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A13952 A briefe institution of the common places of sacred divinitie Wherein, the truth of every place is proved, and the sophismes of Bellarmine are reprooved. Written in Latine, by Lucas Trelcatius, and Englished by Iohn Gawen, minister of Gods word.; Scholastica, et methodica, locorum communium s. theologiæ institutio. English Trelcatius, Lucas.; Gawen, John, minister of Gods word. 1610 (1610) STC 24261; ESTC S103024 183,328 620

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onely concerning the condigne but not so much as concerning the congruent The outward impulsiue cause is Christ God-man both in respect of his merit as also of his efficacy and operation Of his merite because both by obeying and suffering in his life and death he purchased for vs the benefite of Iustification t Esa 83.3 1. Tim. 2.6 1. Ioh 1.7 Rom. 8.30 31. Of this Efficacy because he effectually applyeth this purchased benefit both by offering the same by the preaching of the word conferring it by the inward and effectuall operation of his spirite u Rom. 1.16 2. Cor. 5.19 On mans behalfe that which is is called reductiuely the Efficient cause of the Passiue Iustification is wholy Instrumentall and it is saith by which not for which we are sayde to bee iustified both in respect of her Correlatiue as also in respect of her cōtrary the law and good works Of her Correlatiue because the whole forme of saith as it is justifying consisteth in relation neyther is it sayde to justifie vs as it is a quality but as it is occupied relatiuely in the applying of her Correlatiue u Gal. 3.8 Heb. 2.4 Rom. 1.17 Of her contrary because the good workes which are required in the person of him that is justified are excluded from the merit of Iustification as in the place concerning Earth and Workes shall be spoken more at large x Rom. 5.15 11.6 Ephes 2.8.9 The matter of Iustification which on Gods behalfe is considered actiuely is two fold according as there are two parts of Iustificatjon the Remission of sinnes and the obedjence of Christ For because we y Asiequuti sumus procured vnto our selues both the bond of death and the deprjuation of righteousnesse and life both were needful for our Iustificatjon that both our sinne might bee abolished by Remission that wee might be freed from death which is the wages of sinne and that righteousnesse might bee communicated vnto vs to the end we might attaine vnto life z Dan. 9.24 Gal. 3.13 By the name of Remission of sinnes we vnderstand that gratious act of God whereby hee perfectly forgiueth and remitteth the fault and the punishment for the merit and satisfaction of Christ a 2. Cor. 5.19 Rom. 8.1 4.7 The foundatiō hereof is the righteousnesse of Christ not his Essentiall and Diuine b Esa 42.8 nor yet his habituall which was his originall righteousnesse opposite vnto our originall righteousnesse or spot of nature but his actuall righteousnesse which is the effect of both namely a most perfect obedience performed to the Father both by satisfaction for sin and by fulfilling of the Law For the obedience of Christ is two fold opposite to the double bond of man after his fall actiue for the fault passiue for the punishment or both for both The Actiue obedience is a perfect performance of Gods law which Christ fully and perfectly executed even to the vtmost title c 1. Cor. 1.30 Rom 5.19 2. Cor. 5.21 of the law the necessitie hereof in the worke of our Redemption and Iustification three things doe prooue the Iustice of God the office of a Mediatour and our Salvation The iustice of God for if you eyther respect his nature wherby he is infinitly iust he ought not to saue man but by the same manner of iustice d Prou 17 Exod. 20.5 eyther proper to vs or freely imputed or if we respect his will revealed in the law which is an vnmoueable 〈◊〉 of Iustice he hath prescribed none other way vnto life than obedience The office of Christ the Mediatour for wheras he as our surety was bound by a voluntary dispensation to vndergoe and performe those things which we our selues were necessarily bound to vndergoe and performe it was needfull that he should not onely suffer death for vs but also performe the law because we were bound vnto both e Rom. 8.3 Gal. 4 45. Our Saluation for whereas two things are necessary for the same a freeing from death and a giuing of life it was needfull we should obtaine the one by the purging of sinne and the other by the gift of righteousnesse f Rom. 10 4 Rom. 5 19 20. Hence it is that Christ is said to be the end and presection of the law vnto Saluation to every one that beleeveth and the actuall obedience of Christ whereby we are made just is in the Scripture opposed to the actual disobedience of Adam whereby wee are made sinners g Heb. 10.14 Rom. 4.25 1. Pet. 1.19 1. Ioh. 1.7 Gal. 3.13 Adde further that in the very passiue obedience the actiue neverthelesse doth of right challenge vnto it selfe the chiefty for the suffering doth not simply justifie but as it is the suffering of Christ voluntarily presenting himselfe to God the Father by his Eternall Spirit whervpon the same Christ by offering himselfe as a sacrifice suffered as a Sacrificer performed it The Passiue obedience of Christ is the sacrificing or suffering of Christ very necessary in respect of God of Christ the Mediator and of vs. Of God because his justice must haue beene satisfied by punishment Of Christ because he being our surety ought to haue payde our debt Of vs because it was needefull that we should be freed from death by death h Num. 8.33 The Subiect of this righteousnesse is Christ alone in whom subiectiuely that habituall Iustice is inherent and from whom that both actiue passiue obedience proceeded which wee called actuall righteousnesse The matter of Iustification which is considered Passiuely are men elect i Rom. 5.8 10. Tit. 3.3 Eph. 2.12.13 Of this matter there is commonly had a double notion the one according to Nature the other according to Grace supernaturall according to nature they are sinners and therefore subiect to the accusation and malediction of the law k Rom. 8.30 Eph. 5.30 Ioh. 17 20. according to grace supernatural they are beleevers or ingraffed by faith into Christ The forme of Iustificatiō taken actiuely is a feee imputation of Christs actuall righteousnesse whereby the merits and obedience of Christ are applied vnto vs by vertue of that most strait communion whereby hee is in vs and we in him The forme therfore consisteth in Relation in which the vnity that ariseth thereout hath between both boundes the manner of a forme and consisteth rather in the issuing forth and the habite then in the inherence Hence it is also that Relation is sayde m Non esse eius sed esse ad aliad not to bee his but to be in respect of another Now it is receyved by right of the giving and acceptance of the merites of Christes obedience for this imputed righteousnesse is grace and not nature the communicating of a benefite not a Real or habitual possession of the righteousnesse or substance of Christ Lastly an Imputation not a passible quality inherent in vs. In this Imputation we consider two things the truth
By the name of couenant wee vnderstand not that generall earthly and temporarie couenant which God made and keepeth with all created things according to their nature by the free law of his prouidence neither that speciall couenant which hee entred into with our first Parents in that state of integrity a speciall examination or triall of obedience being added as also both the promise of a life supernaturall and the threat of a double death being put therto d Gen. 3 22. the one is of nature vniuersall the other of humane nature limitted by a certaine bound of time and state neither of both are properly pertaining to vs who are to be aduanced from the vniuersall nature and the corruption of particular nature to the communion of supernaturall glory but we vnderstand that couenant which God entred into with man after his fall by his speciall grace which covenant is one onely for as much as there is but one only way of salvation though a variable and divers maner of adminishing the same bee pointed out Wherefore first we must speake concerning the very substance of the covenant Secondly of the Formes therof which diversly it had from the outward maner and circumstances The Covenant then which God entered into with man corrupt is the free disposition of God whereby hee promiseth eternal salvation by the death of his Sonne to the glory of his Grace The Efficient cause of this Covenant is God e Ier. 3● 31 c. Gal. 4.24 for here is not the disposition of two parties which is wont to presuppose the equalitie of persons and right betweene parties for such a one can never befall betweene God and the creature but it is of God alone who of his meere will stroke that covenant with man whereby hee might bee advanced from his owne nature vnto the communion of Gods grace and glory And the manner of this Efficient cause in the Scriptures is vsually two wayes circumscribed both Generally Immediately as also Particularly and Mediately Generally and Immediately it is the benefite of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost But Particularly and mediately it is the benefite of Christ God and man who as hee is the foundation of Election so is hee also of Gods grace in time communicated vpō which this covenant is built ſ Eph. 13.4 Act. 3.15 The Matter of the covenant is two-folde whereof the one is of the Obiect the other of the Subiect wherein also the parties are to bee considered The Obiect or the matter as they tearme it about or concerning which is two-fold First it is God promising life vnder condition of faith and his worshippe secondly it is man g St●pulās covenanting for grace and promising faith and obedience The Subiect or parties of the Covenant doe circumscribe the conditions thereof which are of two sortes the first is of them which are promised of God in the Law and the Gospell the latter of those to the performing wherof man bindeth himselfe promising faith and good works The Forme of the Covenant is a mutuall binding of the parties according to certain conditions of God promising by the death of his Sonne a free Remission of sinnes and everlasting life h Gen. 12.1 ● Ier. 32.40 Of Man promising faith obedience i Gen. 17.1 Mar. 16.16 And in respect of this obligation the manner of the parties is diverse for in respect of God it is his owne free Grace and mercy who bindeth himself to man by his loue and promise in respect of man it is an obligation wholy of right and due The End Generall is a declaration of Gods soveraigne goodnesse mercy and Iustice in our Salvation Particular is mans salvation as farre foorth as faith by it selfe hath respect to mans good though through his owne fault the same bee not alwayes saving vnto him And this is the Substance of the covenant which God made with man after his fall the truth whereof is expressely and perfectly contayned in the olde and new Testament the Law and the Gospell The Manner of administring this covenant was divers according to the difference of the times k Heb. 1.1 wherein a diverse face and forme was put vpon that selfe same substance of the thing The Generall distinction of the times hath two Periods the one of Christ to bee exhibited the other of him already exhibited And that wee may speake of the first euen before Christes comming he administred this covenant diverse wayes according to the manner of the three Ages The first Age was from the time of Adams fall vnto Abraham at which time God expounded no lesse evidently then briefly the whole manner of the covenant in that promise which is extant in the third of Genesis l Gen. 3 15. And this was the Manner of the Promise The second was from Abraham vnto Moses when the promise which hithervnto was proposed vnto all being restrayned to Abraham and his posterity was sealed with Sacraments after that a solemne covenant was added to the promise conditions were layed downe on both sides aswell on Gods behalfe as on mans behalfe And this is properly called the Manner of the Covenant because of the expresse mention of the mutuall obligation m Gen. 7 4 5. c. The third was from Moses vnto Christs comming when God in a more speciall manner disposed declared and confirmed that covenant into the forme of a Testament n Heb. 9 15 16. Of this Testament there are two partes subordinate the one to the other The one Legall and conditionall requiting of man a perfect obedience of the law and vnder condition thereof promising life eternall o Leu. 18.5 Luc. 10.27 which part was as it were a preparation vnto the other according as the Law is the Schoole-master vnto Christ but the other part of that Testament was the Doctrine Evangelicall concerning mans reconciliation with God and his deliverance from his misery by the death of Christ which part was shadowed forth with divers Types and Ceremonies p Exod. 14 20. Heb. 8.8 And this was the Maner of Administring the covenant before Christes comming After Christs birth first at the cōming of Christ into the flesh afterwards in his administration in the flesh and lastly at his death the old being abrogated hee brought in the new Testament q Heb. 7.17 Heb 9.16 We say abrogated after a sort in respect of both partes of the Testament of the former because God neyther vrgeth nor requireth the manner of perfect obedience of the Law of the latter because the body succeeded the shadowes the truth the figures the thing signified the signes and sacrifices And hence it may bee easily concluded what might bee the difference and agreement of the Law and the Gospell of the old and the new Testament The Agreement is made in the Substance of both for there are no Essentiall but Accidentall differences according to the divers manner of
one declared by the effects of both but as concerning the Object are both vniversally all Creatures even the vnreasonable which shall be freed from the servitude of corruption and generally all both Angels and Men and particularly that man of Sinne and Sonne of Perdition Antechrist e Mat. 29.32 1. Thes 4.17 Apoc. 20.12 The Forme is that whole order and proceeding of the most majesticall judgement comprehended in the very preparation both of the Iudge and of the Persons to be judged in the sentēce of the judgement and in the execution of the sentence f Mat. 25.32 1. Thes 4.16.17 The End Supreame is the glory of God himselfe and the accomplishmēt or Christs office Subordinate the iust condemnation of the wicked and the glorious felicity of the faithfull both which the infinitenesse and eternity either of joy or sorrow followeth g 2. Tim. 4 8. Particularly the State of man after this life after the time of that vniversall life resurrection and last judgement is eyther of life or death eternall Life Eternall is the life of glory wherein the Soule ioyned to our body enioyeth God for ever being advanced to the highest toppe and height of her felicity The cause of this life is God to wit the Father the Efficient the Sonne the Meritorious and the holy Ghost the sealing and applying Cause h Ioh. 14 2● Apo. 21.3 1. Cor. 15.45 Rom. 8.11 The Matter which hath the respect of the Subiect are those good things which neyther eye hath seene nor eare heard nor can the mind of man comprehend i 1. Cor. 15 28. That which is of the Obiect are all the blessed and elect k Apo. 21.3 Mat. 25.24 The Forme is the most perfect knowledge vision and fruition of God himselfe and the exceeding felicity blessednesse of man which accompanieth the same which also consisteth both in the separation and absence of all evill things in the participation and presence of all good things both are both perfect and eternall l Apo. 22.4 Psa 7 15 1. Ioh. 3.2 Psa 16.11 The End is the glory of Gods grace and the glorifying of the elect m Apo. 21.3.5.12.11.17 1. Cor. 15.28 Death Eternall is the vnspeakeable and most miserable condition of the reprobates appointed or decreed of God whereby both their Soule and body are most justly adiudged to eternall punishments The Efficient Cause remote is God the most iust iudge the Instrumentall is Sathan the neerest is Sinne n Mat. 25.41 The Matter which hath the respect of the Subiect are Eternall punishments that which is of the Obiect are the Cursed and the Workers of iniquity o Ioh. 5.29 1. Thes 1 9. The Forme is the perpetuity and the infinitenesse of the punishments in Hell p Apo. 20.15.21.8 Esa 66.24 Mat. 4.42 The End Supreame is the glory of Gods Iustice The Neerest is the iust condemnation and punishment of the wicked OF MANS ESTATE after this Life The Part Confuting Touching the Resurrection I. THe Resurrection in the holy Scripture is two wayes taken Figuratiuely or Properly Figuratiuely eyther by a Metonymy it signifieth immortal life or by a Metaphor eyther a deliverance from danger or the regeneration of the Soules which is a spirituall resurrection and is called the First Properly Resurrection signifieth the quickning of the Bodie which shal be done at the last day which also is called the Second II. THere is one Resurrection Vniversall and Finall which no man shall escape an other Particular or foregoing whereof there are particular examples extant in the Scriptures Of the last Iudgement I. IVdgement in the Scriptures signifieth three things eyther the cause of damnation or an vniversall governement or the very Act eyther of condēnation or Iustification II. THere is a two-fold Iudgement of the Lord Particular or Antecedent When God in this life eyther defendeth his people or represseth the wicked Vniversall being the last which shall be done in the last day of the Resurrection III. THe Sonne is sayde to be the iudge of the world not exclusiuely or oppositely but by an appropriation for that by the Sonne in a visible forme the last iudgement shall be executed IIII. THe Sonne is said to be ignorant of the day of iudgement eyther because he would haue vs to be ignorant thereof or as touching his humane nature which by ordinary and naturall knowledge knoweth nothing of this matter or as touching his state of humility which as touching his voluntary dispensation hee hath taken vpon him Of Life Eternall I. THere are 3. kinds or differences of life there is a life of nature which the Apostle calleth Naturall There is a Life of Grace which the Sons of God alone doe enioy in this world there is a life of Glory which consisteth in the vision of God II. LIfe Eternall is two wayes taken Metonymically both for the way to life and for Christ himselfe Properly for the State of the blessed after this life III. THere is one Vision of God Naturall in the thinges created an other Specular or Symbolicall by resemblances and Signes an other of Faith by the doctrine and doings of Christ an other of Present sight or of glory to come when we shall see God face to face Of Death Eternall DEath is fowre-fold First Corporall which in the Scriptures is also called Temporall and the first death in respect of the wicked Secondly Spirituall and that eyther of the faithfull or vnfaithfull that of the faithfull is three-fold of Sinne which is called Mortification of the Law as it is the power of Sin of the world as the world is dead vnto them The death of the vnfaithfull is that which may be called the death of faith or of the soule Thirdly Eternall which is called the second Fourthly Civill death which of the Lawyers is sayde to be of them which are condemned to death FINIS
of nature from God the naughtines came vnto the Subiect by the corruption of man The Places of Scripture which are wont to bee wrested against the truth of this Doctrine of Providence are for the most part these Against the Materiall Cause 1 Of the Corinth 9.9 Ans Providence is eyther generall or speciall A conclusion from the deniall of the one vnto the deniall of the other is of no force 2 Sam. 1.6 1. King 21.34 Ans Providence and chance are not repugnant the one to the other if the respect of divers causes bee distinguished Esay 31. 1. Act. 5.38 Ans according to the divers considerations of the beginninges wee iudge both of the Causes whether neerest or remote and of the qualities of Actions whether good or bad but whatsoever quality is vitious it is from the particular beginning and not from that which is Vniversall or Common Against the Formall Cause Ezec. 18.33 Ose 13.9 Answ a double consideration of the punishmēt of sinne is wont and ought to bee distinctly noted one is of Iustice in God and hath a respect of morall good another of merite and fault in man hath a respect of evill and in this latter signification these places are to bee vnderstood Prou. 16.4 Answer The working of God in respect of the wicked presupposeth three thinges first the limitation of sinne secondly the withdrawing of Grace thirdly the ordayning of punishment Ierem. 10.7 Answ The Prophet speaketh from the feeling of his own infirmity not of an vntruth in doctrine nor of any wickednesse in life but of his vocation vnto which hee was drawne against his will Exod. 4.21 Esa 69.19 Ezek. 14.9 Rom. 1.28 2. Thes 2.11 Answere A Working is one thing and a working permission is another thing That is in good thinges onely this both in good evil for by permitting God worketh foure wayes first as touching the materiall of sinne secondly as touching the withholding of grace which God oweth to no man because it is grace Thirdly as touching the endes vnto which God disposeth sinnes Fourthly as touching the iust punishment of the sinner whereof this is the highest degree by sinne to punish sinne OF THE WORKES OF Grace or of Redemption CHAP. V. THe Worke of God Externall and Temporall which he bringeth to passe in thinges is twofold of Nature and of Grace The Worke of Nature whereof hithervnto we haue spoken is whereby God hath eyther created thinges not as yet being or conserveth governeth and ordereth them being created by his Providence The Worke of Grace is that which God effecteth in the Elect who shall be heyres of Salvation according to the good pleasure of his will And this Worke commonly is called Redemption for the explication of which worke three thinges concurre the beginning the manner and the Effect or the Application thereof The beginning is Christ as hee is God and man from whome there is no power nor healthfull Action which is needefull for Redemption but doth proceed The manner according to which Christ executed this worke is that holy disposing and dispensation of his offices Now the Effect or Application is discerned first by the degrees hereof in this life that is by Calling and by Iustification Secondly by outwarde meanes that is by Gods Covenant and by his Sacraments Thirdly by the Subiect that is the Church which Christ hath redeemed with his blood Wherefore wee must treate first of Christs person secondly of the offices of his person Lastly of the other places pertayning to the application OF THE PERSON OF CHRIST The Part Confirmatiue CHAP. VI. THe neerest singular and determinate beginning of our Redemption is Christ as hee is God and man because by him Man was to be redeemed in whome our redemption was from everlasting Predestinated by him againe to be restored by whom at first he was created in him he ought to bee made partaker of the loue of God who was the Sonne of loue or the beloved Sonne and at last in him to obtayne the right of Sonnes or adoption who by Nature was the Sonne and heyre of God from everlasting Christ therfore being God and man is as the scripture most briefly defineth the Worde made flesh or God made manifest in the flesh that is a person in whose singularity two Natures the properties thereof remayning whole are vnited for the Redemption of mankind For the explication of this Definition we must consider of three things in order First of the Natures and the necessity verity and actions thereof Secondly of the Subject of the Natures or of the person and of both the Vnity and the operation thereof Thirdly of the Hypostaticall vnion of the Natures and of the manner foundation power and efficacy thereof As concerning the Natures whereas Nature is an outward beginning making the thing it selfe and distinguishing it from other things we acknowledge two such natures in Christ according to the Scripture Divine and Humane both in themselues and in their properties distinct a Rom. 9 1 1. Ioh. 5.20 Phil. 2.6 the one from everlasting immutable immortall impassible the other in time conceyved and borne mutable mortall passible Both are Indivisibly necessary for the redemption of mankind or the dispensation of the office of a Mediator the divine Nature that hee might satisfie God that the satisfaction might bee proportionable to our debt that an Infinite good might helpe an Infinite evill by overcomming death and by vndergoing both the heavines of sinne and the infinitenesse of Gods judgement Adde further that whereas the arbitrement betweene God and man is aboue the humanity because no man can bee a chiefe and supreme messenger of divine thinges but God by his God-head because no working aboue nature such as is a sufficient Intercession with God is of or from nature because no beginning but of the Godhead it selfe can bee the beginning of that satisfaction which may stand before God it must needes bee that according to the divine nature in his person hee tooke on him all the partes of Mediation or Mediatorship But the humane that being man hee might according to the Law satisfie Gods justice that hee might sufficiently suffer for the accomplishment of the worke of satisfaction both by obeying made vnder the law and by dying made a curse according to the Law that in all thinges being like vnto his brethren sinne excepted hee might bee a faithfull and vniversall high Priest in those thinges which are to bee performed before God to purge the sinnes of the people b He. 2.17 Now the divine Nature of Christ that wee may in few wordes speake touching the verity of those Natures is that whereby hee obtayneth the same Essence with the Father and the holy Ghost albeit both according to his person whereby hee is distinguished to bee the Sonne of God and according to the dispensation of his office whereby hee is discerned to bee a Mediator hee is distinguished from the essence of God of which nature
Perpetual or continuall which was dayly performed by two Lambes b Exod. 29 39. the other set because vpon set or appointed dayes it was offered eyther Sabathicall which was every Sabath offered or monethly which was every new Moone or anual which was every year offered c Leu 23.2 3. c. Numb 28.23 The Extraordinary was that which was performed for an Incident necessity eyther publicke of all the people or private of every man d 1. Sam. 7 8. 2. Sam. 24.25 The Redeeming was that whereby some certaine sinnes were purged and there was one for sinne by error or ignorance committed e Leu 4.2.3 c. another for an offence or sinne committed by one witting and willing f Leu. 7.24 both were ordinary eyther in the new Moones as at the Feast of Passeover and Pentecost g Leu. 23 19. Numb 28.15 or extraordinary at any other time Now commeth the thirde action of Priesthoode to witte Intercession whereof there were as it were three partes Presentation whereby the Priest presented himselfe as a Mediator to God for the people Covenant whereby for himselfe and the people hee solemnely promised thankefulnesse and obedience Prayer whereby hee prayed for the remission both of his their sinnes And this is the manner of the type to which the verity of Christes Priestly office every way answereth most agreeably and perfectly whether you respect the calling of the person or the execution of his office The calling of Christes person to this priestly office three arguments doe proue First divine testification wherof the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes citeth a two-folde testimony h Heb. 5.5 6. Secondly the voluntary debasement of Christs person and the dispensation of his office whereof there was one onely end even the execution of this office Thirdly the Analogy and comparison of Christs person and Melchisedech which the author to the Hebrewes doth at large prosecute The execution of Christs priestly office is as it were by three partes finished by the fulfilling of the Law by the full payment of punishment and by intercession or by the gracious and effectual application of both The fulfilling of the Law is that wherby hee hath freely and perfectly performed the whole righteousnesse vnto which wee were bound both by a perfect conformity of vnderstanding wil with that Law and by workes agreeing with this Law as being perfect both inward and outward i Rom. 8.4 Ioh. 17.19 Mat 3.15 For two thinges were required that the Law might bee fulfilled the righteousnesse of the person or that which is habituall and the righteousnesse of operation or that which is actuall that from which is the power this from which is the Act of fulfilling Christ had both not for himselfe onely but for vs yet for himselfe because man but for vs because hee was man for vs for as he was made God-man for our sake so those things which he beeing man had and did he had and did them for vs. Hence it is also that many are called just by his obedience and that hee is sayde to bee the end of the Law vnto righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth k Rom. 5.19 The full payment of punishment is the voluntary oblation of Christ whereby hee offered himselfe to God and the Father in the eternall Spirite the price of Redemption for our sinnes being himselfe both the Sacrifice and the Sacrifice There were of that oblation as it were two partes the appointing of the Sacrifice and as it were the preparing of the same for the sacrificing then the very consummation of the Oblation on the Altar of the crosse The appointing and preparing of the Sacrifice all those sufferings doe limite wherewith Christ disposed himselfe voluntarily vnto the oblation of the sacrifice of his body especially about the end of his life and the next day before his death l Mat. 26.38 Ioh. 12 27 Mar. 4.35 Of these sufferings some were Inward in respect of the soule and affection m Heb. 5.7 Apoc. 9.15 Esa 53.5 some outward in respect of the body n Heb. 10.5 Mat. 20.28 for the whole Substance of his Man-hood must needes haue beene possessed in suffering of punishments that hee might saue whole man The consummation of the oblation was made on the crosse by death but because the Scripture maketh mention of a two-fold death to wit naturall which is of this world and supernaturall which is of the other both which were layde vpon Adam the offender and his posterity when the Lord sayde By dying thou shalt die both these Christ for vs suffered and subdued that when the soule was separated from his body o Ioh. 19.30 this when having felt by dispensation the dashing and violent force thereof hee sayde My God my God why hast thou forsaken me p Mat. 29.46 Now vnto both deathes was conjoyned a curse corporall and spirituall by the signe of the crosse that Christ by the curse of his punishment might purge the curse of our guilt q Gal. 3.13 1 Pet. 2.24 for albeit neyther of both were Infinite as touching the time yet both are considered as Infinite touching the absolute quantity and therefore Christ suffered death infinite in deed and not in time because the Infinitenesse of his Merite Satisfaction Sacrifice and Redemption by all meanes went beyond that Infinitenesse of time which the damned feele There remayneth the last part of the Execution of Christs Priest hood which is Intercession whereby Christ applyeth effectually that vnto vs which hee hath deserved by the fulfilling of the Law and the full payment of punishments First by presenting himselfe vnto to God the Father as the onely Mediator and Satisfier that hee might procure vnto vs the presentation of his merite and of his performed satisfaction Heb. 9.24 Rom. 8.34 the remission of sinnes and the restoring of righteousnesse Secondly by promising and vndertaking to God the Father for vs obedience and thankefulnesse the seale and earnest of which vndertaking hee giveth vs even his Spirite by whome hee might stirre vp in vs a desire both to avoyde sinne performe righteousnesse r 1. Pet. 2.5 Rom. 8.26 Mat. 20.38 Lastly by making intercession and praying for vs. ſ Rom. 8.34 And this intercession of Christ as it leaneth vpon his satisfaction and sacrifice so it obtayneth that dignity value which it hath from his whole person whose worke it is The kingly office of Christ is that whereby Christ doth order and desend his kingdome purchased by Redemption But whereas the kingdome of Christ is two-fold the one Essentiall according to nature which he hath cōmon with the Father and the holy Ghost the other Personall according to dispensation of will which hee executeth as being Mediator t Ioh. 18 36. Rom. 14.17 Psal 2.6 Eph. 1.22 in respect of this properly this Kingly office of Christ must needes bee considered Now it is considered by the manner of
administration and the tearme or end thereof Of Administration there are two times the present as of this world the future as of the other In this world Christ administreth or ordayneth his church two wayes by Prescription and by Execution of Lawes The Prescription of Lawes is two-fold outward whereby Christ by the Ministery of the Word prescribeth vnto his Subjects Lawes of u Iac. 4.12 Eph. 4.11 1. Cor. 12.18 beleeving and living Inward whereby he moveth by his holy spirite the hearts of the Elect vnto the obedience of his commandements with a feeling of his present grace and a sure hope of his future glory x Ioh. 1.16 Act. 26.18 1 Ioh. 1.3 The Execution is finished in two partes In the gracious distribution of Rewardes and Benefites whereby all corporall and spirituall things necessary for salvation are ministred to the church vnder a certaine condition of the crosse y Ioh. 14 18. Heb. 13.5 Iac. 1.5 and in the just inflicting of punishments whereby he dealeth with the enemies of his church whether they be corporall or spirituall by repressing and restrayning some z Psal 110 Rom. 16.20 but by punishing and vtterly destroying other some a Rom. 7.24 ●5 1. Cor. 5.36 In the other world Christ administreth his church with a perfect consummation both of Rewardes b Rom. 14 7. Apoc. 21.4 1 Cor. 2.9 and punishments c poc ● 2.8 2 Thes 1.6 the Antecedent wherof shall bee the vniversall judgement the consequent Eternity The terme and end of this kingdome in respect of d Oeconomiae the ordering thereof shal bee when the Sonne being about to deliver vp this kingdome of Mediatorshippe to God and the Father shall be subject vnto him who hath made all things subject to himselfe that GOD may bee all in all e 1. Cor 15 28. for hee shall solemnely professe his voluntary subjection towardes God the Father by a singular and glorious yeelding vp of this Oeconomicall Kingdome receyved of him as touching his Person from the Fathers hand And this is the manner of Christs Office according to the speciall kinds thereof Now concerning the parts wee must in few wordes consider Of Christs Office there are two parts or as they are commonly called two Estates of Christ God-man Humiliation and Exaltation for in these that whole dispensation of Salvation and the execution of Christes threefold Office consisteth wherefore looke what is the manner of Christes Office from the Natures in the person or from the person according to both Natures the same also is the manner of his Humiliation and Exaltation Humiliation is that base and voluntary condition of Christ God-man vpon earth whereby hee debased himselfe as touching both Natures that he might both die and by dying satisfie as touching his Divine Nature he debased himselfe both by a voluntary subjection of his Person and by a hiding of his glory and maiesty before men for the time f Phi. 2.7.8 as touching his Humane Nature both by taking vnto him the Infirmity of our Nature and secondly by his most humble Obedience of Life and Death g Esa 53.5 Ioh. 19.34 Exaltation is the condition of Christ God-man whereby hee was advanced into the glory and dignity which was meete or convenient for the person of a Mediator and that according to both natures according to the divine nature by relation or by a divine manifestation of that maiesty which he hid during the time of his abasement h Rom. 1.4 Act. 2.38 according to the humane partly by the deposition of his servile conditiō and partly by the receiving gifts in body in soule concurring together vnto the perfection and blessednesse of his humane nature aboue all nature i Phil. 3.21 Ephe. 1.20 2. Heb 2.9 Of both states there are proper degrees opposite one to the other Of Humiliation and first of that which is outwarde or of his Submission vnto death there are three degrees death with the curse conjoyned k Gal 3.13 Burial that the truth of his death might bee ratified l Luc. 23 53. Descent into Hell or that voluntary debasement of Christ to suffer and as it were with wrestling to overcome the paines of Hell which Christ chiefly felt in his soule when he was assaulted first with heavinesse afterwardes with the sorrowes of both deaths m Act. 2.24 Eph. 4.4 To these are opposed three degrees of Exaltation Resurrection in which by divine power having subdued death hee raysed vp himselfe vnto life everlasting d Mat. 28.6 1 Cor 13.4 n Ascension whereby through the same power hee verily and visibly translated his body into the Heaven of the blessed o Act. 1.9 Eph. ● 11 sitting at the right hand of the Father whereby Christ was actually endued with all fulnesse both of glory and power p Heb. 1.3 Psal 110.1 1 Cor. 15.25 OF THE OFFICE OF CHRIST The Confuting Part. Distinctions in defence of Christs Office in Generall I. THere is wont to bee a three-folde signification of the Word Office for eyther it importeth an endeavor or deede wherevnto for some man wee are dutifully employed or an action of vertue as Cicero defineth or lastly an action or worke vnto which when a man is appointed he accordingly executeth the same and in this last signification it ought to bee taken when we treat of Christs Office II. IN the Office of Christ three thinges are to bee distinguished Vocation which in person hee had immediately from God Gifts by Vocation which immediately hee receyved in the Humane Nature Administration which was in person according to both Natures which three the outward vnction in the olde Testament signified III CHrist is sayd to be Mediator partly as hee is middle partly as he is mediant middle in Person mediant in Office IIII. OFfice ought to be distinguished either by the Substance thereof or by the manner of execution by substance according to the partes and speciall kindes of it by manner which hath respect both vnto the person to the natures in the person for the agent is one and the action one in respect of the Person yet there are two powers of the Agent and two beginnings of actions in respect of the Natures In Defence of Christs Propheticall Office CHrist is called a Prophet for three respects first in respect of person for hee is the wisedome of the Father not subiectiuely residing in the Father but impressiuely expressing the same in the Person 2. in respect of Office because he hath taught his Church immediately eyther according to eyther nature in the old or according to both in the new Testament 3. In respect of Ministery mediately teaching men by mē which were called eyther ordinarily or extraordinarily vnto the office of teaching In Defence of his Priestly Office I. THe Worde Sacrifice is taken in Scripture eyther Analogically or properly Analogically or by a certain resemblance it signifieth the duties of Piety
II. THe Calling which is common to all by naturall Grace is wrought by God according to the a Esse naturae being of Nature as the Schoole-men speake generally but that which happeneth to those that are called Supernaturally is concluded in two partes for it proceedeth generally from the caller belongeth particularly to the called III. THe Formall of the calling ought to bee distinguished from the Materiall thereof because the Subject of that is particular but the Subject of this belongeth to all men alike OF MANS IVSTIFIcation before GOD. The Part Confirming CHAP. IX THe Second degree of Application which is here made on the behalf of God is Iustification It is needefull that the verity of this Iustification bee declared two wayes by Anotation of Words wherof there is vse in the explication of this doctrine as also by definition of the thing it selfe according to all the causes The Words whose doubtfull signification is to bee taken away lest they should in the doctrine it selfe breed any difficulty are chiefly two Iustice and Iustification Iustice which indeede is of the Person is two wayes vsually considered one way in the manner of quality or Inherence and it is the obedience of the Law which wee performe to it the other in manner of Relation or Imputation and it is a gracious giving of another mans obedience for vs performed that is called the righteousnesse of the law or Works this of the Gospell or Faith that is in the person subjectiuely this of the Person by Grace of Imputation It is needefull that both bee distinguished because there is a diverse vse of both of this in the Private and inward court of the conscience before God of that in the publicke and outward Court of christian profession before men Iustification generally considered is the very application of righteousnes but specially if wee treate of righteousnesse inherent it is the effecting of a certaine habituall holines in man which signification is most vnusuall and vnproper if wee treate of the righteousnesse of Imputation it is a gracious Imputation of another mans righteousnes by faith and so an absolving of a man before God And this signification as most proper and vsuall both the common custome of tonges a Idiotismus the proper phrase of the holy Scriptures doe confirme The common custome of tongues for as with the Grecians to justifie hath two significations besides or without the doctrine of Iustification the one to judge and pronounce one just by publicke judgement the other after the cause is judged judiciously to punish one so that there is the same vse of the word with the Hebrewes two things doe most evidently proue first the direct and most frequent vse of that word in court or pubilcke judgements causes and actions b 2. Kin. 15.4 Deut. 25.1 Esa 43.9 secondly the manifest c Pro. 17 15. Esa 50.8 Rom. 8.33 ●4 opposition of condemnation and justification as being contraries d Antithesis And in this signification the word to Iustifie commonly importeth three thinges To absolue a person accused e Esa 5.23 Exod. 23. Luc. 7.29 to iudge one for righteous to giue a testimony to one already Iustified as also rewardes which are due to the iust and innocent If you respect the proper phrase of the Scripture by iudiciall proceeding it proposeth the whole doctrine of Iustification this the Phrases of speaking which the Scripture vseth as also that whole manner and course of our Salvation which it describeth doe proue The Phrases which in this point the Scripture vseth do proue some by way of deniall that hee which is iustified is not condemned not iudged and that sinnes are not imputed vnto him f some by way of affirmation doe proue that hee is made iust is freede from the accusation and condemnation of the law that righteousnesse is imputed vnto him c. g Rom. 5.18 8.33 The whole course and manner of our Salvation is fully performed as it were by two degrees by the knowledge of our misery and the trust of Gods mercy Of our misery there are three partes the Offence the Guilt and the Punishment Of Gods mercy there are three opposite parts the foregiuenesse of the fault the absolving from the guilt and the freeing from the punishment That whole course or proceeding frō our misery to Gods mercy is caled Iustificatiō by a signification taken from common pleadings h Forensi or from the Lawyers Iustification therefore is properly a free iudiciall action of God whereby hee iudgeth the elect in themselues subiect to the accusation and malediction of the Law to bee iust by faith through Christ by imputation of his righteousnesse vnto the prayse of the glory of his Grace and their owne salvation i Rom. 3.24.25 That this definition might be rightly vnderstoode it is needefull that the Causes which are orderly noted in the same bee two wayes considered according as Iustification is taken eyther Actiuely in respect of God who iustifyeth or Passiuely in respect of man who is iustified The Efficient cause of Iustification taken actiuely is God the Father in the Sonne by the holy Ghost k 2. Cor. 5.19 2. Cor. 6.21 for it is in him to absolue or acquite the guilty person by whose Iustice hee is made guilty in him to pronounce one iust whose will is a rule of Iustice Lastly in him to giue iudgement of life or death who by nature right and office is supreme iudge l Esa 59 1 Psal 5● 4 Esa 43.21 Mar 27. Of this Efficient there is a double Impulsiue cause Outward and Inward the Inward is the onely mercy of the father m Rom. 3.23 both in regard of his good plesure which predestinated vs n Ephe. 1.5 into the adoption of sonnes o Rom. 3.23 as also in regard of the p Oeconomiae disposing and dispensation which both ordained the Sonne for this end and applyed the benefite obtayne● by the Sonne vnto vs q Coloss 1.12 And this is the grace which in Scripture if called the Grace of r Free gifts in Schooles the Grace that maketh one acceptable and among the common sort the Grace that freely giveth and is alwayes opposed vnto workes which are called the gifts by grace or of grace freely givē because God tooke not the first cause of Iustification from vs or our workes but in himselfe and from himselfe for the vnsearchable riches of the glory of his grace Wherefore there can bee from vs no disposition and preparation which of the Popelings is surmised to be necessary for the bringing in of the forme of Iustification ſ Eph. 2.8.9 Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.4 for albeit there bee two speciall degrees of preparation if not in time at leastwise in nature going before Iustification to witte the feeling of our misery and a confused knowledge of Gods mercy yet none of these maketh for the manner of the Efficient Cause not
both of his bloud shed are givē in Baptisme and of his body crucifyed in the Supper For the passion of Christ is as it were the materiall and meritorious cause of our salvation l 1. Pet. 1.7 2. Pet. 1.19 Mat. 20.28 Of his Benefites because looke what things Christ hath and did hee testifieth m Ioh. 6.53 Ioh. 15.4 Rom. 8.32 by visible signes in every Sacrament that hee had them to our good and did them for vs. Now the Scripture proposeth foure things which in very deed are the benefits of Christs person and the fruites of his merite n 1. Cor. 1.30 Righteousnesse which is the remission of sinnes and the absolution of the sinner before God Wisedome which is the perfect and true knowledge of Gods wil which no man hath without Christ Sanctification which is the denying of our selues joyned together with repentance and new life Redemption which is both a full deliverance from all evils yea even from our last enemy Death as also a small glorification And these are those things which are sealed in all Sacraments which of the Divines are otherwise wonte to bee expressed by the name of an invisible Grace as the signe it selfe by the name of a visible Forme From this consideration of the signe and the thing signified the agreement and difference of both may bee concluded The Difference because they are divers both in nature for the Signe is visible the thing signified is invisible and in the Obiect for the signe goeth but into the body the thing signified into the soule and in the Manner of communication for in respect of the signe the manner is corporall but of the thing signified it is spirituall the Agreement because those things which were otherwise really and very farre separated are joyned together by a Sacramentall vnion The inward and proper forme of a Sacrament is that excellent agreemēt of the Signe with the thing signified and the mutuall relation of the one vnto the other whereof that properly consisteth in the comparison and similitude of the Effects this in the ordayning of the signe to the thing signified Now this conjunction of the Signes and the thing signified in the Sacramēts is not naturall by a substantiall contraction or knitting together or by the vniting of the accidents and substances Indistantiā Inexistentiam nor locall by the neerenesse and beeing of the one in the other nor yet spirituall as immediately quickning the very signes themselues but it is wholy Relatiue and Sacramentall consisting specially in three thinges in the signifying in the sealing Praebitione and in the exhibiting of the thing signified In the signifying because the signes by a most agreeable similitude and proportion as it were by a certaine introduction doe represent the o Gen. 17 10.11 1. Cor. 11.15.16 Ioh. 6.33 spirituall mysteries that is the things invisible by things visible In Sealing because the Signes are and are called the Seales or stampes of the thinges signified both for that they confirme the truth of the similitude betweene the signe and the thing signified and that also they necessarily and most surely seale the efficacy of both conjunctions in the lawfull vse thereof p 1. Ioh. 1.7 And this is called a coupling of the Sealing In Exhibiting because that in very deede is exhibited which is figured by the signes for God mocketh not by instituting Signes whereof there should be no truth but as in the audible word so also in the signe that is in the visible word he in very deed performeth what he promiseth and sheweth q 1 Pet. 3.2 Rom. 4.11 Eph. 3.7 And yet the exhibiting or receyving of the the thing signified are not referred to the Instruments of the body but to the heart of the beleever because it is spirituall according as the exhibiting and receyving of the Signes is corporall wee say spirituall for a double respect both by reason of the Efficient that is the hidden operation of the holy Ghost which is done in very marvailous maner that by the means of Christs flesh mystically communicated to vs the bloud and vertue of Christ-merite pearceth even vnto our soules ſ Col. 6.7 Ioh. 1.26 and by reason of the Instru●ent be cause faith by which we rece ue them is a spirituall instrument by the bond whereof the spirit most straitly conjoyneth those things together Col. 26.7 Ioh. 1.26 which otherwise are very faire distant each from the other t Eph. 3.17 From this inward forme of a Sacrament and the mutuall disposition of the signe and the thing signified doe arise two speciall kinds of Sacramentall Predications vsed in the Scriptures the first when the signe is pronounced of the thing signified that is when the signe is sayde to be the very thing signified as when Christ is called our Circumcision our Covenant our Paschall Lambe u 1. Cor. 5.7 Gen. 17.10 Act. 7.8 the other when the thing signified is pronounced of the signe that is when the very thing signified is sayde to be the signe as when the bread is called the body of Christ the wine the bloud of Christ x 1. Cor. 11.24 Mat. 26.28 And these Predications are wont to bee called Relatiue Analogicall and Metonymycall Relatiue because when the one separated thing is pronounced of the other a mutuall relation and respect of things like the one to the other is necessarily presupposed Analogical because the changing of the names is made in regard of the Analogy and exceeding great agreement betweene themselues Metonymycall because the signe is put for the thing signified so contrariwise The reason of these Predications in the mater of a Sacrament is the vnion which as it cōsisteth in three in the signifying sealing and spirituall exhibiting so it maketh these Sacramental Predications true because of the signifying sealing and exhibiting The End of a Sacrament is two-fold Proper and Accidentall The Proper is eyther Primary or Secondary That is the visible sealing of Gods invisible grace and our conjunction with Christ y Rom. 6.4 1. Cor. 10.16 Gal. 3.27 This is a testifying of godlinesse towards God of loue towards our neighbour and of open profession whereby as by a marke wee are severed from other Synagogues of Sathan z 1 Cor. 10.17 Eph. 4.5 1. Cor. 11.29 The Accidentall is the condemation of them that vnworthily communicate for albeit the vnfaithfull receiue the Sacramēts yet for the abuse of the signes reproachful contempt against the thing signified they are made guilty of the contempt of Christ and therefore also of everlasting death and condemnation By this a An alysi opening of the definition through all the causes it may easily be cōcluded what those things are which most properly may hold the name and nature of a Sacrament to witte those wherein there may be a concurrence of all these causes and of the conditions that issue out of these Such Sacraments as these are
of the very Institution Neyther must we referre the words of the Promise in the Supper to Christs Sacrifice but to the Sacrament which hee instituted neyther also in Baptisme is the efficacy of the Sacrament simply expressed but the promise given concerning the efficacy V. THe m Concionale word pertaining to the congregation the word of Institution are not opposite but both in Baptisme and the Supper there is the same worde for that which is n Or of Preaching for the congregation in Baptisme the same is of the Institution and that which is of the Institution in the Supper the same is for the congregation VI. IN every Sacrament two things must needes bee distinguished the Substantiall and the Accidentall thereof the one whereof is properly required for the being the other for the well being of the same Now the Preaching of the same is no part of the Essence of the Sacrament but pertayneth to the manner of Administration VII THe Consecration of Sacraments consisteth in two thinges in the Institution or ordinance blessing sealing of the word and in the promise of God himselfe then in the holy vse thereof which is done by prayers and thanksgiving VIII THe chaunge of the Sacramentall word is twofold Substantiall and Accidentall the one properly pertayneth to the sense the other to the wordes and order of the wordes and yet a conclusion from the change of wordes to the change of the Element is of no force because this cannot bee changed without corruption but those may easily be changed the sense neverthelesse remayning Distinctions in Defence of the Cause Materiall I. SIgnes are eyther of things past or thinges present or things to come and they all eyther pointing out or sealing vp or presenting of all which the Sacramentall signes are mixt II. THe signe signifieth eyther the Element or the Action or both wherefore in a Sacramentall thing all that is called the signe which is perceyved by the fences whether it bee seene or heard for the Element is perceyved by the sight but the action by the sight and hearing III. THe thing signified in the sacrament is both a substance and action the substance is eyther properly whole Christ or Synecdochically the body of Christ delivered vnto death and his bloud shed the Action is Gods alone and is eyther Iustification or Regeneration IIII. THe thing and the signes are both offered eyther joyntly and truely in respect of God who promiseth or distinctly in respect of the faithfull to whome without the sacramentall cōmunion the thing signified is truely and spiritually given or of the vnfaithfull to whome even in the Sacramentall Communion the Signes indeede are offered but the thing signified is not given Distinctions in Defence of the Forme and Effect of a Sacrament Bellarmine proveth by ten reasons that the Sacraments of the New Law are the causes of Iustification by the worke done Cap. 8. Lib. 2. de Sacram. Ex opere operato I. THe Sacramentall Signes are sayde to bee practicke not for that they worke by the deede done but because they are effectuall Instruments whereby the truth of Gods Grace in Christ is sealed vppe vnto vs and because Infantes are baptized the Sacramentes doe not therefore immediately effect Sanctity for in respect of the Infants Baptisme is properly a Sacrament of entrance as in respect of them that are growne to full age it is a Sacrament of Sanctification not by effecting but by binding II. GOds institution or authority hath ●ot put a power of effecting in the Sacraments which is proper to the Principall Agent but of signifying sealing and presenting neyther hath humane instirution any place in divine matters sith the nature of those things which concerne faith and religion lerneth vpon the alone word of God III. THe Institution and vse of a Sacrament consisteth in two things first in the Relation of the Signe vnto the thing signified Secondly in the lawfull administration and receyving the verity and vertue of the Relation doth wholy depend vpon the Institutor of the lawfull administration God is the Author according to his will but man is the Minster of the same according to the rule of Gods will and his owne calling IIII. THe Sacraments depend vpon God and Christs Passion after a divers respect vpon God as the cause vpon Christs death and Passion as the object for the Passion of Christ cannot properly be called the cause of the Sacrament but the object and the thing signified wherevnto it is carried V. WE are made assured of the remission of sins by the Sacraments through an assurance not absolute but relatiue not from the former but from the latter not by the Principall but by the Instrumentall not properly by effecting but by scaling VI. THe Sacraments the word haue reference vnto faith not after a contrary but after a subalternall manner because as faith is begotten by the word so it is nourished by the Sacraments both are Instruments yet distinct by manner of working VII SAcraments profite not except they bee well applyed now there are two meanes of Application the one outward the other inward the outward are the Signes and the Word the vse of the Signes is perceyved by the touching but the vse of the Word by hearing the vnderstanding of both is required because the Signes and the word not beeing vnderstood doe not profite the inward is faith which bringeth the vse of the Signes and the word to the Soule VIII THe subordinate Instruments of the stirring vp of faith is the word of preaching or the Scripture and the visible word of the Sacrament neyther doth the one disanull the other but rather settle and establish each other Adde further that the vse of the picture and outward Signes of Baptisme is one and of the Signe is another whereas that hath neyther the worde nor promise this both IX THe profite of the Sacraments is both Generall and Particular in a diverse respect Generall in respect of the entrance and the whole outward action Particular in respect of the Application the one Generally is performed by the Signes and the word the other particularly by faith X. THe Difference of the Sacraments of the olde and new Testament consisteth not in the thing signified but in the manner of signifying and other outward Adjuncts and circumstances whereof wee haue aboue spoken The same Point doth Bellarmine proue by eight Testimonies of Scripture Cap. 4. The First Place is of Mathew the 3. Answ There is no difference made between the Efficacy of Iohns Baptism and Christs but betweene the Persons whereof the one by the outward Ministery onely giveth the water as the Signe of the Remission of sinnes the other by the Inward Efficacy giveth the Spirite as the earnest of the thinges signified And hee vseth the future Tense speaking of Christs Baptisme because he hath respect to the very Ministery of Christs Preaching which he was about to take in hand neyther doth the Place
which not withstanding how needefull it is the Forme End of the Lordes institution as also Tradition doe proue with great likely hood Fourthly they who for heresie or for their dissolute life are lawfully excommunicated for this Supper requireth worthy guests which liue to Christ in Spirit Faith Whence it was that the persons who were excōmunicated or did Penance after the Sermon ended were in former time commaunded to goe forth The Matter constituting the holy Supper is two-fold the one Earthly Outward Elementall Visible the other Heavenly Inward and Spirituall wherof that is commonly called the Signe this the thing signified By the name of Signe all that is vnderstoode whatsoever is perceyved by the outward senses in the pure and lawfull administration of the Lordes Supper whether it be the Element or the bodily substance or the action or rite agreeable to Gods institution The Elementall Signes for of the Rites wee haue spoken in the explication of the Efficient Cause are two the Bread and Wine which two albeit materially they are distinguished yet formally and perfectlie as the Schoolmen speake they make but one Sacrament now they so make it that neyther more nor fewer bee required for the entirenesse and perfection of this Sacrament Not more because all refreshing or feeding is by them performed and ours in Christ is perfectly noted forth Not Fewer because if the one fayle or be wanting the Sacrament of perfect refection is taken away And in this defect Offence is committed in the maiming of the Elements or in the communion vnder one kinde onely against the Lords Institution the Apostles Tradition The End and Dignity of the Sacrament and lastly against the Orthodoxall consent of the elder Church Christs Institution because if you respect eyther the action of Christ and of the Apostles in the first Supper both were given and both were receyved or the wordes First Preceptiue of both they include a commaundement Take and Drinke Secondly Definitiue they are pronounced of both the Bread and the Wine This is my body and this is my bloud Thirdly Expositiue In both they propose a promise o Mat. 26.28 Mar. 14 24. Luc. 22.20 Apostolicall Tradition because the Apostle by the authority of the Lord injoyneth vpon the whole Church of Corinth a necessity both of eating the bread and drinking the wine Which p 1 Cor. ● 11.25.26 Tradition that it was proposed not to one age but to all ages to bee observed The consequence of the Text doth easily proueq. The End and Dignity of the Sacrament because the end is to seale the perfect refreshing of vs in Christ which by the cutting off of the other Signe is made vnperfect but the dignity is to set forth the grace of that covenant after a more evident manner then in the olde Testament it was set forth vnto those who did all alike partake of the Paschall Lambe and of the water out of the rocke as the Story and Paules eplication teacheth r 1. Cor. 10.1 2 The Orthodoxall consent of the elder Church because all that ancient and purer Church judged that the communication of both kinds did not pertaine to the Cleargy onely but to the Laiety aswell It knew nothing of Concomitancy which from the bad costome of the Eucharist dipped in the Wine sprūg forth aboue a thousand two hundred and twenty yeares after and afterwards was cōfirmed in the Councels of Constance Basil and Trent Now by the name of Bread Wine we specially and properly vnderstand those Elements which by those words are wont amongst vs to bee noted and pointed out To witte being Pure and Common Pure that they be not mingled or confounded together eyther by dipping of the bread in the wine or by adding the same together with the Wine Common or Vulgar that they bee such as are in common vse to wit lest by the matter colour and taste of those signes any superstition should bee bredde in the heart or mind The Thing signified or the matter inward and spirituall in the Supper of the Lord the neerest and principall is the body and bloud of the Lord That as it was crucifyed or broken This as being powred out Then the Secondary is the most strait copling of Christ with vs by faith by the meane whereof wee are made partakers of Christes owne person and all his benefites The First or Principall in the Supper is the Body and Bloud of the Lord both as touching the Substance and as touching the singular Attributes of the Substance As touching the Substance because wee a●e made partakers of the true and Essentiall body and bloud of Christ though after a spirituall manner of receyving ſ 1. Cor. 10 26. for albeit the Supper be an eating of the body yet it is not bodily but spirituall not in respect of Essence but in the manner of communicating and the spirituall efficacy of nourishing for the Spirite of man by faith alone receyveth the body and bloud of Christ and with them really for even spirituall actions haue also their reallity is nourished to a spirituall life by the effectuall working of the holy Ghost Neyther doe wee exclude whole Christ from the Supper t Gal. 3.27 Rom. 6.3 sith by the denomination of his body and bloud the whole humanity of Christ nay his whole persō is synechdochicaly vnderstoode because neyther the humanitie without the Divivity not the Divinity without the humanity nor both without their common Subject can bee a mediatrix The reason of which Synecdoche is that albeit he be the one and the same who suffered for vs even Christ God and man yet suffered he not in the very Divinity but in the Flesh for therefore as sayd Augustine was Christ borne that being man hee might deliver men and being mortal hee might deliver mortall and dead men from death The Particular Attributes of this Substance are the crucifying of his body and the powring out of his bloud u 1 Cor. 11.14 Luc 22.19.20 and the fruit of the merite of Christes Sacrifice conjoyned with these to wit Remission of sinnes Sanctification Redemption whence it is that in the Scripture the whole obedience of Christ and all the benefits thence proceeding haue vsually been signified by one word Death x 1. Ioh. 1.7 1. Pet. 1 19. Mat. ●0 28. The Secondary thing signified in the Supper is the most straite vniting conjoyning of vs all into one mysticall body both with Christ and among our selues y 1. Cor. 10.16.17.12.13 for as wee are tyed among our selues by the holy band of the same faith and brotherly loue as the members of the same body so by the true eating of Christs body wee are most straitely conjoyned with him and from him as from the head life issueth vnto vs as vnto his members z Ioh. 6.5.7 By the meane of this vnion it commeth to passe that wee bee made partakers both of the benefits of Christ and of his
same pertaineth to a Divine and to the Principall end of Divinity which is Salvation is generally limitted as it were within 2. boundes of places and times for wee must necessatily know and discerne a double estate of man the one in this life while hee is in the way the other after this life when hee shall attayne to the last Gaole eyther of felicity or eternall death In this life wee are wont ought to consider a double estate of man according to the distinction of the works which indeede passe from God to the creatures by an outward and temporall action the one of nature the other of grace that belonging to man as he is naturall as touching himselfe this as hee is to bee advanced by the grace of God aboue his nature and naturall condition The Former State of man in this life which is according to nature ought to bee discerned and distinguished according to the divers condition and consideration of Nature Now the Nature of man is two wayes considered one way according to his Beginning and first Originall condition and creation the other way according to the Change and Corruption which followed after as man fell from his Naturall goodnesse by his owne mutability and fault into the evill of Nature and guilte or sinne wherevpon there ariseth a double Estate of Man in Nature the one of Integrity the other of Corruption OF THE STATE OF Integrity or first Creation of MAN according to the Image of GOD. The Part Confirming CHAP. II. THe State of Integrity or the first creation of man before his Fall is a singular worke of God in Nature whereby hee made man a Reasonable creature being of a compound or double nature according to his Image for his owne glory and the good of Man himselfe The Efficient Cause is Iehovah Elohim The Lord God or God in the Plurality of Persons and Vnity of Essence for there is but one finishing or perfecting of the worke of one Essence though according to the distinction of the persons the order of working is distinct For the Father created by the Sonne through meanes of the power of the Spirite himselfe Now God effected it both by a cōmon consultation will and consent going before a Gen. 1.27 and by a manner of of effecting or creating partly immediate if you respect the soule which God of nothing created by infusing and infused by creating b Gen. 1.7 partly mediate if you respect the body which was brought forth from a matter pre-existent The Matter or Subject of this first estate is humane nature endued with all perfections which in thēselues might befitte for a thing created according to the condition thereof Now whereas wee call it a matter wee vnderstand not onely that which is incorporeall or the corporeal onely but that which is composed and as it were tempered of both for there are two essentiall partes of this Subject or humane nature whereof wee treate the Body and the Soule the truth whereof ought to be discerned and distinguished by their first Beginning Substance and Qualities By their first beginning because the bodies of our first Parents were created of a matter preexistent or having a fore-being eyther neere as the body of Eue of Adams ribbe and the body of Adam of the dust c Gen. 2.7 22. 1. Cor. 15.45 or remote of the 4. Elements which Synecdochically are vnderstoode by the name of earth as being an Element for substance and quantity predominant but the soules were created of nothing by the vertue of Gods infinite power as after the same manner God createth new soules in every body for they are not brought forth from the body d Per traducem by derivation but are brought into the body by creation e Psal 33.14 Zach. 12.1 Heb. 12.9 nor are they forced out by the power of the matter as other living creatures as well perfect as imperfect for they are simple spirites which are neyther divided nor changed nor corrupted By Substance because the bodies are compound substances furnished with diverse Organes or Instruments by which the soules exercise their powers and faculties but the soules are substances both simple and immateriall for being compared to other materiall thinges they consist of no matter and that they haue not any materiall matter their beginning and originall hath taught as also immortall not absolutely by themselues by the Law of nature or composition for God alone being life it selfe is by himselfe immortall but by the grace of God the creator and his divine will which created the same to be such that though it had a beginning yet it should not haue an end f 1. Tim 6.16 Luc. 16.22 23.43 By Qualities because even their bodies had also an incorruptibility not in their owne nature absolutely for everything composed of contraries is corruptible but by Gods grace whereby man was able as touching his body not to die vnlesse through his g Gen. 3.19 Rom. 5.12 Iac. 1.15 owne fault hee had voluntarily brought on himselfe the first and second death also a Bewty so that there was not any Infirmity or deformity but a convenient proportion and a most godly well ordered constitution but the Soules which are humane and as they are so had two principall faculties the vnderstanding and the will according as the obiect of them is two-fold to witte Being and Goodnesse to which faculties as beeing Subalternall all the other are referred For the vnderstanding apprehendeth Being and Truth the vniversall indeede by it selfe but the particular by sense The Will inclineth forward to good which because it is in the things them selues it doth not properly draw and take vnto it the very things but is drawne of them The Forme of this first Estate of man is limitted in the condition and consideration of the Image of God according to which man was created Now we call the Image of God that likenesse whereby man resembleth the nature of his Creator after a convenient manner of his nature partly in the soule properly partly in the body because of the Soule Last of all partly in the whole and entire person by reason of the vnion of both In the Soule whether you respect the Nature thereof and the faculty of substance or the Faculties or lastly the qualities of the habites wherby they are perfected The Substance of the Soule resembleth the Nature of God according to her condition and the measure of the condition for three causes first because as that so this also is one though it cōsist of many faculties as her essentiall partes For of one singular thing there is but one substantiall forme Secondly because as that is so also is this simple spirituall immateriall Simple in respect of the materiall i Act. 17.26 Spirituall in respect of the bodies k Gen. 2 9 Immateriall in respect of Originall l Gen. 2.7 Thirdly as that is so is this also incorporeal
Instrumentall beginning thereof In Defence of the Efficient Cause of Actuall Sinne. I. IN Actuall Sinne there are two thinges Being and Iniquitie Of Being God is the Author and Principall Efficient of Iniquity the Will of Man II. A Thing is sayde to be done by Gods permission two wayes eyther by it selfe or by Accident That which is done God permitting it by it selfe hath the respect of good but that which is done by Accident God permitting the selfe same in respect of God permitting it by accident is evill because God permitteth not evill as it is evill but as it is a meane of his glory In Defence of the Matter of the first SINNE That the first Sinne was not Pryde but vnbeliefe against Bellarmine Lib. 3. de Amiss Gratiae Cap. 5. 6. I. EEccles 10.14 There is a fallacy of the sense or vnderstanding of the word For Pride is not the beginning or cause of backe-sliding or departing from God but on the contrary the very backe-sliding departing from God which is comprehended in vnbeliefe is made the beginning and cause of pride II. TO b. 4. Ans The place treateth not of the order of diverse actes in the first sinne but of the Effect of Pride to witte Perdition the beginning whereof is truely and properly attributed to Pride yet not exclusiuely III. ROm. 5. Ans Disobedience comprehendeth the whole Sinne of Adam to witte the violating or breaking of Gods commaundement which if it should bee resolved into it owne parts the first shall bee not Pride but vnbeliefe IIII. THe Testimonies of the Fathers which are alleadged eyther do not ●reate of the order of the first sinne ●ut of the next Adjunct thereof or Synecdochically they vnderstand by pride vnbeliefe it selfe as the immediate ●ause thereof V. THe inner actions are two wayes discerned eyther in respect of the In●ention or in respect of the execution whereof the one properly respecteth the end the other the meanes but when there is speech made of the first sinne it is not inquired what was the first thing in the intention of Adam Eue but what was the first act of committing the Sinne. In Defence of the matter of Original Sin That Originall Sin is a quality or Concupiscence against Bellar. Lib. 5. cap 15. I. THe Positiue cause of original Sin is held to be three-fold the First the actuall sinne of Adam Secondly the Law of Nature originally passing the third the Iustice of God II. THe positiue quality is trāsferred to the posterity after the same manner as the Sinne it selfe is not as a certaine accident of nature concreated or together with it created which should follow or accompany the substance by it self but as a whole corruption of the whole mā which hath a foundation in Adam as in the first instrument of nature it selfe neyther are the habits gotten convayed into the ofspring as they are personall but as in the name of the whole Nature one for all gotte them III. IN Concupiscence two things concurre the very Act of lusting or coveting which by it selfe is not evil and the deformity of that act of that God is the Author of this he must by no meanes bee the Author IIII. THe first sinne was not onely the sinne of the Body but also of the Soule Wherefore it was not onely the eating of the fruit forbidden but also vnbeliefe and pride in the soule and so whole Sinne is transmitted into body and soule not onely by the law of generation by which man formeth or yeeldeth forth man but also according to the corruption of him that generateth wherby man as hee is corrupt begeteth corrupt man V. THe Quality was not diminished both because then it passed as it were into another nature as also because it cannot eyther bee diminished or abolished but by the singular grace of God VI. THe Concupiscence of the Flesh against the Spirite doth not onely signifie those first motions voyde of consent but also the very roote of evill and the whole corruption which is not onely of the coveting but also of the other faculties of the Soule VII ORiginall Sinne is taken away in this life by the regeneration of Baptisme not that it might not be but that it might not be imputed for sinne In Defence of the matter of Actual sinne against the distinction of Sinne Veniall and Mortall Bellar. Lib. 1. Cap. 9.10 I. THe Testimonies of Scripture doe not proue or confirme the Verity of the distinction according to the mind of the adversary Not the First Mat. 5. for hee treateth of the inequality not onely of sinnes but also of punishments by an allusion to civill or politicke punishments Not the Second Mat. 23. for hee treateth of the nature of Hypocrites who being carefull in small matters doe openly neglect the chiefest things and make not a difference betweene those things which by themselues and alwayes are necessary and those whereof not the want but the contempt doth make vs guilty or culpable Not the Third Luc. 6. for he treateth of them who hunt after prayse by the reprehending of others but doe neyther know nor reproue themselues being in others very quicke sighted but in themselues blind Not the Fourth Luc. 12. for hee speaketh of the duety of loue towardes our neighbour whereby wee are bound after the example of Gods goodnesse to forgiue even the least sinnes Not the Fift 1. Cor. 3. for hee speaketh of doctrine and the manner of teaching that by a supposition applyed to the Doctors of the Corinthians Not the Sixt Iac. 1. for hee speaketh of the degrees of sinnes which are three Vitiousnesse a vitious motion and vitious action And of all these Death is made the reward or wages Not the two Last Math. 12. for hee speaketh of the nature of Sinnes even the least or lightest for which notwithstanding we are presented guilty before God Eph. 5. because both the heavinesse of sinnes and the effect of the same are expounded Synecdochically II. THe Testimonies of Councels and Fathers are either suspected or in controversie as of the Tridentine Councell and of the Popes both Pius and Gregorie or doe treat of the inequality and divers degrees of sins as the Councell of Milevitum and of the Fathers Augustine Origen Chrysostome and Hierome III. THe reasons which are alleadged proue nothing Not the first because it is grounded vpon a double false presupposall Vppon the one that sinnes in the faithfull are not mortall For the Wages of Sinne of whatsoever manner it be vnlesse it bee forgiven is Death Vpon the o●her that the sinnes of the faithfull are lighter then the sinnes of the vnfaithfull and so in their Nature Veniall For in that sinnes are Veniall in the faithfull it is not from the nature of the sinnes but from the Grace of God and in that they are not so in the vnfaithfull it is not from God but from the nature both of the sinnes and sinners Not the Second because Sinne is not sayde
Life but the Instrument and meane to attaine vnto life Neither doe the places which are cited proue any thing else which doe eyther note the quality of them that are to be saved and not the cause of Salvation Heb. 10.1 Tim. 2. Rom. 10. or doe intimate the way of righteousnesse by which men come vnto Salvation Phil. 2. 2 Cor. 4. Or lastly doe treate of the Effects from which as from that which is the a A Posteriori That is from the Effect to the Cause latter judgement both may and should be had of them that are truely justified and hereafter shal be glorified Mat. 25. Iac. 1. 2. Cor. 7. II. NEyther doth the reason alleadged from an absurdity and expressed in the ninth Chapter proue the contrary for Faith alone is sayde to saue vs aequivocally eyther in respect of faith because it is alone or of salvation because it alone saveth Faith is not alone without works but it alone saveth and justifyeth without workes as the eye onely seeth yet not alone but joyned together with the Body That the Law of God is not possible to be fulfilled by vs against Bellarmine Lib. 4. Cap. 11. I. THe Testimonies of Scriptures which are alleadged First Ma● 11. 1. Ioh. 5. treate not of the nature of the Law compared with the power of the Regenerate or not Regenerate for the fulfilling of the same but eyther of the burthē of the Crosse which the inward vertue and efficacy of Christs Spirite and the hope of eternal immortality doe ease or of Gods commandements in Generall aswell in respect of Faith as of good workes which are not so farre grievous that by them the faithfull should be oppressed for both the Spirite becommeth conquerour and whosoever beleeveth i● freed from the curse of the Law Secondly those in Ioh. 14. Ro. 13 Gal. 5. Ioh. 15. doe not treate of our power for the fulfilling of the Law but eyther of our duety or of the effect of our loue towardes God Or lastly of the loue of our neighbour as a most evident Testimony of the whole obedience of the Law Thirdly in Psalm 118. 1. King 14. Act. 18. 1. Kin. 15. 2. King 23. 2. Chron. 15. 11. There is no speech concerning any perfection of the righteousnesse of those who are named righteous absolutely but eyther respectiuely or by relation vnto others or Inchoatiuely as touching themselues or by Imputation in respect of Gods acceptance Or lastly after a sort in respect of their owne sincerity opposed or set against Hypocrisie II. THe reasons which are alleadged Chap. 13. proue not the question in hand Not the First for it is grounded vpon a false presupposall and vpon that which by the Schoolemen is tearmed Petitio Principij Not the Second because it playeth vpon a false consequent for our bond remayneth albeit our weakenesse or want of power bee admitted like as the debt is wont to remaine though the debtor bee not able to pay Not the Third because God hath his reasons First he doth not require a debt in vaine and we are put in mind of our debt Secondly the Principles of nature are not in vaine stirred vp for the convincing of the wicked and the saving of the godly Not the Fourth because the Apostle discourseth Rom. 8. of the right of the Law not of Iustification and that right is not saide to be fulfilled of vs but in vs. Not the Fift because the operations of the Spirit are produced in vs according to the manner of the Instrument and the measure of our Infirmity Not the Sixt because as being Iustified they are born of God they performe the Law but as they are regenerate vnperfectly they performe and fulfil the same vnperfectly OF MANS ESTATE after this Life The Part Confirming CAP. VIII ANd this is the State of Mā in this life both according to the condition of his first Originall or Naturall corruption as also according to his regeneration by Grace or the truth of Christian calling Now the other State of Man which shal bee after this life next ensueth the same and it ought two wayes of vs to bee considered and declared eyther Generally in respect both of the godly and vngodly or Particularly in respect of these or those Generally the estate of man after this life is knowne by two degrees by the resurrection of the flesh and the last iudgment The Resurrection of the flesh is an iterated and indivisible coupling of the soule with the body wrought by the mighty power of God that when death shall be conquered men made immortall might liue for euer eyther in glory or in torment The efficient cause principal of the Resurrection is the whole Godhead For the father raiseth the dead the sonne quickneth whome he will and the holy Ghost with the father and the sonne giueth a fulnes of life aswell to the body as to the a 1. Cor. 15.12 1. Thes 4 14. 1. Cor. 15.25 soule but the instrumentall or ministeriall are the Angells the effectuall working of whome the scripture signifieth by a Metaphor of a sounding Trumpet The matter is mans body the same in number as touching the substaunce which wee beare in this life whether it bee of them which are dead or of those which shall bee found aliue at the last day b Dan 12.2 Ioh. 5.26.29 1. Thes 4.16.17 The forme according to the consideration of the matter shal be eyther a Restoring of the dead vnto life or that proportionable and conformable transformatiō of those which shal be foūd aliue This form the changing of the qualities of the body doth accompany being indeed a generall incorruption and immortallity but besides these in respect of the faythful there shal bee a particular glory power and spiritualnes of the bodyes The end principall is the glory of the righteousnes and grace of God Subordinate according to the considerations of the persons that rise agayne eyther the salvation and glory of the Elect or the punishment and casting away of the Reprobate The last or extreame iudgement is a iudiciall act whereby Christ in the last day with greate maiesty and glory shal giue sentence vpon all men vniuersally The efficient cause principall as touching indeed the iudiciall power and authority is God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost but as touching the maner of iudgment or exercise therof Christ is not onely as he is God but also as hee is man both because of the estate of glory which followeth together with the personall vnion of the divine and humane nature as also because of the agreeablenesse and affinitie of himselfe with men c Mat. 24.30 Luc. 21.27 2. Tim. 2.8 The Administring Cause shall bee the Angells whose Service God will vse both in the gathering together and in the separating and singling out of them that shal be judged d Mat. 24.31 1. Thes 4.16 The Matter as it respecteth the subject is the faith or infidellty of every
which is OF CORRVPTION CAP. III. AFter this first state of Integrity the second which is of Corruption by and by succeeded and followed It is The Condition of Man whereby in turning away goodnesse from himselfe and himselfe from goodnesse and in estranging the same into the contrary hee by himselfe as touching himselfe wholy perished And this condition ought two wayes to bee knowne according to the quantity and quality thereof For first wee are to see concerning the corruption which man procured to himself through his owne fault and naughtinesse then concerning the power of man which after that corruption remayned in Man The place concerning Sin containeth and expoundeth the Doctrine of Corruption but the place concerning Free-will containes and layeth open the doctrine of Mans Power OF SINNE The Part Confirming CAP. IIII. SINNE by which name the quality of humane Corruption is wont to be expressed is in Generall defined to be a Ioh. 3.4 a breaking of the law or iniquitie that is a Defect or want of that lawfull good which was given to our Nature by God whereby man declining from good and inclining to nothing but to evill is made guilty of Gods wrath and damnation and everlasting punishment but in Speciall it ought three wayes to bee distinguished defined and through the causes to bee expounded For there are three degrees of Sinne the Beginning of it was in Adam the Propagatton from Adam in vs and the Effect of the same from vs Wherefore wee must by order consider together of the Sinne of Adam Original Sinne and of Actuall Sinne. The Sinne of Adam is an act of disobedience in Adam as in a singular individuall person and generall beginning of all men whereby by violating the Law of God hee destroyed both himselfe and his posterity for ever b Gen. 3. Rom. 5. 2 Cor. 11.3 Originall Sinne is an hereditary vitiousnesse whereby for the disobedience of Adam all men from him either propagated or to bee propagated are made guilty of both euils both of sinne and punishment c Psal 51.7 Eph. 2.3 Rom. 5.12 Actuall Sinne is an iniquity and Lawlessenes whereby wee swarving or going awry in our actions from the straitenesse of the Law dayly increase the guilt of sinne and punishment d Mat. 12.34 Iac 1.13.14.15 Rom. 7.8 The Efficient Cause of Adams sinne or the beginning thereof may bee noted to bee two-fold according to the former and the latter Actiue as wee distinctly speake and Actuall The Actiue beginning is a naturall power to both opposites the morall good and evill e 1● Tim. 2 13. Rom. 5.12 The Actuall whereby through the act of disobedience the will of man abused that his power to evill lost his power to good and alienated the same into the contrary f Gen. 3.6 Rom. 5.19 Ecle 10.15 The Efficient Cause of Originall sinne ought to bee considered and discerned by three wayes and degrees for there is a double outward cause one inward The outward neerest cause is the actuall sinne of Adam who was as the mediate and common beginning of whole humane nature g Rom. 5 12.19 but the Remote was the justice of God which God had shadowed in nature and expressed in speech plainely vttered or in the word Enunciatiue h Gen. 3. The inward Cause is the very Law of Nature originally passing of which law God layed downe a double ordinance By the one hee commaunded a propagation absolutely by the other hee threatened a punishment conditionally with the former he furnished both man in man Nature with the latter man only Hence it came to passe that by that ordināce of propagation man is begotten but by the ordinance of punishment hee is begotten vitious i Rom. 5.12.16 Heb. 7 9.10 1. Cor. 15.22 Both alike necessarily The Efficient Cause of Actuall sin properly immediately is the wil which commaundeth the Act in which the whole Action of evill resideth as in the Agent or working Instrument k Gen. 6.5 Iac. 1.14.15 The Matter of Adams first sinne which is as the Subject is the whole and entire person of Adam and in him as in the actiue beginning the whole matter of mankind l 1. Cor. 15 22 But that which is of the Object is the taking of the forbidden fruite and the vse or eating thereof m Gen. 3.4.5 both whereof includeth a contempt of Gods commaundement an impious consent of licentious will Briefly a most miserable backesliding from God and a disobedience of the whole man n Psal 51.5 T it 33. 1. Cor. 2 14. Rom. 7.23 Eph. 2. c. The Matter of Originall Sinne which is as the Subiect is whole man and every man according to himselfe wholy and the whole of himselfe for the whole Subject is subjacent to whole sinne both in respect of receyving for whole man receyveth whole sinne and of power and manner for the whole man doth and worketh whole sinne and therefore whole sinne affecteth and infecteth whole man with a corporall and effectuall taint or contagion o Rom. 5.6 7. Rom. 6.6 Gal. 5.16 Col. 2.11 Rom. 8.3 6. Eph. 4.17.18 but that which is as the object is first a defect or want of originall righteousnesse then an inclination or quality contrary to that righteousnesse or vprightnesse which is commonly called naturall corruption or originall concupiscence the former those testimonies of Scripture doe proue which speake of Sinne negatiuely or privatiuely but the latter those which speake of sinne affirmatiuely or positiuely p Mat. 12.34 Mar. 7.31 The Matter of Actuall sin which is as the Subject is man according to his body and Soule and all the faculties of both to witte both of body and Soule p Gal. 5.19 20. c. Mat. 15.19 Rom. 14.1 Eph. 2.3 Rom. 15.18 Col 3.17 Gal. 6.1 Iac. 4.17 but that which is of the Obiect are the thinges spoken done and lusted after against the Law whether they be of omission or commission eyther by infirmity or by malice or whether they bee outwardly or inwardly committed wherevpon many kindes of sinnes arise and those which are neyther mutually matched each with other nor linked together but some more grievous then other yea and oftentimes some contrary each to other q Ioh. 9.11 2. Pet. 2.20.21 Hence also is the difference between sinne pardonable and vnpardonable whereof the one is sayed to be a sinne which is committed against the father and the Sonne that is every transgression of Gods law wherevnto Repentance belongeth and therefore that which is pardonable not by the properties of it own nature but by the grace mercy of him against whome it is committed r Mat. 12.31 the other is sayd to be a sinne which is committed against the holy Ghost and therefore is called by an excellency in Scriptures the blasphemie of the Spirite and a sinne vnto death ſ Mat. 12 31. 1. Ioh. 5.16 Now for the making
of this Sinne three thinges concurre First the Deniall of the Truth against knowledge and conscience Secondly an vniversall Backe-sliding from Christ not a particular sinne against the first or second Table of the Law Thirdly a Rebellion sprung from a hatred of the truth conjoyned with a tyrannicall sophisticall and hypocritical oppugning or withstanding and of these conditions there is a mutuall knitting and sequele of the one with and after the other Further it is called a Sinne against the Holy Ghost not in respect of the divine Essence and person of the Spirite but in respect of his office that is of Grace and illumination whereof the holy Ghost is properly the Worker or effecter but it is sayed to be vnpardonable for three causes First because of the just judgement of God who suffereth not his Spirite which is the Spirite of truth to bee reproved of a lie Secondly because of impenitency or the hardnes to repent Thirdly because of the truth and the dignity of redemption purchased by Christ For there remaineth no other sacrifice after men haue forsaken the sacrifice of Christ t Heb. 6.4 Heb. 10.20 The Formall of Adams first sinne is two-fold according as that sinne in a divers respect is eyther a Quality or Relation as it is equality the formall thereof is disobedience u Rom. 5.19 Rom. 5.14.15 1. Tim. 2.13 as it is a Relation The Formall of the same is guilt or obliging to everlasting punishment Disobedience passed by Act but guilt was spread on all the posterity by imputation z Rom 5 12. 1. Cor. 15.22 The Formall of Originall Sinne is likewise vsually taken two wayes eyther for guilt which neverthelesse is rather the necessary consequent of that sinne or the proper accident thereof or for that whole deformity of whole nature which was not infused nor yet gotten by imitation but naturall or as wee speake connaturall or begotten together with vs not by the vice of common Nature but by the vice of the first originall Instrument from which all descended naturally a Psal 52.7 Rom. 5.12 1. Cor. 5.22 Eph. 2.3 The Formall of actuall sinne is an inordinatene adioyned to that which is spoken done and lusted after against the Law which ought to be discerned frō the actions motiues as the defect from the effect For sinne is not formally the very action but the corruption or defect of the action and as the Actions of men are two-fold Immanentes trauseuntes to witte abiding in and passing from Whereof those come from the mind and will immediately but these by the members or Instruments of the body mediately so there is a two-fold inordinatenesse the one Inward the other outward b Rom. 24 1. Eph. 2 3 Gal. 5.16 Rom. 15 15. Col. 3.17 Rom. 6.19 The End of the first Originall and Actuall Sinne ought to bee discerned after one and the selfe same manner and consideration Now it is discerned two wayes First by the Accident in respect of God disposing sinne to the iust end and most wisely shewing forth his glory both by workes of justice against them who endeavour to sinne by workes of mercy towardes them whome he freeth from sinne for Christ Secondly according to it selfe in respect of man in whome sinne is in which respect an end of Sinne cannot properly bee granted but in steade thereof are granted two Consequents or effects guilt punishment c Gen. 2 17. Rom. 6.23 Eph. 2.3 2. The. 1.9 By the name of guilt we vnderstand that bond between sinne and punishment as a meane put betweene whereby the sinner is most strongly bound to the subjection of punishment and in the very subiection to the continuance thereof The punishment is both deathes both of the body temporall and of the soule together with the body eternall Wherevnto are conjoyned afflictions as the fore-goers of both and these through the goodnesse of God are in those which are truely faithfull eyther tryals or martyredomes or fatherly chastisements but in the wicked they are in theyr owne nature torments punishments and these two Effects do altogether hold all men bound being considered in the state of nature without any difference of age yea the very Infants who both haue a guilt and feele a most bitter punishment both of losse and sence vnlesse God gratiously avert it Now hee averteth it for the covenant sake in the Infants of the faithfull in whome sinne is taken away by Baptisme both in the lessening of it selfe and the releasing of guilt yet not that it giveth over eyther to be in all equally or to worke in them that are already of full yeares vnequally for that natiue or naturall corruption remayneth in Act even after Baptisme e Rom. 7.18 Exod. 34.7 Pro. 20.9 Iob. 9.20 OF SINNE The Part Confuting In Defence of the Efficient Cause of the First Sinne. DISTINCTIONS I. IN the Fall of Adam three beginnings concurre which must bee distinguished and discerned one Outward two Inward to witte Generall and Particular the Outward beginning vniversall is God in respect of the action The Inward Generall is nature which moveth man to the action naturall The Inward Particular is the will of man in the power whereof the principalnesse of causing consisteth Principalitas cousalitatis as it is such an action II. ADam is two wayes to bee considered eyther as a particular person or as the roote of all mankinde if after the former manner the disobedience of Adam was his owne proper sinne if after the second it was with him and vs common In Defence of the Efficient Cause of Originall Sinne. I. THe Efficient of this Sinne is eyther Totall as they speake or Partiall that which is partiall is improperly and accidentally sayde to bee a cause in respect of the occasion it selfe and it is the tree of life and the instigation of that old Serpent that which is totall is Man himself through the maner of propagation II. THe Propagation of Sinne is two wayes made partly by the manner of Generation and partly by the maner of Fault Of Generation because Sinne is transfused through the body of the Begetter into the body of the begotten materially but into his soule causally and that partly by Gods forsaking and partly by the contagion of the body into which the Soule is infused of Fault because Adam according to the condition wherein hee was created conveighed through his offence as through a certaine gate whatsoever evill was in himselfe into all his posterity III. THe Soule of Man is two wayes considered eyther according to her Essence or according to her Subsistence according to her Essence shee is from the Man that begetteth who communicateth vnto him that is begotten that singular manner of subsisting in the body IIII. THe whole of Nature should be distinguished from the whole Nature because wee haue that from common nature absolutely by Gods ordinance but this mediately from our Parents as the