee must doe it with a filiall and religious reverence and feare Answ 4 Fourthly there is Iugum Christi the yoke of Christ and this the Text speakes of Quest 2 How manifold is the yoke of Christ Answer Two-fold namely Crucis legis the yoke of Affliction and Evangelicall obedience For Christ requires these two things of all that belong unto him namely I. That they should suffer all that hee laies upon them And II. That they should doe whatsoever hee requires of them And both these are included in Matth 16.24 where our Saviour commands us To take up our Crosse and follow him Quest 3 What yoke doth our Saviour here speake of Answ 1 First some say that he speakes De jugo legis of the yoke of the Law only Answ 2 Secondly some say that he speakes De jugo Crucis of the yoke of the Crosse only Answ 3 Thirdly I conceive that Christ speakes directly and immediately of the yoke of the Law and Obedience and implicitely of the yoke of the Crosse because hee both assists us in doing that which he requires and in bearing of that which hee imposes as followes by and by And therefore wee are commanded verse 28. to submit our necks to both these yokes and in this verse for our comfort our Saviour pronounceth them to be both light Quest 4 Why doth our Saviour call the yoke of the Law and Crosse his yoke for my yoke is easie Answ 1 First hee cals the yoke of the Law his for these causes namely I. Because he did co-operate and concur with the Father in the giving of the Law Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa And therefore without doubt Christ had a hand in the promulgation and pronouncing thereof and so in that regard may justly call it his yoke II. Because it was confirmed by him hee openly protested that he came not to destroy or abrogate but to ratifie the Morall Law Matt. 5.17 c. He came not to free Christians from the obedience hereof but obligeth them to obedience thereunto For his will is his Fathers will and his Commandement his Fathers Commandement and therefore in this regard it may be called his yoke III. Because it was borne by him and absolutely performed and kept by him Take my yoke upon you c. As if hee would say the yoke that I have borne my selfe for it is easie I having perfectly kept and obeyed it Ano thus also it may be called His. IV. Because he tooke away the rigorous and impossible conditions thereof It was said before his comming Fac hoc vive doe this and live and without the full and perfect obedience therof yee shall not live but Christ hath mitigated this rigorous Law and now assured us that for his sake God will accept of the will for the deed And therefore for this his mitigating and dispensing of the hard conditio s of the Law it may be called his yoke V. Because he gives us power in some measure to obey and observe it For my yoke is easie as if he should say the yoke of the Morall Law which was imposed upon you by my Father and confirmed by my selfe is an easie yoke to you because I will enable you to beare it and that which therein you cannot doe of your selves I will doe with you and for you It is my yoke because I beare the greatest weight of it and therefore refuse not you to undertake it for what with that which I beare my selfe and what with the strength I endue you withall your burden is but easie and your yoke light And thus also it may be called Christs yoke because hee beares one part himselfe as followes by and by and gives us grace and strength sufficient to beare the other part with joy and comfort VI. It may justly be called Christs yoke because he rewards the obedience thereof As is most plainely laid downe in the two former verses where he promiseth to refresh and to give both spirituall and eternall rest to all those who submit their necks to this yoke and labour constantly and perseverantly to performe absolute perfect and universall obedience to this Law And thus we see in what regards our Saviour cals the yoke of the Law his yoke for these causes viz. Secondly our Saviour cals the yoke of the Answ 2 Crosse and Affliction his yoke I. Because the crosses and afflictions which wee suffer are imposed upon us by his will and permission For without that no enemy or calamity could touch us II. Because we beare the Crosse by his example therefore it is called his yoke III. Our Saviour cals our crosses and afflictions his yoke that thereby a difference may be observed betweene the scourges of wicked men and the crosses of beleevers for these are his yoke but not those IV. The Crosse is called Christs yoke because he hath sanctified this yoke by his owne body which on earth was subject to crosses afflictions and persecutions for us V. Because our Saviour doth so moderate our afflictions and crosses by the aid assistance and comfort of his holy Spirit that they become light unto us therefore they are called his yoke How doth our Saviour say that his yoke is easie and his burden light seeing that he saith Matth. 7.14 Quest 5 That strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leads unto life and therefore verse 13. commands us to enter in at the strait gate And againe in the 12. verse of this Chapter hee saith That the kingdome of heaven suffereth violence and the violent onely take it who strive to enter therein by force And Marke 10.25 hee saith that it is
laborious and burthensome than a vertuous There is no burthen heavier than the conscience of sin and none lighter than a good conscience there is no punishment greater than the punishment of sin neither any reward greater than that which shall be conferred upon those who bear Christs yoke A man can serve no worse Master than Satan nor better than Christ and therefore how great is the folly and madnesse of those who refuse to bear Christs yoke and in the mean time willingly submit their necks to Satans Thus Chrysostome saith that the yoke of Christ is light sweet and easie compared with the yoke of sin which is born by wicked men Chrys s And he proves it thus I. Because sin is a most heavie burthen according to that of the Prophet David Mine iniquities are gone over my head and as a heavie burthen they are too heavie for me Psalme 38.4 And Zachary chap. 5. verse 7 8. saith The burthen of sin is like a Talent of Lead which presseth a man down to the ground and will not suffer him to rise II. Because Christ is a most sweet and gracious Lord and therefore David exhorts all but to taste and see how good and gracious he is Psal 34.8 and then they will never refuse to submit their necks to his yoke III. Because the sweet pleasures of sin and delights which carnall and wicked men finde in the service of satan will all vanish away as a dream in the night Wisdom 5.6 7 c. But the sweetnesse of Christs yoke endures for ever for the bearers thereof shall have peace of conscience and internall joy here on earth and eternall felicity and happinesse in the kingdom of heaven IV. Because the end of wicked workers is death and destruction Rom. 2.4 and 3.6 and 6.23 Seventhly the yoke of Christ is light in regard of his example for he hath born it himself Ordinarily a man doth not think his own burthen so heavie as he would think another mans that is a man carrieth with more ease and willingnesse that which is his own than that which is anothers and to take a great deal of pains for our selves is not so troublesome or irksome unto us as to do the like for another Now Christ bare the yoke and burthen for us and that willingly thinking it out of his love to us to be but light and easie and therefore we should not think it hard to bear our own burthen or unwillingly submit our necks to that yoke which in duty we ought to carry Besides by Christs bearing of this yoke it is become more easie unto us For I. We see that it is a yoke which may be born because our Christ hath born it And II. It is made lighter unto us by Christs bearing thereof The yoke that cattell do bear is very heavie when it is new and green but when it is dry and somewhat worn it is more soft to be suffered and more light to be carried And therfore our blessed Saviour would not incontinently after his birth burthen us with the yoke of his Law but first did carry it some three and thirty yeers himself that it might become seasoned and more light unto us For what hath Christ commanded us to do that he hath not first done himself what yoke hath he cast upon our backs that he first hath not born upon his own shoulders If he commanded us to fast he fasted if he commanded us to pray he prayed if he commanded we should forgive he pardoned if he commanded us to love he loved if he commanded us to dye he died And therefore let us look upon Jesus the Author and finisher of our Faith and think that we saw him with this yoke upon his own neck and this burthen upon his own back bearing and carrying them for our sakes and examples that is bearing them himself that so they might become easier unto us that seeing he carried them we may not refuse to bear them but be incouraged to undergo thē because if the Master did carry them then well may the servant if he did bear them for our sakes then we may wel bear thē for our own And thus the yoke becomes easie unto us by Christs bearing of it Eightly Christs yoke is easie in regard of the short small and momentary time that it lyeth upon us A Porter thinks a heavie burthen light if he be to carry it but to the next dore or a little way off No man thinks much of great toil and travell if it be but of short continuance And therefore in this respect Christs burthen is light The yoke of the Crosse is but momentary as Paul himself saith our light afflictions which are but for a moment 2 Cor. 4.17 where the second is an Exegesis of the first Was Pauls afflictions light No but very heavie as appears most cleerly by the 8 9 and 10 verses of that same Chapter Then why doth he call them light if they be heavie Because Magna brevis they were but short and momentary The life of man is like the Day of an hireling saith Iob 7.1 And therefore who will think either the yoke of the Law or the burthen of the Crosse to be heavie seeing they are to bear them but a day yea in regard of eternity but a moment Life is short our labour is of the same length Last for when once the night of death approacheth then all tears shall be wiped off from our faces then our yoke and burthen shall be taken off and we shall be made happy and blessed by the enjoyment of eternall rest Rev. 14.13 Ninthly the yoke of the Law is light easie in regard of the purity thereof for the Law of Christ is pure and all his Commandements are holy and just and good Moses Law did allow of Divorcements and Vsury Phoraneus granted to the Egyptians by a Law to be theeves In Lycurgus his Lawes man-slaughter was not chastised By the Law of Solon Solonius Adultery was dissimuled Numa Pompilius held it lawfull for a man to conquer as much as he could take although hee could pretend no other colourable title at all unto it then the purchase by dint of sword The Lydians used no other Marriage then this that he who first could allure a maid unto folly and entise her unto fornication should bee her husband The Baleares commanded that the Bride should not be given to the Bride-groome before the next kinsman had used and defloured her These and such like Lawes wee may justly say were hard heavie and grievous but the holy and sacred Law of Christ is so right in the things it doth admit and so pure and sincere in the things it doth permit that it doth neither suffer vice nor consent to the vicious man And therefore may be called light in this regard Tenthly Christs yoke and burden is light and easie unto the faithfull in regard of that love which they beare unto him for love we