Selected quad for the lemma: duty_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
duty_n call_v day_n sabbath_n 2,551 5 9.9293 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

thing from this at the Margent follow that which is by it selfe at the beginning Difference in substance there is not any but the Copie for that at the Margent was not altogether so perfect THE FIRST BOOKE OF DIVINITIE OF GOD THE CREATOR CHAPTER I. Of GOD the FATHER the SONNE and the HOLY GHOST DIuinitie is a Doctrine of glorifying God whereof there bee two parts One that concerneth God The other concerning Emanuel God with vs. God is Iehouah three Persons Iehouah which is Being or Perfection it selfe signifieth a Nature that hath all good and perfect things in a most perfect and incommunicable manner The perfect things in God beside Life Vnderstanding and Will without which no perfection can bee are Holinesse and Blessednes Holinesse is the puritie of his Nature from whence commeth a Righteousnesse in all his Wayes specially seene to vs in foure chiefe and principall Vertues which in the Scripture you shall find for the most part to goe by couples or payres The first couple are Kindnesse and Truth Kindnesse in being ready to bestow all good things Truth faithfully to performe whatsoeuer he speaketh The other couple are Iustice and Mercy flowing from the former Iustice to render to euery one his due Mercy in being ready to helpe in time of need This is the Holinesse of GOD and his Righteousnesse comming from it Blessednes is his All-sufficiency of things that make one happy and standeth in Kingdome and Power or Glorie Kingdome is his Soueraigntie of commanding whatsoeuer he will Power his ablenesse to doe whatsoeuer hee commandeth Glorie comprehendeth all the excellencies of his Nature as Wisedome and other Graces of the minde Strength Comelinesse and Beautie Graciousnesse or an amiable and louely Nature a complete furniture of Riches Honour and of all kind of Pleasures and Delights These are the Perfect themselues His perfect and incommunicable manner of hauing of them is Infinitenesse and Eternitie Infinitenesse whereby he is without circumscription and therefore of a most single Nature that whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe and therefore also inuisible and incomprehensible Eternitie whereby Hee is without beginning or ending and therefore of himselfe and vnchangeable This is it we meane by IEHOVAH who vpon all that hath beene said is nor can be but One. The three Persons are each of them that one Iehouah diuersly subsisting and are the Father and the Sonne or the Holy Ghost The Father is a Person who from all eternitie hath begotten the Sonne The Sonne is a Person from all eternitie begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost is a Person eternally proceeding from the Father and the Sonne CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God GOD being thus in his Nature and Person most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glorie by two notes of excellencie which he taketh to him Kingdome and Honour Kingdome is that whereby hee doth exercise an absolute Soueraigntie toward others The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the Persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them The Kingdome of God hath two parts Purpose and Works Purpose is his Decree before all times of euerything CHAP. III. Of Creation THe Works of God are the execution of his Purpose and are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things of nothing finished in sixe dayes and was of euery Creature in excellencie of perfection Of the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men it was after his owne Image and Likenesse in Holinesse and Happinesse Holinesse in a mind inlightned with the knowledge of the whole Will of God and all the strengths of Nature conformed thereunto Happinesse in the fruition of Gods loue and from thence comming a Coniunction and Communion with him Coniunction is an inioying of his Personall presence Communion is a participation in some sort of his Blessednes both Kingdome Power and Glorie CHAP. IIII. Of Prouidence PRouidence is his gouerning of the things created CHAP. V. Of the Morall Law SO much of the Kingdome of God the honour due vnto him is That the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men doe his Will with that whole strength of their naturall integritie Euery thing with so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excell the doing whereof is termed Righteousnesse CHAP. VI. The first Table and the first Commandement RIghteousnesse hath two parts Pietie and Iustice Pietie is of the immediate duties to God whereof this is the whole that wee haue God to be our God The parts are two One to cleaue vnto him Louing Reuerencing Feating Beleeuing Trusting and Hoping in him from whence arise Patience and Humilitie The other to worship him which worship comprehendeth all kind of Seruice publike and priuate One principall part whereof is Prayer both petition for the obtayning of good things or turning away of euill and thanksgiuing for all wee doe inioy A piece also of this Seruice when iust cause requireth is swearing and cursing by his Name making our Vowes vnto him and by lotterie to commit into his hands the successe of our doubtfull affaires CHAP. VII Of the second Commandement TO the worship of God two things doe belong a holy manner of worshipping God and a holy rest The manner standeth in Obedience and Reuerence Obedience is the worshipping of him according to his Commandement CHAP. VIII Of the third Commandement REuerence is a religious affection in the seruice of God whereunto are requisite Preparation and Humiliation and when need is both Fasting to quicken vs to petition in the acknowledgement of our vnworthinesse and wants and Feasting to expresse our thankefulnesse for his benefits CHAP. IX Of the fourth Commandement THis is the manner of Gods worship A holy rest is a sanctifying of a time vnto his seruice which beside other times as occasion shall be offered in a Family or for ones selfe apart ought ordinarily to bee in the Morning and Euening of euery day for Church-meetings on such Dayes and Times of the day as may stand with the conuenience of that Church But of necessitie one whole day in seuen is thus to be kept holy both with publike and priuate exercises In which number the duties of brotherly loue as distributing to the Poore according to Gods blessing vpon vs visiting the Sicke helping our Neighbour or any thing that is his in their distresse come also to bee reckoned when they are done as works of Mercy This Day in the first institution was the seuenth Day from the Creation and called the Sabbath Day beginning on the euening of the day before when the Creation of the World was finished CHAP. X. Of the second Table of the Law and of the fift Commandement IVstice followeth which is of the duties among our selues and is honour or the generall duties of Loue. Honour is a performance of duties in respect of a degree First among vnequals from Inferiours to their Superiours and contrariwise As To all Superiours in
contrarie whereof is Loue of the Creature aboue God He u Mat. 10. 37. that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthy of me They x Iohn 12. 43. loued the prayse of men more then the praise of God Whither belongeth the loue of our selues and of worldly pleasures of which kind of people the Apostle saith y Philip. 3. 14. Whose god is their belly Secondly When we come vnto our selues the soule is to be respected before all worldly commodities z Mat. 6. 33. Seeke first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall as appendices be cast vnto you So in spirituall Graces euery one as it is more excellent Desire a 1. Cor. 12. 31. the best gifts and I will shew you a more excellent way Follow b 1. Cor. 14. 1. after loue and couet after spirituall gifts but more that ye may prophesie of outward things The bodie is c Pro. 22. 1. to be esteemed more then rayment a good name more then great riches and grace and fauour better then siluer or gold And therefore in the things that concerne our owne good first we are to aske those that belong to the sauing of our soules and that without exception next the things for this present life so farre as God seeth them to bee good for vs. The contrarie whereof is that which the Apostle speaketh of Phil. 3. 19. To minde earthly things and as he saith in d 1. Tim. 6. 5 6 9 10. another place To imbrace godlinesse not for it selfe but for lucres sake Thirdly Circumstances also of time place person and such like ought to inforce our strength and powers Paul though he carryed himselfe in all sinceritie towards all yet 2. Cor. 2. 12. professeth hee did it more aboundantly vnto them Fourthly In things that are indifferent the lesse and fewer circumstances must yeeld to the more and greater vpon this reason Ezra being in a straight either to passe vnto Ierusalem with danger of his owne life and of theirs that went with him or to giue the King occasion to suspect the truth which he had taught him preferred that rather I was ashamed saith hee Ezra 8. 22. to aske of the King an Armie and Horsemen to helpe vs against the enemie in the way because we had spoken to the King saying The hand of our God is vpon all them that seeke him in goodnesse But his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him In respect of all these things that hitherto haue bin deliuered the Law of God is called the Moral Law for there is a four-fold cōsideration of the Law of God One as it is an absolute and perfect comprehension of al duties whatsoeuer whereupon it hath the name of the Morall Law Another as it is the Image Sampler wherunto men Angels were created in all Wisedome and Holinesse at the beginning And so it is properly termed the Law of Nature The third as it contayneth the couenant of workes In which regard Paul is wont for the most part to terme it the Law and sometimes the e Rom. 3. 27. Law of Workes The last as it is a rule and direction for renewed Holinesse or the workes of Grace and Sanctification And in that sence Iohn calleth it the new Law or Commandement 1. Iohn 2. 8. But the Morall Law is it which here wee treate of whereunto for the Reasons afore-said these properties are ascribed First It is a Light vnto our feete and a Lanterne vnto our steps as it is in Psal 119. 104. Salomon f Pro. 6. 23. also in the Prouerbs For the Commandement is a Lanterne c. the Law a Light guiding our steps aright in those straight wayes wherein we are to walke And heereof the Commandements of God are said to bee straight and right The g Psal 19. 9. Commandements of IEHOVAH are right Therefore h Psal 119. 126 I account all thine Ordinances right in all things So doth Salomon proclayme in his i Pro. 4. 11. Prouerbs that by the words of Wisdome which there hee vttereth hee will guide vs in the paths of rightnesse Secondly It is a good and a holy Law as the Apostle to the k Rom. 12. 2. Romanes calleth it That good will of God And DAVID l Psal 119. 39. Thy Lawes are good Being therefore good it is in it selfe acceptable vnto God and maketh those that doe it accepted to him Whereupon the same Apostle m Rom. 12. 2. there calleth it That acceptable will of God Contrariwise sinne peruerteth the straight wayes of the Lord as Peter speaketh Acts 13. 10. And therefore it is euill and naught Know n Ier. 2. 19. and see saith IEREMIE that it is an euill and bitter thing that thou forsakest IEHOVAH And this is the common Epithite which the Scripture giueth vnto sinne which being naught maketh vs odious and hatefull vnto God o Pro. 15. 26. Euill thoughts are an abomination to IEHOVAH Thou p Psal 3. 6. hatest all the workers of iniquitie Thirdly It is a q Iam. 1. 25. perfect Law commanding all good and forbidding all euill Fourthly It is an eternall Law without limitation of time or place giuing a most absolute and perfect direction for all ages and times of the World before and since the Fall and binding to a perpetuall obseruation of it So in the r Reuel 21. 27. Reuelation wee finde That no vncleane thing nor which doth abomination or lyes shal enter into the new Ierusalem And Paul telleth the ſ Gal. 5. 21. Galathians They which doe such things the workes of the flesh there reckoned vp shall not inherit the Kingdome of God for which cause the definition not of Righteousnesse onely but of euery Commandement is so fitted as the same may be a perpetuall rule to serue all times and persons whatsoeuer for albeit some speciall duties of certaine Commandements shall cease when wee come to Heauen yet the substance of euery one remayneth there shall bee no Seuenth day set apart vnto Gods Seruice for all Eternitie of time shall be taken vp for it and a t Heb. 4 9. perpetuall Sabbath no vse of Marriage but u Mat. 22. 30. puritie and perfection like to the holy Angels And the like is to be said of the other Commandements for seeing the Image of God witnesse the x Coloss 3. 10. Ephes 4. 24. Apostle standeth in Righteousnesse and Holinesse which are the two branches of the Law it must needes tye vs with an euerlasting loue who were first made in that likenesse and whose perfection in Heauen is to bee fully and perfectly renewed thereunto which perpetuitie of the Morall Law was y Exod. 34. 27. 2 Cor. 3. 7. noted by ingrauing of it in stone But where will you say is this Doctrine of Righteousnesse taught First Nature it selfe doth teach it in that by our first Creatiō
day is holy to our Lord. So the people went to eate and to drinke and to send portions to celebrate great gladnesse And in Hester 9. 19. They celebrated the fourteenth day of the Moneth Adar with gladnesse and bankettings and merriments and sending of portions from one to another Generally the Law thereof giuen Deut. 16. 14. The Feast of Tabernacles thou shalt keepe seuen dayes thou shalt reioyce when thou keepest that Feast c. The contrarie is in this Day of gladnesse to mourne and weepe for which r Nehem. 8. 10. 11. 12. Nehemiah and the Leuites doe reprooue the people Hold your peace for this Day is holy be not sad therefore CHAP. VIII Of the fourth Commandement THE fourth Commandement enioyneth a This is the manner of Gods worship A holy rest is the sanctifying of a time vnto his Seruice which beside other times as occasion shall be offered in a Family or for ones selfe apart ought ordinarily to be in the morning and euening of euery day sanctifying of some time vnto his seruice both other times as occasion shall require and especially some set and solemne times which first in a Family or for ones selfe apart ought ordinarily to bee in the morning and euening euery day as the Psalmist Å¿ Psal 92. 2. saith It is good to declare in the morning thy Kindnesse and thy Truth in the night Therefore was the morning and euening Sacrifice instituted of God Exod. 29. 38 39. Some mens zeale hath carryed them further either in respect of the publike calamities of the Church or their owne more speciall and priuate wants to performe this dutie both morning euening and at noone Euening morning and at noone will I meditate and pray aloud saith DAVID Psal 55. 17. So Daniel thrice a day kneeled vpon his knees and prayed and confessed before his God Dan. 6. 11. which is there noted to haue beene his continuall course or else this at noone haply may bee thought when they came to receiue their meate with Prayer and Thankesgiuing Secondly For publike exercises and meetings of the For Church-meetings on such dayes times of the day as may stand with the conueniencie of that Church But of necessitie one whole day in seuen is thus to bee kept holy Church we must doe it on such dayes and times of the day as may stand with the conueniencie of that Church Thirdly One whole day in seuen is of necessitie to be kept holy This the Scripture calleth by excellencie the Sabbath Day without a difference as it were the elder brother to all the rest of the dayes of the weeke which is called t Leuit. 23. 15. 25. 8 8. Mat. 28. 1. Acts 20. 7. 1. Cor. 16. 2. Marke 6 2 9. Luke 24. 1. Iohn 20. 1. Sabbaths in the plurall The parts of the sanctifying of this day are two one to rest from worldly businesses and from those workes and duties of our calling which at other times are not onely lawfull but expedient and necessarie to bee done The particular workes that we are thus to abstaine from are of two kinds First great aswel as smal and smal aswel as great A greater and more excellent worke can hardly be imagined then the building of Gods owne House the materiall and outward Tabernacle yet euen That the Lord by a strict precise caution doth specially forbid vpon this day Exod. 31. 13. Yet saith hee yee shall obserue my Sabbaths Not setting your hand in that day vnto this worke though it be most holy Those holy women that had Odours Oyntments and all things in a readinesse yet in a religious obseruation of Gods Ordinance forbare on the Sabbath to embalme the precious bodie of our Lord and Sauiour Christ and are commended by the Holy Ghost for it They u Luke 23. 56. rested saith LVKE the Sabbath Day according to the Commandement Againe how small a thing is it to gather a few stickes But when one presumed to doe this and with an high hand in prophanation of the Sabbath wee know what his doome was from the mouth of God himselfe Numb 15. 32 33 34 35 36. In the second place come things both necessarie and delightfull of profit and of pleasure In seed time and in haruest the fittest seasons for all worldly commodities thou shalt keepe Sabbath saith the Holy Ghost Exodus 34. 21. Of this kinde are trauailing and iournying vpon that Day whereof the Law is giuen Exodus 16. 29. Tarrie euery man in his place Let no man goe out of his place the seuenth Day Likewise Faires Markets and all kinde of buying and selling for which cause x Nehem. 13. 19 Reade Verse 15 16 17 18. Nehemia that godly Magistrate When the gates of Ierusalem began to bee darke before the Sabbath commanded to shut the gates and charged that they should not be opened till after the Sabbath and set some of his seruants at the gates that there should be no burden brought in vpon the Sabbath Day Sporting also banquetting and such like which distract our minds from Gods Seruice are then to be auoyded which is that the Lord calleth Not to do our owne delight vpon that Day Esay 58. 13. The doing of which things or of any of them is contrarie to this outward sanctifying of the Sabbath Yet can we not say that all these things are vtterly forbidden without exception certaine cautions must bee made First Things of common honestie and for necessarie safegard of that which would otherwise perish are lawfull vpon that Day Our Sauiour taketh that for granted euen amongst those that most straightly vrge the Letter of this Law What y Mat. 12. 11 man is there among you which hath a sheepe and if it fall vpon the Sabbath Day into a Ditch will not take it and plucke it out Secondly Such are allowed as take vs not away from the Seruice of God but serue for honest and needfull recreation to make vs fitter for holy things Thirdly Hither belong those labours and bodily workes which are done for the setting forth of Gods Glorie as hee that being made whole tooke vp his Bed Both with publike and priuate exercises and carryed it on the Sabbath Day Iohn 5. 8 9. The next part of the sanctifying of this Day is to imploy it in the Seruice of God which is that whereunto the outward rest tendeth Esay 58. 13. If thou wilt turne away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thine owne will vpon mine Holiday and call the Sabbath delight holy to IEHOVAH and honour him not doing thine owne wayes c. Of this kind are First All religious and holy exercises whereof these the Scripture noteth by name as duties to be performed vpon that Day First To heare the Word preached Acts 13. 14. 15. After the reading of the Law and the Prophets in the Synagogue on the Sabbath Day the Ruler of the Synagogue sent vnto them saying Yee men and
The Popish Fast which was iudged sufficient if they onely abstayned from meate without any regard of inward godlinesse the end and true vse of Fasting whereunto all the former bodily exercises tend This is double according as they are both laid forth Ezra 8. 21 Then I proclaymed a Fast at the Riuer of Ahaua that wee might afflict our soules before our GOD and seeke of him a right way for vs our little ones and our substance First Is the humbling and casting of our The Pharisaicall Fast of the Papists which is so far from humbling them that contrariwise it maketh them swell with a proud opinion of meriting thereby selues downe before the high Maiestie of Almightie God both in sorrow for our sins and in a solemne confession of the same and of the iust punishments and threatenings of the Law that belong vnto vs for them Therefore the Lord instituting this Fast telleth the people q Leuit. 16. 31. and Leuit. 23. 27 29 32. Num. 29. 7. They shall humble their soules that day Secondly A raysing of our selues vp by the sweet and gracious promises of the Gospell with assurance that together with the forgiuenesse of our sinnes wee shall obtayne the things wee sue for so farre as it is for Gods Glorie and our good whereupon it is called A Day of Atonement and hath most excellent promises made vnto it Ioel 2. 13 14. Rent your hearts and not your garments and returne vnto IEHOVAH your God Who knoweth whether he will returne and repent him and leaue a blessing behind him And againe r Ioel 2. 10 20. Now is IEHOVAH alreadie zealous for his Land and vseth clemencie towards his people And IEHOVAH answered and said to his people Behold I will send you wheate c. And this the sweet experience of all the Fasts of Gods Children doth from time to time confirme The end of whose Fasting was alwayes ſ Iudges 20. 23. Ezra 19. 6. Ester 14. 16. 2. Chr●n 20. 3. Dan. 9. 20. Feasting and of their mourning exceeding great reioying The third head is the time of Fasting The Popish Fast which appointeth set times Fridayes and such like howsoeuer the time fal out prosperous or aduerse which generally is the time of heauinesse and affliction as the Prophet saith Esay 22. 12. In that Day when the enemie besieged thee being a Day of wasting and trampling and confusion as he said before Verse 5. the Lord IEHOVAH of Hosts called to weeping and mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with Sackcloth But as it cannot be limited to any certaine set dayes so neither can it bee circumscribed within any stint of time being to hold longer or shorter as the hand and wrath of God doth more or lesse lye vpon vs the least time that may be is a whole day Vnder the Law from euening to euening as the Commandement is giuen Leuit. 23. 32. and the Children of God haue t Iudges ●0 26. and else-where alwayes practized With vs Christians whose Sabbaths begin otherwise from morning to morning vpon occasion of great calamities eyther pressing or approching It is sometimes three dayes together as in Queene u Ester 4. 16. Hesters time And that of x Acts 9. 9. Paul vpon his first Conuersion Daniel for his owne priuate humiliation stretcheth it further Daniel 10. 3 4. In those dayes I DANIEL gaue my selfe to mourning three weekes of dayes pleasant bread I did not eate neither did flesh or wine come within my mouth c. The last thing is Poperie that ordayning many both wicked and vnnecessary holy-dayes razeth out of their Kalender this one and beside the Sabbath the onely holy Day ordayned of the Lord. That this time whatsoeuer hath the nature of a Sabbath and therfore is called a y Leuit. 16. 31. Leuit. 23. 32. Sabbath and a Day of rest wherein wee are expresly z Leuit. 16. 29. 23. 28 30 31 forbidden all kind of worke and are called to the duties of Pietie and of the Seruice of God whence it is called a Ioel 2. 12. The sanctifying of a Fast Ioel 2. 12. hauing alwayes extraordinarie The Popish Fast which hath no more extraordinary Prayer vpon that Day then vpon any other exercise of Prayer ioyned with it Mat. 17. 21 This kind of Deuils goeth not out but by Prayer and Fasting 1. Cor. 7. 5. that ye may be at leisure for Fasting and Prayer And so you shall see in b Iudges 20. 26. Ezra 9. 5. Nehem. 1. 4. Dan. 9. 3. 2. Chro. 20. 4 5 6 all the Feasts recorded in the Booke of God And if the Fast be publike of a whole Church Citie or Kingdome then it hath also the preaching of the Word and all other holy exercises So the Prophet c Ioel 2. 15 16 IOEL willeth them to gather the People and to proclaime an Assembly And Leuit. 23. 27. a Law is made that on the Fast day there should be an holy Conuocation To returne now from whence wee are digressed A are not onely pleasing vnto God through his forgiuenes of the sinne question of great moment doth heere offer it selfe If sinne be mingled with all our Actions how can they please God or how can we looke for a reward for them which d 1. Tim. 4. 8. Paul assureth vs of telling vs that Godlinesse is profitable to all things and that it hath the promises both of this life and of the life to come The answere is They are pleasing and acceptable vnto God by his forgiuing of the sinne that cleaneth to them couering and hiding that which is ours looking vpon his own worke within vs. So e Reuel 8. 3. 4. Christ being the Angell that stands before the Altar hauing a Golden Censer is said to haue much Odours giuen vnto him which he offereth with the Prayers of all the Saints vpon the Golden Altar which is before the Throne Insomuch as the smoke of the Odours with the Prayers of the Saints goe vp before God out of the Angels hand that is by the vertue of his Prayer and Intercession all the works and Prayers of Gods Children are made acceptable vnto him and as a sweete smelling sauour before him So the f Mal. 3. 4. Prophet doth fore-tell when the Angell of the Couenant shall once come the Oblation of Iuda and Ierusalem shall be sweet vnto IEHOVAH And g Rom. 12. 1. Paul doth exhort vs to present our bodies a liuing Sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God h 1. Pet. 2. 5. PETER in like sort to offer vp spirituall Sacrifices acceptable vnto GOD through IESVS CHRIST Touching the reward it is true indeed in many places but haue beside of Gods free Goodnes looking vpon them in the perfection of his Sonne speciall promises of reward made vnto them both in this life and in the life to come of the Scripture large and ample promises are made vnto our workes
doth attribute to the vertue of his Resurrection whereat because the Glorie of his Kingdome did actually beginne though the efficacie thereof were euer since the fall of Adam it selfe obtayneth the name of the Kingdome m Mat. 16. 28. of the Sonne of Man being the ground-worke and foundation of our n 1. Pet. 1. 3. Regeneration o Rom. 4. 24. Iustification p Rom. 6. ● 5. Sanctification and q 1. Cor. 15 20. 1. Thess 4. 14. rising from the dead yea and of the r 1. Pet. 3. 21. The day of his rising sauing of our soules as in the particulars hereafter shall be seene A worthy fruit indeed of our Sauiours Resurrection and no doubt I may truely say a greater and a more noble worke then the first Creation whereupon the Day wherein hee arose and renewed the World againe being the ſ Mat. 28. 1. Marke 16. 9. Luke 24. 1. Iohn 20. 1. first day of the Creation which the Scripture is wont to call The first day of the weeke because it beganne next after the Iewes Sabbath is in perpetuall memorie of that benefit become the Day which wee Christians doe keepe holy the Day being changed but not a Day of rest abolished And that the Day was so changed is easie to be proued which was the first day of the Creation is an euerlasting remembrance of that benefit come in the place of the Sabbath out of the Scriptures for first on this Day the Apostles t Iohn 2. 19 26. Acts 2. 1. kept their solemne Assemblies and u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Congregation-meetings on this Day they came together to x Acts 16 13. Praier y Acts 20. 7. preaching of the Word breaking of bread c. on this Day were z 1. Cor. 16. 2. collections and gatherings for the poore And * Reuel 1. 10. Iohn on this Day gaue himselfe in a speciall manner to spirituall Meditations Paul a Acts 20. ● 7. likewise hauing election of seuen whole daies wherein he abode at Troas made onely choice of this Secondly Our Sauiour Christ himselfe gaue testimonie to this Day gracing it with his b Marke 16. 1● Luke 24. 21. Iohn 20. 19 26. apparitions c Acts 2. 1. distributions of the Holy Ghost c. For the d Leu. 23. 15 16 Feast of Pentecost fell alwaies vpon this first Day of the weeke But you will say We reade no where of any Commandement giuen for such an alteration Neither is it necessary the constant practice of Christ and his Apostles and of the Churches then generally without exception is a rule to binde all Ages in perpetuitie seeing the Apostles did nothing of their owne heads but as they were taught of Christ during those fortie daies that he abode with them after his Resurrection And yet if a Commandement were needfull is not that an expresse Commandement 1. Cor. 16. 2. Touching the gathering for the Saints as I haue appointed in the Churches of Galatia so also doe yee Euery first Day of the weeke let euery one lay aside c. which is a speciall dutie of the Sabbath Day I verily thinke the Psalmist so long before pointed at it when he saith e Psal 118. 24. This same Day wherein Christ the Stone which the builders refused is by his rising from the dead become the head of the corner f Psal 102. 19. Prince of a new created people and Lord of the g Heb. 2. 5. c. World to come IEHOVAH hath made that is to say magnified and made famous to be celebrated with Prayses Thankes giuings in his Church for euer As the word made is taken 1. Sam. 12. 6. Esay 43. 7. and in diuers other places And what maruell though the Day suffered a change when the whole World it selfe was changed This besides the change of the Day it selfe brought and with it two other notable changes also First Of the name from the Sabbath to bee called called the Lords Day by a greater and more honourable Title h Reuel 1. 10. The Lords Day consecrated to his Seruice So as the very name is become a Badge of our Christian and holy Profession seuering vs from Iewes Turkes and other Enemies to the Name of Christ Neither shall you finde in all the New Testament that the Day which the Churches celebrate was at any time after Christs Ascension called The Sabbath Day Secondly In that it beginneth not on the Euening of beginning when he arose and began to renew the World the Day before as the Iewish Sabbaths did but at the dawning of the Day when i Marke 16. 9. Iohn 20. 1. our Sauiour beganne the worke of his Resurrection Now that the Day which wee are to sanctifie beginneth at that time is made good by the practice of Saint Paul who tarrying at Troas seuen whole dayes preached vpon this Day and continue in his Sermon vnto midnight spent the rest of the night in holy conference vnto the dawning of the day and then departed Act. 20. 7 11. Proceed wee now to the rest that followeth concerning This great worke hath two parts Regeneration and Saluation the excellencie of Christs Kingdom The beginning whe 〈…〉 Regeneration by his Spirit the fruits or qualities whereunto we are regenerate Wisdome Righteousnesse and Sanctification The end and accomplishment Happinesse and Immortalitie for so our Sauiour teacheth Iohn 3. 3 5. Vnlesse a man bee borne againe hee cannot see or enter into the Kingdome of God Regeneration being first and the ground-worke of Regeneration is the rest we are to see what Regeneration is I define it to bee our spirituall incorporating into Christ betweene which and the worke of Sanctification the difference lyeth plaine for as Creation is distinguished from the qualities wherein men were created so is this Now Creation from the qualities whereunto wee are regenerate And as Generation is one thing and the corruption that Parents beget vs in another so is our New birth one thing and the Holinesse or Sanctification which we haue thereby another This appeareth manifestly 1. Iohn 5. 8. where Spirit Water Bloud that is to say Regeneration Iustification Sanctification are distinguished And 1. Iohn 3. 1 2 3. where purifying of our selues is made an effect of being the sonnes of God So our Sauiour saith Iohn 3. 6. That which is borne of the Spirit whereby he meaneth our part regenerate is Spirit that is to say wholy spirituall holy and sanctified As that which is borne of the flesh meaning all of vs by fleshly Generation is flesh that is to say carnall in euery part and in all the powers both of bodie and soule impure and vncleane and subiect to the wrath of God Peter also when he saith a 1. Pet. 1. 22 23. Hauing your soules purified by obeying of the Truth through the Spirit vnto brotherly loue without hypocrisie from a pure heart loue one
vnto vs whereof if there were no more that one example of Dauid may bee a sufficient witnesse and serue in stead of many c 2. Sam. 12. 10 11. The Sword shall neuer depart from thy house for euer I will rayse vp against thee euill out of thine owne house And I will take thy Wiues before thine eyes and giue them to thy fellow who shall lye with them before this Sunne To conclude it must cost many bitter cryes and pittifull lamentations many a salt teare deepe sighes sobs and grones great deiection of minde and abasing of ones selfe long exercise in the Schoole of Affliction much strife and struggling and many a plucke and wrestle like true Israelites with God himselfe our owne conscience and the feares and terrours of Hell before we can come to obtayne a blessing at his hand to be assured we are reconciled to him And yet for all that wee are not free from falling any more after we be once risen for euery day we fall yea oftentimes a day and therefore haue need of a continuall and euery day Repentance The greater question is whether wee may fall againe into the same sinne whereof truely we haue repented especially if it be a grosse and hainous sinne I answere The best man in the World hath no priuiledge this way but that as hee may lye long in his sinne so hee may fall againe into it and as hee may fall once so may hee fall twice and so may hee fall oftener and how oft the word for ought I know setteth not any stint neither are the Mercies of God nor Merits of Christ to bee restrayned to so narrow bounds but that where sinne aboundeth there grace doth more abound Howbeit he that shall so doe spoyleth himselfe of much comfort and greatly shaketh the assurance of Faith which euery Christian ought to labour for seeing a continuall relapse into one and the same offence is a fearefull argument of a man forsaken and giuen vp of God yet all comfort is not wholy to be denyed to such a one for First d 2. Cor. 8. 12. If there be a willing mind euery one is accepted for that grace he hath not for that which he hath not Secondly e 2. Cor. 12. 9 10 The power of GOD is perfected in our weaknesse The sixt and last thing touching Repentance is the meanes to spurre vs forwards to this duty which is twofold One on the behalfe of God the other of our selues On the behalfe of GOD by the power of his Spirit by the Ministerie of his Word by chastizements and afflictions by blessings and outward benefits as he promiseth in f Hosh 2. 14 15 16. HOSHEA Therefore behold I will perswade her by my Spirit after I haue brought her into the Wildernesse and tamed her by afflictions and will speake vnto her heart there is the word mouing And will giue vnto her Vineyards c. that she may sing as in the dayes of her youth and what time shee came out of the Land of Egypt And in that Day saith hee thou shalt call me My good man c. that is then shalt thou take mee for thy Husband and serue and worship me On our behalfe for the better quickening of vs vnto this dutie we are not onely carefully and with a good conscience to vse all the holy meanes ordayned of God for the conuerting of our soules Prayer Meditation of the Word and other godly and profitable exercises but especially sometimes wee are to take vp the exercise of a true fast commanded in the Word of God for our h Mat. 17. 21. Sauiour telleth vs that there are some kinde of Deuils whom Prayer only will not cast out vnlesse it haue Fasting ioyned with it Fasting is an vtter abstinence for a time not from flesh onely but from all the delights and commodities of this life so farre as necessitie and comelinesse will permit Whereupon it is called A i Ioel 2. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 day of restraint That we may know to fast as we ought it shall bee fit to reduce to some heads what is necessarie to a true fast All may be comprehended in these foure The first head is of the things wee are commanded to abstayne from As first all kinde of Popish Fast which permitteth al kind of meate at Dinner flesh onely excepted and at Supper to fill ones selfe with bread and drinke and both at Dinner and Supper with Wine and all kinde of Dainties Spicebread Fruit Marmal●t and Sucker c. Meates and Drinkes which the very word of k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iohn 3. 8. fasting doth import And therefore in the Fast of Niniue they are forbidden as much as to l Ionas 3. 7. taste any thing Secondly The benefit of ordinary sleepe Ioel 1. 13. Goe lodge in Sackcloth extending this exercise at the least to some part of the night whereupon m Marke 13. 32 watching is also added as a Companion to this exercise Thirdly All brauerie and costlinesse of attyre contenting our selues with a common kind of apparell or rather vnder that which is common and ordinarie Exodus 33. 5. IEHOVAH said vnto MOSES Say vnto the Children of Israel Thou art a stiffe-necked people c. Put therefore thine Ornaments and Iewels from vpon thee that I may know what to doe with thee Thus did the holy Fathers in times past clothe themselues with Sackcloth and Ashes which Fashion Kings themselues in their Fasts scorned not to take vp as wee reade of the King of Niniue Ionas 3. 7. Who rose out of his Throne put away his Robe from him and couered himselfe with Sackcloth and sate in Ashes And the like did wicked Ahab 1. Kings 21. 27. Fourthly Cheerfulnesse and outward ioy and pleasure In which respect the exercise which the n Mar. 2. 20. Luke 5. 35. other Euangelists ca●l Fasting o Mat. 9. 15. Matthew calleth Mourning Can the children of the Bride-chamber mourne as long as the Bride-groome is with them And Ioel calleth it weeping Let the Priests weepe betweene the Porch and the Altar So it is said Iudges 20. 26. that all the Israelites came to Bethel and there wept and fasted And 1. Sam. 7. 6. in the Fast at Mispa that they drew out of the fountaine of their heart teares as it were buckets of waters which they powred forth before IEHOVAH Fiftly All gate and gesture that may carrie any shew of loftinesse with it So did AHAB p 1. King 21. 27 clothe himselfe in Sackcloth and went softly Sixtly The lawfull vse of Marriage 1. Cor. 7. 5. Depriue not one another but by consent for a time that yee may haue leisure for Fasting and Prayer yea though it be betweene the Bride-groome and the Bride which of all other are least to be restrayned Ioel 2. 16. Let the Bride-groome goe out of his chamber and the Bride out of her Bed-chamber The second head is
in the end Death which is the separation of Soule and Body Yet in all this some Reliques of former D●gnitie doe remaine namely in the Minde common Principles of Good and Euill sparkes of that light of Nature and some Seedes of Conscience which notwithstanding are wholly sinfull and doe but serue partly to keepe Men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable In the Body a kind of Maiestie in the whole Man a certaine Soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute Creatures The Creature here through the Fall of Man receineth an impaire of his first perfection So much of that which is in part The fulnesse of the Curse after Death is Damnation with the Deuill and his Angels In Soule presently till the Latter Day at what time God for that purpose raysing vp their Bodies the whole Man shall receiue the like Doome and Execution accordingly A miserable Change to such Men as then are liuing shall be instead of a Death and rising from it The Creature is then also subiect to an vtter abolition THE SECOND BOOKE OF DIVINITIE Of EMANVEL God and Man our Redeemer CHAP. 1. Of CHRIST THis is the summe of that Doctrine which we haue concerning GOD. The other followeth concerning Emanuel GOD with vs. Emanuel GOD with vs is in one Person the Sonne of GOD and very Man conceiued of a Virgin by the Holy GHOST Who is also CHRIST or Anointed called of his Father euer since the Fall of Adam to be a Mediatour betweene GOD and Man of a Couenant to saue through Faith in him that is by apprehending of the Couenant certaine few Men whom GOD his Father hath chosen from Eternitie and giuen vnto him to set forth in them the prayse of his Mercie This Couenant is called the Couenant of Grace And ratified by the Death of Him that made it hath also the Name of a Testament Being alwayes one and the same in substance it is neuerthelesse distinguished or distinctly to be considered in the Old and the New Testament The Old Testament was the Couenant through CHRIST to come The New Testament is the Couenant through CHRIST alreadie come IESVS the Sonne of Marie CHAP. II. Of the Priesthood of Christ OF the Office of Mediation there be two parts Priesthood and Kingdome Priesthood is in the things which he doth to God for those Elect. The parts are Oblation and Intercession Oblation is the offring vp of Himselfe for them It standeth in two things First the sanctifying of his Humane Nature in all Holinesse from the very first moment of his Conception for the worke of the Mediation Then in the performing of the most excellent measure of Obedience to the Law of God that can possibly fall vnto any Creature One principall part whereof are his Sufferings in taking vpon him our Sinnes and the whole Curse both that of this Life and the fulnesse of it due vnto them after Death All which he fully satisfied The Curse vpon vs here in the whole course of his Life the fulnesse of the Curse vpon the Crosse and Death by dying vnder the power whereof he lay three dayes in the Graue This Righteousnesse or Obedience being the Righteousnesse of Him who is both God and Man doth consequently merit a like supreme measure of Blessednesse euidently seene in the G 〈…〉 s that did follow his Sufferings and were in Soule or Bodie apart or ioyntly in them both In Soule hee went to Heauen presently after Death His Body hee rayled from the Dead glorious the third day at the da●●ning of the Day In his whole Person Soule and Body ioyned together he ascended into Heauen the fortieth day after his Resurrection and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say imoyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glory Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is the continuall presenting of his Merites to God his Father on the behalfe of those Elect. CHAP. III. Of Christs Gouernment of the World in generall SVch is the Priesthood of Christ his Kingdome followeth Kingdome is in the things which hee doth from God for those Elect. The Kingdome of Christ hath two parts One whereby hee gouerneth all the World according to their owne Nature since the Fall In the Angels perfect in Deuils and Men corrupted in the rest of the World peruerted CHAP. IIII. Of the Propheticall Office of Christ And of his Word THe other which is vnto his Church a Companie of Men culled out of the World This latter part contayneth his Propheticall Office and that which the Scripture by excellencie termeth the Kingdome Propheticall Office whereby hee hath a Church vnto himselfe by his Word and the Power of his Spirit The Word of Christ is his publishing of the Couenant of Grace Which of the Old Testament was called the Promise of the New is called the Gospel CHAP. V. Of the outward Church HIs Church is the outward Church or the Church of Gods Elect. Outward is of those that professe to beleeue in Him Seuerall Companies that assemble for the Exercises of the Word are so many Churches and Members of the Whole And in euery of these God hath alwayes some that are His indeed Their Children also are of the Church Vpon the outward Church Christ bestoweth Gifts both for the Churches common good and for a Man 's owne priuate For the common good are first things committed to the Churches keeping then Ministeries and Graces The things committed are his Word whereof wee haue spoken to be preached Sacraments to be administred and other holy Things Preaching is an Instruction of the Church by liuely Voice in the Word of Christ and that by Doctrine or Exhortation Doctrine in laying forth the Truth and confuting of contrarie Errors Exhortation to apply it also to all good vses of comforting denouncing sti●●ing vp reprouing A Sacrament is a signe and seale of the Couenant either for our entrance or continuance in the Couenant The administration is to deliuer them with declaring Christs Institution and Prayer vnto God to make the same effectuall to the end for the which they were ordayned Which the Scripture calleth Blessing or Consecration It followeth to speake of Ministeries and Graces Ministeries are publike Functions in the Church specially for Preaching which includeth the dutie of offering the Churches Prayers and Administration of the Sacraments Among the Ministers of the Word some haue beene extraordinarily inspired of Christ to deliuer both by liuely Voyce and Writing so as they could not erre the whole Truth of Christ and had power to worke Miracles for the confirming of their Doctrine All other Ministeries are to fetch their Light from the Doctrine of those that were so inspired Graces are Gifts for the discharge of those publike Functions Gifts for a Man 's owne priuate are Knowledge of the Word of Christ and a Taste of the sweetnesse of it Which being the highest Step that it is possible for any Reprobate to ascend changeth after a
Of the will the Apostle saith It is d Phil. 2. 13. God that worketh to will in you our e Heb. 13. 18. will is in all things to conuerse honestly the flesh f Gal. 4. 27. hindereth from doing the things ye would The contrary whereof is the will of g Ephes 2. 3. the flesh and of our owne thoughts called h 1. Pet. 4. 3. else-where The will of the Gentiles The last thing to be considered in the qualities of the soule are the affections of it to bee good and holy Thou i Deut. 6. 5. shalt loue IEHOVAH thy God with all thy soule The contrary whereof are those dishonourable and foule affections which the Apostle mentioneth Rom. 1. 26. Therefore God gaue them ouer to dishonourable affections Againe k Rom. 7. 5. When we were in the flesh the sinfull affections wrought in our members c. They l Gal. 5. 24. that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections thereof The particular affections which the Scripture aboue the rest doth recommend vnto vs as Bellowes to blow vp and increase spirituall Graces and to carry vs forward to a high degree of Holinesse are these that follow First Loue and liking of that which is good hatred and detestation of that which is euill as the Psalmist ioyneth them together Thou louest m Psal 45. 8. righteousnesse and hatest iniquitie Loue is the habit as it were and perfection of the whole Law both of the first and second Table Thou n Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy minde This is the first and great Commandement and the second is like it Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe On these two Commandements hang the whole Law and the Prophets And of the second Table Paul saith o Gal. 4 13 14. Serue one another through loue for all the Law meaning the whole second Table is fulfilled in one word in this Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Againe p Rom. 13. 8 9. He that loueth another fulfilleth the Law for this Thou shalt not commit adulterie Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not stoale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Thou shalt not couet and if there be any other Commandement it is summed vp in this word euen in this Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Generally 1. Tim. 1. 5. hee saith the end or perfection of the whole Law is loue c. And Coloss 3. 14. hee calleth loue The bond of perfection because it knitteth and bindeth together all the offices we owe to God or one vnto another So as what dutie soeuer we performe bee it neuer so glittering and shining in the World if it be not done in loue it is nothing at all worth As wee are taught 1. Cor. 13. yea our loue in this behalfe ought to extend it selfe not to our friends onely and them that loue vs againe but vnto all men to our q Mat. 5. 44. enemies and them that hate vs. The contrary hereof is hatred of God our Brethren and of good things Of God because wee see him iust to punish mens offences A fault so monstrous that one would thinke impossible it should fall vpon any Creature to hate and abhorre the Creator but that the Apostle hath noted our nature to be tainted with it Haters r Rom. 1. 30. of God and the ſ Psal 37. 20. 21. 9 c. 81. 16. 139. 21. Enemies or haters of IEHOVAH are oftentimes spoken of in the Psalmes and t 2. Sam. 12. 14. 2. Chron. 19. 2. else-where Of the hatred of our Brethren the Apostle saith He n 1. Ioh. 2. 9. 11 that hateth his Brother is in darknesse And againe He x 1. Ioh. 3. 15. that hateth his Brother is a Man-slayer Bloudie y Prou. 29. 10. men saith SALOMON hate him that is vpright And 1. Kings 22. 9. it is the voyce of wicked Ahab that hee hated the Prophet of the Lord because he neuer spake good vnto him With loue is coupled a liking and allowance of that which is good after the example of God himselfe of whom it is said that be z 1. Chro. 19. 17 delighteth in the things that are right Of this the Wiseman speaketh in the Prouerbs a Prou. 16. 13. Let the lips of the Righteous be acceptable vnto Kings The contrary whereof is an approbation of euill in other though it were so that we our selues did abstaine from it This fault the Apostle noteth to the b Rom. 1. 32. Romanes Who not onely doe so but are fautors and appro●uers of these that die it And Dauid in the Psalmes c Psal 50. 18. When thou seest a Thiefe thou takest pleasure in him The next is hatred and detestation of euill both euill persons and things whereof the Psalmist saith O d Psal ●7 10. yee the louers of IEHOVAH hate the thing that is euill And of himselfe hee professeth I e Psal 26. 5. hate the congregation of euill doers I f Psal 31. 7. hate them that obserue vaine vanities O g Ps 139 21 22. IEHOVAH doe I not hate them that hate thee I hate them with a perfect hatred they are in stead of enemies vnto mee I h Ps 119. 104. hate euery euill way I * Ps 119. 161. hate lyes and abhorre them SALOMON also in his Prouerbs i Pro. 8. 13. ioyneth together the feare of IEHOVAH and the hatred of euil as special parts of the heauenly wisdome wherof he there treateth The contrary whereof is the loue of euill things when our k Psal 141. 4. heart which the Psalmist prayeth to be deliuered from is inclined to them This DAVID l Psal 52. 5 6. vpbraydeth vnto DOEG Thou louest euill rather then good lying rather then to speake Righteousnesse thou louest it wonderfully thou louest all pernicious words O deceitfull tongue In the m Psal 4. 3. fourth Psalme he cryeth out Yee sonnes of men how long will you loue vanitie seeke lyes c And Salomon in his n Prou. 1. 22. Prouerbes How long O yee Fooles will ye loue foolishnesse and Scorners long after scorning A second affection is Cheerefulnesse and ioy in that which is good sorrow and griefe of heart and an holy anger when we see men to doe euill Of cheerefulnesse and ioy in good things Dauid speaketh in the Psalmes I o Psal 119. 14. reioyce in the way of thy Testimonies as being aboue all substance Thy p Vers 110. Testimonies are the ioyes of my heart I reioyce q Vers 110. 4. in thy words as one that findeth a great bootie So is it said 1. Chron. 29. 9. The people were glad offering freely or cheerefully And Verse 17. I with a right heart freely haue offered all those things and thy people also that are heere
present doe I see with cheerfulnes freely offering vnto thee By this argument the r 2. Cor. 9. 7. Apostle exhorting to liberalitie willeth euery one to doe as he purposeth in his heart that is freely and of his owne accord determineth with himselfe For saith hee God loueth a cheerefull giuer And thereupon the Children of God are euery-where called A Å¿ Psal 110. 3. Cant. 6. 9. free-hearted people Whereunto the same Apostle there maketh griefe and necessitie to be contrarie Griefe when wee performe good duties heauily and with grudging not of a franke and readie minde Necessitie when wee doe them indeed but against our will onely because wee must needs doe so to saue our credit and reputation among men whereas otherwise wee would not doe them And so doth Peter also oppose these two 1. Pet. 5. 2. Of the other vertue we haue a notable Example in our Sauiour t Marke 3. 5. Christ who was angry and sorrie withall at the hardnesse of the Iewes hearts The contrarie whereof is vnaduised anger such as the Apostle speaketh of Iam. 1. 20. The wrath of man worketh not the Righteousnesse of God or that which God prescribeth For this Ionas is reproued of God Ionas 4. 9. And Ahab u 1. King 21. 4. taxed that he was discontented and angry because NABOTH would not let him haue his Vineyard The third affection is feare of offending in any thing which Salomon maketh the Badge of Gods Children Blessed x Pro. 28. 14. is the man that feareth alwayes And y 1. Pet. 1. 17. Peter doth exhort vs If yee call him Father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your dwelling heere in feare The contrary is carnall securitie when a man runneth on in the hardnesse of his heart without Repentance for so Salomen doth there oppose it But he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into euill Thou saith z Rom. 2. 5. PAVL after thine hardnesse and heart that cannot repent heapest to thy selfe wrath against the Day of Wrath. And a Deut. 19. 19. Moses in Deuteronomie Take heed that there be not any among you that when he heareth the words of this curse blesse himselfe in his minde saying Peace shall be vnto me though I walke after the fantasie of mine owne heart So adding a drunken soule to a thirstie one Lastly our whole bodie and all the members of it ought holily to expresse the inward holinesse of our mind soule Ye are b 1. Cor. 6. 20. bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirits which are Gods present c Rom. 12. 1. your bodies a liuing Sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God Giue your d Rom. 6. 19. members seruants vnto Righteousnesse in Holinesse The vnmarryed e 1. Cor. 7. 34. woman careth for the things of the Lord that she may bee holy both in body and in spirit And the Apostle f Heb. 10. 22. speaketh not onely of the sprinkling of our hearts from an euill conscience but of the washing of the body by the bloud of Christ with cleane water For this cause our Sauiour g Heb. 10. 5. Christ comming into the World saith Sacrifice and Oblation thou wouldest none of but a body thou hast fitted for me wherein to yeeld your absolute and perfect obedience that is better then all Sacrifice The contrary whereof is the dishonouring or defiling of our owne bodies wherof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1. 24. And the giuing of our Members seruants vnto vncleannesse and to iniquitie to commit iniquitie Rom. 6 19. which is there opposed to the former of giuing themselues vnto Righteousnesse in Holinesse In this part of the Members of our bodie the senses first are to be acquainted with good things especially the sight and hearing Incline h Pro. 4. 20. thine eares vnto my words Blessed i Mat. 13. 16. are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare The contrarie whereof is the abusing of them as our first k Gen. 3. Parents did Next is the Tongue for by it as the Apostle l Iam. 3. 9. saith blesse we God Of this it is said m Rom. 14. 11. Euery tongue shall giue thankes vnto God that euery n Phil. 2. 11. tongue may confesse that Iesus Christ is Lord vnto the glory of God the Father The contrary whereof is when the mouth speaketh vaine things as it is Psal 144. 8. To the tongue belongeth open profession of God and of all good duties Be readie o 1. Pet. 3. 15. alwayes to make profession to euery one that asketh of you an account of the faith which is in you p Rom. 10. 10. for with the mouth men make confession to saluation Ye q Exod 23. 13. shall make no mention of the names of other gods neither shall they be heard out of thy mouth Their r Psal 16. 4. sorrowes shall be multiplyed that endow another god I will not powre their burnt Offerings of bloud nor take their names in my lips And hither are to be referred all outward markes of this profession as in Gods seruice The calling vpon of his Name Bowing and kneeling Lifting vp of hands eyes c. as the people did Nehem. 8. 16. answering all Amen Amen with the lifting vp of their hands and stooped and bowed downe to IEHOVAH with their face to the ground ward In doing reuerence to Superiours Å¿ Leuit. 9. 32. vncouering our head and rising vp before them c. The contrary whereof is Open profession of wickednesse when a man need not to digge to finde out their sinnes as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 2. 34. they are so plaine and manifest vnto all or as it is in t Ezech. 24. 7. EZECHIEL When they set their sinne vpon the cliffe of the Rocke in the open face and view of the World and do not powre the same vpon the earth to couer it with dust loth it should be seene Such is that Esay 3. 10. The obstinacie of their face testifieth against them and they doe not conceale but vtter their sinne openly shamelesly and obstinately as Sodom whose impudencie of sinning was such and so audacious that the u Ier. 20. 16. Prophet saith of them God heard a cry in the morning and a shooting at noone day And IEREMIE x Ier. 2. 25. When I said Keepe thy foot from being vnshod and thy throte from being athirst thou saidst desperately No for I loue strange gods and them will I follow Againe y Ier. 18. 12. They say desperately We wil go after our own thoughts and euery one do after the fancie of our own wicked heart And hither Their errour which hold it lawfull to bee present at Idolatrous seruice keeping a mans Conscience to himselfe And where such beare themselues bold vpon the example of Naaman the Syrian 2. King 5. 17 18 let
vertue of all goodnesse The Apostle noteth this also common to all good duties And c 2. Thess 3. 13 ye brethren be not wearie of well-doing Doing d Gal. 6. 9. well let vs not bee wearie for in the proper time we shall reape if we faint not Which is a notable reason taken from the end and reward due vnto it And the rather to perswade vs to this vertue the Apostle to the e Heb. 12. 2 3. Hebrewes biddeth vs to looke to the Captaine and perfiter of our faith IESVS who for the ioy set before him indured the Crosse despising shame and sitteth at the right hand of the Throne of God Consider therefore saith the Apostle him that indured such gaine-saying of sinfull men against him that you bee not wearie and faint in your soules The contrarie therefore is First To faint giue ouer and to be wearie of well-doing Cursed f Gal. 3. 10. is euerie one that continueth not in the things that are written in the Law to doe them Secondly To slide backe and fall away from which the Apostle doth carefully dehort vs Take g Heb. 3. 12. heed brethren lest there be at any time in any of you a wicked heart of vnbeliefe to depart away from the liuing God for as our Sauiour threateneth Hee h Luke 9. 62. which setteth his hand vnto the Plough and looketh backe is vnfit for the Kingdome of God Now wee must not thinke that this perfection here spoken of is required of all alike for euen among men it is iust i Luke 12. 48. to whom more is committed of him to require more The holinesse and perfection of the Angels farre exceeded the holinesse and perfection of Adam according as their nature was more excellent and perfect Adam k 1. Tim. 3. 6. also excelled Eue who as the weaker Vessell euen then when shee stood in her integritie was first assailed by the cunning and slight of Satan and both Adam and Eue if they had still continued in the state of Innocencie by time and experience of Gods goodnesse should haue beene better confirmed and growne more and more in heauenly Graces as our l Luke 2. 52. Sauiour did so in men growne and publike persons more is required then in children or priuate men The last thing is that as our minde soule and bodie Euery thing with so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excell and all the strength of them must bee carryed both in nature and action to the performance of all good duties so it must bee to euery one in his degree and place For a difference of duties must of necessitie bee holden the Commandements are some greater then other and in euery Commandement some duties to bee preferred before the rest For example the duties of the first Table are greater then the duties of the second which besides the expresse words of our Sauiour Christ calling it the m Mat. 22. 37. first the great Cōmandement may be shewed out of the Prophet first and then out of the Apostle who both make the breach of the first Table to bee the cause that men runne head-long into all offences against the second Vpon n Hosh 4. 12. the tops of the Mountaines they sacrifice and vpon the hils they offer burnt offerings vnder the Oke and Poplar and Oliue because the shaddow therof is good Therefore doe your daughters commit fornication and your daughters in Law goe a whoring And therefore o Rom. 1. 25 26 28 29. God gaue them vp to their owne hearts lust vnto vncleannesse to defile their owne bodies betweene themselues which turned the Truth of God into a Lye and worshipped the Creatures forsaking the Creator who is blessed for euer For this cause God gaue them vp to vile affections vnrighteousnesse fornication c. The duties of the first Table are greater then the second as they are in order before them And this is absolutely true comparing like degrees as morall duties of the one with morall duties of the other not ceremoniall of the first Table with the Morall of the second for in that case it is true which the p Hosh 6. 6. Prophet speaketh I am delighted with Mercie and not with Sacrifice So the chiefe middle and least duties of the first Table are to be compared with the like of the latter deedes with deedes words with words thoughts with thoughts not otherwise for if you cōpare Murder with the least abuse of the Name of God or Adulterie with the least breach of the Sabbath these are the greater sinnes For the measure and proportion to bee obserued in this difference First in the seruice of God our nature ought to bee more prone and apt vnto it our knowledge greater our iudgement riper our conscience tenderer our memorie fresher our desires and will earnester all things to bee done with a greater Affection Loue Approbation Cheerefulnesse Feare to offend Sinceritie Zeale Watchfulnesse and continuance both in Profession and Action In which regard to shew how all our Thoughts Desires and Affections should thus bee taken vp when we come to deale with God it is said Thou q Mat. 22. shalt loue the Lord with all thine heart and with all thy soule and with all thy strength As if this were proper to the Duties of the first Table which indeed doth but principally belong to them and is by proportion to bee carryed to the rest Therefore the glorie of God ought to be dearer vnto vs then the sauing of our owne soules As the examples of Moses and Paul doe teach vs r Exod. 32. 32. one desiring to be blotted out of the Booke of Life rather then that Gods great Name should be blasphemed amōg the Gentiles The ſ Rom. 9. 3. other for the glorifying of God in the sauing of his Brethren the Nation of the Iewes wishing to be anathema accursed from Christ But especially Christ himselfe as a most absolute and perfect example of all righteousnesse doth herein goe before vs when the houre being come wherein hee was for our sakes to drinke vp the full cup of the fierce wrath of his Father and his soule perplexed that he knew not which way to turne him yet hee more regardeth the glorifying of God then the sauing of himselfe from that houre Now t Ioh. 12. 27 28 is my soule troubled And What shall I say Father saue me from this houre but for that cause am I come vnto this houre Father glorifie thy Name And hereupon it is that in all our Prayers we are to set that in the first place as our Sauiour by the verie order of his heauenly Prayer teacheth so as if it could be imagined that wee had no need to aske for our selues which wee alwayes haue yet the onely zeale of his glorie ought continually to stirre vs vp vnto this dutie and that much more forcibly then all our owne necessities The
we were made framed to the perfectiō of it yet retayn some notions therof in this our corrupt estate Secondly The Image of this Righteousnesse being in manner quite defaced and done away by the Fall of Adam the same is by the mercifull prouidence of GOD for a more certaine direction of our wayes and to humble vs in seeing how short we come of the performance of it againe renewed and the summe of all compendiously abridged in ten Words Sentences or Commandements written z Exod. 34. 28. by the finger of GOD in two Tables Thirdly The same are expounded and handled more at large in the whole Volume of the Scripture where all this Doctrine is fully and absolutely taught Of both thse Lawes the Law of Nature and the written Law the Apostle speaketh Rom. 2. 14 15. For when the Gentiles which haue not a law doe by nature the things of the Law these hauing not a law are a law vnto themselues as those which declare the worke of the Law written in their heart their conscience bearing record vnto themselues and their thoughts accusing or excusing them c. For the vnderstanding of those ten Commandements and the better to discerne the large spread of Righteousnesse which they contayne take these few Rules that hold in euery one First They are vttered by a figuratiue speech of a part for the whole vnder one and that commonly the greatest comprehending not onely euery particular dutie whatsoeuer may fall into the life of man of the same nature with that which is there commanded or forbidden but the whole manner of performance that it bee with all the powers of ones minde soule and bodie which belonging to euery Commandement is once for all explayned in the definition I gaue of Righteousnesse Secondly Commanding one thing they forbid the contrarie forbidding one thing they command the contrarie Lastly this withall is to be remembred that all the things before spoken of in the definition I gaue Holinesse and Righteousnesse pertayne and haue their place in euery Commandement the corruption of nature and desire being as I thinke forbidden in euery one not alone in the tenth And that for these Reasons First From the nature of God that gaue the Law who being a a Iohn 4. 24. Spirit therfore piercing b Heb. 4. 12 13 into the most secret thoughts and intents of the heart euery Commandement of his not onely the ten Commandements layd together must needes bee c Rom. 7. 14. spirituall to binde the whole strength of nature and all the thoughts and desires which the Scripture is wont to call the spirit of our minde as before was noted Secondly Since it cannot bee denyed but that this is so in the duties of the first Table the same reason and proportion carrieth it to those of the second also Thirdly our Sauiour Christs interpretation of the seuenth Commandement is a sufficient warrant extending it to all kinde of Lust Math. 5. 28. As for the tenth it hath another sense as shall be seene when we come vnto it And that which Paul saith Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust I take vnder reformation of better iudgement to be meant not of the tenth Commandement onely but of the whole puritie that way which the Law of God thorowout requireth and that as well in the duties to God as to our brethren which the Apostle soundly gathereth to be commanded in the Law because the Law is spirituall Neither doth it follow because he saith Except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust that therefore he must needs point out the very words of one Commandement or because he saith many times that Commandement that therefore he meaneth a particular Commandement one of the tenne for the Law may as well be said to say Thou shalt not lust because in the generall doctrine thereof it forbiddeth all kind of lust as in the like case the same Apostle d Ephes 5. 14. writeth that God saith in the Scripture Arise thou that sleepest and Christ shall shine vnto thee Which notwithstanding are not the precize words of any one place of Scripture but the generall summe and doctrine of the Gospell The name also of Commandement comprehending the scope and substance of many Commandements you haue so vsed 1. Iohn 2. 7 8. And albeit Paul Rom. 13. 9. doe aptly truly render the meaning of the tenth Commandement by the same very words which heere he vseth that hindereth not but that in this place it may haue another sence the word seruing indifferently for e So is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken Luke 22. 15. Matth. 22. 17. and 1. Pet. 1. 12. for a longing and earnest desire coueting or for lusting and the diuersity of the Argument inforcing a diuers interpretation of these two places The Tenne Commandements which summarily conteine the whole doctrine of Righteousnesse whatsoeuer the Law or Prophets speake of our Sauiour Christ in his The doing whereof is tearmed Righteousnesse and hath two parts Pietio and Iustice infinite wisedome hath contriued into two The loue of God and of our brethren When vnto the Lawyer asking him which is the great Commandement in the Law he answereth f Math. 22. 37. Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy might This is the first and great Commandement and the second is like vnto it Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe on these two commandements hang the whole Law and the Prophets PAVL vseth the very termes of Pietie and Iustice Rom. 1. 18. For the wrath of God is manifest from heauen against all impiety and iniustice of men So he saith Tit. 2. 12. that the Grace of God manifested by the Gospell instructeth vs that wee should liue soberly and iustly and godly in this present world Where before Iustice and Piety which are the parts he putteth Sobriety or Soundnesse of minde as the forme that is to hold in both 1. Tim. 1 2. he deuideth it into Piety or Godlines and Honesty Sometimes in stead of Piety you shall finde the terme of Holinesse which is all one g Luke 1. 75. That being deliuered out of the hands of our enemies wee might serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse Put on h Ephes 4. 24. the new man which according to God is created in true righteousnesse and holinesse but i Acts 3. 14. yee haue denyed that holy and lust one HEROD k Marc. 6. 20. did reuerence IOHN knowing he was a iust and a holy man Yee l 1. Thess ● 10. are witnesses and God how holily and iustly and vnblameably wee were conuersant among you that beleeue Hee m Reuel 22. 11. that is iust let him become more iust hee that is holy let him become yet more holy According to this diuision of our Sauiour Christ wee commonly call these two The
first and the second Table as they were at the first deliuered of God to Moses The summe of the first Table is Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart or minde and with all thy soule and with all thy might And to this Table the foure first Commandements doe belong The summe of the second is Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe And to this Table the sixe last Commandements doe belong for all which our Sauiour Christ himselfe is our warrant who calleth these two The n Math. 22. 37. first and second Commandements The summe of the first Commandement is That wee Pietie is of the immediate duties to God whereof this is the whole that we haue God to be our God haue God to be our God So it is expressed in the Commandement it selfe Thou shalt haue no other gods before my face The first affirmatiue whereof is Thou shalt haue me to be thy God The contrary of this hauing of God to be our God is first that which the Psalmist o Psal 10 4. noteth The wicked are so proud they seeke not after God Against which p 2. Chro. 15. 13. Asa made a Law that if any would not seeke after God he should die Secondly Atheisme in denying God or his properties as Prouidence Wisedome Presence c. The foole q Psal 14. 1. hath said in his heart There is no God Yee haue said r Malach. 3. 14. It is in vaine to serue God c. Wee haue God to bee our God by cleauing to The parts are two one to cleaue vnto him him and worshipping him This Distribution Moses giueth Deut. 10. 20. Thou shalt feare IEHOVAH thy God and serue him Thou shalt cleaue vnto him and sweare by his Name Cleauing I call that straight and holy bond whereby we are tyed and glued as it were to God as the Apostle speaketh Å¿ 1. Cor. 6. 17. He that is glued to the Lord is one spirit Of this it is said t Iosh 23. 8. Stick fast vnto IEHOVAH your God as you haue done vnto this day He exhorted u Acts 11. 23. all that with purpose of heart they would cleaue to the Lord. The contrary wherof is that which the Prophet speaketh of x Ierom. 17. 5. Cursed is the man whose heart departeth from IEHOVAH Their y Esay 26. 13. heart is farre from mee If any man z Hebr. 10. 38. with-draw himselfe my soule shall haue no pleasure in him This cleauing to God groweth from a respect of that absolutenesse of all good things that are in him and hath these parts First to loue him for his goodnes desiring nothing Louing more then to be ioyned vnto him delighting to thinke and speake of him and to doe the things that are pleasing in his sight By which notes and marks it is easie for vs to examin our loue vnto him a Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt loue IEHOVAH thy God with all thy heart c. The contrary whereof is that hatred of God whereof we spake before Secondly to reuerence him for his Holinesse and the Reuerencing Maiesty of his presence before whome no vnseemely thing may come b Eccles 5. 1. God is in Heauen and thou art vpon the earth therefore let thy words be few And this as a bridle reyneth and keepeth vs backe from committing either open wickednesse or secret sinnes Who would not be ashamed to spue in the face of his Prince How much more should we blush to powre foorth our wickednes in the sight or presence of this King of Kings infinitely more glorious then all the Princes of the world Therefore doth the Holy Ghost aggrauate the sinne of the old world c Gen. 6. 11. That the earth was corrupted before God and of the Sodomites that d Gen. 13. 13. they were exceeding sinners before IEHOVAH that is without all reuerence daring in his presence and as it were hee looking on to commit all kind of filthinesse And the Wiseman e Prou. 5. 21. vseth this as a most effectuall Argument to draw men from the enticements of sin vnder that one of the strange woman comprehending all the rest For that the wayes of euery one are before the eyes of IEHOVAH For the other common are the exhortations in the Scripture f Gen. 17. 1. Walke before me and be vpright And g Exod. 20. 3. thou shalt haue none other gods before my face ENOCH h Gen. 5. 14. is also commended that he walked with God And the Prophet Ieremy i Ierem. 13. 23. notably inforceth this reason Can any man lye hid in darkenes and I not see him saith IEHOVAH Doe not I fill Heauen and earth The contrary wherof is prophanenes of heart k Hebr. 12. 16. Let there be no prophane person as ESAV c. Thirdly to feare him for his Power and Iustice not Fearing with a seruile feare which hath paine and torture in it and setteth the conscience as it were vpon a l Iohn 4. 18. Rack but with a filiall and childlike feare that is to say not so much for feare of punishment as for feare of offending so good and so gracious a Father Thou m Leuit. 19. 14 shalt not curse the Deafe neither put a stumbling blocke before the blinde but shalt feare thy God I am IEHOVAH Who n Ier. 10. 7. would not feare thee c. seeing Power resteth in thee Let o Heb. 12. 28. vs labour to please God with reuerence and feare for euen our God is a consuming fire If p 1. Pet. 1. 17. you call him Father which without respect of persons iudgeth euery one according to his worke passe your time of dwelling heere in feare If q Mal. 1. 6. I be a Father where is my feare Feare r Esay 8. 13. 14. not the feare of this people nor terrifie your selues IEHOVAH of Hoasts him sanctifie let him bee your feare and let him bee your terrour Where these two kindes of feare are plainly distinguished The contrarie whereof is contempt of God like to Pharaoh Who is Å¿ Exod. 5. 2. IEHOVAH c. To beleeue him for his Truth and Faithfulnesse to Beleeuing performe whatsoeuer hee speaketh as hee saith in the Psalmes t Ps 89. 34 35 I will not alter that which is proceeded out of my mouth nor falsifie my faith The lacke of this Grace bereaued those two worthy Saints of God Moses and Aaron of that great blessing which they so much desired to conduct Gods people into the Land of Promise Because n Numb 20. 12 yee beleeued mee not to sanctifie mee in the presence of the Children of Israel therefore yee shall not bring this Congregation into the Land which I haue giuen them The contrarie of it is doubtfulnesse concerning the Truth of Gods promises or iudgements whether present or to come I x Psal 116. 11. said
that all corrections ought to leuell at The bluenesse of the wound serueth to purge the euill and the stripes within the bowels of the belly Secondly The terrifying of others to commit the like offences which God in the execution of his Lawes hath a speciall eye vnto That q Deut. 13. 11. all Israel may heare and tremble Lastly concerning Magistrates Let it bee knowne that the vse of the Sword standeth also in lawfull and iust Warre in fighting the Lords Battailes as shee speaketh r 1. Sam. 25. 28. vnto DAVID For IEHOVAH will certainly make for my Lord a sure House if my Lord fight the Battailes of IEHOVAH and euill bee not found in thee all thy dayes The Ministers Dutie is to attend publike teaching From the Ministerie publike teaching to be diligent therein I ſ Esay 62. 6. haue set Watch-men vpon thy wals O Ierusalem which all the day and all the night shall not cease the t Rom. 12. 7. 8. teacher let him continue in his teaching the exhorter in his exhortation c. The u 1. Pet. 1. 2. Elders among you I exhort c. Feed the Flocks of God that dependeth vpon you Take x Acts 20. 28. heed to your selues and to all the Flocke wherein the Holy Ghost hath made you Bishops that you feede the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne bloud The contrarie whereof are First Idoll shepheards that cannot teach at all such as the Prophet complayneth of Their y Esay 56. 10. watch-men are all blinde they haue no knowledge they are dumbe dogges they cannot barke Secondly Negligent Preachers which as Esay there saith lye and sleepe and delight in sleeping Wherefore God telleth z Ezech. 3. 17 18. EZECHIEL Sonne of man I haue appointed thee a Watch-man to the House of Israel and thou shalt heare the Word out of my mouth that thou maist giue warning vnto them from me when I say vnto the wicked man Thou shalt certainly dye and thou doe not giue him warning nor speake to warne the wicked man of his euill way to keepe him aliue that wicked man shall dye by his owne iniquitie but his bloud will I require at thine hand The Dutie of those that haue any charge or gouernment From priuate authoritie Prouision of Food and Rayment is First Prouision of food and rayment whereof the a 1. Tim. 5. 8. Apostle saith If any prouide not for his owne and specially for those of his owne house he is worse then an Infidell For this doth SALOMON commend the vertuous woman Prou. 31. 15. Rising whilest it is yet night she giueth meate to her houshold and the ordinarie to her Maides And b Verse 21. againe She feareth not the Snow for her Family For all her Family is clothed with double clothes And Pro. 27. 27. he saith not onely Let the milke of the Goates be sufficient for thy food but further also for the food of thy Family and for the sustenance of thy Maides Secondly Familiarly to teach their Inferiours as the c Ephes 6. 4. Familiarly to teach their Inferiours Apostle exhorteth fathers to bring vp their children in instruction and information of the Lord for which Abraham d Gen. 18. 19. is highly commended of God I know saith hee that he will command his Sonnes and his Family after him to keepe the way of IEHOVAH in doing righteousnesse and iudgement Thirdly To goe before them in Prayer so did e Gen. 25. 20. and in Prayer to goe before them Isack pray vnto IEHOVAH ouer-against his Wife that is in her presence and together with her and for her because she was barren The Dutie of Parents more particularly is From both the Parents To apply their children to that they are fit for First To apply their children to that they are fit for f Pro. 22. 6. Instruct a childe after the manner of his way euen when he is verie old he will not depart from it ADAM g Gen. 4. 2. in the first beginning of the World practised this Lesson for hauing two sonnes CAIN and HABEL HABEL was a Shepheard and CAIN an Husbandman Secondly To prouide for them For h 2. Cor. 12. 14. Children ought and to prouide for them From the Father to name the Childe not to store vp for Parents but Parents for their Children Speciall to the Father is to name the Childe which authoritie Zacharie Father of Iohn Baptist tooke vpon him when the Mother of the friends i Luk. 1. 62 63. striuing about the name hee decided the Controuersie and called him Iohn Of the Mother another Dutie is more specially to bee From the Mother to nurse it obserued that she nurse the Childe Holy women haue alwayes reckoned this to belong vnto them k Gen. 21. 7. Sarah a great Princesse maketh no doubt but that hauing a Childe she was to giue it sucke Who would haue said to ABRAHAM SARAH shall certainly giue sucke for I haue borne a Sonne In like sort l 1. Sam. 1. 23. Anna is recorded to haue giuen suck to Samuel as was the common course then of religious and godly Matrones whereupon the m 1. Tim. 5. 10. Apostle requireth this in the first place as one of the most special good workes which hee would haue that woman to bee well reported for that should be associate into the number of Widdowes that she haue nursed her Children From Masters due respect of their Seruants trauailes The Dutie of Masters is to haue a due respect of their Seruants trauailes whereof there is a speciall Law n Deut. 15. 12 13 14. When thou sendest out free from thee in the seuenth yeere thy brother an Hebrew that hath serued thee six yeeres thou shalt not let him goe away emptie but shalt giue him a liberall From Husbands cherishing of their Wiues with all entyre affection reward of thy Sheepe and of thy Corne and of thy Wine c. The Dutie of Husbands is that they cherish their Wiues with all entyre affection Ye o Eph. 5. 25. 29. Husbands loue your Wiues euē as Christ hath loued the Church for no man at any time hath hated his own flesh but nourisheth it cherisheth it The Dutie of Equals one vnto another is Secondly it is of equals one vnto another in louing honouring and First To loue and to honor each other Be p Rom. 12. 10. affectioned to loue one another with brotherly loue In giuing honour go one before another submitting q Ephes 5. 21. your selues one vnto another in the feare of GOD. Wherefore wee are to testifie that our loue and respect to others by all holy tokens and outward signes of salutation or otherwise Greet r 1. Pet. 5. 14. ye one another with the Kisse of loue Salute ſ Rom. 16. 16. one another with an holy Kisse The Churches of Christ salute you
for it is neere my house and I will giue thee a better Vineyard then it or if it seeme better in thine eyes I will giue theemony to the full value of it He that is so effected will reioyce in anothers good Reioycing in anothers good as in our own which is the top and perfection of loue as in his owne Rom. 12. 15. Reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe which is the top and perfection of loue And heereupon I take it by conference of both the Euangelists MATTHEW and MARKE that our Sauiour Mat. 19. 19. noteth out the tenth Commandement by these words Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Which else-where is made the whole summe of all the second Table The contrary hereof is first Selfe-loue In q 2. Tim. 3. 2. the latter dayes men shall be louers of themselues Secondly Enuie maligning the good things of another condemned r 1. Tim. 6. 4. He is puffed vp and knoweth nothing but doteth about questions and strife of words whereof commeth Enuie Strife Raylings euill Surmises c. 1. Tim. 6. and the first of ſ 1. Pet. 2. 1. Wherefore laying aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and enuie and all euill speaking Peter 2. Thirdly Reioycing at his hurt The Psalmist complayneth of this Psalme 70. 34. Let them be turned backward and confounded that delight in my hurt let them goe backward for a reward of their shame that say There there And t Obad. v. 12. OBADIAH reprehendeth the Edomites for it Thou shouldest not haue beene glad of the day of thy Brother meaning his affliction the day when hee was made a stranger neither shouldest thou haue reioyced at the Iewes what day they perished This Commandement hath commonly another sence of forbidding onely the first lusts and motions of sinne but the reasons to confirme the Interpretation which I haue giuen I take it vnder reformation are plaine and pregnant which notwithstanding I offer without preiudice of other mens opinions submitting my selfe and them to those that can better iudge First The plaine euidence of the words Thou shalt not couet thy Neighbours house which is to be inforced by the conference of the rest of the Commandements Honour thy father and thy mother Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not steale thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not beare false witnesse hauing all of them a common and a familiar vnderstanding such as euery man at the first hearing doth conceiue This therefore must haue the like And it is a thing in this point worthie to be obserued which the Talmudists cite so oft The u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law they meane the Scripture speaketh according to common vse Now let any man indued onely with reason and vnderstanding be asked what this should meane Thou shalt not couet thy Neighbours house he will certainly answere We must be content with our owne Secondly The word that Moses hath in x Deut. 5. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou shalt not long after thy Neighbours house c. Deuteronomie signifieth To long after a thing and To haue ones teeth water at it for so you shall finde it vsed Mach. 7. 1. and in many other places Thirdly The particular instances Thy Neighbours House Wife Man seruant Maide Oxe Asse or any thing that is his declare manifestly that goods and possessions are the proper subiect of this Commandement for which cause Exodus 20. 17. the Wife of our Neighbour his most y Pro. 19. 14. precious possession commeth not in the first place but is set in the middest of other possessions that by the very marshalling of the words it might appeare that this Commandement reacheth not to the desiring of ones Wife for filthinesse and vncleannesse sake Fourthly The order of the Commandements going by degrees from the greater to the lesse and so continually falling till you come to this sinne of couering which is the first step and beginning of all wrong and deceit and yet differeth in nature from them both Fiftly Adde hereunto that which I hold as a certayne ground and is prooued before at large that the corruption both of nature and desire is forbidden in euery one so as this cannot be restrayned to a seuerall degree of sin but a differing and distinct kinde of sinne from those that went before Sixtly and lastly our Sauiour Christ the best Interpreter of the Law doth so expound it Marke 10. 9. when reckoning vp all the Commandements of the second Table in stead of Thou shalt not couet he saith Thou shalt not depriue or bereaue a man of ought hee hath that is couet or desire to haue any thing that is his though it be neither by wrong nor fraude which two are forbidden in the words next before but rest in that which God hath giuen thee which in effect is to loue our Neighbour as our selfe as z Mat. 19. 19. Matthew hath it For that this must needs be the sence of that place Marke 10. 19. I gather first because no doubt our Sauiours purpose was to reckon vp al the Commandements without leauing out any one Secondly Else in so few words hee should make a superfluous repetition and not onely so but also speake darkly and obscurely that which was more cleerely taught before for Thou a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shalt not bereaue cannot bee brought to explaine Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse it being a great deale more questionable what is meant by that word then by the other two CHAP. XV. Of the Couenant of Workes THE whole Doctrine of Righteousnesse in With the Creatures who are thus to doe his will it hath pleased God to make a Couenant which is called the Couenant of Workes A Couenant of life or blessednes to the doers of death or of a curse vnto transgressours the seuerall parts and branches of it hath hitherto beene declared which is indeed the perfect rule directorie of all duties whatsoeuer which either we owe to God or to our brethrē for his sake Now if a man shall aske but what good commeth to vs by the keeping of these Commandements This if there were no more is aboundantly sufficient that God is thereby glorified So as if it were possible which notwithstanding cannot be that doing his will we should perish euerlastingly yet ought wee as cherefully and with as readie mindes to obey as if wee were to gaine Heauen by it But see the exceeding bountie and goodnesse of God that will not haue vs serue him for nought He is pleased for the perfect keeping of his Law and the Righteousnesse by him inioyned not onely to promise a recompence of reward but to contract and couenant with vs and vnder certaine conditions as it were to binde himselfe vnto it which is the same that we call the Law or Couenant of workes the first Couenant that euer God made with his Creatures
Fruits of the Earth by the Caterpiller the g 40. Oliue Tree to cast her Oliues In goods the h 17. basket the Dough the i 18. increase of the Kine and the flocke of the Sheepe to be accursed that which k 29 33. one hath to bee taken from him by Rapine and Fraud his l 31. Oxe to be slayne before his eyes and he not eate of it his Asse taken away and come no more to him his Sheepe to bee giuen to his Enemies and none to keepe him from this violence And thus for m 48. outward sustenance to be brought to extreme penurie and want of all things that n 44. hee must bee driuen to borrow and not able to lend In estate and honour the o 43. Stranger amongst them to climbe aloft high high and they to come downe lowe lowe the p 44. Stranger to bee the head and they the tayle In ones name fame and estimation to be a q 37. taunt a by-word and a Prouer be vnto all people and to get r 20. shame and rebuke in whatsoeuer they set their hand vnto Particularly of this kind are First Ignorance losing all that excellency of Wisedome Ignorance Knowledge and vnderstanding that was in Adam and in stead thereof a putting on a contrarie habit of blindnesse and errour a manifest fruit of sinne and so noted Deut. 28. 28. Secondly Shame comming from that nakednesse Shame whereby wee are stripped of all the ornaments of our Glorie for that by sinne shame entred into the World it is plaine in that ſ Gen. 2. 25. compared with Gen. 37. before Adam and his Wife were naked and yet not ashamed Thirdly All kinde of paine weaknesse and infirmitie the t Gen. 3. 19. woman in sorrow to conceiue and beare the man u Gen. 3. 19. Infirmitie Sicknesse in the sweat of his browes to eate his bread Againe x Deut. 28. 1 22 27 35. hunger thirst wearinesse sores itches sicknesse c. And that these and such like are the fruits of sinne appeareth also by the warning our Sauiour gaue to him that hee had healed of his sicknesse Iohn 5. Iehoua shall make the pestilence cleane vnto thee vntill be hath consumed thee Iehoua shall smite thee w●●h a Consumption and with the Feuer and with a hot burning Ague and with a feruent heate Iehoua shall smite thee with the Botch of Egypt and with the Eme●ods and with the Scabs and with the Itch. Iehoua shall smite thee in the knees and in the thighes with a sore Botch that thou canst not be healed euen from the sole of thy foot vnto the top of thy head and in the end Death which is the separation of soule and bodie 14. Behold thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Therefore Mat. 9. 2. when hee was to heale the man sicke of the palsie hee said vnto him Be of good comfort sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Fourthly Death the separation of the soule and bodie So the Apostle telleth vs Rom. 5. 12. Through death sinne came into the World which bodily death is a part of that death threatned at the first Gen. 2. 17. What day thou eatest of it thou shalt dye And this is as it were the last and vttermost period of all our former miseries in which one they all are comprehended for in death our shame weaknesse and dishonour is most apparant as the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 15. 42 43. that our bodie is sowne that is buried and committed to the ground in corruption in dishonour and in weakenesse And of this nature is a y 1. Co 15 51 52. 1. Thes 4. 15 16. Yet in all this some reliques of former dignitie doe remaine namely in the minde miserable change like to death which shall befall them that are aliue in the latter Day But in all this God hath beene pleased to vse a temper leauing still some reliques of our dignitie and first condition That part indeed of his image which standeth in righteousnesse and true holinesse is quite and cleane abolished that not so much as any steps or fragments doe remayne the z Ephes 2. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse that we are borne dead in sinne but the Image of GOD standeth also in the excellencie of man aboue other Creatures of which dignitie or excellencie but not of holinesse or Innocencie some reliques wee carrie yet about vs And they are first in the minde or bodie alone and by themselues considered then in the whole man In the minde First Common principles of good and euill which Common principles of good and euil sparkes of that light of nature the a Rom. 1. 18. Apostle calleth Truth that is some seed of the eternall Truth both for knowledge of God and of our duties to our brethren as that there is one God and that the same God is to bee serued that hee rewardeth those that keepe his Law and punisheth the transgressors that men must reuerence their Superiours and not harme their Neighbours nor doe iniurie one vnto another And from this light that euerie one carryeth about him and is borne and bred together with him commeth the Law of nature that nature which now wee haue since the fall of Adam therefore Iohn 1. 9. it is said that euery man comming into the World is lightened therewithall And this serueth notably for the collection and gathering of his Church out of the wicked World for if all common honestie all seedes of comelinesse and vertue were vtterly extinguished and put out how could either the Church bee gathered at all or preserued or kept when it is once gathered Secondly A conscience when we doe amisse whereof some seedes of conscience naturally some seedes are left in euerie one the better to represse the vnbrideled course of our affections howsoeuer some struggle to shake them off Rom. 2. 15. their conscience accusing or excusing Now this light of Nature and seedes of conscience which notwithstanding are wholy sinfull left in man are good and holy things in themselues and of their owne nature but in vs vtterly corrupt and naught All whose parts and powers are wholy tainted and defiled with sinne that truly the a Titus 1. 15. Apostle saith Both our minde and conscience is defiled Therefore they serue not at all to iustifie vs as though and doe but serue partly to keepe men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable by our owne Wisedome Reason Will Desire or Affections wee were able to doe or to indeuour that that is good but partly to keepe men from breaking out without shame vnto an ouer-bold and audacious defiance of all godlinesse and honestie partly to make vs inexcusable in the sight of God Rom. 1. 20. For first those seedes of Truth and Light which wee haue of God are so farre
required to the receiuing of them both to vnderstand what we doe through a true knowledge of our owne wretchednesse and of the Couenant of Grace in Christ to feele the fruit and the comfort which they bring and to desire and affect to be made partakers of it Great reuerence and attention in the receiuing of them by comparing the Signes and Spirituall things together Great thankefulnesse after to God for his mercies offered vnto vs in them All which being necessarie in the hearing of the Word is by so much the more necessarie here as God by them doth offer a greater grace and commeth more neere vnto vs wherefore the l 1. Co. 11. 28 29 Apostle saith Let a man examine himselfe and so eate of this Bread and drinke of this Cup for he that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh condemnation to himselfe not making a difference of the Lords Body Fiftly Those that come vnto them not onely to the Lords Table but if they be of riper yeeres to the Sacrament of Baptisme are publikely to testifie their Faith and Repentance So we reade Mat. 3. 5. Then came forth to him Ierusalem and all Iudea and all the Countrie round about Iorden and were baptized of him in Iorden after they had confessed their sinnes And Acts 8. 36 37. As they went by the way they came to a certaine water and the EVNVCH said Lo here is water what hindereth that I should not bee baptized And PHILIP said If thou beleeuest with thy whole heart thou mayst Then hee answered I beleeue that Iesus Christ is that Sonne of God Then hee baptized him And this is the generall rule giuen concerning the Passeouer which was as the Supper of the Lord with vs. If m Exod. 12. 48. any Stranger soiourne among you that would celebrate the Passeouer of IEHOVAH let euerie Male of them be circumcised whereby he may testifie his consent in the same Faith and Religion with you and so let him come to celebrate it None vncircumcised shall eate thereof Sacraments differ from Sacrifices besides other differences maynly in nature for First Sacrifices were giuen offered and presented vnto God Sacraments are taken and receiued of God by the hand of the Ministers of his Word Secondly Sacrifices were Signes and Figures of good things n Heb. 10. 1. to come Thirdly Sacraments are Signes and Remembrances of good things alreadie come The next head is a holy Ministerie which Christ hath It followeth to speake of Ministeries and Graces Ministeries are publike Functions in the Church giuen to his Church o Ephes 4. 12. for the perfecting of his Saints for the building vp of his body for this power is deriued from Christ as from the Head and Lord of the Prophets as we reade Mat. 23. 34. Therefore behold I Christ p Luke 11. 49. the Wisdome of God as Luke hath it send vnto you Prophets and Wisemen Ephes 4. 11. Hee therefore himselfe Christ gaue some to be Apostles c. Mat. 16. 19. I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the Kingdome of Heauen And from him haue all the Ministers euery one since the World was fetched their authoritie By his Spirit it was that they spake as wee heard before out of q 1. Pet. 1. 11. Peter Wherefore Reuel 22. 6. hee is called The Lord God of the holy Prophets as may appeare if you compare that place with Reuel 1. 1● The difference betweene his Ministerie and theirs standeth in these two things First That hee their Head and Lord executed all the parts of his Ministerie in another sort and with greater authoritie and power then any Minister before or after him Mat. 7. 28 29. and Marke 1. 22. They were astonied at his teaching for he taught them as one that had authority and not as the Scribes Secondly The Prophets and the Ministers whom hee sent spake from him and in his Name But hee speaketh from himselfe and in his owne name r Mat. 5. 2● 28 32 34 39. I say vnto you Of these Ministeries many things might be spoken full Specially for preaching of great varietie and of deepe and difficult questions concerning their Calling Election Ordination The keyes of the Church committed into their hands Their power of binding and loosing and the whole Order and Gouernment of Gods House But I will leaue them all and hold me onely to that of Preaching and Administring of the Sacraments Preaching therefore is the worke of the Ministerie and of those whom God hath lawfully called to execute that publike Function in the Church for ſ Rom. 10. 15. How can they preach except they be sent So that the handling of the Word by any other that hath no calling for it how well soeuer hee handle the same and how truely soeuer hee expound it is not that preaching which Christ hath ordayned to bring men vnto saluation by Not that it is vnlawfull for priuate men to deale with the holy Scriptures and to open and expound the same so euery one keepe him within the bounds and lists of his Calling and looke what is fit for him according to the gifts and graces he hath receiued but that is of the Master in his Family and within his priuate walls This which we speake of is publike in the Congregation and in the Church of God The dutie of Preaching carryeth with it and hath as which includeth the dutie of offering the Churches Prayers it were inclosed in the nature and bowels thereof another dutie of offering the Churches Prayers which can neuer be separated from the dutie of Teaching Samuel ioyneth them together 1. Sam. 12. 23. Moreouer touching me God forbid that I should sinne against IEHOVAH in ceasing to pray for you yea I will instruct you in the good and right way And the whole Colledge of the Apostles Acts 6. 4. But we will alwayes continue in Prayer and in ministration of the Word Publike Prayer is for the Minister to offer vnto God the Prayers and Supplications of the Church that as in Preaching hee is the Mouth of God vnto his people so in Prayer hee is the peoples mouth vnto God for the Church or Congregation is the place of publike Prayer and if one list to doe it by himselfe hee hath his house to pray in but in the Church all are to attend the Minister which is in CHRISTS place vnto them And that which he one man doth offer well appeareth to be the Prayers of the Church by the peoples giuing of consent to that hee prayeth and saying Amen vnto it which appeareth to haue beene the laudable vse of the old Church Nehem. 8. 7. Where EZRA blessing IEHOVAH the great God all the people answered Amen Amen with lifting vp their hands and stooped and bowed downe themselues to IEHOVAH with their faces to the ground-ward The Primitiue Church in the Apostles time did retayne the same as appeareth 1. Cor. 14. 14 15 16 17. in that
the first grace of God which they call Free-will and that God may be prouoked by our merites to giue vs the second Grace and to make Man a worker together with God in that great worke of our new Birth which the Scripture in expresse termes appropriateth vnto God calling it his owne Workmanship and a Creation Eph. 2. 10. to exclude man and whatsoeuer is of and in man that the whole Doctrine of Diuinitie doth directly ayme and shoot at and whereunto the parts are all to be referred as to their last and furthest end for albeit the seuerall Doctrines haue their seuerall and proper vses the Law to humble vs the Gospell to giue vs comfort in the Sauing Health that through Faith is reached forth vnto vs Preaching to beget Faith the Sacraments to strengthen it Discipline to retaine in the obedience thereof and so in the rest yee the last and vttermost the most shining and glorious end whereunto not one but 〈…〉 y part and not the parts onely but the whole body and frame of all tendeth is this of glorifying God Which will appeare most plainely if wee examine all this Doctrine point by point and goe it throughout in order as it lyeth As 1. The whole Treatise of the Godhead both of his Nature and Persons wherein hee shineth so glorious that the glorie of GOD is often vsed in the Scriptures for his Person and Presence So b Exod. 33. 18. Moses beseecheth him to cause his glorie to passe before him And in c Ezech. 2. 22. Ezechiel the blessed glorie of IEHOVA is said in stead of his glorious and blessed presence 2. His Eternall Councels whether of sauing those he chuseth or destroying those whom he reiecteth whereof the Wise man d Pro. 16. 4. teacheth that he made all for himselfe that is to the prayse of his glorie As the Apostle handling the same Argument doth expound it Eph. 1. 6. 3. The Creation which if Men were as dumbe as Stones would of it selfe sufficiently proclayme the glorie of the Creator And yet he that will see it so set forth as men may learne to admire it let him read the 19. Psalme The Heauens declare the glorie of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy-worke 4. His Workes whereof the e Psal 113. 4 6 7. Prophet cryeth out that he is exalted aboue the Earth yea aboue the Heauens themselues in the glorie of the same Dwelling most high but yet looking most low both in Heauen and in Earth raysing the poore out of the dust the needie out of the dunghill c. as followeth in that Psalme 5. The honor due vnto him from all his reasonable Creatures in Heauen vpon the Earth whose f Matth. 6. 10. part it is to do his will and to performe whatsoeuer he commandeth 6. The Couenant of Works whereby in his Iustice he rewardeth the thorough perfect obedience of Christ his Sonne and of the holy Angels and punisheth all transgression and disobedience as in the Angels that fell and in reprobate and wicked men 7. The Couenant of Grace which the g Ps 19. 8 9 11. Prophet calleth The Restorer of the Soule the Gladder of the Heart the Enlightner of the Eyes more to be desired then Gold yea then much fine Gold sweeter then the Honey and the Honey-Combe God hauing h Rom. 11. 32. shut all that is to say all Men and whatsoeuer is of Man vnder sinne that he might haue mercy vpon all whom hee meaneth for to saue This is it which teacheth i 1. Cor. 1. 31. Christ to be made vnto vs wisdome from God and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that as it is written He that glorieth let him glorie in the Lord Because in him as the same Apostle sheweth k 2. Cor. 1. 20. All the promises of God are yea and Amen vnto Gods glorie Whereupon Iohn l Reuel 14. 6. in the Reuelation teacheth That this is the true voice of the euerlasting Gospell Feare God and giue glorie vnto him 8. The collection and gathering of his Church wherein as m Psal 29. 9. Dauid saith he vttereth all his glory Some footsteps whereof were to be seene in the peculiar choice First of a Family in Abraham Isack Iacob and the twelue Patriarkes then of a whole Nation of the Iewes from the rest of the people of the World Therefore doth the Psalmist say n Psal 76. 2. In Iewry is God famous and his Name is great in Israel But the full accomplishment of this his glory whereof the other was but a light precursion is vpon the breaking downe of the partition wall betweene the Iewes and Gentiles and reconciling them in one body vnto himselfe In which sence the Apostle o Ephes 3. 10. affirmeth that euen to the Angels themselues to principalities and powers is made knowne through the Church the diuers and manifold wisdome of God And the p Psal 102. 16. Psalmist long before had prophesied that when Iehoua did build vp Sion by the comming of his Sonne the calling of the Gentiles and the full repayring of his Church vniuersall then should he be seene in his glory 9. Sanctification of life and the obedience of his Saints wherein q 1. Cor. 10. 31. Whatsoeuer wee doe wee doe all to the glory of God 10. The saluation it selfe of Gods Elect standing in the participation of his glory As the r Rom. 3. 23. 13. Apostle noteth when he saith All haue sinned and come short of the glory of God that is of eternall life which we are to seeke and labour for not so much for our owne good and happinesse as for his glory from all which we gather a rule to examine and iudge of all Doctrines That those are euer soundest which giue to God the greatest glory and contrariwise whatsoeuer sootheth vp the proud spirit of man or darkneth the glory of the liuing God that if there were no more is cause enough to make vs to reiect it This our Sauiour teacheth Ioh. 7. 18. He that seeketh the glory of him that sent him he is true and there is no vnrighteousnesse in him making it the certaine badge of all true and heauenly Doctrine if it tend to glorifie God As by the same argument Paul auoucheth his Doctrine to bee such that an Angell from Heauen preaching otherwise were to be held accursed for doe I now saith hee perswade men or God tendeth my ſ Gal. 1. 8 9 10. preaching to set vp man or to pull downe the pride of all flesh that God alone may be exalted Two parts we make of all this holy Doctrine one properly Whereof there be two parts One that concerneth God the other concerning Imanuel God with vs. concerning God the Creatour the other concerning Christ the Redeemer the true Emanuel God with vs. For so our Sauiour in that which wee call the Lords Prayer doth deuide it speaking in the three former Petitions
first of the Nature Persons and properties of the Godhead then of his soueraigntie and command together with the duty of Allegiance which wee owe vnto him which if men were able to performe as the Law of their Creation not enioyneth onely but inabled them vnto and as the Angels doe in Heauen they neede goe no farther but should be blessed in the doing of it But because that is a path which no foot of man can tread he propoundeth in the other three to miserable man fallen now away the blessed Sonne of God that peerelesse Pearle and inestimable Treasure of the World Iesus Christ the righteous who hath gone the tracke for vs and regeneration righteousnesse and sanctification through him more briefly Iohn 17. 3. hee noteth the perfect distribution of Diuinity To know thee the only true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ These two parts lacking apt names to expresse them you may perhaps till we light vpon some better not altogether vnfitly call Theologie and Christianitie for so Theologie doth in his proper and naturall signification sound a Speech of or concerning God The name of Christianity taking it for the Doctrine of Christianitie as is vsuall in words of art may aptly bee deduced from diuers t Act. 13. 26. and 26. 18. 1. Pet. 4. 16. places of holy Writ and is the same in sense which the u Col. 3. 16. Apostle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of Christ. But till these termes by custome and vse bee worne and made familiar and our eares better acquainted with them I thinke it not amisse to forbeare the names let the thing be vnderstood To define God perfectly as that great and Christian God is Iehouah three persons Iehouah which is Being or perfection it self x Ramus in his Theology Logician said wee had neede of Gods owne Logicke whose nature knowne onely to himselfe infinitely exceedeth all thought and apprehension that can possibly bee in any creature wherefore to keepe vs within the limits of sobriety not taking vpon vs to define that wee know not which were folly and madnesse much lesse attempting it in the God-head which were extreme vngodlinesse we must remember the answere that God made vnto Moses desiring to see the Maiestie of his presence that he should see his hinder y Exod. 33. 23. parts but his face could not be seene There is then in God a forepart and a face there is a hinder part and backe By his face that is his very Maiestie and Essence no man or Angell is able to define GOD but by those steps and markes of his glory whereby he hath manifested himselfe in his Word and Works as it were by his hinder and backe parts we may in some sort describe him which what they are appeare in the next Chapter when passing by Moses whom he set in the hollow of a Rocke and couered with his hand till he were gone by he cryed z Exod. 34. 6. IEHOVAH IEHOVAH the mighty God mercifull and gracious long suffering and full of kindnesse and truth preseruing kindnesse for thousands forgiuing iniquity and rebellion and sinne by no meanes freeing the guiltie visiting the iniquity of fathers vpon children and vpon childrens children to the third and fourth Generation All which and whatsoeuer notes of his glory else scattered here and there in the whole Volume of the Scriptures or shining euery-where in the large Volume of the Heauens are many times comprehended in one onely word as Iah Iehouah or Ehieh that is to say I am as if you would say Being or perfection it selfe For these three comming from the same a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 root and being in effect but one are that essentiall and proper name of God whereby he calleth himselfe when he would paint out men the excellency of his Nature and distinguish it from all other things that are in Heauen or vpon the earth or vnder the earth So Exod. 3. 13 14 15. vnto Moses asking him When I shall say vnto them The God of your fathers hath sent me vnto you and they say to me What is his name what shall I say to them IEHOVAH answered MOSES EHIEH or I am for I am And he said Thus shalt thou say to the Children of Israel EHIEH that is I am hath sent me vnto you Againe God said to MOSES Thus shalt thou say vnto the Children of Israel IEHOVAH the God of your fathers the God of ABRAHAM the God of ISACK and the God of IACOB hath sent me vnto you This is my Name for euer and this is my Memoriall vnto all Ages Of the other we reade Psal 68. 5. Exalt him for his Name IAH It is most certaine that b Plato in his Dialogue entituled Cratylus the name of a thing if it be rightly giuen serueth to set out the true nature property of the thing wherein consisted a great part of that wisedome which was in Adam who c Gen. 2. 19. gaue apt and fit names to all the Beasts of the Field and to all the Fowles of the Ayre according to their quality and condition much more is the same to be thought of this Name which the most wise God taketh to him and is neuer giuen to any Creature Man nor Angell to Temple Sanctuary nor any holy place else not so much as in a Sacramentall signification if the places seeming to serue for that purpose be rightly skanned These words therefore doe truly and perfectly comprehend that backe part of his or d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1. 19. whatsoeeuer may be knowne of God so farre as our slender capacity is able to reach For first hereby appeareth that all that is is in him subsistence life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse and whatsoeuer else all proper to him all his and commeth from him all essentiall vnto him and of his nature all infinite eternall and vnchangeable Or to speake more plaine in that he is Being first he must needs haue in himselfe the very life soule and perfection of all things that be subsistence life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse and whatsoeuer else Secondly all this hee hath infinitely for what can bee imagined where Being should be excluded Thirdly nothing is in him but essentiall and of his nature for all is his Being Fourthly how can being it selfe otherwise be then of and from it selfe Fiftly Being can neuer leaue to bee nor haue beginning of his Being and therefore is eternall Lastly it is not possible that any thing should bee whom Being doth not make to bee In briefe God is being life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse essentially infinitely eternally causally to himselfe and others And so doth the Apostle at once expound all those names when hee saith e Rom. 11. 36. For of him and by him and to him are all things But this needeth some larger explication Therefore it shall not bee amisse more particularly to deduce these things and