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

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What is Reprobation It is the eternall predestination or fore-appointment of certain Angels and men unto everlasting dishonour and destruction God of his own free-will determining to passe them by refuse or cast them off and for sin to condemn and punish them with eternall death Prov. 16. 4. Exod. 9. 16. Rom. 9. 17. 22. 2 Tim. 2. 20. Mat. 25. 41. Is not sin the cause of Reprobation No for then all men should be reprobate when God foresaw that all would be sinners but sin is the cause of the execution of Reprobation the damnation whereunto the wicked are adjudged being for their own sin Is there no cause then of Reprobation in the Reprobate None at all in that they rather then others are passed by of God that is wholly from the unsearchable depth of Gods own free-will and good pleasure But is not God unjust in reprobating some men and electing others when all were alike No for he was bound to none and to shew his freedome and power over his creatures he disposeth of them as he will for his glory as the Potter is not unjust in making of the same clay sundry vessels some to honour and some to dishonour Doth Predestination only come within the compasse of Gods decree and not the means also of accomplishing the same Yes the means also comes within this decree as the Creation and the fall of the reasonable creatures If God hath decreed the works of the wicked must not he of force be the author of sin and evill God is not the cause of sinne and evill which he forbiddeth and condemneth but Satan and man yet God in his secret will hath justly decreed the evill works of the wicked for if it had not so pleased him they had never been at all for most holy ends both of his glory and their punishment as may be seen in the Jews crucifying of Christ Acts 2. 23. and Josephs selling into Egypt Gen. 45. 7. 50. 20. For the thing that in it self by reason of Gods prohibiting of it is sin in respect of Gods decreeing of it for a holy end comes in the place of a good thing as being some occasion or way to manifest the glory of God in his justice and mercy for there is nothing sin as God decreeth it or commandeth it neither is there any thing of it selfe absolutely evill 1 Pet. 3. 17. But because God hath forbidden it therefore it is evill and only unto them unto whom God hath forbidden it as Abraham killing of Isaac being commanded of God was to be obeyed and sin it were to have disobeyed it which otherwise by reason of Gods commandment forbidding to kill was a sin for God forbiddeth not things because they are of themselves and first evill but therefore are they to man evill because God hath forbidden them for all sin is a transgression of a law and God doth in heaven and in earth whatsoever pleaseth him neither is there any greater then he to command him So much of the decree or purpose of God what is the execution of it It is an action of God effectually working all things in their time according to his decree Eph. 1. 11. Acts 4. 28. What are the parts of the execution Creation and Providence Psal. 33. 6 7. 9. 10 11. 146. 6 7. Jer. 10. 12. What is Creation It is the execution of Gods decree whereby of nothing he made all things very good Gen. 1. 1. 7. Heb. 11. 3. How many things in generall are you to know concerning the Creation The causes and the adjuncts in the former whereof we are to consider the authour or efficient cause the matter the form or manner and the end in the latter the goodnesse of the creatures and the time of their Creation Who is the Authour of this wonderfull work God alone How doth that appear Not only by the plain and manifold testimonies of holy Scripture but also by light of reason well directed for reason teacheth that there must needs be a first cause of all things from whence they proceed not only as they are this or that but simply as they are that all perfections which are in other things by participation should be in it essentially and that the same must be of infinite wisdome in that all things are made and ordered unto so good purposes as they are none of which things can agree to any but to God alone whence it is that the Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. 17. 24. doth point out God to the Heathen by his work above other Is not Creation then an article of faith above reason Yes in regard of the time and manner of it as likewise in respect of a full and saving assent unto it with comfort Is the Father alone to be held the Creator of all things No but together with him the Son also and the holy Ghost for so S. John testifieth that by Christ the eternall Word and Wisdome of God al things were made without him was made nothing Joh. 1. 3. In like manner S. Paul teacheth that by him all things were created in heaven and in earth both things visible and invisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers by him and for him they were all created Col. 1. 16. Moses also declareth that the Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters sustaining and holding up and as it were brooding for that metaphor he useth the unformed matter to bring forth the most comely and beautifull forms of all things Gen. 1. 2. Did not the Angels create some creatures at the beginning or cannot Man or the Devils now create creatures No Creation is a work of God which only he is able to doe and therefore whatsoever the Devill or Judges like the Sorcerers of Egypt seem to doe it is nothing but a delusion of the senses as the Devill himself confesseth Mat. 4. and the Sorcerers Exod. 4. What was there not something before the Creation as the first matter of all things or space or the time in which this world was made No for then there should be something eternall as well as God Whereof then were all things made Of nothing that is of no matter which was before the Creation How doth that appear Because they are said to have been made in the beginning Gen. 1. 1. that is when before there was not any thing but God the Creator and before which there was no measure of time by men or Angels How and in what manner did God create all things By no means or instruments which he needeth not as man doth but by his powerful word that is by his only will calling those things that are not as though they were Heb. 11. 3. Rom. 4. 17. Ps. 148. 5. Was that Word by which he made all things Christ his Son All things indeed that were made were made by the Son the second Person of the Trinity Joh. 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1.
and whereas a man willeth a member of his body to be cut off we may rather call it a permission then a willing and yet a vvilling permission You have shewed how many ways sin is to be considered how many things are to be considered in every sin and how we are said to will a thing Now let me hear what you say to the matter in question that is whether God doth will sin or no Before I answer directly to your question I think it is not amisse to shew what every one must carefully take heed of in answering to this question for in answering there is danger Let me hear what dangers must be avoided in answering There are two and every one must avoid them and sail between them as between two dangerous rocks The first is this we must take heed lest we make God the author of sin by affirming that he willeth sin as the Libertines do as Adam did Gen. 3. 12. for that were the next vvay not only to put off our sins from our selves and lay them upon God but also to cast off all conscience of sin and all fear of God then the which nothing can be more blasphemous against God and pernicious to our selves What is the second thing to be avoided The other is this we must take heed that we affirm not any evill to be in the world which God knoweth not of or whether God vvill or no for that vvere to deny Gods omnipotency and al-knowledge These are two dangerous rocks and heresies indeed but now I expect a direct answer to the question That cannot be at once but by going from point to point according to our former distinction of sin and vvilling Very well then declare first of all what things God doth properly will which of themselves are to be willed God doth first and chiefly vvill himself that is his own glory and Majesty as the end for vvhich all things are and this he is said to vvill properly that is he loveth it advanceth it and delighteth in it and to this purpose serve all those Scriptures vvhich command us to sanctifie his name and to adore his glory as in Esa. 48. 11. Pro. 16. 4. Rom. 11. 36. Besides himselfe he doth properly vvill all other things vvhich he made and vvhich he doth himself insomuch as he doth approve them and love them as appeareth by these places following God saw all that he made and it was good and therefore gave a Commandement that one should preserve another by multiplying and encreasing Again it is said whatsoever the Lord will that he doth therefore whatsoever he doth that he wils and although he hateth evill yet he doth properly will and love that good which commeth of evill that is his own glory and the salvation of his people Whether doth God will punishments or no Yea his will is the first and efficient cause of all punishment which is proved by this reason and argument every good thing is of God every punishment being a work of justice is a good thing therefore every punishment is of God and he doth will it What say you to the words in Ezekiel 18. 23. 32. I will not the death of a sinner That place is to be understood onely of the elect for properly indeed God doth not will their death and therefore to keep them from death meaning eternall death he giveth them repentance Whether doth God will sin as it is a punishment of sin that went before Yes he doth and it usuall with God to punish one sin with another as for example the hardning of Pharaohs heart was a sin in Pharaoh and God brought it upon him not as a sin but as a punishment of his former sins You say that in every sin is an action or deed which is either inward or outward whether doth God will that or no So far forth as it is an action only God doth will it but not the corruption deformity of the action for in him we live move and have our beeing Acts 17. 28. But whether doth God will sin properly as it is a transgression of the law and a corruption in the action or no No he doth not neither can be for it is against his nature and to this effect serve these places of Scripture following Psal. 5. 5. Heb. 1. 15. 1 Joh. 1. 4. and reason doth confirm it many vvayes for looke vvhat God doth vvill properly he loveth and alloweth it but God hateth and damneth sin as the Scriptures vvitnesse and therefore he doth not vvill it properly Zach. 8. 17. Again he hath sent his Son to take away the sins of the vvorld and to destroy the vvorks of the Devill therefore he doth not vvill them Lastly if God should properly vvill sin then he must be the author of sin but he is not the author of sin for the Scriptures doe never attribute sin unto God but unto the devil unto men Ro. 9. 14. 1 Ioh. 2. 16. But although God doth not properly will sin yet he doth willingly permit sin doth he not Yes but for the better understanding how God doth permit sin vve must consider hovv many vvays or in hovv many senses one is said to permit a thing and that is three vvays To permit is sometime of two good things to grant that vvhich is lesse good although it vvere against our vvill as for example a man vvould bring up his son in learning rather then in vvarfare or in any other occupation but because his son hath more mind to an occupation then to learning and doth crave of his father to go to some occupation or to be a Soldier rather then a Doctor his father doth grant him his desire but he had rather have him to be a Scholar And this is a kind of permission and suffering but this permission ought rather to be called a will indeed for that which is lesse good yet because it is good he doth will it and approve it and it is a true object of his will and it may be called a permission in respect of that will which had rather have had the greater good And is thus God said to permit sin in this sense No by no means for sin as it is sin hath no shew of good in it which may be compared with a greater good Which is your second way of permitting Sometimes to permit is to grant one evill to goe unpunished that many more grievous evils thereby may be prevented as many times Princes Magistrates are wont to doe and so some do think that God hath granted some sin to be done without danger or threatning of punishment lest more and more hainous mischiefs should ensue And are not you of that mind No God forbid I should for the Apostles rule is both generall and true we must not doe evill that good may come thereof lest we be damned justly therefore no man may by the law of God admit any sin to avoid another
What learn you from thence Not to suffer our selves to be instruments of evill to any in the least sort if we will escape the curse of God for if God did punish a poor worm which had no reason or will to chuse or refuse sin how much lesse will he spare us which have both What is the sentence against the Devill The Ordinance of God That there shall be always enmity between the Devil and his seed on the one side and the woman and her seed on the other together with the effect of this enmity VVhat doe you understand by the seed of the Devill seeing there is no generation of the Devils for that there is no male nor female among them neither have they bodies to engender The seed of the Devill are all both wicked men and Angels Joh. 8. 44. which are corrupt and carry his image 1 Joh. 3. 8. In which respect the wicked are called the children of the Devil and every where the sons of Belial Act. 13. 10. What learn you from thence That the war of mankind with the Devill is a lawfull war proclaimed of God which is also perpetuall and without any truce and therefore that herein it is wherein we must shew our choler our hate our valour our strength not faintly and in shew only but in truth whereas we being continually assaulted with our enemy leave our fight with him to fight against our brethren yea against our own soules he continually and without ceasing fighting with us and not against his own as the blasphemous Pharisees said Mat. 12. 24. VVhat is the sentence against the Woman First in the pain of conception and bearing child Secondly in the pain of bringing forth wherein is contained the pain of nursing and bringing them up Thirdly in a desire to her husband Fourthly in her subjection to her husband Was she not before desirous and subject to her husband Yes but her desire was not so great through conscience of her infirmity nor her subjection so painfull and the yoake thereof so heavy What is the sentence against Adam First his sin is put in the sentence and then his punishment What is his sin One that he obeyed his wife whom he should have commanded then that he disobeyed God whom he ought to have obeyed the first being proper to him the other common to his wife with him What was the punishment A punishment which although it be more heavy upon Adam yet it is also common to the woman namely the curse of the earth for his sake from whence came barrennesse by Thistles and Thorns c. whereof first the effect should be sorrow and grief of mind Secondly labour to the sweat of his brows to draw necessary food from it and that as long as he lived Lastly the expulsion out of Paradise to live with the beasts of the earth and to eat of the hearb which they did eat of What learn you from thence That all men from him that sitteth on the Throne to him that draweth water are bound to painfull labour either of the body or of the mind what wealth or patrimony soever is left them although they had wherewith otherwise plentifully to live What observe you else I observe further out of this Verse and out of the two next that in the midst of Gods anger he remembreth mercy for it is a benefit to Adam that he may live of the sweat of his brows to Eve that she should bring forth and not be in continuall travell unto them both that he taught them wisdome to make leather Coats What learn you from that it was said God made them Coats That in every profitable invention for the life of man God is to be acknowledged the Authour of it and have the honour of it and not the wit of man that invented it as is the manner of men in such cases to sacrifice to their nets Hab. 1. 16. When there were better means of clothing why did they weare Leather It seemeth that thereby they should draw themselves the rather to repentance and humiliation by that course clothing What learn you from thence That howsoever our condition and state of calling afford us better array yet we learn even in the best of our clothes to be humbled by them as those that are given us to cover our shame and carry always the mark and badge of our sinnes especially when these which were even after the fall the goodliest creatures that ever lived learned that lesson by them What followeth A sharp taunt that the Lord giveth Adam ver 22. further to humble him as if he should say Now Adam dost thou not see and feel how greatly thou art deceived in thinking to be like God in eating of the forbidden fruit What learn you from it That by the things we think to be most esteemed contrary to the will of God we are most subject to derision and that it must not be a plain and common speech but a laboured speech that must bring us to repentance Why doth God banish him out of Paradise lest he should live if he should eat of the tree of Life seeing there is no corporall thing able to give life to any that sinne hath killed It is true that the eating of the fruit of the Tree of life would not have recovered him but the Lord therefore would have him banished from it lest he should fall into a vain confidence thereof to the end to make him seek for grace Wherefore are the Angels set with a glittering sword to keep them from the Tree of life To encrease their care to seek to Christ being banished from it without hope of comming so much as to the sign of life What learn you from hence The necessary use of keeping obstinate sinners from the Sacraments and other holy things in the Church Thus much of the miserable and unhappy condition which our first parents brought upon themselves Did this estate determine in their persons or was it derived from them to all their posterity It was for their sinne in eating the forbidden fruit was the sin of all men and we therein became sinners and guilty of eternall Condemnation So that they by this first transgression did not onely lose for themselves the Image and favour of God but withall all deprived their posterity of that blessed estate Rom. 3. 23. and plunged them into the contrary Rom. 3. 12. bringing damnation upon themselves and us all wherefore this cursed estate of mankind is called in the scriptures the image of Adam Gen. 5. 3. the old man Ephes. 4. 22. the flesh Gen. 6. 3. John 3. 6. c. And the Apostle teacheth expresly Rom. 5. 12. That by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went over all men forasmuch as all men have sinned How doth the Apostle here call this the sinne of one man seeing both Adam and Eve sinned which are two and that Eve sinned before Adam In
the name of Adam was comprehended the man and the woman for by mariage two are made one and Moses calleth both the man and the woman Adam Gen. 5. 2. and last of all the Apostle used the word here signifying both man and woman What reason is there that all their posterity should take part with them both in their fall and in the wofull effect thereof It seemeth not to stand with the Justice of God to punish us for the sin that we never did Our first parents by Gods appointment were to stand or fall in that triall not as singular persons only but also as the head and root of all mankind representing the persons of all that should descend from them by naturall generation and therefore for the understanding of the ground of our participation with Adams fall two things must be considered First that Adam was not a private man in this businesse but sustained the person of all mankind as he who had received grace and strength for himself and all his posterity and so lost the same for all For Adam received the promise of life for himself and us with this condition if he had stood but seeing he stood not he lost the promise of life both from himself and from us and as his felicity should have been ours if he had stood in it so was his transgression and misery ours So that as in the second Covenant the righteousnesse of the second Adam Christ Jesus the Mediatour is reckoned to those that are begotten of him by spirituall regeneration even those that beleeve in his name although they never did it so in the first Covenant the sinne of the first Adam who herein sustained a common person is reckoned to all the posterity that descend from him by carnall generation because they were in him and of him and one with him Rom. 5. 15 16 17 18 19. Secondly that we all who are descended from Adam by naturall generation were in his loyns and a part of him when he fell and so by the law of propagation and generation sinned in him and in him deserved eternall condemnation therefore as two Nations are said to be in the womb of Rebekah Gen. 25. 23. and Levi to have paid tithes to Melchisedec in the loins of Abraham Heb. 7. 9 10. who was not born some hundred years after so is it here Thus we see that as by the act of generation in leprous parents the parents Leprosie made the childrens and the slavish and villanous estate of the parents is communicated unto all the off-spring for a man being a slave his progeny unto the hundred generation unlesse they be manumitted shall be slaves even so the naturall man howsoever he thinketh himself free yet in truth he is sold under sin and is the very servant of corruption and in that state shall for ever remain unlesse the Son doe make him free Joh. 8. 33 34. 36. Rom. 6. 17. 19 20. 7. 14. 2 Pet. 2. 19. We see also that great Parsonages rebelling against the King do not only thereby hurt and disgrace themselves but also stain their whole bloud and lose their honour and Inheritance from themselves and from their children for by our Law a man being attainted of High treason the attaint of bloud reacheth to his posterity and his children as well as he lose the benefit of his Lands and Living for ever unlesse the King in favour restore them againe as God in his mercy hath done unto us Then it appeareth that by propagation from our last parents we are become partakers of the sin of our first parents Even so and for the same transgression of our first parents by the most righteous Judgement of God we are conceived in sin and born in iniquity and unto misery Ps. 51. 5. for men are not now born as Adam was created but death doth reign over them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam Rom. 5. 14. that is over infants who are born in sin not by imitation but by an inherent corruption of sin even as we see the young Serpents and Wolves that never stung men or devoured sheep are notwithstanding worthy to die because there are principles of hurtfulnesse and poysonsomnesse in them How is it shewn that babes new born into the world have sin In that they are afflicted sundrily which they bewray by their bitter cries and in that they comming out of the mothers womb goe straight into the grave What is then the naturall estate of man Every man is by nature dead in sin as a loathsome carrion or as a dead corps and lieth rotting and stinking in the grave having in him the seed of all sins Eph. 2. 1. 1 Tim. 5. 6. For the fuller understanding of the state of sin and the consequents thereof declare first what sin is It is defined in one word 1 Joh. 3. 4. to be the transgression of the law namely a swerving from the law of God making the sinner guilty before God and liable to the curse of the law Gen. 4. 7. Seeing by the law sinne is and the law was not before Moses Rom. 5. 13. it seemeth there is no sin untill Moses When it is said the law was not before Moses it is to be understood of the law written in the Tables of stone by the finger of God and other laws Ceremoniall and Politicall written by Moses at the commandement of God for otherwise the law the Ceremoniall law excepted was written in the heart of man and for the decay therof through sin taught by those to whom that belonged from the fall unto Moses Is every breach of the Law of God sin Yea if it be no more but the least want of that God requireth Rom. 7. 7. Gal. 3. 10. And doth every sin the very least deserve the curse of God and everlasting death Yes verily because God is of infinite Majesty and dignity and therefore what so toucheth him deserveth endlesse wrath wherefore Purgatory and our owne satisfaction for small sinnes is vain How many sorts of sins are there Sin is either imputed or inherent the one without us and the other within us What is the sin Imputed Our sin in Adam in whom as we lived so also we sinned for in our first parents as hath been shewed every one of us did commit that first sinne which was the cause of all other and so we all are become subject to the imputation of Adams fall both for the trasgression and guiltinesse Rom. 5. 12. 18. 19. 1 Cor. 15. 22. What sins are Inherent in us They doe either defile our nature or our actions the one called Originall sin the other Actuall Col. 3. 9. For every one naturally descending from Adam beside the guilt of that first sin committed in Paradise first is conceived and born in original corruption Ps. 51. 5. Secondly living in this world sinneth also actually Gen. 6. 5. Esay 48. 8. yea of
It is also called habituall concupiscence which is nothing else but an evill inclination and pronenesse to the transgression of Gods Law which by corrupt Nature is bred with us How is it called in the Scriptures The old man Ephes. 4. 22 Coloss. 3. 9. Sin inhabiting and dwelling in us the Law of sin the Law of the members warring against the Law of the mind the flesh the encompassing sin c. Rom. 7. 23. Gal. 5. 17 24. Heb. 12. 1. Is this to be reputed sinne Yes and a great sin as may appeare by these reasons First because it defileth and corrupteth the whole man soule and body with all their faculties powers and parts as the minde will memory heart affections appetite with all the members of the body which it maketh to be the instruments of evill Secondly it polluteth all our words and works and maketh them all repugnant to the Law of God Thirdly it is the root and fountaine of all our actuall sins from which they grow and spring Fourthly because it continually warreth against the spirit and choaketh and quencheth the good motions of it Gal. 5. 17. 1 Pet. 2. 11. Fifthly because it maketh a man the slave of sinne and Satan Rom. 7. 14 23. Sixthly because it joyneth with the Devill and the World and betrayeth us to their tentations Eph. 2. 2 3. Seventhly because it is an uncurable evill seeing it so hangeth upon us that we cannot shake it off Heb. 12. 2. Eighthly because it is but the more irritated by the Law of God which should suppresse it Rom. 7. 8. Lastly because it maketh us children of wrath and liable to everlasting condemnation although dying in childhood we should never commit any actuall transgression For death and damnation raigned even over them which had not sinned after the similitude of Adam that is by actuall transgression Rom. 5. 14. But doth this Commandement extend to the prohibition of Originall sin in the whole body and all the parts of it No for it forbiddeth sins committed against our Neighbours only like all other Commandements of the second Table as appeareth by the words themselves and the Apostles epitomizing of this whole Table in those words Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Rom. 13. 9. And therefore all originall injustice wicked inclinations thoughts and affections are here only forbidden as they respect our neighbours and are opposite to charity but as they respect God and are repugnant to the love of him they are forbidden in the first Table What are actuall Concupiscences They are evill motions which are repugnant to charity What are the kinds of them They are either such as are vaine and unprofitable or such as are hurtfull and pernicious How are they unprofitable So farre forth as they fasten mens minds to earthly things and thereby withdraw them from heavenly In what respects are they hurtfull First because they are instruments of sin as they are fit objects to every sin in its kinde For if any objects are offered to the minde or senses which self-love causeth them to thinke to be profitable pleasant and desireable concupiscence presently apprehendeth and catcheth at them to satisfie worldly lusts Secondly They choake the seed of the Word in the hearts of carnall men Mar. 4. 19. Thirdly They make men insatiable knowing no end or measure in pursuing worldly things Fourthly They cast men headlong in whom they raigne into sin Eph. 2. 3. and give them up to vile lusts and a reprobate mind Rom. 1. 24. Psal. 81. 12. Fifthly They fight against the soule and if they overcome bring it to destruction 1 Pet. 2. 11. How many wayes are these motions evill Two wayes either in respect of the phantasie and cogitations of the minde or in respect of the affections and imaginations of the heart When are the thoughts evill Then and so far forth as they sollicite and encline us unto evill Why doe men thinke that thoughts are free and not to be charged upon men or called to account Foolish men thinke and say so but the Scriptures say otherwise and affirme them to be sins Prov. 24. 9. as being repugnant to charity 1 Cor. 13. 5. and therefore forbid them Deut. 15. 9. injoyne us to confesse them and to crave pardon for them Isa. 55. 7. Acts 8. 22. and though we sleight them yet God taketh notice of them Psal. 94. 11. 1 Chron. 28. 9. Ezek. 11. 5. Psal. 139. 2. yea he hateth evill thoughts as abominable Prov. 15. 26. Zach. 8. 17. and severely punisheth them as we see in the example of the old world Gen. 6. 5. and 8. 21. How are these evill thoughts injected Either by Satan or else arise from originall concupiscence and both of them either waking or sleeping How are they injected by Satan Either immediately by himselfe 1 Chron. 21. 1. John 13. 2. Luke 9. 46 47. or mediately by his instruments as of old by the serpent And that he may the more easily insinuate into his minde whom he tempteth he often suborneth those that are nearest and dearest unto us to be his instruments as we see in the example of Jobs wife and Peter Iob 2. 9. Math. 16. 23. But are these tentations to be reputed our sins Not if we repell and extinguish them as fire in water for Christ himselfe was tempted yet without sin Heb. 4. 15. But if we admit them and doe not presently reject them they infect our minds and hearts with their poison and become our sins How else doe evill thoughts arise in us From our naturall corruption and habituall concupiscence Luke 24. 38. Gen. 6. 5. Math. 15. 19. 2 Cor. 3. 5. And these thoughts arise in us either waking or sleeping How are these motions evill in respect of the affections of the heart These though they have not the consent of the will to act them yet are they sinfull in respect of the sins which arise from them of which also they are the first degrees as we see in the first boyling of anger in the heart and of lust and uncleane motions which proceed from the defect of that charity and purity which God requireth in us and afterwards produce the acts of murther and fornication when the will consenteth unto them Mat. 5. 22 28. Are there no degrees of these evill affections and perturbations of the heart Yes for they are to be considered either in their first beginnings as they are the first motions of concupiscence by which the minde is first withdrawne from its rectitude and then the heart suddenly affected Or else when by the pleasure and delight in those first motions they are tickled and inticed to retaine them still that they may enjoy a greater and more full measure of delight What followeth this pleasure thus retained and continued in the mind and heart Consent to the acting of the sin which in Gods sight is all one with the sin it selfe seeing he reputeth the will for the deed
thing is gone for he hath neither the chiefe City nor the Tribune nor the Commandement of the people and therefore he can be no let to the Antichrists comming especially the Pope having gotten such an upper hand over him as to cause him to waite at his gate barefoot and to hold his stirrop What shall be the end of this Antichrist God shall confound him with the breath of his mouth that is with the preaching of his Word which serveth for another argument to prove the Pope to be Antichrist for whereas he had subdued Kingdomes and Empires under his feet he hath been of late mightily suppressed by the Word preached and not by outward force as other Potentates use to be What learne you of this The marvellous power of Gods Word to suppresse whatsoever riseth against it for if the mightiest cannot stand before it much lesse the smallest and therefore it is expressed by a mighty winde Acts 2. 23. which carrieth all before it and by fire which consumeth all and pierceth all And it declareth a marvellous easie victory against the enemies when it is said that with the breath of his mouth hee shall consume his enemies 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. What else shall be the overthrow of Antichrist The glorious appearance of the Son of God in the latter day What gather you of this That before the last day he shall not be utterly consumed whereof notwithstanding it followeth not that the head shall remaine till then for the Beast and the false Prophet shall be taken and cast into the fire before the latter day but some shall retaine a liking of him and his errors and superstitions even till the last day Hitherto of the head of this generall Apostasie what are the members of it They are first described by their end even a number of people that shall perish which accordeth with that name and property of the head the Destroyer or Son of perdition being truely verified in them in regard of the fearefull end he shall bring them to What is the use of this That as no poyson can take away the life of an elect so small occasions carry away such as are appointed to destruction How otherwise are these members of Antichrist described By this that they never loved the truth although they understood and professed it How should a man love the truth For the truthes sake not for vaine glory filthy delight or commodidities How appeareth it that men love the Word of God When they walke accordingly and keep faith in a good Conscience which some losing by their wicked life lost also their Faith that is their Religion 1 Tim. 1. 19. How is it to be understood that God giveth men up to strong delusions Because God is a just Iudge which by them either punisheth or correcteth former sinnes and especially the contempt of the Gospell in which regard even amongst us now some are cast into the sinke of Popery some into the Family of love some become Arians some Anabaptists at which are as it were divers Gaoles and Dungeons whereinto hee throweth those that are cold and carelesse Professors of the Gospell What learne you by this That they that imagine God favourable unto them notwithstanding their sinnes because their life or goods or honours are spared are foully deceived for when the Lord ceaseth to reprove any or to strive with them Rom. 1. 24 26. then doth he give them up into vanity of their own minds to do their wicked wills which is the greatest judgement and very usuall with God to doe What is our duty in such cases To pray unto the Lord to keep us from all errors but if for our triall and further hardning of others it please him to send errors amongst us that it would please him to preserve us in that danger that we taste not of that bait whereby Satan seeketh to catch us What other cause is there of sending these errors That those may be damned which believe not the truth for as God hath appointed them to damnation so betwixt his counsell in rejecting them and the finall effect of it there must be sin to bring the effect justly upon them What reason is annexed for their just damnation Because they rest in unrighteousnesse having their eares itching after errors which they drink in as the earth drinketh up water So that albeit they be powerfully sent of God in his judgement yet are they also greedily desired and affected of them Having spoken at large of the providence of God disposing of man in this world it followeth to speak of his providence concerning mankinde in the world to come How doth God then deale with men after this life He bringeth them all to judgement What is meant here by judgment The pronouncing or executing of the irrevocable sentence of absolution or condemnation How is that done Partly on every man in particular at the hour of his death Heb. 9. 27. but fully and generally upon all men at the second comming of Christ Acts 17. 31. The death of every one severally goeth immediately before the particular judgement the generall resurrection of all goeth before the finall judgement which shall be at the last day Must all men then die Yea all both good and bad Psal. 49. 10. Eccl. 2. 16. save that unto some namely such as shall be found alive at Christs comming a change shall be in stead of death as shall be shewed Death being the punishment of sinne how commeth it to passe that the righteous dye to whom all sinnes are forgiven Death indeed came on all mankinde by reason of sinne Rom. 5. 12. but yet it is not in all things the same to the godly and to the wicked for howsoever unto both it be the enemy of nature as the end of naturall life 1 Cor. 15. 26. Psal. 90. 3. Yet 1. unto the godly it is a token of Gods love unto the wicked of his anger Psal. 37. 37 38. Job 18. 13 14. 2. Vnto the godly it is a rest from labour and misery Apoc. 14. 13. the last enemy being now destroyed 1 Cor. 15. 26. unto the wicked it is the height of all worldly evils Luke 12. 20. 3. Vnto the godly it is the utter abolishing of sin and perfection of mortification Rom. 6. 7. unto the wicked it is the conquest of sinne and accomplishment of their spirituall captivity 4. Vnto the godly it is so far from being a separation from Christ that even the body severed from the soule and rotting in the grave is yet united to Christ and the soule freed from the body is with him in Paradise Luk. 23. 43. Phil. 2. 16. unto the wicked it is an utter cutting off from the favourable presence and fruition of God 5. Vnto the godly it is the beginning of heavenly glory unto the wicked it is the entrance into hellish and endlesse torments Luke 16. 22 23. How are men judged at the houre of death 1. God at that
and night And thus for our main and principall debt of Obedience hath our Mediatour given satisfaction unto the Justice of his Father with good measure pressed down shaken together and running over But beside this we were lyable unto another debt which wee have incurred by our default and drawne upon our selves by way of forfeiture and nomine poenae For as Obedience is a due debt and Gods servants in regard thereof are truly debters so likewise is sinne a debt and sinners debters in regard of the penalty due for the default And as the payment of the debt which commeth nomine poenae dischargeth not the tenant afterwards from paying his yearly rent which of it self would have been due although no default had been committed so the due payment of the yearly rent after the default hath been made is no sufficient satisfaction for the penalty already incurred Therefore our surety who standeth chargeable with all our debts as he maketh payment for the one by his Active so must he make amends for the other by his Passive obedience he must first suffer and then enter into his glory For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many sons unto glory to make the Captain of their salvation perfect that is a perfect accomplisher of the worke which he had undertaken through sufferings The Godhead is of that infinite perfection that it cannot possibly be subject to any passion He therefore that had no other nature but the Godhead could not pay such a debt as this the discharge whereof consisted in suffering and dying It was also fit that Gods justice should have been satisfied in that nature which had transgressed and that the same nature should suffer the punishment that had committed the offence Forasmuch then as the children were partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil and deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Such and so great was the love of God the Father toward us he spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all and so transcendent was the love of the Son of God toward the sons of men that he desired not to be spared but rather then they should lie under the power of death was of himself most willing to suffer death for them which seeing in that infinite nature which by eternall generation hee received from his Father he could not doe he resolved in the appointed time to take unto himselfe a Mother and out of her substance to have a body framed unto himself wherein he might become obedient unto death even the death of the crosse for our redemption And therefore when hee commeth into the world he saith unto his Father A body hast thou fitted me Lo I come to doe thy will O God By the which will saith the Apostle wee are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Thus we see it was necessary for the satisfaction of this debt that our Mediatour should be Man but he that had no more in him then a Man could never be able to goe through with so great a work For if there should be found a Man as righteous as Adam was at his first creation who would be content to suffer for the offence of others his suffering possibly might serve for the redemption of one soul it could be no sufficient ransome for those innumerable multitudes that were to be redeemed to God out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation Neither could any Man or Angel be able to hold out if a punishment equivalent to the endlesse sufferings of all the sinners in the world should at once bee laid upon him Yea the very powers of Christ himself upon whom the spirit of might did rest were so shaken in this sharp encounter that he who was the most accomplisht pattern of all fortitude stood sore amazed and with strong crying and tears prayed that if it were possible the houre might passe from him This man therefore being to offer one sacrifice for sins for ever to the burning of that sacrifice he must not onely bring the coals of his love as strong as death and as ardent as the fire which hath a most vehement flame but he must add thereunto those everlasting burnings also even the flames of his most glorious Deity and therefore through the eternall Spirit must he offer himself without spot unto God that hereby he might obtain for us an eternall redemption The bloud whereby the Church is purchased must bee Gods own bloud and to that end must the Lord of glory be crucified the Prince and author of life be killed he whose eternall generation no man can declare be cut off out of the land of the living and the man that is Gods own fellow be thus smitten according to that vvhich God himselfe foretold by his Prophet Awake O sword against my shepherd and against the man that is my fellow saith the Lord of hosts smite the shepherd and the sheep shall be scattered The people of Israel we read did so value the life of David their King that they counted him to be worth tenne thousand of themselves how shall we then value of Davids Lord who is the blessed and onely Potentate the King of kings and Lord of lords It was indeed our nature that suffered but he that suffered in that nature is over all God blessed for ever and for such a Person to have suffered but one houre was more then if all other persons had suffered ten thousand millions of years But put case also that the life of any other singular man might be equivalent to all the lives of whole mankind yet the laying down of that life would not be sufficient to doe the deed unlesse he that had power to lay it down had power likewise to take it up again For to be detained always in that prison from whence there is no comming out before the payment of the uttermost farthing is to lie always under execution and to quit the plea of that full payment of the debt wherein our surety stood engaged for us And therefore the Apostle upon that ground doth rightly conclude that if Christ be not raised our faith is vaine we are yet in our sinnes and consequently that as he must be delivered to death for our offences so he must be raised again for our justification Yea our Saviour himself knowing full well what he was to undergoe for our sakes told us before-hand that the Comforter whom hee would send unto us should convince the world that is fully satisfie the consciences of the sons of men
of God is so clearly laid open in the preaching of the Gospell that it needs not to be more cleare If at any time we cannot know nor understand this will of God as touching our salvation in whom is the fault The fault is in our selves and the reason is because we are carnall and naturall and destitute of the Spirit of Christ for Paul saith The carnall and naturall man cannot perceive the things of God but if the Spirit of Christ doth come and open our understanding and correct our affections we can no longer doubt of his will and therefore the Apostle immediately after addeth and saith but we have the mind of Christ. Whether is this will of God made known to every one of Gods children particularly or no Yes it is for Paul having the Spirit of Christ saith that this will of God was manifested unto him when he saith Gal. 2. 20. Christ loved me and gave himselfe for me and to the Corinthians he saith but God hath revealed them that is the joyes of heaven to us by his Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 9. How doth this prove that we can have this knowledge Very well for if all the Elect are led by the same Spirit that Paul had it will also perswade them of this will of God as well as Paul But how prove you that they have the same Spirit That the same Spirit is given to all the elect I prove it out of the Prophet Esay who saith thus My word and my Spirit shall not depart from thy mouth nor from thy seed for ever Esa. 59. 21. which is such a blessing as no blessing can be desired in this world greater more excellent or more heavenly for when we are once armed with the knowledge of this will of God we shall passe through fire and water without any danger Esa. 43. 2. we shall overcome the world and death and triumph over our enemies as Paul did Rom. 8. 38 39. Whether are there more wills in God then one or no The will of God in some respects is but one and in some respects it is manifold How is it but one For the better determining of this point we must first consider how many significations there be of this word Will in God It signifieth the faculty or ability of willing in God and so it is God himself and the very essence of God and so his will is but one It signifieth the act it self of willing and if it be so taken it is all but one for God doth that in one and that eternall act will whatsoever he will It signifieth the free decree of his will concerning either the doing or the suffering of any thing to be done if we take it in this sense the will of God is still but one and that eternall and immutable May we call the decree of Gods will the will of God Yea very well as the Testament of one that is deceased is called the last will of the Testator because it is the firm and last decree of the Testators will and mind concerning the disposing of his goods and the Scriptures doe make the will of God and the counsell or decree of his will to be all one as appeareth in these places following Esa. 46. 10. Acts 4. 27 28. Joh. 6. 40. How is the will of God manifold There be two respects chiefly for which the will of God is said to be manifold or more then one First for the divers kinds of things which God doth will and hereof it is that it is called sometime the will of God concerning us and sometime the will of God done by us The first is his favour and love towards us in Christ Jesus in which he willeth and decreeth that we shall be saved through his Son of this Christ speaketh Joh. 6. 40. The other which he will have done of us is that which is expressed in his Word and that is to beleeve in Christ and to walk in his laws Psal. 143. 10. of which David saith thus Teach me to doe thy will because thou art my God and Paul saith Rom. 2. 18. Thou knowest his will that is his law Which is the other respect for which God is said to have many wils The will of God is said to be manifold and divers for that those things which he doth seem to will them after divers sorts and not after one and the same manner first after one manner he doth will good things and after another manner he doth will evill things Shew how that is He willeth good things properly and absolutely by themselves and for themselves he willeth evill things for another end Rom. 12. 2. and that is for good too and the first is called the good will of God and acceptable to himself the latter is called the permissive will of God or a voluntary permission in God because he is not compelled or constrained against his will to will them Again sometime he willeth simply and absolutely sometimes he seemeth to will conditionally and some things he revealeth at one time some at another and some things he doth for which he giveth a reason and the reasons of some things are secret to himself only and for ever Why then belike you grant that in God there be many wils No I deny that for although in those aforesaid respects the will of God is said to be manifold for our understanding yet for all that indeed and in truth the will of God is but one onely and that most constant eternall and perpetuall as for example he willed some things in the old Testament he hath willed other things in the new Testament yet one and the same will in God decreed both Again his will was that some things in the old Testament should last for a time that is to the comming of Christ or as the Apostle saith to the time of reformation Heb. 9. 10. But he willeth that the things of the new Testament shall last to the end of the world and yet one will in God decreed both these from everlasting Again although God seemeth to us to will some things absolutely and simply some things conditionally yet in truth to speak properly all things whatsoever God willeth he willeth absolutely and simply and whereas he is said to will some things conditionally that is to be referred to the manifestation of his will for there is not in God any conditionall will but only that which openeth his will in this or that or on this or that condition for a condition in God is against the nature of his eternall kingdome and knowledge Obj. God commandeth many things to be done which are not done so that there is a will declared in his word and there is another in him forbidding or hindering that which he commandeth in his Law and therefore there are in God many wils The things which God commandeth are of two sorts some are absolutely commanded without any condition expressed or concealed as that Moses should
the confirmation thereof or a reason of the perswasion that they are forgiven What is the summe of this Petition That we may be justified and be at peace with God that God giving us a true knowledge and feeling of our sins would forgive us freely for his Sons sake and make us daily assured of the forgivenesse of our sins as we are privy to our selves of the forgivenesse of those trespasses which men have offended us by Job 33. 24. Psal. 35. 3. Jer. 14. 7. Col. 3. 13. What is meant here by debts The comparison is drawne from debters which are not able to pay their creditors to whom all we are compared for that we have all sinned Therefore by debts we must understand sins as Saint Luke expoundeth the metaphor and that not in themselves as breaches of the Law of God for who would say that we owe and are to pay sin unto God but with respect to the punishment and satisfaction due to Gods justice for the offence of sin For our debt being properly obedience whereto we are bound under penalty of all the curses of the Law especially eternall death Rom. 8 12. 13. 18. Gal. 5. 3. we all in Adam forfeited that bond wherby the penalty became our debt and is daily increased in us all by sinning Luke 13. 4. Mat. 18. 24 c. Rom. 6. 23. What learne you from hence Here hence two things are implyed One a franke and humble confession that we have sinned both originally and actually Another that there is no power in us to make satisfaction for our sins What use is there of Confession Great for that we have naturally a senselesnesse of sin or else being convinced thereof we are ready to lessen it and make it light the contrary whereof appeareth in the children of God 1 John 1. 8 9. Psal. 32. 3 4. Prov. 28 13. Job 31. 33. 1 Sam. 15. 19 20. Psal. 51. 3 4 5 6. Acts 22. 3 4 5. 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. How can a man confesse his sins being not knowne and without number Those that are knowne we must expresly confesse and the other that are unknowne and cannot be reckoned generally Psal. 19. 12. How appeareth it that we are not able to pay this debt Because by the Law as an obligation every one being bound to keep it wholly and continually Deut. 27. 26. Gal. 3. 10. so that the breach thereof even once and in the least point maketh us debtors presently as having forfeited our obligation there is no man that can either avoid the breach of it or when he hath broken it make amends unto God for it considering that whatsoever he doth after the breach is both imperfectly done and if it were perfect yet it is due by the obligation of the Law and therefore cannot goe for paiment no more then a man can pay one debt with another What doth it draw with it that causeth it to be so impossible to be satisfied The reward of it which is everlasting death both of body and soule Rom. 6. 23. the greatnesse and also number whereof is declared by the parable of ten thousand talents which no man is able to pay being not able to satisfie so much as one farthing But are we not able to satisfie some part of it as a man in great debt is sometime able to make some satisfaction especially if hee have day given him No and therefore we are compared to a child new borne red with bloud and not able to wash himselfe nor to help himself Ezek. 16. 4 5. And to captives close shut up in prison and fetters kept by a strong one Luke 4. 18. Matth. 12. 29. so that there is as small likelihood of our deliverance out of the power of Satan as that a poore Lamb should deliver it selfe from the gripes and pawes of a Lion What is the meanes to free us from this debt By this petition Christ teacheth us that being pressed with the burden of our sin we should flee unto the mercy of God and to entreat him for the forgivenesse of our debt Matth. 11. 28. Esa. 55. 1. even the cancelling of our obligation that in Law it be not available against us In which respect the preaching of the Gospel is compared to the yeare of Iubile when no man might demand his debt of his Brother Luke 4. 19. How shall we obtaine this at Gods hands By the onely blood and suffering of Christ as the onely ransome for sin contrary to the Papists who confessing that originall sinne is taken away by Christ in Baptisme doe teach that we must make part of our satisfaction for our actuall sin and therefore some of them whip themselves as if their bloud might satisfie for sinne which is abominable to think What doe you then understand here by forgivenesse Such remission as may agree with Gods justice which will not endure him to be a loser wherefore it is forgivenesse of us by taking paiment of another Job 33. 24. even of our surety Iesus Christ in our behalfe 1 John 2. 2. What meane you by saying Vs and Ours We include with our selves in this petition as many as are in Christ enabled by a true faith to lay hold on him and to plead his paiment and satisfaction Psal. 130. 7 8. 51. 18. Doe we here pray for the sinnes of this day as before for the bread of this day Not onely for them but also for all that ever we have done at all times before to the end that we might be the further confirmed in the assurance of the remission of all our sins What is further to be considered in this Petition That as in the former by Bread more was understood so here under one part of our Iustification to wit the remission or not imputation of sins unto death by meanes of the satisfaction of Christs sufferings we doe also conceive the other part which is the imputation of his holinesse unto life eternall as implyed under the former and inseparably annexed thereto For as Christ hath taken away our sins by suffering so he hath also cloathed us with his righteousnesse by fulfilling of the Law for us Dan. 9. 24. 2 Cor. 5. 21. What doe we then aske of God in this Petition Six things viz. 1. Grace feelingly to know and frankly and tremblingly to confesse without excuse or extenuation the great debt of our sins Psal. 51. 3. and our utter inability to satisfie for the same or for the least part thereof Psal. 103. 3. 142. 2. 2. That God would bestow upon us Christ Iesus and for his sake remove out of his sight all our sins and the guilt and punishment due unto us for the same 3. The power of saving faith Luke 17. 5. to lay hold on the meritorious sufferings and obedience of our Lord Iesus Christ unto our full Iustification Esa. 53. 5. 4. The Spirit of prayer that with griefe and sorrow for our sins wee may crave pardon for our