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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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Jerem. 45.4 5. and all his creatures Behold that which I have built will I destroy and that which I have planted will I pluck up even this whole land and seekest thou great things for thy selfe seek them not 9. That we should referre the use of all things to the glory of God since that wee have received all good things from him Rom. 11.36 Of him and through him and for him are all things 10. That seeing the works of God were therefore created and placed before our eyes even for us to behold them we do not idly but earnestly and as much as every mans ability occasion and vocation permitteth him contemplate and consider them and learning out of them the wisdome power and goodnesse of the Artificer celebrate it both in this life Acts 17.26 27. and in the world to come He hath made of one bloud all mankind to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath assigned the times which were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation that they should seek the Lord if so be they might have groped after him and found him though doubtlesse he be not far off from every one of us OF ANGELS AMongst things created by God the chiefe and principall are those natures which are indued with reason Angels and men For in these hee imprinted the marks and image of his divinity and would have all other things to be the matter of his praise but of these he would be known and praised and unto them was his will to impart and communicate his blessednesse and joy The Questions concerning Angels are two 1. What description is set down in the Scripture of good Angels 2. What description is delivered of bad Angels 1. What good Angels are ANgels both good and bad as holy Scripture records are spirits 1. Angels spirits or incorporeall substances Luke 24.39 Coloss 1.16 Heb. 1.14 1 King 22.21 The Angels themselves are not seen but the bodies or shapes which they take by which name here a spirituall person is understood that is a substance incorporeall invisible individuall living understanding incommunicable not sustained in another neither part of another as A spirit hath not flesh and bones All which are in heaven and in earth things visible and invisible They are all ministring spirits There came forth a spirit and stood before the Lord. That therefore both in times past there appeared oftentimes good Angels when as the gathering and establishing of the Church the doctrine of God being not as yet plainly delivered and the prophecies not fulfilled needed more extraordinary and miraculous revelations then now and now adayes also not seldome appear bad Angels this 1. doth not prove their nature to be visible or corporeall For those visible shapes or bodies which may be seen or felt are divers substances from the incorporeall essence of spirits being formed either of nothing or of some matter and carried and moved by a spirit for a time for the working and performing of certain actions For both they put them off and lay them away again and also they take forms of divers sorts and kinds as The serpent by whom the Divell communed with Eve Mens bodies Gen. 3.1 18.4 Exod. 3.2 2 King 2.11 6.17 The errour of the Sadducees Acts 23.8 Act. 7.53 whose feet Abraham washed A flame in the bush appearing to Moses A pillar of cloud and fire in the desart Horses and chariots of fire And further this very thing refuteth the opinion of the Sadducees Who said that there was neither Angel nor spirit but that good Angels are cogitations and motions raised by God in men or happy events proceeding from God and bad Angels evill and wandring affections or lusts or purposes and devices which come of the corruption of nature For except they were living substances and forcible in working they would not assume carry and move bodies and visible shapes Moreover the Scripture attributeth many things to them every where which agree not but to natures subsisting by themselves living and understanding for the good Angels were those ministers Gal. 3.19 Mat. 25.31 24.26 18.10 Luke 2 10. 15.10 1 Pet. 1.12 Mat. 22.30 Heb. 1.4 Psal 34.7 John 8.44 Job 1.6 Mat. 8.28 31. 25.41 by whom the Law was delivered in mount Sinai They shall come with Christ when he shall judge the quick and the dead They know not the day of judgment They alwayes behold the face of the Father which is in heaven They rejoyce for the salvation of men The elect shall be like unto them Christ is made more excellent then the Angels They defend the elect But the evill Angels did not abide in the truth They appear amongst the children of God They invade and possesse the bodies of men and beasts They shall be punished with everlasting torments Angels are also finite that is of a limited essence or nature and endued with a certain measure of strength and wisdom For although spirits are not circumscribed in a certain compasse of place 2. Angels finite both in nature and in properties as bodies yet their substance is neither infinitely extended neither in more places then one at the same time neither is able in wisdome or power or other properties to match and equall the immensenesse of the Creatour For they are said to go from one place to another and to be absent from one place when they are in another as Luke 1. Act. 10. 12. Dan. 10. 3. They were created Psalme 148. Coloss 1.16 They were created by God of nothing in the very beginning of the world Praise yee him all yee his Angels praise him all his army For hee commanded and they were created By him were all things created which are in heaven and which are in earth things visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers c. Moses made mention of the Angels in general though not in particular Job 2.6 38.7 Wherefore albeit by Moses there is no mention made in the story of the creation severally of Angels as who applying himself to the common capacity of men especially recounteth the visible works of God yet when as hee saith that heaven earth and all the host of them was created he implyeth also Angels which both are these very heavenly hosts and ministers of God and are often mentioned among them by Moses himself How the Angels are called the children of God And whereas they are called The children of God it is not to be understood of any co-eternity and propagation of their substance out of God but of their creation and conformity with God and of the mutuall love between God and them as in like sort also may be said of men 4. They were created in holinesse They were created all good and holy that is in their creation they were enriched with strength wisdome liberty of will holinesse and righteousnesse whereby they might
workes of both creations Whatsoever things the Father doth the same things doth the Son also The Father sheweth him all things whatsoever hee himselfe doth Therefore not only the workes of the second creation but also of the first creation preservation and administration of the world In the same place it is said As the Father quickneth so the Son quickneth whom he will But the Father was from the very beginning the giver of corporall and spirituall life By him were all things created which are in heaven and which are on earth things visible and invisible whether they be thrones Co● 1.16 17. or dominions or principalities or powers all things were created by him and for him And he is before all things and in him all things consist Thus far of the first creation that which followeth speaketh of the second creation Repl. 1. All these speake of the instauration of the Church Ans No Because that comprehendeth also the Angels Repl. 2. The Angels also were restored by Christ and joyned to their head Ans But the new creation is called a restoring from sinnes and death to righteousnesse and life this agreeth not to the Angels Repl. 3. By whom also hee made the worlds Heb. 1.2 The worlds that is the new Church Ans 1. God made the old also by him because it is one Church having one head and foundation 2. The Greek word ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is used in that place signifieth in Scripture the world not the Church And further when it is there added Bearing up all things by his mighty word those words speake of the preservation not onely of the Church but of all things And moreover hee rendreth a cause why hee is the heire not onely of the Church but of all creatures namely because he is the Creator and Preserver of all things Thou Lord in the beginning hast established the earth and the heavens are the worke of thine hands Repl. In these wordes hee converteth his speech to the Father to prove that hee was able by his power to lift up the Sonne to divine majesty Answ This is an impudent shift and elusion 1. Because it is said before But unto the Son which appertaineth to both places of the Psalme cited by the Apostle 2. Because the Psalme doth intreat of Christs kingdom and therefore those words which there are spoken of the Lord are to be understood next and immediatly of his person secondarily and mediately of the Father Repl. 1. If hee made all things then the Father made them not by him John 5. ●9 Ans Both he made them and they were made by him Whatsoever things the Father doth the same doth the Sonne also And yet the Father doth them by him Repl. 2. The Creatour cannot be compared with the creatures But Christ is there compared with the Angels Therefore creation of things is not attributed unto Christ Answ Hee is not compared with the creatures in any proportion but without proportion This the place it selfe of the Psalme proveth The heavens shall perish but thou dost remanine Repl. 3. If hee were Creatour and equall with the Father hee could not sit at his right hand Ans Wee may invert this and say of the contrary rather if he were not equall he could not sit at his right hand Because none but the omnipotent and true God is able to administer the kingdome of heaven and earth Who being in the forme of God Phil. 2.6 Esay 45.23 Rom. 14.11 Esay 41.12 Rev. 1.18 22.23 thought it no robbery to be equall with God Thus saith the Lord that created heaven Every knee shall bow unto mee This is said of Christ Againe I am I am the first and I am the last My hand hath laid the foundation of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the heavens when I call them they stand up together These words Christ applyeth unto himselfe In it was life and the life was the light of men Wee interpret that the Sonne of God is by himselfe the life In the Word was life as is the Father and the fountaine giver and maintainer of all life as well corporall and temporall as spirituall and eternall in all from the very beginning of the world John 5.26 Hee hath given to the Sonne to have life in himselfe as the Father hath life in himselfe They construe it That the man Jesus is the quickner and giver of life because in him is the life of all that no man without him and all by him are saved These are their words Unto which we reply If hee give eternall life to all so that no man hath it without him Therefore either no man was quickned before he was born of Mary which were absurd or he was the quickner and giver of life from the beginning Even as John affirmeth this of him as being verified in him also before he was made flesh Neither can this be understood only of his merit whereby he deserveth this life for men For that life is in him signifieth that he is John 5.21 10.26 by his efficacy and effectuall working the quickner and reviver as himself expoundeth it and the adversaries themselves confesse So are we also to understand his illightning of men that is the knowledge of God the authour whereof he was in all even from the beginning as himselfe saith No man knoweth the Father but the Son and hee to whom the Son will reveale him And John Baptist saith Mat. 11.27 John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the Son hath declared him The light shineth in darknesse And the light shined in the darknesse and the darknesse comprehended it not Wee interpret it That this word even from the beginning hath both by naturall light and by the voice of heavenly doctrine shewed God unto men but those who were not regenerated by his Spirit have not knowne this light They say That he shined not before hee began to preach Ans 1. If so then should he not have been the true light that is the authour of light and the knowledge of God but only a minister thereof as was John Baptist but the Evangelist in this respect maketh John Baptist diverse from Christ 2. He should not have been the illumina●or of all men which yet themselves are faine to confesse Christ himselfe saith of himselfe and Saint John here of him Hee lighteth every man that cometh into the world that is either with naturall light or spirituall Hee was in the world and the world was made by him and the world knew him not Wee as touching the time hereof say He was in the world it was from the beginning of the world unto his incarnation all which time the Son of God hath in the world which was created by him shewed God unto men but is not knowne of men They construe it of the time of his preaching when he was not heard but despised and persecuted Ans
Church is 1. Visible or Militant which in this world fighteth under Christs Banner against the world the flesh and the Divell This Militant Church is either visible or invisible The visible Church is a company among men imbracing and professing the true and uncorrupt Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel and using the Sacraments aright according to Christs institution and professing obedience unto the Doctrine in which company are many unregenerated or hypocrites consenting notwithstanding and agreeing to the Doctrine in which also the Son of God is forcible to regenerate some by the vertue of his Spirit unto everlasting life Or it is a company of such as consent in the Doctrine they professe wherein notwithstanding are many dead and unregenerate members Mat. 7.21 13.21 42. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heaven Hither pertain the parables of the Seed and the Tares likewise of the Net gathering both good and bad Fish The invisible Church is a company of those which are elected to eternall life 2. Invisible in whom a new life is begun here by the holy Ghost and is perfected in the life to come This Church as long as it warfareth and sojourneth on earth alwayes lieth hid in the visible Church It is otherwise called the Church of the Saints They which are in this invisible Church never perish therefore neither are any Hypocrites therein but the Elect only John 10.28 2 Tim. 2.19 Why it is called invisible of whom it is said No man shall pluck my sheep out of mine hands The foundation of the Lord remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are is It is called invisible not that the men therein are invisible but because their faith and godlinesse is invisible neither is known of any but of themselves in whom it is and because we are not able certainly to distinguish or discerne in the visible Church the true godly from the Hypocrites Moreover both these parts of the true Church both visible and invisible are either universall or particular The universall visible Church The universall visible Church is the company of all those which professe the Doctrine wheresoever in the world they be The particular visible Church The particular visible is also a company of those which professe the doctrine but in some certaine place The visible Church is universall in respect of the profession of one faith in Christ and of one Doctrine and worship But it is particular in respect of place and habitation The universall invisible and of diversity of rites and customes So also the invisible Church is universall as all the Elect in whatsoever place they be and whatsoever time they lived have one faith againe it is particular as either in this or that place they have the same faith Now all particular Churches are parts of the universall and the visible are parts of the universall Church visible as also the invisible are parts of the universall Church invisible And of this personall visible Church doth the Article or Creed speak properly I beleeve the holy Catholike Church For besides that the universall invisible Church is Catholike it is also nobilitated with this title that it is Holy Further in this is the true communion of Saints between Christ and all his members What difference between the visible and invisible Church Rom. 8.30 There is almost the same difference betweene the visible and invisible Church which is between the whole and part For the invisible lieth hid in the visible as a part in the whole Which appeareth out of this place of Paul Whom the Lord predestinated them also he called This calling whereby the Lord calleth us is of two sorts inward and outward The inward Saint Paul saith was wrought according to the purpose of saving men and the Elect are called by both Hypocrites are called onely by the outward calling And in respect of this outward calling is the Church called visible and the Church of the called where are Hypocrites also But the invisible is called the Company or Church of the Elect and Chosen Object 1. If the whole be visible the part also is visible Answ That part also is visible as concerning men elected or as they are men and as they professe the Doctrine of the visible Church but it is not visible as concerning the godlinesse or faith of men or as concerning faith and repentance in men Object 2. They which are in the Church perish not as the definition of the Church affirmeth Many Hypocrites are in the Church Therefore either Hypocrites shall not perish or it is false that they which are in the Church perish not Answ They which are in the invisible Church perish not and of this was our definition But the Minor proposition speaketh of the visible Church in which are many Hypocrites Object 3. Where the invisible Church is not neither is the visible In the time of Popery was not the invisible Therefore there was not the visible Ans I deny the Minor For there also were remnants that is there were alwayes some mingled with those dregs who held the foundation some more purely some lesse In summe The Church was oppressed but not extingnished The Church of the Old Testament and the New There is also another division of the Church into the Church of the Old Testament and of the New The Church of the Old Testament is a company or congregation imbracing the Doctrine of Moses and the Prophets and making profession that they will imbrace in Jury the Mosaicall Ceremonies and keep them and as well in Jury as also out of Jury imbrace the things signified by those Ceremonies that is beleeving the Messias which was to be exhibited The Church of the New Testament hath not these differences because all beleeve in the Messias already exhibited This Church is a company imbracing the Doctrine of the Gospel using the Sacraments instituted by Jesus Christ and beleeving in him being exhibited the true Messias 3. what are the tokens and marks of the Church Profession of the true doctrine THe marks of the true Church are Profession of the true uncorrupt and rightly understood Doctrine of the Law and Gospel that is of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles There concurre withall oftentimes errours but yet notwithstanding this mark is sure if the foundation be kept albeit stubble be builded thereon yet so that those errours of stubble be not maintained The right use of the Sacraments The right and lawfull use of the Sacraments For amongst other ends of the Sacraments this is one that this company of Gods Church may be discerned from all Sect and Hereticks Profession of obedience to the doctrine Mat. 28.19 20. Profession of obedience to the Doctrine or Ministery These three marks of the Church are contained in those words of Christ Go and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of
Creation of the world and the principall Questions of Creation are these 1. Whether the world was created of God 2. How it was created 3. For what cause it was created 1. Whether the world was created of God Five significations of the word world FIrst the words and terms are to be understood The name of the world is diversly used in the Scripture 1. It signifieth the universall frame of all things namely heaven and earth and all things which are in them visible and invisible besides God himself The world was made by him John 1.10 2. Worldly concupiscence 3. All mankind 4. The wicked or those that are not regenerate in the world 5. The elect That the world might beleeve John 17.9 21. John 3.16 So God loved the world Here we consider it in the first sense To create signifieth three things To create signifieth 1. To ordain or constitute as the Latines used it Creare Consulem to create a Consull 2. To make something of nothing without any motion with a beck or word only so it is taken in this place 3. The continuating of creation or creation continued which is the providence of God The creation of the world proved That the world hath not been from everlasting but had when it seemed best to the Creatour according to his eternall counsell and will a beginning once and was created of that only true God who hath manifested himself in the Church that he is the eternall Father and Son and holy Ghost wee know By testimonies of Scripture By testimonies of holy Scripture as by the whole history of the creation set down by Moses Likewise Psal 33.6 9. Psal 104. 113. 124. 136. 146. Isa 44. Acts 4.17 out of other testimonies of Scripture very many By the word of the Lord were the heavens made and all the hoste of them by the breath of his mouth Hee spake and it was done hee commanded and it stood or was created There are other places also in the Psalmes where more largely and amply the wonderfull works of God and the principall parts of the world created by God are proposed to be considered of us that through the consideration thereof wee may learn to put our trust and confidence in God For this purpose did the Lord himself propose unto Job his marvellous and incomprehensible works conspicuous in heaven and earth Job 38. 39. and other things also created by him to declare his justice power and providence 2. By reasons Furthermore besides testimonies of Scripture almost innumerable it is confirmed also by firm and true reasons that the world was created of God such as these following 1. The originals and beginnings of nations and people shew it which could not be fained of Moses when as some remembrance and memoriall of them was then extant amongst many which yet in processe of time perished 2. The novelty and latenesse of all other histories compared with the antiquity and ancientnesse of the sacred story 3. The age of man decreasing which sheweth that there mas greater strength in nature at the first and that not without some first cause it hath decreased hitherto 4. The certain course and race of times even from the beginning of the world unto the exhibiting of the Messias 5. The constitution and founding of common-weals 6. The order of things instituted in nature which must needs have been produced and framed by some intelligent mind far superiour to all things 7. The excellency of the minde of men and Angels These intelligent mindes have a beginning Therefore they have it from some intelligent cause 8. The principles or generall rules and naturall notions ingenerated in our minds 9. The trembling of conscience in the wicked 10. The ends of all things profitably and wisely ordained therefore by some cause understanding and ordaining them 11. Lastly Those other arguments and reasons also which prove that there is a God prove in like manner that the world was created of God 3 Naturall reasons Thirdly besides these reasons it may be enforced by philosophicall arguments drawn out of the bosome of nature That the world was created and that it was created of God although by them we are not able to demonstrate the time when it was created For 1. There is no infinite processe in nature of causes and effects for if so nature should never attain unto her end even the producing of effects Therefore this world had a beginning 2. The noblest and excellentest of all effects is the world Therefore it proceedeth from the noblest and excellentest cause which is God How the creation is unknown to Philosophers Other questions as Whether the world was created from everlasting or in time that is Whether it be an effect of equall perpetuity with his cause and so co-eternall or Whether it once so began to be that before it had no being Again Whether if sometimes it were not yet it was necessary that it should be created And Whether it shall endure for ever And if it endure Whether it shall remain the same or it is to be changed These and such like questions cannot be decided by Philosophy The reason is because all these things depend upon the meer will of God the first mover of all things who doth nothing of necessity but with most absolute freedome Now this his will is not known to any creature but to whomsoever God himselfe revealeth it Therefore it is not manifested to heathenish Philosophers but declared to the Church alone for they cannot possibly collect any thing hereof by proceeding from a continuing effect unto his cause It followeth indeed that there is some cause of those effects but it followeth not that those effects were produced of that cause either at this or that time or from all eternity because a free agent may either act or suspend his action at his pleasure The whole demonstration hereof is thus brought in form No effect depending onely of such a cause as worketh freely or contingently can be demonstrated by that cause But the creation of the world is such an effect Therefore the creation of the world cannot be demonstrated by the will of God the first mover of all things that it either was made from everlasting or in some beginning of time Arguments of Philosophers against the creation of the world Now whatsoever arguments are brought of Philosophers against the creation of the world it is easie to perceive that these were not framed out of true Philosophy but by the imaginations of men if the order of the generation and mutation of things instituted in nature which was created of God be discerned from creation Object 1. It is absurd say the Philosophers to imagine that God is idle Ans Nay rather it is absurd to term him idle who administreth and ruleth the world Repl. This I grant but he could not govern the world when as yet the world was not
is The washing by the bloud of Christ in the Supper The body and bloud of Christ Ans The thing is not diverse because it is the same To be washed by the bloud of Christ and To drink the bloud of Christ as we have heretofore proved But the manner of the signifying one and the same thing is diverse that is there is a diverse similitude of one and the same thing signified by the signes or one and the same thing hath a diverse similitude or proportion Therefore as in Baptisme so in Circumcision likewise and the Passeover is promised a spirituall thing not a corporall and so also here in the Lors Supper 3. The third sort of Arguments which are deduced from the analogie of faith 1. FIrme and strong reasons are drawne from the Article which is concerning the truth of Christs humane nature Christ took a humane nature like unto us in all things sinne only excepted and retaineth the same through all eternity for our comfort and safety but humane nature is neither infinite neither can it be in moe places at once nor visible and invisible both together For it is proper unto the Deity only which is unmeasurable to be essentially in many or in all places at once according to that saying of Scripture Jerem. 23.24 Am not I he which fill heaven and earth and by this very attribute or property God is distinguished from all creatures Now the God-head it selfe cannot at the same time be both visible and invisible finite and infinite but in its own substance remaineth alwayes invisible incomprehensible and infinite else could it not be unchangeable We may not therefore imagine that when Christ said This is my body his body then sate both visible to them at the Table and yet was invisible also in the bread or that now it is both visibly conversant in heaven and invisibly contained in the bread 2. From the Article of Ascension Christ ascended truly that is was in his body visibly and locally taken up into heaven so that his body remained not nrr now remaineth on earth but in heaven whence he shall visibly returne to judgement He is not therefore in the bread Or thus we may urge the reason Christs body is finite as being a true body But it is now in heaven Therefore Christs body is not in While they beheld him he was taken up Acts 1.9 Colos 3.1 Seek the things which are above where Christ is The Major also is evident For if the true and very body of Christ be infinite it is on earth was no true body of Christ but apparent and phantasticall because it cannot agree no not to the God-head it selfe to be at one time finite and infinite sensible and insensible and so all those things which are spoken of Christ in the Articles of our Beliefe should not have been done indeed but only should have seemed and appeared to be done and so we should as yet remain in death Now here are two things to be noted 1. That by the argument drawn from the ascension Christs body is not cleane taken out of the Supper as some cavill but only out of the bread For the distance of heaven and earth only hindereth the existence of Christs body both in heaven and in the bread together but not his presence in the Supper to be spirituall eaten by faith For our faith in the word of the promise annexed to the bread and wine beholdeth and imbraceth the body and bloud of Christ and all his benefits there present 2. That the Argument of the Ascension not done but together with the former Argument of the truth of his humane nature overthroweth the opinion of a corporall presence of Christ in the bread For if Christs humane nature might be every-where or present in many places his Ascension could not hinder but that he might at once be both in heaven and in the bread But whereas the humane nature is finite not present in many places nor every-where hence it is that the Argument borrowed from the Article of his Ascension presseth most powerfully and as in the first Supper the consequence derived from the property of his humane nature thus Christs body sits at the Table Therefore it is not in the bread or in the mouth of his Disciples is sound and good so now we necessarily conclude out of the truth of his Ascension thus Christs body is in heaven Therefore it is not in the bread or elsewhere on earth Object It is humane reason alone that judgeth Christs corporall presence in the bread contrary to these Articles of faith Therefore they are not indeed contrary Answ We deny the Antecedent For not reason onely but the Christian faith and Gods Word reacheth us that Christs body is a true humane and finite body and not conversant at once in all or many places and that now since it ascended into heaven it is not in the earth but remaineth and abideth in heaven untill he returne thence to judge the quick and the dead That Christs body then should be present at once in heaven and in the bread is repugnant not to humane reason only but also to Gods Word This indeed is a principle uncontroversed How farre forth we are not to listen to mans reason in divine matters That mans reason in divine matters oppugning Gods Word is not to be regarded but ought to be subject thereunto Notwithstanding it is not simply to be cashiered or discharged no not in controversies of Divinity as if we were to bring a meer brutish and blockish sense to the sifting of the truth of Gods Word but we are to use reason aright to discern therby truth from falshood For to this end was reason given to us men that we should discern by the light of understanding contradictory opinions and fully conceiving what is consonant with Gods Word and what jarreth therewith should applaud and imbrace the one and reject the other If this be not grounded and settled in us there will be no opinion so absurd and impious there will be nothing in the polluted sinks of all Hereticks so filthy and monstrous which may be confuted by holy Scripture For Hereticks and Deceivers will alwayes except against us that their opinions impugne not the truth of Gods Word but that they seeme onely in mans reason so to doe Repl. The Scripture attributeth to Christs body many properties and prerogatives supernaturall or above and beyond nature which are not incident to our bodies as to walke on the waters to be transfigured to be carried up into heaven to pierce and passe through a stone and closed doores to be united to the God-head personally to be made a sacrifice for our sinnes c. Therefore it is no absurdity to attribute unto it presence in heaven and in the bread both at once or even ubiquity it selfe Ans In the Antecedent are many untruths mingled with some truths For the penetration of Christs body through the stone
Scripture lest those things should be thrust upon us under his name which are not his Further 6 The Church doth not erre Matth 18.19 they make their boast that the Church cannot erre and that therefore the decrees of the Church are of equall authority with the holy Scripture because the Church is ruled by the same spirit by which the Scripture is inspired even as it is promised If two of you shall agree in earth upon any thing whatsoever they shall desire it shall be given them of my Father which is in heaven For where two or three are gathered in my name there am I in the midst of them And I am with you alway unto the end of the world Matthew 28.20 1 John 2.20 27. So Yee have an ointment from him that is holy and ye know all things Likewise The annointing which ye received of him dwelleth in you and yee need not that any man teach you but as the same annointing teacheth you of all things and it is true and is not lying and as it taught you yee shall abide in him But first of all wee know 1 Answer The true Church Matth. 13. Marke 4. Luke 8. that it is the true Church onely which erreth not and is ruled by the holy Spirit which is gathered in the name of Christ that is which heareth and followeth the voice of the Sonne of God And therefore these things doe nothing appertaine to a wicked multitude which openly maintaineth doctrine contrary to the Gospel though it never so much vaunt of the Churches name yea and beareth sway and rule in the Church according to that which is said To him that hath shall be given but from him that hath not even that which hee seemeth to have shall be taken away So did the Pharisees and Sadducees among the Israelites erre not knowing the Scriptures neither were they the true Church though they seised upon the name and place of it 2. The true Church indeed erreth not universally For alwaies the light of the truth 2 Answer Universally especially concerning the foundation of doctrine is preserved in some mens mindes whereupon the Church is called the pillar and ground of truth But yet neverthelesse some of the godly oftentimes fall into errours through ignorance and infirmity yet so that they hold the foundation neither do they defend their erroneous opinions contrary to their conscience and at length they forsake them even as it is said 1 Corinth 3. If any man build upon this foundation gold silver c. And If ye be otherwise minded Ephes 4. God shal reveal even the same unto you Last of all There is given unto every man grace 1 Corinth 12. according to the measure of the gift of Christ And The Spirit distributeth to every man severally as hee will Philip. 3.15 The Apostles before they had received the holy Ghost at Whitsontide were the lively members of the Church yet erred they concerning the kingdome and office of the Messias There were of the Chiliasts opinion great men in the Church as Papyas Irenaeus Apollinarius Tertullian Victorinus Lactantius Methodius Martyr And therefore although the Church erre not universally yet oftentimes some of her members erre when as they swerve from the word which God suffereth not seldome to happen unto them for to keep us being warned of our weaknesse and blindnesse in modesty and his true feare and in daily invocating of him and withall to teach us that the truth of doctrine is not to be measured by the title of the Church but by the word delivered of him by the hands of the Prophets and Apostles as it is said Thy word O Lord Psamle 129. is a lanterne unto my feet and a light unto my paths Likewise 1 Tim. 6.20 Keep that which is committed unto thee and avoid profane and vain babblings This ground being once laid that so farre forth the Church erreth not 7 Object The Church ought to obey Bishops by the commandement of God Acts 20.28 Marthew 18.7 Luke 10.16 Heb. 13.17 as it doth not swerve from the written word of God it is easie to answer to that which they make shew of to the contrary That the Church is ruled by Bishops and therefore must obey them as it is said Take heed unto all the flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made you over-seers to governe the Church of God And If hee refuse to heare the Church let him be unto thee as an Heathen man and a Publican Hee that heareth you heareth mee and hee that despiseth you despiseth me And Obey those who bear rule over you For both they must rule and the Church must obey them according unto the prescript of Gods word as it is said If any man preach any other doctrine let him be accursed Galatians 1.9 Answer Necessarily in those things which belong to the Ministry freely in traditions Mat. 23.2 Whatsoever therefore the Ministers propound of the word of God unto the Church we must of necessity obey it that which the Lord teacheth when hee saith The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses chaire All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe that observe and doe For they sit in Moses chaire who teach Moses doctrine in the Church If also they ordaine any things indifferent and of a middle sort which are profitable these also are observed for maintaining of order and avoiding of offence But if they require us to beleeve or observe things repugnant to the word of God or things that are in their owne nature indifferent with putting an opinion of necessity in them and of worshipping of God they sit no longer in Moses chaire but in the chaire of scorners and of them it is said John 10. ● 1 Tim. 4.1 The sheepe heard them not Likewise In the latter times some shall depart from the faith and shall give heed unto the spirits of errour And that the decrees of the Bishops also are not to be received among the precepts and decrees of the Church is confirmed by the example of the civill Magistrate whose just and good lawes binde the consciences of the subjects For the dissimilitude of the examples consisteth in that 1 Instance The Magistrate doth bind the conscience therefore Bishops that God himselfe by expresse word hath decreed a necessity of obedience to the Lawes and Commandements of the civill Magistrate which are not repugnant unto his Law but hath given a libertie of conscience in traditions of the Church so that hee pronounceth himselfe to be angry with him who obeyeth not civill Magistrates as long as they command nothing repugnant to his Lawes but not with them which without offence do contrary to the constitutions of Bishops For of the Magistrate is is said Rom. 13.5 Wee must obey him for conscience sake But of things indifferent in the Church Col. 2.26 Let no man condemne you in me at or drink or in respect of a holy
reconciled witnesse Peter who saith He was put to death concerning the flesh Repl. But Christ is the Intercessor and God the Testator Therefore the reconciliation is not of force Ans They differ in person and offices the person of Christ differeth from the person of the Father and the holy Ghost in office not in efficacy and power and in respect of him it is an intercession in respect of us a reconciliation or receiving into favour 2. How a Covenant may be made between God and men THat Covenant could not be made without a Mediatour for we could neither satisfie nor come again in favour with God no nor receive the benefit of reconciliation procured by another Furthermore God in his justice would not admit of us without sufficient satisfaction we were the enemies of God therefore the entrance and accesse to God lay not open to us before he was pacified by the merit of our Mediatour as it hath been shewed more at large before in that question Why a Mediatour is necessary for us The reconciliation could not be plenarily accomplished without the satisfaction and death of the Mediatour Again without the Mediatour regenerating us we should not have been able to stand to the conditions and so had the Covenant been made of no force 3. Whether there be one or moe Covenants There is but one Covenant in substance two in circumstance THe Covenant of God is but one in substance and matter but two in circumstances that is it is one in respect of the more generall conditions by which God combineth or compoundeth with us and we with God but it is two in respect of lesse principall conditions or as some speak it is two as touching the manner of the administration thereof There is but one in substance How one in substance 1. Because there is but one God one Mediatour between God and men Christ Jesus one mean of reconcilement one faith one way of the salvation of all who are saved and have been saved from the beginning It is a great question Whether the ancient Fathers were saved by any other means then we are which except it be well and circumspectly construed obscureth with palpable darknesse the light of the Gospel But these testimonies of Scripture doe lesson and schoole us the truth herein Hebr. 13.8 Eph. 1.22 4.1 Jesus Christ yesterday and to day and the same also for ever God hath appointed him over all things to be the head of the Church By whom all the body is coupled and knit together c. No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father John 1.18 he hath declared him There is given no other name under heaven whereby we must be saved No man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will reveale him Acts 4.12 Matth. 11.27 John 14.6 I am the way the truth and the life no man cometh to the Father but by me Hee meaneth I alone am the way by which even Adam attained salvation Luke 20.24 John 8.56 Many kings have desired to see these things which ye see and have not seen them Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad All therefore as well under the Law as under the Gospel who were to be saved had respect to the onely Mediatour Christ by whom alone they were reconciled unto God and saved Therefore there is but one Covenant 2. The Covenant is only one because the principall conditions which are termed the substance of the Covenant are the same both before and since Christs incarnation for in both Testaments before and after the exhibiting of Christ God promiseth remission of sins to beleevers and repentant sinners and men bind themselves to beliefe and repentance There are said to be two Covenants How two in circumstance the old and the new as concerning the circumstances and those conditions which are lesse principall which are the forme of administration serving for the principall conditions that the faithfull may attain unto them by the help of these Now what these principall conditions are shall appear out of that which followeth A rule here may be observed The diversity of Covenants is known by the diversity of their conditions In all Covenants their conditions are ever to be considered which if they be the same then are the Covenants also the same if diverse then the Covenants also diverse if partly the same and partly diverse then the Covenants are also in part the same and in part diverse as in this Covenant 4. In what the old and new Covenant agree and in what they differ The old and new Covenant agree in three things WHereas the Covenant is one and yet the Scripture speaketh thereof as of two we are to consider wherein the old and new Testament concurre and agree and wherein they differ They agree In their Author and Mediatour In their Authour which is God and in their Mediatour which is Christ Object But some man will say Moses was the Mediatour of the old Covenant Ans True as in a type adjoyned to the Mediatour which was signified who then also was Mediatour but now is sole Mediatour without that typicall Mediatour For he is manifested in the flesh and is no more covered with types In the promise of grace In the promise of grace touching remission of sins and life everlasting to be given freely by and for Christ the Mediatour to those only who beleeve which promise was common to the old Church as well as to us For God promised the same grace and mercy unto all who beleeve in the Mediatour In thy seed shall the nations of the earth be blessed Gen. 22.18 Gen. 3.15 Gen. 17.7 John 3.36 The seed of the woman shall break the head of the serpent I will be thy God and the God of thy seed He that beleeveth in the Son hath life everlasting We beleeve through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ to be saved even as they doe Now here wee speak not in particular of the circumstances of grace but in generall of the promise of grace But Covenants have the same corporall promises also but that only in generall In their condition in respect of us Gen. 17.1 Mark 1.15 In their tenour and condition in respect of us for in both God requireth of men faith and obedience Walk before me and be thou upright And Repent and beleeve the Gospel The new and o●d Covenant therefore agree as concerning the principall conditions of the Covenant both in respect of God and in respect of man But the two Covenants differ The old and new Covenant differ In promises of corporall benefits In the promises of corporall benefits for the old Covenant had speciall promises of some certain definite corporall blessings as the promise of the land to be given to the Church of the form of ceremoniall
working and effecting any thing is so in God onely that there is not the least ability or efficacy of any creature but what he continually imparteth and preserveth at his pleasure and therefore the power of God is to be considered of us not as being idle but as creating sustaining moving and ruling all things The reasons are 1. God is the first cause of all things therfore he hath all things in his power and their ability is so much as he giveth unto them 2. He doth such things as can be done by no created and finite power as are the creation and governing of all things the preservation of common-weals the deluge the delivery out of Egypt and all his miracles 3 Hee is unchangeable therefore in him to be able to do and to do is the same which to will and so of the contrary But although all men affirme God to be omnipotent yet there is a double difference between the sacred doctrine of the Church Two differences between the doctrine of the Church and Philosophy in conceiving of Gods omnipotency and Philosophy concerning Gods omnipotency For 1. Without the doctrine of the Church men only know the universall and generall power of God whereby hee createth preserveth and governeth the whole world but they know not that power whereby he saveth men and restoreth the world by his Son gathering and preserving an everlasting Church and delivering it from sin and death and endowing it with life and glory everlasting by which works God especially sheweth forth his power as it is said Yet a little while and I shall shake the heavens and the earth and the sea Hagg. 2.7 and the drie land 2. Neither do they professe of the generall power of God so much as is sufficient for albeit they are enforced to confesse that God is the author and preserver of the world yet are they not able to say that all things were created of nothing by the word of God alone and forasmuch as they are ignorant of the cause of sin and confusion they cannot affirm all things so to be administred and governed by Gods omnipotency as that all which is good is done by the powerfull working of Gods will but they attribute many things to chance fortune and humane wisdome or vertue and so imagine the power of God to be idle in these and doing nothing Furthermore That God cannot either sin or will and allow of sin or be changed or diminished or suffer any thing or make things done undone or will things flat repugnant and contradictory or create another God or some nature equall to himselfe or be perceived by bodily senses or do other things proper to a created or finite nature or admit the same into himselfe this doth not diminish or weaken but rather augment and strengthen his power For that is the greatest and most perfect power which can neither be destroyed nor weakened nor diminished and that none sustaining it but only by it selfe But contrariwise to be able to be corrupted and impaired is a token of imbecility and imperfection Gods exceeding wisdom whereby both he knoweth all things perfectly and is the fountain of all knowledge and understanding Of exceeding and immense wisdome That wee may rightly and with profit and commodity know the power of God it is necessary not to consider it but as it is joyned with his immense wisdome and goodnesse which moderateth it Further of his divine wisdome we learn 1. That God doth of himself in one act or view under stand and behold perpetually and most perfectly in marvellous manner and that unknown to us himselfe and the whole order of his minde declared in the nature of things and in his word and what agreeth therewith and disagreeth and all his works and all the works of all creatures past present and to come and all the causes and circumstances of all things 2. That all Angels and men have no more knowledge of divine and humane matters then God doth work and maintain in their mindes for among other things the most beautifull and sightly order which is in the nature of things the ends and uses of all things the signification of future events arts and sciences the everting and overturning of those devices which the divell and wicked men have most craftily contrived against God and all the godly doe enforce all men to confesse that these things could not proceed but from a most wise artificer and author Wherefore also the Scripture it selfe willeth us to consider the wisdome of God shining in these his works Eccles 3.11 Isa 44.7 God hath made every thing beautifull in his time Who is like mee that shall call and shall declare it and set it in order before me since I appointed the ancient people He taketh the wise in their craftinesse Job 5.13 and of these it concludeth that the wisdome of God is immense and unconceivable Psalm 147.5 Rom. 11.33 as His wisdome is infinite O the deepnesse of the riches both of the wisdome and knowledge of God! But here again is to be observed a difference between Philosophy and the word of God 1. That even in the creation the known or legall wisdome was darkned and maimed in men through sin and therefore needeth a renewing by the word delivered to the Church 2. That men without this heavenly doctrine are altogether ignorant of the especiall wisdome of God revealed in the Gospel whereby hee saveth the Church gathered from amongst mankind by the Son as it is said I give thee thanks O Father because thou hast hid these things from the wise and men of understanding Matth. 21.25 and hast opened them unto babes Good Six significations of the goodnesse of God in Scripture Psalm 106.1 143.10.1 John 1.5 The goodnesse of God signifieth sometimes his bountifulnesse as Praise the Lord because he is good sometimes all the vertues and whatsoever is spoken of the nature of God as Let thy Spirit lead me through the right way That which also is meant by the name of holinesse or sanctity and light So in this place by the name of goodnesse are understood 1. All those things which are attributed to God in his word and are represented and resembled in his image as those things which are termed good in Angles and men as life power wisdom joy righteousnesse c. For such is the nature of God as it hath manifested it self in the Law and Gospel and the goodnesse of the reasonable creature is an image of the divine goodnesse and therefore here also differ Philosophy and the Scripture in that Philosophy attributeth onely to God that his goodnesse which was opened in the Law and yet neither that wholly but of his goodnesse revealed in the Gospel it is altogether ignorant 2. By reason of the great and huge difference between the Creator and the creature we understand those good things to be in God which are agreeing to his divine nature
be conformed and like to God as it is said He saw all that he had made and loe it was very good Gen. 1.31 Psalme 103.20 And of the good Angels it is said Ye his Angels that excell in strength and do his commandements in obeying the voice of his word Their Angels alwayes behold the face of my Father which is in heaven Mat. 18.10 22.30 Luke 9.25 Esa 6.2 The elect shall be in the resurrection as the Angels of God in heaven They are called holy Likewise Seraphin that is flaming or shining namely with purity and divine wisdome and with the love of God But of the bad Angels it is said Hee abode not in the truth The Angels which kept not their first estate John 8.44 Jude 6. but left their own habitation c. 5. And confirmed therein Now as these former to be spirits infinite created by God of nothing and created good and holy are in the Scripture delivered as common both to good and bad Angels So also the Scripture delivereth those things whereby a huge and exceeding difference appeareth between them For the good Angels by the especial grace of their Creatour were so confirmed and established in that sanctity and blessednesse wherein they were created that albeit they serve their Creatour with an exceeding and most free will yet can they never revolt from him or fall from that state of righteousnes and felicity wherein they stand 1 Tim. 5.2 Wherefore they are called elect Angels they are said alwayes to behold the face of the Father Mat. 18.10 22.30 Of those who are elected to everlasting life it is said that they shall be like Angels And this perseverance in their state they have Job 4.18 not by the peculiar excellency and vertue of their nature as it is said He found no stedfastnesse in his servants and laid folly upon his Angels but of the meer and free bountifulnesse of God towards them by the Son of God keeping and guiding them that they may be joined to him as to their head and remain together with elect men the everlasting Church and Temple of God magnifying and praising God for ever All things consist in him It hath pleased the Father to gather together in one all things Col. 1.17 Ephes 1.10 both which are in heaven and which are in earth in Christ. The good Angels were both created confirmed 1. Everlastingly to know and magnifie God for his goodnesse and bounty towards them and mankind 6. To worship and magnifie God Praise the Lord all ye his hosts Psal 103.21 Isa 6.3 Luke 2 13. 7. To be the ministers of God for the saving of the chosen They cry Holy holy holy the Lord of hosts the whole earth is full of his glory And they laud and praise God for the manifestation of the Messias 2. To be the ministers of God for the accomplishment and maintaining of the safety and salvation of the chosen when as God by them declareth his will delivereth the godly out of dangers defendeth them against the divels and wicked men Or also to punish the wicked who oppugn the Church Ps 34.7 91.11 John 5.4 They serve also for the wicked The Angel of the Lord pitcheth round about them that fear him and delivereth them He shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy wayes Now although the wicked also and reprobate are defended by the Angels and receive other benefits not seldome at the hands of God as when after the waters of Bethesda had been troubled by an Angel whosoever then first stepped in was made whole of his disease yet these benefits stretch no farther then the commodities of this life and as other things which befall unto the wicked in this life whether good or bad are turned to their destruction but serve for the defence and delivery of the chosen for whose sakes God oftentimes like as he punisheth the wicked They are the ministers of the elect by Christ so also he enricheth them with his benefits The ministery then and guard of Angels properly belongeth to the saints and chosen unto whom that being lost by sin is restored by the merit and benefit of Christ for he is the head of the Church which consisteth of Angels and men restoring that good will and conjunction which is between the members of the same body between men and Angels and using at his good pleasure the ministery of Angels to safeguard and defend his Ephes 1.10 Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.4 Matt. 23.49 Heb. 12.22 That he might gather together in one all things which are in heaven and in earth in Christ Let all the Angels of God worship him He shall send his Angels Yee are come unto the mount Sion and to the citie of the living God the celestiall Jerusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels Jacob saw a ladder which reached from earth to heaven on which the Lord stood and the Angels went up and down by it Gen. 28. ●2 which signifieth God and man the Mediatour Ye shall see heaven open John 1.51 and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Why God useth the ministery of Angels being able to ●r●ng what he will to passe without them Now God doth many things by Angels and sometimes by many together which he could as well do either without them or by any one of them Partly in favour and regard of our infirmity which unlesse it see it self invironed with many succours defences and instruments of his divine power and bountifulnesse falleth presently of doubting of the providence safeguard and presence of God as it is manifest by the example of Elisha's servant 2 King 6 1● and by those consolations and incouragements which promise unto the Church the aid of Angels Partly to shew his power also over his Angels who useth their labour and ministery at his pleasure Why the Angels are called 1. Powers 2 Thes 1.7 2. Principalities Ephes 1.21 Col. 1.16 3. The host of the Lord and the host of heaven Psalm 103.21 148.2 1 King 22.19 Rev. 19.14 4. Cherubins Hereof the Angels are called the powers of the Lord Jesus when he shall shew himself from heaven that is by whom he exerciseth his power Likewise they are called principalities might powers dominions created by the Son of God subject unto him being exalted at the right hand of God because by them hee sheweth and exerciseth his principality or rule might power and dominion Likewise The host of the Lord and the host of heaven because both the number of them is huge and great and God ruleth over all of them as a Captain over his souldiers and doth by them whatsoever he will Hereof also are they called Cherubins that is flying or winged because they perform and execute with all readinesse and celerity the hests and commandements of God and do each their own parts and
is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith Four Difference between Christs kingdom ours There is notwithstanding a difference between the kingdom of Christ and ours For 1. The kingdom is hereditary unto Christ For he is the naturall Son and therefore by nature King but ours is by right of adoption Christ as the naturall Son is ruler over his house heire of all things We are by and for him Heb. 3.6 1.2 the adopted sons of God 2. He alone by full right is King over all creatures simply but especially over the whole Church of the holy Angels and men But we neither are nor ever shall be the Kings and head of the Angels and the Church but only over other creatures which are compelled to serve us we are Lords heaven earth and all things shall serve us we shall be adorned with glory majesty and no common excellency of gifts but with the highest prerogative over all wicked men and divels whom we shall judge subscribing and yeelding our consents to the Soveraigne judgment of Christ in condemning and destroying them Ye shall sit upon twelve seats Mat. 19.28 judging the twelve tribes of Israel 3. He conquereth his enemies by his own power we in him and by him that is by his grace and assistance Be of good comfort I have overcome the world John 16.33 4. He alone ruleth the Church with the scepter of his spirit and word moving our hearts and restoring in us the lost image of God we are ministers and administrators of the outward word and rites we cannot give the holy Ghost as I baptise you with water Mat. 3.10 1 Cor. 3 5. but he that cometh after me he shall baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire Who is Paul then and who is Apollos but the ministers c. The summe of all is In the old testament were Prophets Priests and Kings typicall What it is to beleeve in Christ Christ is those three in signification and in truth we by participation from him Wherefore great is the use of this doctrine 1. Vnto consolation Fot to beleeve in Christ is not only to know that Jesus is the anointed that is the chief Prophet Priest and Kings but to be perswaded that he is such also unto me and that I being engraffed into him by faith as a member into the head am daily sustained governed and quickned by him and that he maketh me also partaker of his unction or annointing that by the working of the holy Ghost I may also be a Prophet a Priest and a King This is the unspeakable advancement and dignity of Christians 2. Vnto exhortation For whereas we are all Prophets and Doctors appointed by God therefore we are to confesse and celebrate his name whereas we are all Priests it is our duty to offer up our selves unto him as a lively sacrifice of praise and thankfulnesse whereas we are all Kings it behooveth us to fight and war manfully aginst sin the world and the Divel that at length we may beare rule over all our enemies being adorned with everlasting blisse and glory ON THE 13. SABBATH Quest 33. For what cause is Christ called the only begotten Son of God when wee also are the sons of God Ans Because Christ alone is the co-eternall and naturall Son of the eternall Father a Ioh. 1.14 H●bt 1.1 2. John 3.16 1 Joh. 4.9 Rom. 8.32 and we are but sonnes adopted of the Father by grace for his sake b Rom. 8.16 John 1.12 Gal. 4.6 Ephes 1.5 6. The Explication UNder this question the Common place touching the God-head of the Son is contained Out of the words of the question an objection may be thus collected Hee which is the onely begotten Son hath no brethren but Christ hath brethren for even we also are the Sons of God Therefort he is not the onely begotten Son of God Answ For answer hereunto wee must put a distinction and difference between Christs and our manner of being Sons Christ is the onely begotten Son the naturall and proper Son of God Wee are the sons of God adopted of the Father by grace through Christ For further evidence in illustrating this point we are to explain in briefe who are called sons and how many waies this name is used and this being done to examine who are and are called the sons of God All sons are either born sons or adopted sons Divers sorts of sons Sons that are borne sons are they who begin at one and the same time both to be and to be sonnes and these are either sons borne of Parents or sons borne by grace Sonnes borne of Parents are properly called naturall sonnes to whom the essence and nature of their Parents is communicated and that either in part or wholly In part the essence and nature of the Parents of whom wee are borne is communicated unto us men Wholly the divine essence is communicated of the Father unto Christ as touching his God-head As then we are the naturall sons of our Parents so Christ according to his divine nature is the naturall and only Son of God of the same essence and nature with the Father of whose substance he was after a manner altogether ineffable John 5.26 begotten from everlasting As the Father hath life in himselfe so likewise hath hee given to the Son to have life in himselfe The eternall Father therefore hath communicated unto his Sonne the life whereby both himselfe by himselfe liveth and whereby hee quickneth all creatures which life is that one and eternall Deitie creatresse and defendresse of all things Sonnes by grace are they who at one and the same time began to be and to be sons of God but that they are sonnes this they have either by grace of Creation or by grace of Conception by the holy Ghost and of the Vnion with the Word The sonnes of God by grace of Creation are Angels and Adam before the fall because God created them that hee might account them for his sonnes and they againe acknowledge and magnifie him as their bountifull and benigne Father These indeed are unproperly called sonnes borne by grace but yet such they are in as much as they began both to be and to be sonnes The Son of God by grace of conception by the holy Ghost and of union with the Word is Jesus Christ onely according to his humane nature because as touching this he was the Son of God by grace even presently from that very moment when hebegan to be born man and that therefore because by the vertue of the holy Ghost he alone was born of the substance of the Virgin pure from all stain or corruption and so was personally united with the Word Adopted sons are they who begin not at the same time to be and to be sons but sometimes were when yet they were not adopted or sometimes were not sons or had their being ere they were such sons
the flesh which he tooke Repl. 4. But hee is no where said to be invisible John 1.5 10. Ans He is said to have been in the world unknowne and this John speaketh of him as he was before his incarnation And then he was in the world invisible Likewise John 14.21 Mat. 28.20 I and the Father will come unto him And in the same place I will not leave you comfortlesse I will come unto you I am with you alway unto the end of the world that is invisibly as in the Father And if they will deny him to be with us because he is not seen they shall also exclude the Father Repl. 5. He is with us in power and vertue not in essence Ans This objection were rather to be hissed out than to be refuted Jer. 10.17 because he hath not an infinite power and vertue who hath a finite essence The gods that have not made the heavens and the earth shall perish from the earth how much more then the makers of such gods And the Word was with God in the beginning Wee interpret this that the Sonne was co-eternall with the Father and so joyned with him that notwithstanding hee was distinct in person from him They say that this Doctor and Teacher the man Jesus was known of God alone and not men but he was the Messias Answ 1. To be or Not to be with one when it is spoken of a person is never read in this sense as to signifie to be known or not known of one It is therefore an impudent forgery 2. John himselfe expoundeth it The Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father This doth not onely signifie to be known but also to be indeed in the Father to be intirely loved of him and to be fellow and co-partner of the secret and hidden counsels of the Father 3. He saith of himselfe That he came downe from heaven That hee came from the Father and came into the world That he returneth to the Father with whom he was before This doth not signifie a knowing or a not knowing but an existence and being 4. By him all creatures were made of the Father therefore he was present with the Father 5. He was in the world before he being made man came unto his owne and yet not known Therefore to be in the world and to be known of the world are not all one and by consequent neither is it all one to be with God and to be known of God 6. Christ himselfe expoundeth it I in the Father and the Father in mee This signifieth not onely a knowledge but a co-existence and joynt being mutuall And that Word was God Wee interpret That the Word is true God eternall Creatour of heaven and earth the same God with the Father and therefore divers from him as the Word from him that speaketh by him and the Son from the Father but having the same nature and essence of the God-head in him which the Father hath as Christ himself saith I in the Father and the Father in me He is every where in the Father as the Father every where in him But they say that he is God in respect of his gifts worthinesse excellency and office but not by nature Which they prove because others also are in this sense and respect called gods which have not any divinity of themselves therefore Christ also after the same manner seeing hee also hath his divinity from the Father Further they adde that we make two gods and deale contumeliously with the Father Answ Wee make not two gods because the Sonne is one with the Father as God that is having the same essence in him which the Father hath but is diverse and distinct from him as the Sonne and having in him the same Deity which the Father hath communicated But they are blasphemous and contumelious against the Father and the Sonne Because they honour not the Son John 5.23 as they honour the Father Now that Saint John understandeth a Son not a made created and inferiour God to the Father and a diverse God from him is proved and confirmed by many reasons but some few shall now suffice 1. Simply and absolutely without restraint to any certaine circumstance none is called God in the Scripture besides the onely true God eternall creatour of the world 2. That the Word was God before things were created and is the Creatour of all things S. John doth teach 3. He sheweth that he is the authour and fountaine of life and knowledge in men even from the beginning For this signifieth the true light that is which is properly and by it selfe light it selfe and the originall of light in others 4. This Word giveth power to be the sonnes of God John 1.12 This none can doe but the true God alone 5. We are to beleeve in his Name But we must beleeve in none but God only as himself proveth that therefore they must beleeve in him because they beleeve in God 6. John Baptist saith that he baptiseth with the holy Ghost And Christ himselfe often saith that hee will send the holy Ghost from the Father John 1.33 But no man can send the Spirit of God and work by him in the hearts of men but only he whose proper Spirit this is namely God Esay 40.3 Joh. 1.23 3.28 Luke 3.4 8. John 5.13 7. John Baptist is called the fore-runner of Christ who should prepare his way But he prepareth the way of the Lord. 8. Christ himselfe saith That the Father will that all should honour the Son as they honour the Father But no creature albeit excellent can be equalled in honour with the Creatour 9. Every where he is called the true God 1 John 5.20 Rom. 9.5 Act. 20.28 He. 1.8 10. 3.3 and the Lord. This is the true God and eternall life Who is God over all blessed for ever Amen God hath purchased his Church with his owne bloud The scepter of thy kingdome is a scepter of righteousnesse Thou Lord in the beginning hast established the earth and the heavens are the workes of thine hands Christ is counted worthy of more glory than Moses inasmuch as he which hath builded the house hath more honour than the house and hee that hath built all things is God 10. Hee is said to have come downe from heaven yet so that he remaineth in heaven to come unto his together with his Father to be with them unto the end of the world Therefore hee is of an infinite essence every where present and working both in heaven and earth But his humane nature is finite The God-head is after another sort communicated unto Christ than unto creatures Therefore he is God in respect of another nature Now to that which hath been objected concerning the communicating of the Deity unto others whereby they are called gods we answer by distinguishing the diversity thereof For unto others it is communicated by a created similitude of the
John 16.30 Eph. 5.25 26. Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it That he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word He is unchangeable Heaven and earth shall passe but my word shall not passe He is truth it selfe and the fountaine of truth Mat. 24.38 John 0781 0 8.14 John 14.6 Eph. 5.2 Though I beare record of my selfe yet my record is true I am the Way the Truth and the Life He is of unspeakable mercy Even as Christ hath loved us and hath given himself for us to be an offering and a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God He is angry against sin John 3.16 Rev. 6.16 17. and taketh vengeance thereof yea of hidden sins He that beleeveth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Fall on us and hide us from the presence of him that sitteth on the Throne and from the wrath of the Lambe For the great day of his wrath is come and who can stand The Son therefore is God by nature and equall to the Father 4 The Scripture in like sort attributeth all Divine operations to the Son as it doth unto the Father And it communicateth unto him 1. All generall effects and works common to the whole three persons as that he is Creatour John 1.3 Heb. 1.3 By him were all things made Likewise that he is the preserver and governour of all things Bearing up all things by his mighty word 2. It appropriateth unto him certain speciall offices and functions appertaining to the safety of his Church as that he sendeth Prophets Apostles and other Ministers of the Church As the Father sent mee so send I you John 20 21. Ephes 4.11 He therefore gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists and some Pastours and Teachers That he furnisheth his Ministers with necessary gifts and graces I will give you a mouth and wisdome where against all your adversaries shall not be able to speak John 1.18 nor resist That he revealeth unto us his spirituall doctrine The only begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him unto us That he confirmeth this doctrine by miracles And they went forth and preached every where Marke 16.20 1 Cor. 11.23 Mat. 28.19 Rev. 22.16 John 16.14 John 10.14 16. And the Lord wrought with them and confirmed the word with signes that followed That he instituted Sacraments I have recived of the Lord that which I also have delivered unto you Baptise them in the name of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost That he revealeth things to come I Jesus have sent mine Angel to testifie unto you these things in the Church He shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you That he gathereth the Church I am the good Shepheard and know mine and am known of mine Other sheep I have also which are not of this fold them also must I bring and they shall heare my voice and there shall be one sheep-fold and one Shepheard That he inlightneth the understanding and hearts of men No man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will reveale him Mat. 11.27 Luke 24.45 John 1.33 Titus 2.14 John 15.5 Gal. 2.20 Mat. 11.28 John 14.27 Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures That he governeth the actions and lives of the godly Without me ye can doe nothing Thus I live yet not I now but Christ liveth in me That he ministreth comfort in temptations Come unto mee all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you That he strengthneth and defendeth us against the temptations of Sathan and preserveth those that turne unto him by a true faith John 16.33 John 10.28 John 14.14 2 Cor. 12.8 even unto the end Be of good cheere I have overcome the world My sheep shall not perish for ever and no man shall take them out of mine hand That he heareth those that pray unto him If ye shall aske any thing in my name I will doe it I besought the Lord thrice and he answered mee My grace is sufficient for thee That he forgiveth sins justifieth and adopteth unto us to be the sons of God Esay 53.11 Mat. 9.6 By his knowledge my righteous servant shall justifie many That ye may know that the Son of man hath power to remit sins on the earth As many as received him John 1.12 John 10.28 1 John 5.20 Acts 10.42 Acts 17.31 to them he gave power to be the sons of God That he giveth life everlasting I give unto them eternall life This same is very God and eternall life That he judgeth the world It is hee that is ordained of God a Judge of quicke and dead Because he hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man whom he hath appointed These divine works attributed unto the Son differ so from the divine properties which are attributed unto him as effects from their causes so that then his properties worke them 5. The equality of honour and worship dependeth of the equality of essence properties Esay 42.8 He hath equall honour given him and workes I will not give my glory to any other But the Scripture giveth equall honour and worship to the Father and the Son Therefore they are truely equall in God-head and in all the perfections thereof The Minor is confirmed 1. By testimonies Psal 97. Heb. 1.6 Rev 5.13 John 5.23 John 14.1 Psal 45.7 He● 1.8 Acts 30 28. 1 Tim. 16. proving that he is worshipped of Angels and the whole Church Let all the Angels of God worship him That all should honour the Son as they honour the Father Faith and hope are due unto him Yee beleeve in God beleeve also in mee 2. He is called God absolutely and simply as is the Father 3. The Epithetes or titles of divine honour which are every where in the Scriptures attributed unto the Son as God blessed for ever The great God and Saviour The Lord himself from heaven The Lord of glory The Lord of lords and King of kings power and eternall Kingdom Sitting at the right hand of the Father The Bridegroom Husband Head of the Church God of the Temple which are all the Elect Trust and beliefe in him Invocation for he is worshipped of the Church of God and Bridegroome of the Church at all times and in all places Thanksgiving for his divine benefits Furthermore albeit the name of God especially being put absolutely and without restraint doth evidently prove the Sons equality with the Father as it hath been said yet seeing that signifieth moe things and is also applyed to others who are not by nature God we are diligently to collect and to have in a readiness those testimonies in which things proper to the true God only are attributed to the
in the world inferre that the world is not governed by God or if so then hee is unjust for It should goe well say they with the righteous But it doth not so Therefore God either cannot performe it or standeth not to his promises or there is no providence Unto which their cavill we answer That because in this life it goeth not well with the godly it shall goe well with them at length after this life 2. God will have us know it for our comfort that we may comfort our selves amidst our evils and miseries with this that at length shall come a time when wee shall be delivered out of this corruption and rottennesse 3. That wee may retain and keep our selves in the feare of God and our duty and that others also may be reclaimed from evill This judgement shall be let us endeavour therefore that we may be able to stand in this judgement The Scripture useth this argument both wayes both to comfort us and to hold and keep us in our duty Christ shall at length judge the wicked and our enemies suffer wee therefore patiently persecutions Rom. 14.10 We shall all appear before the judgement seate of Christ therefore live wee godly Luke 21.36 Watch therefore and pray continually that yee may bee counted worthy to escape all those things which shall come to passe and that yee may stand before the Son of man 2 Pet. 3.11 Seeing therefore that all these things must be dissolved what manner persons ought yee to be in holy conversation and godlinesse 4. That the wicked may be left excuselesse for they are warned sufficiently that they should be ready at every season lest they should say they were oppressed unawares 11. For what cause God would not have us certain of the time of judgement ALbeit it be most certain that the last judgement shall at length be yet the day of that judgement is altogether uncertain Mark 13.32 Of that day and hour no man knoweth no not the Angels which are in heaven nor the Son himself save the Father Now the causes why God would have it hid from us are these 1. That he might exercise our faith and patience and so wee should shew that wee would beleeve God and persevere in the expectation of his promise albeit we know not the time of our delivery 2. That he might bridle our curiosity 3. That hee might keep us in his fear in godlinesse and in executing of our duty and so we should be no way secure but ready every moment because were are uncertain when the Lord will come 4. That the very wicked might not deferre and prolong repentance seeing they know not the houre Mat. 24.43 25. ●3 lest perhaps the day overtake them unawares If the good man of the house knew at what watch the theefe would come he would surely watch Watch therefore for ye know neither the day nor the hour when the Son of man will come Luke 19.13 Occupy till I come 12. For what cause God deferreth that judgement HEe deferreth it 1. To exercise faith patience hope and prayer in the godly 2. That all the elect may be gathered to the Church For in respect of them and not in respect of the wicked doth the world continue for the creatures were made for the children of the house the wicked use them as theeves and robbers But when the whole number of the Church is fulfilled and gathered together then shall be the end Now God will have the elect gathered by ordinary means he will have them in this life to hear the word and by it be renewed and converted to which is required some tract of time 3. Hee deferreth it that hee might grant unto all a time and space of repentance as in Noahs time and that his deferring might leave the wicked and obstinate without excuse Rom. 2.4 9.22 Despisest thou the riches of his bountifulnesse and patience and long sufferance not knowing that the bountifulnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance God suffereth with patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction 13. Whether the last judgement be to be wished for WE are doubt lesse to wish for the day of judgment because it is an undoubted signe and token of that difference whereby the elect are discerned from the reprobate which declaration the godly do earnestly desire Moreover it shall be a delivery out of those miseries in which wee are Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Revel 22.17 The Spirit and the Bride say Come Lord Jesu which they say not who are not ready to receive the Lord for the wicked tremble and shake at the mention of that judgment The meaning of the Article I beleeve in Jesus Christ which shall come to judge the quick the dead What is the meaning then of this Article I beleeve in Christ which shall come to judge the quick and the dead Ans I beleeve 1. That Christ shal certainly come and that at his second coming there shall follow a renewing of heaven and earth 2. That the self-same Christ shall come who for us was born suffered and rose againe 3. That he shall come visibly and gloriously to deliver his Church whereof I am a member 4. That he shall come to abject and cast away the wicked into everlasting pains Our comfort by Christs coming By these we receive great and sound comfort also and consolation For seeing there shall be a renovation or renewing of heaven and earth we have a confidence and trust that our state also shall be at length other and better then now it is seeing Christ shall come we shall have a favourable Judge for he shall come to judge who hath merited righteousnesse for us who is our Brother Redeemer Patron and Defender seeing he shall come gloriously he shall also give a just sentence and judgement and shall be mighty enough to deliver us seeing hee shall come to deliver his Church great cause why wee should cheerfully expect him seeing he shall abject and cast away the wicked into everlasting torments let us suffer patiently their tyranny To conclude seeing he shall deliver the godly and cast away the wicked he will also deliver not cast away us and therefore it is necessary that we repent and be thankfull in this life and flie fleshly security that we may be in the number of them whom he shall deliver ON THE 20. SABBATH Quest 53. What beleevest thou concerning the holy Ghost Ans First that he is true and co-eternall God with the eternall Father and the Son a 1 John 5.7 Gen. 1.2 Isa 48.16 1 Cor. 3.16 6.19 Act. 5.3 4. Secondly that he is also given to mee b Gal. 4.6 Mat. 28.29 30. 2 Cor. 1.22 Ephes 1.13 to make mee through a true faith partaker of Christ and all his benefits c Gal. 3.14 1 Pet. 1.2 1 Cor.
this which ye now see and hear Wherefore the Son also giveth him but in this order that the Son sendeth him from the Father whence is gathered a strong argument for proof of Christs God-head for who giveth the Spirit of God and who hath any right or title unto him but God for the humane nature of Christ so far off is it that it should have this right and power to send the holy Ghost that contrarily it self was hallowed and sanctified by the holy Ghost What is meant by the giving of the holy Ghost Now we are to understand this giving of the holy Ghost by the Father and the Son as that both of them is effectuall and forcible by him and that the holy Ghost worketh on a precedency of the will of the Father and the Son For wee are to mark and observe the order of operation or working in the persons of the Divinity which is such in working as it is in subsisting the Fathers will goeth before the will of the Son followeth and the will of the holy Ghost followeth them both yet not in time but in order Why the holy Ghost is given The cause wherefore he giveth us the holy Ghost is none other but only of his free election through the merit and intercession of his Son Ephes 1.3 Which hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things in Christ as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world John 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter The Son giveth us him or he is given by the Son because hee hath obtained for us by his merit that hee should be given unto us and he by his own intercession bestoweth him on us 6. Unto whom the holy Ghost is given To all who partake of any of his g●fts To all the Church How to the elect THe holy Ghost is said to be given unto them to whom he communicateth his gifts and who acknowledge him Wherefore the holy Ghost is given to divers parties according to diverse gifts He is given to the whole Church or assembly of those that are called that is both to the elect and to hypocrites but in a diverse manner to the one and the other To the elect he is given not only as concerning his common gifts but also as concerning his proper and saving graces that is not only as concerning the knowledge of Gods doctrine but also as concerning regeneration faith and conversion because besides that he kindleth in them the knowledge of Gods truth and will hee doth further also regenerate them and endow them with true faith and conversion Hee is therefore so given unto them that he worketh and effectuateth in them his gifts of their salvation and that themselves also may know and feel by those gifts imparted unto them the holy Ghost dwelling in them And further he is no otherwise given unto them then as themselves also be willing and desirous of him and then is augmented and increased in them if they persevere How to hypocrites John 14.17 But to hypocrites the holy Ghost is given only as touching the knowledge of doctrine and other his common and generall gifts The world cannot receive him because it seeth him not neither knoweth him Hence it is apparent how the knowledge of tongues sciences and the like gifts bestowed on the heathen differ from those which are bestowed on the Church for they who amongst the heathen excelled in the knowledge of tongues and good arts and things profitable had indeed the gifts of God but not the holy Ghost whom none are said to have but they whom he hath sanctified and who acknowledge him to be the author of the gifts received 7. When and how the holy Ghost is given and received The holy Ghost is given 1. Visib●y THe holy Ghost is then given when he imparteth or communicateth his gifts as hath been already proved And he is given either visibly when he bestoweth his gifts adjoyning outward signes and tokens or invisibly when he bestoweth his gifts without signes or tokens Hee was not alwayes given visibly but at certain times and for certain causes yet was he more plentifully powred on men in the time of the new Testament then before in the time of the old for so had Joel prophecied Joel 2.28 In the last dayes I will powr out of my Spirit So hee was given visibly unto the Apostles and others in the primitive Church Act. 2.3 10.44 There appeared unto them cloven tongues like fire and it sate upon each of them The holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word I saw the holy Ghost come down from heaven c. And these and other like speeches are so to be expounded as that the signe taketh the name of the thing it selfe and therefore that is affirmed of the thing which agreeth unto the signe by which signe the holy Ghost witnesseth his presence and efficacy So also John saw the holy Ghost descending on Christ in bodily shape like a dove Luke 3.22 Hee saw then the shape of a dove under which God shewed the presence of his Spirit Wherefore we must not think that there is any locall motion in God The sending of the holy Ghost is no locall motion but his presence and operation which hee sheweth and exerciseth in the Church For the holy Ghost is spread abroad every-where and filleth both heaven and earth in which respect hee is said to be given sent powred out when by his effectuall and forcible presence he doth create stir up and by little and little perfect his gifts in the members of the Church 2. Invisibly He alwayes was and is given unto the Church invisibly from the beginning unto the end of the world for hee spake by the prophets and hee which hath not the Spirit of Christ is none of his Rom. 8.9 yea without the holy Ghost there never had been 3. By means of hearing the word and receiving the sacraments never should be any Church Hee is given after an ordinary way by the ministery of the word and by the use of the Sacraments and 1. In manifesting himselfe unto us through the studying and meditation of the doctrine of the Gospel for when he is known of us he will communicate himself unto us and when hee sheweth himself to be known of us hee doth also renew and reform our hearts So did hee work in the elect by Peters sermon in the day of Pentecost Acts 2.37 10.44 Likewise he wrought in Cornelius and the rest there present by the same Peter speaking But yet notwithstanding hee doth so work by the word and sacraments as that hee is not tied to those means 4. Freely to that hee is not t●ed to ●hem for hee converted Paul in his journey and hee furnished John Baptist with his gifts in his wombe Now when wee say hee is given by
beleeved the Gospel promise that he would beleeve the Church more then the Gospel if the Church determine or propound any thing which is either contrary to the Gospel or can be proved by no testimony of Scripture This doubtlesse Augustine never meant Nay elswhere he denounceth Anathema and biddeth a curse to come to them who declare any thing besides that that we have received in the writings of the Law and Gospel And in the selfe-same place he witnesseth That he because he beleeveth the Gospel cannot beleeve Manichaeus for that he readeth nothing in the Gospel of Manichaeus Apostleship Therefore traditions or ordinances of the Church bring us unto the Scripture and tie us to that voice which soundeth in the Scripture The Papists wrangling about Traditions But here it must be observed how honestly and fairly the Papists deale For wheresoever they meet with the word Tradition that by and by they wrest to their traditions which cannot be proved out of the Word of God as when Paul saith I delivered unto you that which I received Straight-wayes they cry out Heare you traditions I hear but read on there in the words following Paul himself by writing declaring what those traditions are I delivered unto you how that Christ died for our sinnes according to the Scripture And that he was buried and that he arose the third day according to the Scripture Here you heare Pauls traditions to be double things written For first they were taken out of the Scripture of the Old Testament Secondly they were committed to writing by Saint Paul himselfe So Paul saith of the Lords Supper I have received of the Lord that which I have delivered unto you 1 Cor. 11.23 But this traditions after the Evangelists himself also hath set downe in writing 2 Thes 3.16 The Jesuites cite the saying of Paul Withdraw your selves from every brother that walketh inordinately and not after the traditions which yee received of us But a little after in the same Chapter he describeth what tradition he meaneth as it is manifest to him that looketh on the place And yet will they thence prove that many things are to be beleeved which cannot be proved by any testimony of Scripture The like impudency they shew in another testimony taken our of Luke Acts 16.4 They delivered them the decrees to keep ordained of the Apostles and Elders which were at Jerusalem Ibid. 15.23 When a little before he witnesseth that those decrees were set downe in letters written by the Apostles How the Church may be said not to erre That opinion or saying of the Papists The Church doth not erre is true after this sort 1. The whole doth not erre though some members thereof doe erre 2. It doth not erre universally although in some points of doctrine it may 3. It erreth not in the foundation 5. In what the Church differeth from the Common-weale Seven differences betweene the Church and Common-weale THe Church differeth from the Common-weale 1. Because Common-weales are distinct and Kingdomes of the world are in divers places and times The Church is alwayes one and the same at all times and with all men 2. The Kingdoms and States of the world have many heads or one chiefe Head and many other inferiour heads besides and that on earth The Church hath but one and that in heaven 3. The Common-wealth is governed by certaine Lawes made for the maintenance of outward peace and tranquillity The Church is ruled by the holy Ghost and the Word of God 4. The Common-wealth or civill State requireth outward obedience onely The Church requireth both as well inward obedience as outward 5. In civill States and Common-wealths there is power and liberty to make new Lawes positive by the authority of the Magistrate the violating of which Lawes bindeth mens consciences and deserveth corporal punishments The Church is tied to the Word of God to which it is not lawfull to adde ought or to detract ought from it 6. The civill State hath corporall power wherewith it is armed against the obstinate and disobedient for he may and ought by force to curb these and to punish them by the sword The Church punisheth by denouncing Gods wrath out of the Word of God 7. In the Church are alwayes some elect and holy but not alwayes in the Common-wealth 6. Whence ariseth the difference of the Church from the rest of mankinde Three sorts of men in the world THere are three sorts of men very much different one from another For 1. Some men are even in profession estranged and alients from the Church as who deny faith and repentance and therefore are open enemies of God and the Church 2. Others are called but not effectually which are Hypocrites who professe indeed the faith but without any true conversion unto God 3. Others are called effectually which are the elect who are but a little portion according to that of Christ Many are called Mat. 20.16 Election putteth the difference between the Church and others but few are chosen Now the difference being known let us in a word see what is the cause of this difference 1. The efficient cause of this difference is the Election of God willing to gather unto himselfe a Church in earth 2. The Sonne of God is the mediate executor of this his will and purpose the holy Ghost the immediate Acts 14.16 Rom. 9.18 John 6.37 Rom. 8.19 30. 3. The word of God is the instrumentall cause In times past God suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their owne wayes God hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardneth All that the Father giveth me shall come to me Those which he knew before he also predestinate to be made like to the Image of his Sonne and whom he predestinate them also he called c. By these words we are taught that the promise of grace is generall in respect of the Elect or Beleevers God verily would have all to be saved and that 1. In respect that he loveth the salvation of all But the Elect onely have attained to that salvation 2. In respect that he inviteth all to salvation But the rest have beene hardened Rom. 11.7 7. Whether any one may be saved out of the Church NO man can be saved out of the Church None saved out of the Church John 13.5 Because without the Church there is no Saviour therefore no salvation also Without me you can doe nothing 2. Because whomsoever God hath chosen and elected to the end which is eternall life them he hath chosen to the meanes which is the inward and outward calling The elect therefore though they be not at all times members of the visible Church yet they are all made such before they die Object Therefore election is not free Answ It is free because God chose freely both to the end and to the meanes But after he hath once destined and ordained men to meanes he never
bodies or of our bodies blended and mingled with his The same is refuted by that often alledged comparison of the head and members For those are co-herent and grow together but are not in mixture or mingled one with another Whence also we may easily judge of that communion which is in the Sacraments for the Sacraments seale nothing else but that which the word promiseth But to let this passe The same former errour is also hereby refuted in that this communion must be continued for ever for to this end doth Christ communicate himself to us that hee may dwell in us wherefore such as is his abiding and dwelling such is his communion But Christs abiding and dwelling is perpetuall Therefore his communion also is perpetuall This argument is most strong and firm and therefore for the assoyling of it they have been fain to devise their Ubiquity For The originall of the Ubiquity For to obtain that other communion which they would have they must needs affirm that Christ dwelleth alwayes bodily in all his saints The faithfull are called saints in three respects 1. Imputatively that is Why the faithfull are called saints in respect of that Christs sanctity and holinesse is imputed unto them 2. Inchoatively that is in respect of that conformity and agreeablenesse with the law which is inchoated or begun in them 3. In respect of their separation because they are selected and separated from all other men and are called of God to this end ever to worship or serve him By this then which hath been spoken it appeareth what it is to beleeve the communion of saints namely The meaning of the words of the Article to beleeve that the saints of which number I certainly assure my selfe to be one are united by the Spirit unto Christ their head and that from the head gifts are powred down upon them both those which are the same in all necessary to salvation as also those which being diverse and diversly bestowed upon every one are requisite for the edification and building of the Church Quest 56. What beleevest thou concerning remission of sins Answ That God for the satisfaction made by Christ hath put out all remembrance of my sins a 1 Joh. 2.2 1 John 1.7 2 Cor. 5.19 and also of that corruption within me b Rom. 7.23.24 25. Jer. 31.34 Micah 7.19 Psal 103.3 10 12. wherewith I must fight all my life time and doth freely endow me with the righteousnesse of Christ that I come not at any time into judgement c John 3.18 John 5.24 The Explication The chief Questions here to be considered are 1. What remission of sin is 2. Who giveth it 3. For what 4. Whether it agreeth with Gods justice 5. Whether it be freely given 6. To whom it is given 7. How it is given 1. What remission of sins is REmission of sins is the purpose of God not to punish the sins of the faithfull and that for the satisfaction of Christ. Or it is the pardoning of deserved punishment and the giving or imputing of anothers righteousnesse to wit the righteousnesse of Christ. But more fully it is defined on this wise Remission of sins is the will of God which to the faithfull and elect imputeth not any sin but remitteth to them both the blame and punishment of their sin and therefore doth in like sort love them as if they had never sinned and delivereth them from all punishment of sin and giveth them eternall life freely for the intercession and merit of Jesus Christ the Son of God our Mediatour Now albeit God for the merit of his Son remitteth our sins to us yet hee afflicteth us as yet in this life not thereby to punish us but fatherly to chastise us Neither yet because God doth not punish us for our sins must wee therefore think that he is not displeased with them for hee is highly displeased and offended with the sins also of his saints and chosen although he punish them not in them because he punished them in his Son For God doth not so remit sins as if hee accounted them for no sins or were not offended at them but by not imputing them unto us and not punishing them in us and by reputing us just for anothers satisfaction which wee apprehend by faith It is all one therefore to have remission of sins and to be just Object The law doth not onely require us to avoid sin but to doe good also Therefore it is not enough that our sin be forgiven but also good works are needfull and necessary that wee may be just Ans The omission of good is all sin he that can do good James 4.17 and doth it not is a sinner and accursed But God doth not hate us neither hath he a will to punish us for those sins for which Christ hath sufficiently satisfied in whom also we have remission of these and all other our sins so that by his only merit we are reputed just before God 2. Who giveth remission of sins REmission of sins is given of God onely who as the Prophet Isaiah saith putteth away our iniquities Remission of sins is the work of all three persons Chap. 43.25 And this is done both of the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost for we are baptised in the name of all three Now baptism as also is said of Johns baptism Matth. 9.6 is wrought for remission of sins and of the Son the Scripture affirmeth plainly Acts 5.9 That the Son of man hath power to remit sins Likewise it is said of the holy Ghost Ephes 4.30 That he was tempted that he was offended and grieved Wherefore he also hath power to remit sins for none can remit sins but he against whom sin is committed and who is offended by sin And Christ also in plain words in the Evangelists speaketh of the sin against the holy Ghost Now the cause that God only that is Matth. 12.31 Mark 3.29 Luke 12.10 Why God onely can forgive sin the Father the Son and the holy Ghost only remit sins is this Because none but the party offended can remit sins But onely God the Father the Son and the holy Ghost is offended by our sins Therefore God only can remit them and consequently no creature is able to grant ought of this right of God Whereupon also David saith Against thee only have I sinned and done evill in thy sight Object But the Apostles also and the Church remit sins Matth. 18.18 because it is said Whatsoever ye bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and what whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven Whosesoever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them John 20.23 and whosesoever sins ye retain they are retained Therefore not only God remitteth sins Answ How the ministers the Church are said to rem●t sins The Apostles remit sins in that they are the signifiers and declarers of Gods remission Likewise
in remembrance of him and to shew forth his death 7. That Christ in his Supper doth not command and require a dissembled and hypocriticall remembrance of him and publishing of his death but such as imbraceth his Passion and death and all his benefits obtained by these for us by a true and lively faith and with earnest and ardent thankfulnesse and applieth them unto those which eat and drinke as proper unto them 8. That Christ will dwell in beleevers only and in them who not through contempt but through necessity cannot come to the Lords Supper yea in all beleevers even from the beginning of the world to all eternitie even as well and after the same manner as he will dwell in them who came unto the Lords Supper They disagree in these points 1 THat one part contendeth that these words of Christ This is my body must be understood as the wordes sound which yet that part it selfe doth not prove but the other part that those words must be understood sacramentally according to the declaration of Christ and Paul according to the most certain and infallible rule and levell of the Articles of our Christian faith 2. That one part will have the body and bloud of Christ to be essentially In or With the bread and the wine and so be eaten as that together with the bread and the wine out of the hand of the Minister it entreth by the mouth of the receivers into their bodies but the other part will have the body of Christ which in the first Supper sate at the table by the Disciples now to be and continue not here on earth but above in the heavens above and without this visible world and heaven untill he descend thence again to judgement and yet that we notwithstanding here on earth as oft as we eat this bread with a true faith are so fed with his body and made to drink of his bloud that not only through his passion and bloud shed we are cleansed from our sins but are also in such sort coupled knit and incorporated into his true essentiall humane body by his Spirit dwelling both in him and us that we are flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones and are more neerly and firmely knit and united with him than the members of our body are united with our head and so we draw and have in him and from him everlasting life 3. That one part will have all whosoever come to the Lords Supper and eat and drink that bread and wine whether they be beleevers or unbeleevers to eat and drink corporally and with their bodily mouth the flesh and bloud of Christ beleevers to life and salvation unbeleevers to damnation and death the other holdeth that unbeleevers abuse indeed the outward signes bread and wine to their damnation but that the faithfull only can eat and drink by a true faith and the fore-alledged working of the holy Ghost the body and bloud of Christ unto eternall life Quest 83. What are the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven ON THE 31. SABBATH Ans Preaching of the Gospel and Ecclesiasticall discipline by which heaven is opened to the beleevers and is shut against the unbeleevers Quest 84. How is the Kingdome of heaven opened and shut by the preaching of the Gospel Answ When by the commandement of Christ it is publikely declared to all and every one of the faithfull that all their sins are pardoned them of God for the merit of Christ so often as they imbrace by a lively faith the promise of the Gospel but contrarily is denounced to all Infidels and Hypocrites that so long the wrath of God and everlasting damnation doth lie on them as they persist in their wickednesse a John 20.21 22 23. Mat. 16.19 according to which testimony of the Gospel God will judge them as well in this life as in the life to come Quest 85. How is the Kingdom of heaven opened and shut by Ecclesiasticall discipline Ans When according to the commandement of Christ they who in name are Christians but in their doctrine and life shew themselves aliens from Christ b Rom. 11.7 8 9. 1 Cor. 12.28 after they have been some time admonished will not depart from their errours or wickednesse are made knowne unto the Church or to them that are appointed for that matter and purpose of the Church and if neither then they obey their admonition are of the same men by interdiction from the Sacraments shut out from the Congregation of the Church and by God himselfe out of the Kingdome of heaven And againe if they professe and indeed declare amendment of life are received as members of Christ and his Church c Mat. 18.15 16 17. 1 Cor. 5.3 4 5. 2 Thes 3.14 15. 2 John 10.11 2 Cor. 2.6 7 10 11. 1 Tim. 5.17 The Explication SEeing it hath bin shewed in the Treatise next going before who are to be admitted by the Church unto the Lords Supper very commodiously and fitly shall this doctrine follow concerning the power of the keyes wherein besides other things this chiefly is taught How they who are not to be admitted must be restrained and excluded from the Sacraments lest approaching unto them they profane them The chiefe questions are 1. What the power of the keyes given unto the Church is and what are the parts thereof 2. Whether Ecclesiasticall discipline and excommunication be necessary 3. To whom that power is committed against whom and in what order to be used 4. To what ends it is to be directed and what abuses therein are to be avoided 5. What that power of the keyes committed unto the Church differeth from the Civill power 1. What the power of the keyes given to the Church is and what are the parts thereof THe power of the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven which Christ gave to his Church is the preaching of the Gospell and Ecclesiasticall discipline whereby heaven is opened to the beleeving and shut up against the unbeleeving and unfaithfull Or it is the office or charge imposed on the Church by Christ of denouncing by the preaching of the Gospell and Church discipline Gods will and even of declaring the grace of God and remission of sins unto the penitent that is to them who live in true faith and repentance but of denouncing unto the wicked the wrath of God and exclusion or banishment from the Kingdome of Christ and of casting such out of the Church as long as they shall shew themselves in doctrine and life estranged from Christ and of receiving them againe into the Church when afterwards they shall repent It is called the power of the keyes by a Metaphor or borrowed speech taken from the Stewards of mens houses Why this power is called the keys to whom the keyes are delivererd in charge and the keyes import a Steward-ship by a Metonymy or change of names between the signe and the thing signified thereby as we use to say The Scepter
or Crowne of any Countrey when wee intimate and signifie thereby the Kingdome of that Countrey Wherefore Paul saith 1 Tim. 3.15 1 Cor. 4.1 The Church is the house of the living God The Ministers of the Church are Gods Stewards For look what a faithfull Steward is in his Masters house ordering all things at his Masters beck the same a faithfull Minister is in Gods Church Wherefore the denouncing of Gods will in his Church is executed by the Ministers as the Stewards in his name God himself is authour of this Ministry who gave this power and priviledge to his Church and intituled it by the name of the Keys saying unto Peter I will give unto thee the Keys of the Kingdom of heaven that is the office or power of shutting and opening the Kingdome of God and unto all his Disciples Whatsoever yee binde on earth shall be bound in heaven Mat. 18.18 and whatsoever yee loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven So then the Keyes are that power of opening and shutting binding and loosing and are called Keyes from the efficacy of this power For the Church verily by the Word of God in Christs name whose place the Ministers supply doth open and shut heaven binde and loose men and the holy Ghost workes powerfully by the Word John 20.23 as Christ promised Whosesoever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whosesoever sins ye retain they are retained Now the chiefe and principall parts of this power of the Keyes are two The preaching of the Gospel Two parts of the power of the Keyes or Ministery of the Word and Church judgement which is called also spirituall Discipline or Jurisdiction whereunto Excommunication belongeth With either of these two parts the Church shutteth and openeth bindeth and looseth By the preaching of the Word it shutteth and bindeth when it denounceth to Hypocrites and Infidels Gods wrath and eternal damnation untill they repent and it openeth and looseth when it preacheth to the faithfull and penitent remission of sinnes and Gods favour through Christ By Ecclesiasticall judgement it shutteth and bindeth when it excommunicateth outragious and refractary or stubborne persons that is excludeth them from the communion of the Sacraments the Church and Kingdom of God Againe it openeth and looseth thereby when it receiveth the same persons upon their repentance as members of Christ and his Church Here we are to observe a difference in the order of these two parts For in the preaching of the Gospel the Keyes doe first loose and afterwards binde but in Ecclesiasticall discipline they first binde and afterwards loose Againe in the former they bind and loose the same or divers parties in the latter they binde and loose the same persons only Now What Excommunication is Excommunication is the banishing of a grievous transgressour or an open ungodly obstinate person from the fellowship of the faithfull by the judgement of the Elders or Chief men and by the consent of the whole Church exercised and executed in the name and authority of Christ and of the holy Ghost to the end that the offender being put to shame may repent and scandals in the Church may be prevented This exclusion or exile is not only from the Sacraments but even from the whole communion of the faithfull whereunto the obstinate pertain not at all Two sorts of Excommunication It is two-fold Internall which concerneth God only and Externall which belongeth to the Church The internall excommunication is manifested to men on earth by the externall and the externall is ratified in heaven by the internall according to Christs promise Whatsoever ye bind on earth Mat. 18.18 shall be bound in heaven 2. Whether Ecclesiasticall Discipline and Excommunication be necessary in the Church COncerning the Ministery of the Word there is no doubt but all the Prophets Christ and the Apostles have preached and whereas Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction hath a necessary co-herence with the Ministery of Gods Word it is not to be doubted thereof inasmuch as God himself and Christ and the Apostle Paul have both by precepts and practice confirmed and established it Mat. 18 15. 2 Thes 3.14 1 Cor. 5.1 1 Tim. 1.20 And verily if no Territory no City can stand without discipline lawes and punishment the Church also which is the House of the living God hath need of some spirituall policy and discipline though it much differ from civill Jurisdiction Church-discipline therefore is necessary 1. In respect of Gods generall commandement of preventing the profanation of his Sacraments both in the Old and New Testament In the Old Testament God would not that the rebellious should be reputed so much as members of his people but would have them cut off much lesse would he indure that they should be admitted to his Sacraments Num. 15.30 31. The person that dothought presumptuously whether born in the land or a stranger the same blasphemeth the Lord Therefore that person shall be cut off from among his people Because hee hath despised the Word of the Lord and hath broken his commandement that person shall be utterly cut off God would that all should come unto the Passeover that is all the members of his people but the rebellious and obstinate breakers of his Covenant he utterly disclaimed and renounced from being members of his people therefore hee permitted them not to come thereunto That man that will doe presumptuously Deut. 17.11 not harkening unto the Priest that standeth before the Lord thy God to minister there or unto the Judge that man shall dye and thou shalt take away evill from Israel By these two places God will have those cut off which are rebellious against his law and that even from the civill state and Common-wealth neither doth he permit them to be any members of his people much lesse then will he have them to be accounted members of his visible Church and admitted to the Sacraments The civill or judiciall law indeed is taken away as also are the ceremonies but that especiall difference between the Citizens of the Church and others is not taken away In the first of Esay is a whole Sermon against the wicked which offered sacrifices unto God and there God will not that they should sacrifice unto him therefore now also he will not that such men be admitted to the Sacraments Bring no more oblations saith God in vaine Object God will that all should celebrate the Passeover Therefore here-hence hee excluded not the wicked Ans God will that all celebrate his Passeover that is all such as he will have accounted for members of his Church and people not the obstinate whom hee commanded to be sequestred from his congregation Againe Esay 66. he detesteth such as persist in their wickednesse and yet offer sacrifices unto him Hee that killeth a bullocks is as if he slew a man hee that sacrificeth a sheep Esay 66.3 as if he cut off a dogges necke hee that offereth
an oblation as if hee offered swines bloud hee that remembreth incense as if hee blessed an Idoll Jerem. 6.20 In the sixth of Jeremy he sharply reproveth those who being defiled with their abominations yet durst appeare in his Temple Ezekiel the 20. he threatneth that he will not answer Ezck. 20.31 when he is asked by them who goe after other gods and then present themselves in Gods Temple when they are polluted In the same Chapter he saith verse 24. that they profane his Sabbaths and pollute his Sanctuary who when they have gone a whoring after Idols appeare in his Temple Amos the fifth Amos 5.21 hee rejecteth the sacrifices and worship of transgressors I hate and abhorre your feast-dayes and will not smell in your solemne assemblies Haggai the second he prohibiteth the uncleane in soule once to touch holy things where he speaketh of morall and ceremoniall uncleanenesse Prov. 15.8 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord. In the New Testament John admitteth them only to baptisem who confessed their sins and repented Bring forth fruits worthy amendement of life Leave thine offering before the Altar and goe thy way Mat. 3.6 first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift Therefore whosoever reconcileth not first himself unto his brother hee is to be debarred the Sacraments For Christ will that all submit themselves first unto God according to all his commandements before they approach to any Sacrament For by the name of Altar here are understood any Sacraments whatsoever Amend your lives Acts 2.38 8.37 1 Cor. 10.20 21. 11.27 and be baptised every one of you If thou beleevest with all thine heart thou mayest be baptised Therefore if thou beleevest not thou mayest not The things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to divels and not unto God Yee cannot be partakers of the Lords Table and of the Table of Divels Whosoever eateth unworthily is guilty of the Lords body But the wicked eating without faith and repentance eate unworthily Therefore they are guilty We ought not to partake in other mens sins and we ought not to wink at any mans destruction therefore wee may not admit the wicked to the Sacrament lest they eat unto themselves damnation 2. In respect of Christ and his Apostles speciall commandement If thy brother trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault between him and thee alone Mat. 18.15 16 17 18. if hee heare thee thou hast wonne thy brother But if he heare thee not take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be confirmed And if he will not vouchsafe to heare them tell it unto the Church and if he refuse to heare the Church also let him be unto thee as an Heathen man and a Publican Verily I say unto you Whatsoever yee bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven But Christ will not that his Sacraments which he instituted for the faithfull alone be made common with Pagans and Publicans And lest this Mandate might be understood of some private and speciall judgement it is expresly added Whatsoever yee shall bind c. which words cannot be otherwise understood but of the publike power of the Keys I verily as absent in body but present in spirit 1 Cor. 5.3 4 5. have determined already as though I were present that hee that hath done this thing when ye are gathered together and my spirit in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that such one I say by the power of our Lord Jesus Christ be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh Ibid. ver 11 13. that the spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus And againe With such a one eate not Put away therefore from your selves that wicked man For what concord hath Christ with Belial 2 Thes 3.6 14. or what part hath the Beleever with the Infidels We command you brethren in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that yee withdraw your selves from every brother that walketh inordinately and not after the instruction which yee received of us If any man obey not our sayings note him by a letter and have no company with him that hee may be ashamed 2 John ver 10. If there come any unto you and bring not this doctrine receive him not to house neither bid him God speed for he that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evill deeds 3. The power of the Keyes is necessary in respect of Gods glory For God is reproached and despited if without difference wicked blasphemers goe in the number of his Children and his Kingdom and the divels be confounded 4. Lest the Sacraments be profaned and that given the wicked in the Supper which is denied them in the Word 5. That the purity of Gods doctrine and worship be preserved 6. For the safety of the Church which shall be punished if she wittingly and willingly profane Christs Sacraments or suffer them to be profaned 7. For the safety of the sinners that they being often admonished and put to shame may returne to repentance 8. For avoiding of offence in the Church that others weaklings be not corrupted by evill example 4.1 Cor. 5.6 Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump 9. For avoiding of offence among those that are without lest they who are not as yet members of the Church come not to it 10. That the name of God might not be blasphemed and evill spoken of by others and his Covenant despited and reproached 11. That from the sinners themselves punishment may be averted because the wicked approaching unto the Lords Table eate their owne damnation Wherefore that this may not come to passe the Church is bound to provide that such approach not thither 12. They who deny the faith and doctrine of Christ are to be excluded from the Church and from the use of the Sacraments For the Faithfull or Christians are not to be confounded or mingled with those who are not members of the Church or with those who are professed ungodly persons blasphemers revolters to Arrianisme Mahumetanisme and the like But they that deny and refuse to repent deny the faith and doctrine They professe that they know God but by workes they deny him And he that denieth the faith Tims 1.16 is worse than Infidels Therefore they who persist in their wickednes and deny to repent are to be shut out of the Church neither are they to be admitted to the use of the Sacraments 13. And here hath place that saying of Christ Give not that which is holy to dogges Wherefore neither to the Sacraments are dogges to be admitted namely those which persist in their wickednesse and make a mocke of Gods Word For if Christ speaketh this of his audible Word to wit the Word preached which yet was instituted
tell it unto the Church Mat. 18.17 Luke 22.25 26. The Kings of the Gentiles reign over them but ye shall not be so Wherefore the consent and decree of the Church is to be expected 1. Because of Gods expresse commandement to this purpose 2. That no man be injured 3. That the processe may be better authorised 4. That the Ministery of the Church grow not unto an Oligarchy or a Papisticall soveraignity of some few persons 5. That the condemnation of the rebellious may be the more just The last abuse to be prevented by Excommunication is 5. That we kindle no schismes not give occasion of scandall and offence in the Church whilst good men see many at variance between themselves that grievous evils follow one another on the head and that the Church is divided These evils if the Ministers see or feare they may not proceed but warne and exhort both privately and publikely If they profit nothing hereby they are held excused Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Mat. 5.6 for they shall be filled Others shall give an account of their obstinacy 5. How the power of the Keyes committed to the Church differeth from the Civill power THe differences are many and manifest 1. Ecclesiasticall discipline is executed by the Church the civill power by the Judge or Magistrate 2. In the civill state judgement is exercised according to civill and positive lawes in the Church judgement proceedeth according to Gods Lawes and Word 3. The power of the Keyes committed unto the Church dependeth on Gods Word and the Church exerciseth her authority by the Word when it denounceth the anger and wrath of God against Infidels and unrepentant persons and punisheth the obstinate with the Word only yet so as that this punishment pierceth even unto their consciences the civill power is armed with the Sword and punisheth the obstinate with corporall punishments only 4. The judgement of the Church hath degrees of admonition and if repentance interpose it selfe it proceedeth not to punishment the civill judgement and the Magistrate proceeds to punishment though the offender repent 5. The end and purpose of the Church is that hee which hath offended should repent and be saved for ever the end and purpose of the Magistrate is that the offender be punished and so peace and externall order and discipline be maintained in the Common-wealth 6. As the Church proceedeth against refractary and obstinate persons only so it is bound to reverse and retract her judgement and punishment if there come repentance but the Magistrate when he hath once punished is not bound to recall his judgment and punishment neither is hee able sometimes to revoke and repeale it The Thiefe repenteth on the Crosse and is received of Christ into Paradise neverthelesse the Magistrate goeth on to execute this penalty adjudged unto him and putteth him out of the Common-wealth So oftentimes the discipline of the Church hath place where there is no place for civill judgement as when the Church casteth out of her congregation the impenitent and accounteth them no more for her members whom notwithstanding the civill Magistrate tolerateth And contrariwise the civill government oft-times exileth those whom the Church receiveth as when the Magistrate punisheth Adulterers Robbers Theeves and doth no more reckon them for members of the Common-wealth whether they repent or continue obstinate whom yet the Church if they repent abandoneth not but receiveth Wherefore the difference of the Ecclesiasticall and civill power is apparent and manifest There remaine objections of the Adversaries of Ecclesiasticall Discipline whereunto wee will in few words make answer Object 1. The charge and office of the Keyes is no where commanded Therefore it is not to be ordained in the Church and by consequent no man ought to be excluded from the Sacrament Ans The Antecedenc is false because frequently in Scripture manifest testimonies of this charge and commission are extant Matth. 16.19 I will give unto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heaven and whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth shall be bound in heaven Here in plain words is expressed the power of the keyes committed to all ministers of the word Moreover what this office or charge of the keyes committed to the Church is and how the Church must discharge this charge and function Christ likewise plainly advertiseth and declareth If he will not vouchsafe to hear them tell it to the Church Mat. 18.17 1● and if he refuse to hear the Church also let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican Verily I say unto you Whatsoever ye bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven These things given thus in precept by Christ Paul also doth in the thing it selfe confirm 1 Cor. 5.1 5. 11.20 Let such a one be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus When yee come together into one place this is not to eat the Lords Supper 2 Thes 3.14 If any man obey not your savings note him by a letter and have no company with him that he may be ashamed Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I have delivered unto Sathan 1 Tim. 1.20 that they may learn not to blaspheme In the Prophets also are manifest testimonies in which this is apparent to have been commanded by God Isa 1.11 What have I to do with the multitude of your sacrifices saith the Lord I am full of the burnt offerings of rams and of the fat of fed beasts and I desire not the bloud of bullocks nor of lambs nor of goats Isa 66.3 Hee that killeth a bullocke is as if he slew a man he that sacrificeth a sheep as if he cut off a dogs neck he that offereth an oblation as if he offered swines blond he that remembreth incense as if he blessed an idol I spake not unto your fathers nor commanded them Jerem. 7.22 when I brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt-offerings and sacrifices Psal 30.16 Unto the wicked said God What hast thou to doe to declare mine ordinances that thou shouldst take my covenant in thy mouth Wherefore Christ also saith Matth. 5.24 Leave there thine offering before the Altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift There are other places also of Scripture besides these where it is commanded that all professed wicked persons be excluded from the Church and the use of the sacraments as wheresoever is reprehended the unlawfull use of the sacraments Likewise wheresoever the Ministers are commanded to receive only such for members of the Church as professe faith and repentance Rep. God indeed forbiddeth the ungodly to come unto the Sacraments but he willeth not that the Church should forbid them Ans What God forbiddeth to have done in the Church
death which thing Pilate also himself confirmeth saying Joh. 19.10 Knowest thou not that I have power to crucifie thee and have power to loose thee Repl. 6. It is said in the Gospel Take ye him and judge him after your own law Ans He meaneth the law of Moses as if he should say If he be a blasphemer stone him to death you have my good leave and warrant Repl. 7. Josephus saith That their lawes were granted unto them by Claudius Ans Then before-time they had them not Moreover Claudius is said in this sense to have granted them their lawes because hee permitted them to observe their own lawes and rites in religion Joseph lib. 19. Antiq. cap. 5. I will saith Claudius the Emperour that their lawes be no longer infringed through my predecessour Caius his folly but by the publication of this my Edict that other of Caius be repealed and they have free liberty to persist in the ancient religion of their Fathers Repl. 8. Their Councell was taken away by Herod the Great Therefore before time they had civill jurisdiction and at that time when Christ commanded to signifie it unto the Councell they had none but the civill Wherefore by consequent it was to be signified to the civill Senate for that there was no councell but the Civill For in all there were three councels or assemblies 1. Of the whole kingdome as the high courts of Parliament in England 2. A lesse councell which was the Senate of the city of Jerusalem and that was civill and ecclesiasticall 3. The Triumviri All these were civill The Councell then was civill Christ sendeth to the councell Therefore to the civill Senate Ans 1. By retortion If the Jews lost their civill Jurisdiction under Herod the Great then they had it not in Christs time for it is cleere that Herod the Great died before Christ began to teach Ans 2. The councell was civill but not only civill for it had also Ecclesiasticall power because it handled and decided matters of religion It consisted of Pharisees and Scribes of Divines and Lawyers For they had morall and judiciall lawes The lesse Councell therefore whereof Christ speaketh was not meerely Civill but Ecclesiasticall also Now then the question is Whether Christ commanded to tell the Councell as it is Civill or as it is Ecclesiasticall That he will have it signified unto the Councell as it is Ecclesiasticall we prove out of the text 1. Because we are commanded to account the excommunicated person for an heathen and publican that is for an alien from Christs Kingdome Now to pronounce a man to be a Publican and an alien from Christs kingdome belongeth unto the Ecclesiasticall Magistrate not unto the Civill because a publican and an heathen may be a member of the City but not of the Church of Christ 2. Christ addeth Verily verily I say unto you whatsoever ye bind on earth shall be bound in heaven Here Christ meeteth with an objection For the excommunicated person may object what doth this touch me Although the Church account me for an Infidell for a Heathen man and publican I wil notwithstanding in the mean season ear and drink Christ answereth therefore that this judgement shall not be frustrate or of no effect for I my selfe will be the executor of it Before he said I will give thee the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven Chap. 16. but there he speaketh of the common and generall authority of the Ministery here he speaketh namely and particularly of the Ministers authority in this case To bind loose therefore is not belonging unto the Civill Magistrate but unto the Church Thus farre concerning the first member That in the name of the Church mention is made of the Seniory Now as touching the other member that there is mention of Excommunication in those words Let him be unto thee as an heathen or publican The excommunication is contained in the place of Scripture before alledged Repl. 1. To be accounted for an Heathen man and To be excommunicated are not all one Therefore the word Excommunication is not contained here in words of like force Now the Antecedent is proved thus Let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican There he speakes not of the publique judgement of the Church but of the private judgement of each man Therefore he is not presently excommunicated by the whole Church who is accounted for an heathen by private men Ans Whom each in severall account for an heathen man him the whole Church so accounteth of Therefore he speaketh of the judgement of the Church Rep. 2. But it is not said there in the text whom the whole Church accounteth for an heathen man but He that heareth not the Church account him for a heathen man Therefore thou accountest him not so according to the Churches judgement but according to thine owne judgement Answ Well I account him so because he heareth not the Church But Not to heare the Church and To be a publican and estranged from the Church are not these all one But I adde another thing which admitteth lesse questioning He saith not onely to every private man but the whole Church For To thee and To the Church are of like force For when Christ commandeth that I account a man for a publican and a Heathen doth he in the meane time will that the Church account him for a Christian No because then he would have contrary judgements to be at once given of the same man Wherefore to be accounted of one for a publican is so to be accounted of all even of the whole Church and if that denunciation should not be done in speciall and particular no man should be accounted for a Publican But To be accounted of the Church for a publican and an heathen is to be excommunicated and to be out of the communion of the Church wherefore this later member standeth still that in the Scripture alledged mention is made of Excommunication and that it is committed to the Church Repl. 3. The wicked may be accounted for heathens and publicans without any Excommunication Therefore a publican and an excommunicate are not all one Ans I deny the Antecedent because To account one out of the communion of the Church and To excommunicate are all one Rep. 4. But we may account one that is think one in mind to be such a person Ans If he hear not the Church thou art to know not what the Church thinketh of him in mind but what they publikly determine of him whether thou maiest account him for an heathen and publican And furthermore Paul else-where forbids us to eat and drink with a wicked person 1 Cor. 5.11 but conversing with a wicked man cannot be avoided on the secret cogitation but on the publick determination of the Church therefore it is not a knowledge only in the mind Thirdly in the same place he saith Put away from among your selves that wicked man that
and re-established by the Messias Ans The Major of this Syllogisme is not simply and universally true because there the Prophet indeed prophesieth of the kingdome of the Messias but not only thereof For withall he describeth the restitution of the ceremoniall worship in Judea which should be after the returne of the people out of the captivity of Babylon and should stand in force untill the coming of the Messias Wee deny also the Minor For in the alledged Prophecie not onely the restoring of the Jewish types is promised but under the description of the types the spirituall state and stateliness of the Church which should be under the kingdom of the Messias is shadowed and insinuated which state and statelinesse was to be begun in this life and to be perfected in the life to come Whereof good proofe may be made by these evident arguments Arguments to prove that under the typicall description before alledged the spirituall condition and estate of the Church is figured 1. The story of Esdras testifieth unto us that this restoring was not accomplished untill the coming of Christ and withall other Oracles also of the Prophets concerning the base and contemptible coming and kingdom of the Messias in this world suffer us not to beleeve that there shall be any such magnificent and pompous estate of the Church on earth as the Jewes dreame of no not after the coming of the Messias Wherefore that fore-mentioned restoring of Jerusalem that is the Church is either to be understood spiritually or of force we must grant this absurdity namely that this Prophecy never was nor shall be performed 2. That promise delivered by the Prophet The house of Israel shall no more defile mine holy Name neither they nor their Kings doth necessarily enforce a spirituall sense and meaning touching the perfection of the life to come Ezek. 43.7 For usuall and customable it is with the Prophets to unite the entry of Christs kingdom with the full and perfect establishment thereof Ezek. 47.1 3. Furthermore those waters issuing out of the Temple spoken of in the same Prophecy may not be interpreted to be elementary waters but shadow and represent unto us the plentifull effusion from heaven of the gifts of the holy Ghost in Christs kingdom 4. Lastly we Christians have for our Interpreter the Apostle S. John in his Revelation Chap. 21 22. where the spirituall and heavenly Jerusalem that is the glorified Church of the New Testament is desciphered in words and termes literally borrowed from this description of Ezekiel Wherefore this Prophecie maketh nought to prove the continuall observation of ceremonies in the kingdome of the Messias Object 3. The best and most just forme of government is alwaies to be followed But there can be none better or juster than that which God himselfe settled among his people the Jewes therefore that is to be followed and retained Answ Either the Major of this reason may be distinguished or the Minor denied with an exposition For that which in positive lawes that is such as define the circumstances of the duty of Magistrates and subjects and Citizens one towards another is in every place and at all times most just the same are Law makers to follow But in that forme of the Mosaicall government many things are applied to the state and condition of that Nation Region Time and Ceremoniall worship the observation whereof would now be neither just nor profitable because the causes for which those lawes should be given to the Jewes are taken away or changed as of giving a bill of divorce of marrying the widowes of their kinsmen Wherefore God will not that all Nations and ages be tyed unto those lawes An argument whereof is that even at that very time when he commanded these lawes to be observed hee bound not all Nations but only Abrahams posterity unto them and yet some that lived according to such civill laws of other Nations as were not wicked and ungodly did please him as Naaman the Syrian and whosoever of the Gentiles were converted who yet notwithstanding did not observe the ceremonies and civill lawes of the Jewes And Paul saith wee must obey not only those which governe according to Moses laws but also other Magistrates as the ordinance of God as long as they command nothing contrary to the commandements of God And himself also submitted himselfe to the Romane lawes when hee appealed unto Caesar Rom. 13.2 and when he said it was unlawfull to binde one uncondemned which was a Romane Furthermore if any man will hence conclude That seeing it is lawfull to use the Lawes of other Common-weales as the Athenian Romane and such like it is therefore much more lawfull and beseeming to imitate and follow the forme of that Common-wealth which was immediately ordered and constituted by God himselfe We easily grant that wise and discreet Magistrates and Law-givers may take as well thence as out of other governments if there be any thing convenient and agreeing with their subjects with whom and the time wherein they live so that all opinion of necessity be taken away that is so that it be not therefore commanded or retained because it was prescribed by Moses to the Jews but because there are good reasons wherefore now also it should be done so and if the causes be changed then that the liberty also of changing these lawes by publike authority be retained Neither yet is Moses law any whit impeached by this liberty of cleaving to it or leaving it and appointing other ordinances in place thereof sith in so doing we doe no more than cease to observe that which was never imposed on us How far forth the morall Law is abrogated Hitherto have we intreated of the abrogation of the Ceremoniall and Civill lawes Touching the morall law it is in some part abrogated by Christ and in some part not abrogated It is abrogated in respect of the faithfull two waies 1. As touching the curse of it 1. As touching the course of it Psal 143.2 so that it cannot condemne such as are justified by faith in Christ by reason of the merit of Christ imputed unto them or as touching justification because judgement is not given of us according to the Law but according to the Gospel John 3.36 For the judgement of the Law would condemne and cast us away whose dreadfull voice is Rom. 8.1 In thy sight shall no man living be justified But the judgement of the Gospel is He that beleeveth in the Son of God hath everlasting life This abrogation of the Law is the first and principall part of Christian liberty whereof it is said There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the law but under grace 2. As touching constraint 2. As touching constraint For now the Law doth not any more expresse and wrest obedience from us as a Tyrant or as a Master enforcing and constraining a
is not translated unto them which is proper unto Christ Answ They cannot escape or avoide by this meanes but that they must needs be injurious unto Christ For the Antecedent proposition hath no sufficient enumeration of those waies whereby Christs honour is translated unto others For not onely they which by their own proper vertue and worthinesse but also they which by Christs vertue are said to merit of God those blessings that are proposed for the merit of Christ onely are put in the place and office of Christ For no man besides Christ is able to merit of God any thing not so much as for himselfe much lesse for others by his own obedience and intercession wherefore our Adversaries by this reply overturne their owne doctrine For if the prayers of the Saints are acceptable to God and are heard of him through the force and vertue of Christs merit and intercession they cannot be accepted nor obtaine any thing for us for their owne holinesse and merits as the Papists have hitherto taught us For he that standeth in need of a Mediatour and Intercessour himselfe cannot be the intercessour for other men albeit he may pray for others For he is here called an Intercessour who by the worthinesse and glory of his owne satisfaction and petition obtaineth grace and favour for others 13. Here they reply They which pray for us in heaven are to be prayed unto The Saints pray for us in heaven because in this life they pray one for another and in heaven their love is more fervent towards us then in this life and this may be done without any injury unto Christ our Mediatour and with assured perswasion of being heard either for their merits or for the merit of Christ Therefore we are to pray unto them Answ The consequence of this reason holdeth not Because the praying of one for another is no sufficient cause for which he should be called upon or prayed to who doth pray We gladly yeeld and grant that the Saints in heaven do most earnestly desire of God the defence and deliverance of their brethren namely of the Church militant on earth and that their prayers are heard according to the will and counsell of God whereunto they submit themselves And that this is the meaning and opinion of the ancient Doctors when they treate of the prayers of the blessed for the Church the considering and conference of the places themselves doth shew But that the Saints understand and pray against the evils and dangers of every one and heare out petitions and requests we deny Wherefore neither living in that heavenly fellowship and society neither conversing in this life are they to be called upon or prayed unto without manifest Idolatry 14. God saith though Moses and Samuel stood before me yet mine affection could not be towards this people Therefore the Saints departed pray for us Answ 1. Though we should grant this whole argument yet it followeth not hereon that they are to be prayed unto as hath been already proved 2. This is a figure of speech representative bringing in the dead praying as if they were yet living so that the meaning and sense is Though Moses and Samuel were now living and should pray for this wicked and reprobate people as whiles they lived they prayed for their people and were heard yet they should not obtaine grace or pardon The like place we reade in Ezekiel Though Noah Daniel and Job were in the midst of it As I live saith the Lord God Ezek. 14.20 they shall deliver but their owne soules Here Daniel which was yet living and Noah and Job which were long since departed are placed by the Prophet in the midst of the wicked praying for them 15. The Lord saith by Esaiah I will defend the City to save it for mine owne sake and for David my servants sake ● Kings 19.34 Therefore wee are heard also for the merit and intercession of the Saints Ans This protection and preserving of the City is not promised in respect of Davids merit but in respect of Gods promise of the Messias which should be born of Davids posterity Repl. The delivery of the City from the siege of the Assyrians is not promised and performed in respect of the promise of the Messias because that promise might have beene fulfilled without the benefit of delivery as also it was fulfilled after the taking and overthrow of the City Ans They erre that restraine Christs benefit to those things or promises onely without the performance whereof the promise made unto David concerning the Messias could not have been kept For all the benefits and blessings of God both corporall and spirituall both before and after the Messias was exhibited as well those without which the promise of the Messias could as those without which it could not be fulfilled are all performed unto the Church for the Messias sake For all the promises of God in him are Yea and are in him Amen 2 Cor. 1.20 And so doth the Scripture expound the like kinds of speaking as 1 Kings 13. Deut. 7. Lastly the benefits which God also performeth unto the wicked posterity of the godly are attributed to the godlinesse of their godly parents not of merit but of mercy and for the truth of Gods promises As Exod. 20. 32. Deut. 4.16 16. Jacob saith of Josephs sons Let my name be named upon them Gen. 48.16 and the name of my fathers Abraham and Isaac Here Jacob willeth himselfe and his fathers to be called upon after his death Therefore it is lawfull to call upon the Saints departed Ans It is an Hebrew phrase which signifieth not adoration but an adopting of sonnes so that the sense is Let them be called by my name or let them take their name from me that is let them be called my sons having the dignity and title of Patriarchs that two Tribes of Israel may come therein The like phrase is in Esay Esa 4.1 In that day shall seven women say to one man * According to the old Latines Let thy name be called upon us Job 5.1 Let us be called by thy name that is let us be called thy wives 17. Call now if any will answer thee and to which of the Saints wilt thou turne Here Eliphas exhorteth Job to crave the aid of some Saints Answ The words which goe before do shew that these words belong to a comparison of men with Angels whom he saith so far to excell men in purity that they doe not so much as make answer or appeare being called by men Wherefore this place doth more make against then plead for the invocation of Angels * This is translated according to the old Latine translation the words whereof the Papists urge 18. If there be an Angel one of a thousand to speake for him to declare mans righteousnesse He will have mercy upon him and will say Deliver him that he go not downe into the pit I
have found one in whom I am reconciled unto him Ans Here the old translation speaketh improperly For the words are thus If there be an Angel with him or Interpreter one of a thousand to declare unto man his righteousnesse Then will he have mercy upon him and will say Deliver him that he go not downe into the pit for I have found a reconciliation Now then albeit this were the sense that Angels pray for men distressed and in affliction yet this made nothing for their invocation But it is manifest that this is the sense If a man diseased or afflicted be in his calamity instructed of the will justice and goodnesse of God either by an Angel or by a Prophet or by some Teacher for these also are called Angels and repenteth him of his sins and assenteth unto the doctrine and comfort ministred unto him him will God deliver by their ministery by whom he doth instruct him 19. Inasmuch as saith Christ ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren Mat. 25.40 ye have done it unto me Therefore what honour of invocation we give unto the Saints the same is also given unto Christ himself Ans That honour of the creature may and ought to be referred unto God which God willeth to be done unto him but that honour of the creature which God forbiddeth to be given unto the creature is not honourable but reproachfull and contumelious unto God Now the reason is sottish whereas they will seeme to draw it from the words of Christ when Christ speaketh of the duties of charity which God willeth us to performe in this life towards those that stand in need of our aid help not of the invocation of Saints 20. If the Angels understanding our necessities pray for us and so are to be prayed unto it is lawfull also to pray unto Saints But that the Angels pray for us in speciall it is confirmed by Zachary The Angel of the Lord answered and said Chap. 1.12 O Lord of hosts how long wilt thou be unmercifull to Jerusalem and to the cities of Judah Ans The Major is not wholly to be granted namely that all the Angels understand all the wants and necessities of men For the calamities of Jewry were open not onely to the sight of Angels but also to the sight of Men. 2. We deny the consequence which they frame from the Angels unto the Saints departed For unto the Angels God committeth the care and protection of his Church in this life Therefore they being also here on earth see and know our miseries which the Saints see not unto whom this charge is not committed and they pray particularly for many which we cannot affirme of the Saints by any testimonies of Scripture 3. There is another fault in the consequence in concluding that we must pray to them because they pray for us because not every one who prayeth for us is straight-waies to be invocated as was before declared Object 21. Judas Maccabaeus saw in a dreame Onias the High-Priest and Jeremias the Prophet praying for the people 2 Maccab. 15.14 and holy city Jerusalem Therefore the Saints deceased pray for us and are to be prayed unto by us Ans First an Apocryphall book proveth nothing Againe we deny the consequence that because the Saints pray for us therefore we should pray to them seeing every one that prayeth for us is not forthwith to be prayed unto by us Object 22. Baruc saith Heare now the prayer of the dead Israelites Therefore the Saints pray for us and are to be prayed unto by us Ans Baruc is an Apocryphall Scripture also and besides in this argument the words dead Israelites are mis-construed For the Israelites are there said to be dead not which were deceased and departed this life but which were yet living and invocating on God in this life but by reason of their calamities like unto those that are dead Object 23. We cannot have accesse unto a Prince wit●●ut some ones intercession and mediation Therefore much lesse may we appeare before God without some Intercessour and Mediatour Ans We grant the whole For indeed without Christ the Mediatour there is no accesse to God for any man according as Christ himselfe saith No man commeth to the Father but by me John 14.6 And Ambrose notably answereth this their argument in his Exposition or Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans thus writing Some men are wont to use a miserable or cold excuse saying that we have accesse unto God by his righteous Saints as we have unto a King by his Nobles about him Well Is any man so desperately madde and carelesse of his life as to transferre the Majesty and title of the King to any of his attendants especially seeing that they who are found to have but once consulted of this practise are worthily condemned as guilty of treason Yet these men thinke them not guilty of treason against God who attribute Gods proper honour unto the creature and forsaking the Lord and Master adore and worship their fellow servants as if this made any whit the more for them that herein they serve God For therefore we approach unto a King by meanes of his Nobles and followers because the King himselfe is a man in like manner as we are and knoweth not to whom he may commit the charge of the Common-wealth But to put God in minde of us who is not ignorant of us for he knoweth the merits of all we need no solicitor save onely a devout minde For wheresoever such a one speaketh he will answer nothing c. And Chrysostome saith The Canaanitish woman prayeth not James nor beseecheth John nor goeth to Peter nor followeth after the whole company of the Apostles nor seeketh any Mediatour but in stead of all these she taketh repentance for her companion which repentance bare the place or person of her Advocate and so she went on to the spring head even Christ Thus much be spoken of the sixt vertue prescribed in this Commandement namely invocation and calling on God VII Vertue Right and lawfull swearing Right and lawfull swearing which is comprehended under invocation as a speciall under the generall wherein we desire that God would become a witnesse of the minde of the swearer that in the thing which he sweareth he will not deceive and that God would punish the swearer if he deceive This swearing is authorised by God to be a bond of truth between men and men and a testimony or record that God is the author and defender of truth Unto right and lawfull swearing is opposed The vices opposite Refusing of a lawfull oath The refusing of a lawfull oath when one avoydeth to take an oath which tendeth to Gods glory and to the safety of his neighbour An oath for confirmation is an end of all strife Perjury What it is to forsweare Forswearing Heb. 6.16 when wittingly and willingly a man deceiveth by
Gen. 41.15 But Joseph sware by the life of Pharaoh Therefore it is lawfull to sweare also by man or creatures Ans Some grant that he sinned in so doing namely that he erred following the custome of the Gentiles who were wont to sweare by Kings that thereby he might keep close from his brethren who he was but we may make answer othewise also namely that it was not properly an Oath but only an asseveration made for to shew the evidence of the thing comparing it with a thing which was certaine and evident so that the tenure and meaning of such asseveration is that those things which are avouched are as certaine as that man certainely liveth whom he assevereth to live namely as being knowne and yet living or so certaine as he who assevereth certainely wisheth that man to live whom he nameth So also shall the meaning of Joseph's asseveration be As Pharaoh liveth that is as truely as Pharaoh liveth or is in safety or as truely as I wish him to live and to be in safety so truly say I these things The same sense and meaning is to be rendred of the like asseverations as the asseveration of Hannah 1 Sam. 1.26 17.55 20.3.25.26 As thy soule liveth my Lord namely Ely and of Abner As thy soule liveth O King meaning Saul and of David As the Lord liveth and as thy soule liveth speaking to Jonathan And of Abigail As the Lord liveth and as thy soule liveth speaking to David 3. Whether a Christian may sweare or take a right and lawfull oath Foure causes why we may take a lawfull oath THat a Christian may without breach of piety swear by the name of God namely if the Magistrate exact an oath at his hands or otherwise if necessity so require is here proved by foure arguments Gods glory That Gods glory may thereby be advanced For truth and the manifestation thereof is a thing glorious unto God Mans safety That the safety of others may thereby be procured For our safety consisteth in the truth especially in that heavenly truth Authority of Gods word Because a lawfull oath is authorised by Gods word Example of the ancient Church Exception of Anabaptists and the refutation thereof Because it hath been heretofore rightly taken by the Saints of God Here the Anabaptists except against us saying that of ancient it was lawfull for the Fathers in the Old Testament under the Law to sweare but it is prohibited us in the New Testament Therefore to the former reasons we are to adde these for proofe of the contrary unto their opinion Christs ratification of it in the New Testament Mat. 5.17 Christ saith I am not come to destroy the Law but to fulfill it Now he speaketh this of the Morall Law whereunto an oath belongeth Therefore the taking of an oath was not repealed by Christ It is a part of Gods Morall worship The Morall worship of God is perpetuall But a lawfull oath is a part of the Morall worship of God for it is an invocating of God Therefore it is perpetuall The Prophets call it so Esay 65.16 The Prophets describing the worship of the new Church terme it a swearing by the name of God He that sweareth in the earth shall sweare by the true God Therefore the new Church may sweare by the name of the true God It is a seale of faith and truth and a deciding of debates Heb. 6.16 The confirming of faith and truth and the deciding of debates is profitable lawfull and necessary for Church and Common-wealth and glorious unto God But an oath is a confirmation of faith and truth and a deciding of debates An oath for confirmation is an end of all strife Therefore an oath is not onely lawfull for Christians but also necessary Example of Christ and the Saints in the New Testament Mat. 5.18 Rom. 1.9 Rom. 9.1 2 Cor. 1.23 Phil. 1.8 1 Thes 2.10 We have herein the example of Christ and the Saints in the New Testament For Christ himselfe not once but often used a forme of swearing for confirmation of his doctrine Verily Verily I say unto you And Paul in the same case often interposeth an oath God is my witnesse whom I serve in my spirit in the Gospell of his Son that c. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost I call God for a record upon my soule c. God is my record how I long after you all Ye are witnesses and God also how holily and justly and unblameably we behaved our selves among you These and the like arguments and examples do sufficiently shew that doubtlesse To sweare lawfully is granted unto Christians even now also in the new Covenant The Anabaptists object against us that saying of Christ Object But I say unto you Mat. 5.34 35 36 37. Sweare not at all neither by heaven for it is the throne of God nor yet by the earth for it is his foot-stoole neither by Jerusalem for it is the city of the great King neither shalt thou sweare by thine head for thou canst not make one haire white or black But let your communication be Yea Yea Nay Nay For whatsoever is more then these cometh of evill James 5.12 And that of James Before all things my brethren sweare not neither by heaven nor by earth nor by any other oath but let your Yea be Yea and your Nay Nay lest ye fall into condemnation Answ That by those places alledged not all oathes but rash and unnecessary oathes are forbidden is manifest both by conference of other places and examples of the Old and new Testement and especially by the purpose and scope of Christ who freeing the true meaning and sentence of the law from the corruptions of the Pharisees Two sorts of oathes 1. Direct 2. Indirect Both these oathes are here forbidden and taxing their hypocrisie sheweth that by the third Commandment is condemned not onely all perjury but also all rash oathes superfluous and unnecessary and in them not only those that are direct oathes in which the name it selfe of God is expressed but also indirect or oblique oathes in which the name of God is understood being dissembled and cloaked by uttering in place thereof the names of creatures For such kind of oathes were then commonly used in ordinary and dayly speech and hypocrites A twofold profanenesse issuing out of the Pharisees accustomed swearing by creatures who did exercise those indirect or oblique formes of swearing By the Temple By the Altar By Heaven c. excused them 1. As if swearing on this wise they profaned not the name of God inasmuch as they expressed not the name of God in their oath 2. As if they were not perjured and forsworne if when they expressed not the name of God in their oath they afterwards brake their faith and oath given in that indirect forme of swearing But
instituted of God or is altered or changed in them or when some are excluded from the Sacraments which should be admitted or are admitted which should by Gods ordinance be driven from them or when the people is not instructed concerning the right and lawfull use of them 3. Diligently to learne the doctrine of the Church that is daily to frequent the publike assemblies of the Church III. Vertue and there attentively to give eare unto the heavenly doctrine plainly opened and delivered and diligently to meditate after thereon and examine it but especially to spend those daies which are deputed unto the ministery and service of God in reading meditation and in discoursing of divine matters These things are made manifest by the nature and necessary dependency of correlatives For if God will have some to be diligent teachers on the Sabbath he will also have some to be diligent hearers and learners of this doctrine on the Sabbath And the study of learning is not without private meditation Therefore have the men of Beroea their commendation Acts 17.11 thus They received the word with all readinesse and searched the Scriptures daily whether those things were so But unto them especially is the study of knowing the doctrine of God enjoyned who either serve or hereafter are to serve and minister unto the Church Give attendance to reading to exhortation and to doctrine 1 Tim. 4.13 1 Tim. 3.6 2 Tim. 2.24 25. The contrary vices And Paul will have the Minister of the Church to be fit and able to instruct and to refute the adversaries Unto the study of learning the doctrine is repugnant 1. A contempt and neglect of the doctrine that is either not to afford our presence in sacred assemblies when there is no just cause to hinder us and to busie our selves in such works on the Sabbath day as might have been deferred or not to give eare and attendance to Sermons and the preaching of Gods Word or not to meditate consider and examine the doctrine of the Church 2. A neglect of learning the doctrine in Ministers or in them who of God are called to the study of learning and either are one day to serve for the propagation of the doctrine or have greater occasion and ability of learning it than others have To whomsoever much is given of him shall be much required Luke 12.48 c. 3. Curiosity which is a desire and study of knowing or hearing those things which God hath not revealed unnecessary strange and vain Prov. 25.27 Sirac 3.22 23. To search their own glory is not glory Seek not out the things that are too hard for thee neither search the things rashly which are too mighty for thee But what God hath commanded thee thinke upon that with reverence Hereof S. Paul speaketh 1 Tim. 4.7.2 Tim. 2.23 2 Tim. 4.3 Tit. 3.9 4. To use the Sacraments according to Gods institution The first day of the week the Disciples being come together to break bread IV. Vertue Acts 20.7 Paul preached unto them c. So God commanded the Passeover to be celebrated in a solemne assembly of the people and unto other holy daies and Sabbaths he assigned certaine sacrifices And in like manner God will that as his doctrine should be heard so also the right and lawfull use of his Sacraments should be seen and be held in the publike meetings and assemblies of the Church because God will have both these to be marks whereby his Church may be known and discerned from other sects and peoples Againe as the Word so also the Sacraments are an instrument or exercise to stirre and maintaine in us faith and godlinesse They are also a publike profession of our faith and thankfulness towards God and a part of Gods publike worship in the Church Therefore the use of them is most agreeable and fit for the Sabbath day Unto the right use of the Sacraments is contrary The contrary vices 1. The omitting and contempt thereof 2. The profaning of them when they are not received as God hath commanded neither by them for whom they were ordained 3. A superstitious using of them when as salvation and the grace of God is tyed to the observation of the rites and ceremonies or when they are used to such ends as God hath not appointed The uncircumcised man-child shall be cut off from his people Gen. 17.14 Esay 66.3 He that killeth a bullock is as if he slew a man He that sacrificeth a sheep as if hee cut of a dogs necke c. 5. Publike invocation on God V. Vertue whereby we joyn our confession thanksgiving prayers and desires with the Church For God will be invocated not onely privately by every one but also publiquely by the whole Church for Gods glory and our comfort that so we may the lesse doubt that God will heare us seeing he hath promised to heare not only us but also others and the whole Church praying for us together with us For therefore God hath annexed a speciall promise unto publique prayers If two of you shall agree on earth upon any thing whatsoever they shall desire Mat. 18.19 20. it shall be given them of my Father which is in heaven For where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the middest of them And giving of thanks and praise unto God is promised to God as a speciall worship Psal 22.22 In the middest of the Congregation will I praise thee And the same is commanded 1 Cor. 14.16 When thou blessest with the spirit how shall he that occupieth the roome of the unlearned say Amen at thy giving of thankes seeing he knoweth not what thou sayest I exhort that first of all supplications prayers 1 Tim. 2.1 intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men Now whereas Christ else-where commandeth that when a man prayeth he enter into his chamber Mat. 9.9 and when he hath shut his doore pray unto his Father which is in secret he by these words doth not condemne and forbid publique prayers but hypocrisie and ostentation and feigned godlinesse which the words testifie which goe before When thou prayest be not as the Hypocrites Now hypocrisie is a feigning and ostentation or shew of godlinesse We are here further to observe that in this Commandement is prescribed the publique invocation of the Church but that which was in the former third Commandement prescribed is the private invocation which concerneth every particular man Unto publique prayers is opposed 1. A neglect of the prayers of the Church The contrary vices 2. An hypocriticall presence at them without any attention and inward devotion 3. Such a reading or praying as serveth not for any edifying of the Church Thou verily givest thankes well but the other is not edified 7. Charity and bountifulnesse towards the poore that is to bestow almes VI. Vertue and performe the duties of love and charity towards the needy thereby
assoiled out of the place of Paul 1 Cor. 15.24 He shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father Wherefore as concerning the forme and manner of administration he shall deliver the kingdome after our glorification that is he shall cease to discharge the office of the Mediatour There shall be no need of conversion of purging out of sin of protecting of us against our enemies he shall not gather the Church he shall not raise the dead he shall not glorifie nor perfect them because then they shall be perfect He shall not teach them because they shall be all taught of God Prophecies shall be abolished tongues shall cease and knowledge shall vanish away because When that which is perfect is come 1 Cor. 13.8 10. then that which is in part shall be abolished There shall be therefore no need of these instruments and meanes any longer by which now the Church is gathered and saved There shall no longer be any enemy the Church shall gloriously reigne with Christ and God shall be all in all that is shall manifest himself immediatly unto the blessed Saints In that City which is that consummate kingdome I saw no Temple Revel 21.22 23. for the Lord Almighty and the Lambe are the temple of it And the City hath no need of the Sun neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God did light it and the Lambe is the light of it 3. Who is King and Head in Gods Kingdome The whole three persons Christ in a speciall and particular manner THe Head or King of this kingdome is but one because the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are but one God Now the Father is King and ruleth by the Son and the holy Ghost Christ the Son is King and Head of this Kingdome after a singular maner 1. Because he sitteth God at the right hand of God and ruleth with equall power with the Father 2. Because he is Mediator that is Because he is the person by which God worketh immediately and giveth the holy Ghost John 15.26 Ephes 1 22● I will send him unto you from the Father He hath appointed him over all things to be the head to be Church 4. Who are the Citizens or Subjects of Gods Kingdome THe Citizens of this kingdome are 1. The Angels in heaven confirmed and established in grace 2. The blessed Saints in heaven who are called the Church triumphant 3. The godly or converted in this life who have as yet certaine remaines of sin and are called the Church militant 4. Hypocrites namely the called of the visible Church only but not elected These are counterfeit and apparent Citizens to the outward shew who indeed are not the Citizens of Christs kingdome but only in name but are in truth the bond-slaves of the Divell Hypocrites notwithstanding are called the Citizens of the kingdome Mat. 8.12 22.16 as the Jews are termed by Christ the sons and children of the kingdome Of these it is said The first shall be last that is they who will be accounted first and yet are not shall be last that is shall be declared to be none of the kingdome of God 5. What are the Laws of this kingdome THe Laws whereby this kingdome is administred and governed are 1. The word of God or the doctrine of the Law and Gospel 2. The efficacy of the holy Ghost working and reigning by the word in the hearts of the elect 6. What benefits are bestowed on the subjects of this kingdome THere is no kingdome which hath not regard to the commodities of the subjects And Aristotle writeth to Alexander A kingdome is not injury but bountifulnesse Wherefore this kingdome hath also his proper goods and commodities These are the spirituall and eternall benefits of Christ as true faith and conversion remission of sinnes righteousnesse preservation therein and the continuance of the holy Ghost John 8.38 glorification and life everlasting If the Sonne shall make you free yee shall be free indeed Rom. 14.17 The Kingdome of God is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost John 14.27 My peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you not as the world giveth give I unto you 7. Who are the enemies and foes of this kingdome THe enemies of this kingdome are the Divels and wicked men Now of wicked men some are in the Church as hypocrites who callenge to themselves the name and title of Citizens of the kingdome when as they are nothing lesse others are without the Church and professed enemies as Turks Jews Samosatenians Arrians and whosoever defend errours against the grounds and foundations of Religion 8. In what place this kingdome is administred THis kingdome as concerning the beginning or gathering thereof is administred here on earth yet so that it is not in any one certain place Iland Province People 1 Tim. 2.8 but is spread through the whole world I will that the men pray every-where Where two or three are gathered together in my Name Mat. 18.20 there am I in the midst of them We never go out of this kingdome if we abide in true faith This kingdome as touching the consummation or perfection thereof is administred in heaven And although I goe to prepare a place for you John 14.3 12.26 17.24 1 Thes 4.17 I will come againe and receive you unto my selfe that where I am there may ye be also Where I am there shall also my servant be Father I will that they which thou hast given me be with me even where I am We shall be caught up to meet the Lord. 9. What is the time of the durance and continuance of this kingdome THe beginning and gathering of this kingdome dureth from the worlds beginning to the end thereof because at all times there were are and shall be some members of the true Church whether few or many to be gathered out of this world to the kingdome of God The consummation or perfection of this kingdome shall indure from the glorifying of the godly to all eternity 1 Cor. 15.24 Then shall be the end when he hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father which is to be understood as was before observed as touching this forme of administration of that kingdome 10. How this kingdome cometh It cometh foure waies THis kingdome cometh to us foure waies 1. By the preaching of the Gospel whereby is revealed the light of the true and heavenly doctrine 2. By conversion when some are converted to God and are endued of God with faith and repentance 3. By making progresse or increase when the godly receive increase or when the proper gifts and blessings of the faithfull are augmented with perpetuall increase in the godly or converted Revel 22.11 He that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still 4. By consummation and full accomplishment when the godly
that we may not deeme these things to come by chance to us Our comfort for the care God hath over each of us For our comfort that these corporall blessings may be tokens to us of Gods fatherly good will towards us seeing wholesome blessings and benefits are promised and given to the children of God only Wherefore when they are bestowed on us we must be perswaded that we are of the number of them to whom God hath promised to give them Exercise of our faith in the promise of grace Because the desiring and expecting of these blessings is the exercise of our confidence in the promise of grace or it is the exercise of our invocation faith and hope For we cannot promise unto our selves corporall blessings nor desire them except we resolve that we be in favour and except we be assured of spirituall blessings and of Gods good-will towards us Our necessi●y Psal 115.18 For our necessity that we may do the will of God here on earth which without daily bread we cannot here do The dead praise not thee O Lord. Expectation of all goodnesse from God That the desire of these blessings may be a confirmation in our minds and a profession before the world that God is he who giveth even the least benefits our comfort of Gods continuall care over the whole Church For this our comfort that we may know that the Church on earth shall ever be preserved seeing God heareth us and will give us our daily bread according to his promise 2. How corporall blessings are to be desired Corporall blessings as well as other blessings promised in the Gospel are to be desired With confidence of Gods favour With a confidence and full perswasion of Gods favour because otherwise we are not heard neither are these blessings good and wholesome for us and God may answer that we are not of them unto whom he hath promised these things With a condition of Gods will With a condition of Gods will and pleasure that is with a submitting of our will to Gods will that God would give us what we ask if it please him and as he knoweth they may make for our good and his glory because God hath promised these blessings not with any determined or definite circumstances For God hath not defined in his word what corporall blessings he will give us but as touching spirituall he hath promised expresly that he will give them to every one that asketh them With faith of being heard With faith and beliefe of Gods hearing us so that we certainly bel●eve that God will give us so much as sufficeth To serve God and our neighbour To this end as thereby to serve God and our neighbour not to satisfie our luxurious desires nor for ostentation They who desire them not after this sort are not heard that is such things are not given them as may tend to their safety and albeit they receive that which they desire yet are they not indeed heard of God because those things which they receive are not good and profitable unto their salvation We are here to observe that the Lord commandeth us in generall to pray for corporall blessings neither hath defined in his word what corporall blessings he will give us and hath with this condition promised to give them us namely as the safety and salvation of every one and the manifestation of his glory requireth The reasons hereof are these Two causes why corporall blessings are conditionally to be c●a●ed 1. Because we oftentimes know not what we aske and what is expedient for us And often we aske things neither profitable to us nor serving for Gods glory or the salvation of others But God knoweth best what is convenient and meet for us for the manifesting of his glory and for the furthering of our own salvation Seeing then we often erre in desiring corporall blessings God giveth none other unto us then such as he knoweth to be meet and profitable for us But spirituall blessings God hath promised not in generall only but both specially and simply without any condition annexed For they are simply profitable unto us and God himself hath prescribed the manner and way which we are to follow in them so that in desiring them we cannot erre For what things God hath simply promised us the same we ought simply to desire and what things he hath specially and absolutely promised us the same must we in like manner absolutely aske and desire So must we simply desire the holy Ghost because God hath simply and expresly promised that he will give the holy Ghost to every one that desireth him 2. That we may learne to be content with those things which we have received of the Lord and submit alwaies our will to his pleasure and purpose So God also for this cause hath commanded us in generall to desire corporall blessings that such a desiring of those blessings may be an exercise of our faith and of the subjection and submitting of our will to the will of God 3. Why Christ comprised corporall blessings under the name of bread UNder the name of bread by a Synecdoche Bread signifieth 1. All nourishment which is an usuall figure of speech to the Hebrews Christ comprised all corporall blessings and such as are necessary for this life as are all food victuals raiment health civill peace This is apparent by the end and scope of the petition For we desire bread for our necessity But many other things are necessary for us Therefore we desire them also under the name of Bread And this Hebrew Synecdoche is found often in the sacred Bible as In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eate bread Gen. 3.19 Psal 41.9 He which did eate of my bread hath lifted up the heele against me Furthermore 2. The blessing of them even our wholesome use Christ did not only comprise things necessary themselves under the name of Bread but also the profitable use of them For bread without the blessing of it is no better then a stone And therefore comprehended he all these things under the name of Bread 1. To bridle and reine our desires The reasons of this Synecdoche and to teach us that we should ask bread only that is only things necessary for us to sustaine our life and to serve God and our neighbour both in our common and proper vocation and calling 2. To teach us to pray that this bread might be profitable unto our salvation that is that those corporall blessings might tend to our salvation or that the use of those corporall blessings might be good and saving unto us For bread without this good and saving use is a stone Now bread is made good and saving unto us 1. If we receive it with faith and with that minde and after that manner and to that end which God requireth to wit if we stick not in the creatures but pierce with our
what the highnesse of the Divinity is abased what it is that flesh without the Word acteth not what it is that the Word without the flesh effecteth not Cyrillus Thes l. 10. c. 11. Therefore even as when he wrought miracles by the Flesh we did not attribute those things to him as Man but as God So when after the manner of men he speakes any thing of himselfe which seems inconsonant to his Divinity we ought to attribute that to his Flesh for so by a congruous distribution of all his words and works we shall not deviate from the true knowledge of our Saviour V. If we consider the properties of both natures in the personall union for out of this they are not in the abstract that is in the names of the natures they cannot be changed no more then the natures themselves For we must not say The Deity is the humanity or man or created corporeall visible finite circumscribed dead buried c. neither can we say The humanity is the Deity or God or eternall uncreated incorporeall invisible infinite omnipresent omnipotent c. but we must attribute to each nature what properly belongs to it to the Divinity the divine properties to the Humanity the humane without this the essentiall difference of the natures is confounded and is changed into an Eutychian and Swenkfieldian mingling of natures for in the distinction of the properties consists the distinction of the natures and so the two natures which have the same propertie whether it be by nature or by communication shall be no longer two natures but one nature a only for it cannot be that one nature together can containe two contrary b properties Testimonies of the Ancient Doctors a Damascen l. 3. c. 14. 15. Whose nature is the same their will and action is the same but their will and action is different whose nature is different And again whose will and action is the same their nature is the same but whose will and action is different their nature is also different b Ibid. 3. c. 3. How can the same nature according to the same respect be both created and uncreated mortall and immortall circumscribed and uncircumscribed Theodoret Dial. 11. If Christ is onely one nature how can contraries be attributed to him for to be in the beginning and to take beginning from Abraham and David are altogether contraries VI. Hence it appeares that the humanity of Christ remaines not but is changed into the Divinity and so that nature is confounded Also that in Christ there remaine not the two distinct natures but that the two are changed into one if these positions be true that the humanity in and by the personall union did assume with the Word all the properties and operations of the Word that it is and operates all which the word is and operates that it is invisible uncircumscribed omnipresent c. let these positions be palliated which way you will Yea so much the rather if it be affirmed that in the humanity there are three sorts of properties to wit supernaturall preternaturall and divine and therefore we reject these subsequent doctrines of the Ancient and Moderne Hereticks as unknowne to the Scriptures and to the Catholicke faith as 1. That Christ is not truly God but meerely Man 2. That Christ according to his Deity is onely a spirit created before all that have been made of nothing 3. That he is not a true and perfect man of the same soule and body with us remaining also in glory 4. That in Christ there is one person of the Son of God another of the Sonne of Mary 5. That the personall union began in the Mothers womb but by the resurrection ascension and sitting at the right hand of the majesty of God hath its perfect consummation by equalling the two natures in glory so that the flesh body and bloud of Christ are perfectly of one essence power and efficacy with God and with the Word 6. That Christs humanity is equall with God by reason of the glory and majesty communicated to it but in the nature thereof is not God 7. That the specificall difference of the union is the reall communication of all the divine properties with the humanity so that the omnipotency omnipresence justice and majesty of the Word is really diffused into the Son of man 8. That in Christ there is a double Deity the one communicating and the other communicated or the one participating and the other participated 9. That the specificall difference of the inhabitation of the Word in the man Christ and in other holy men is placed in this that onely some of the divine properties are truly communicated to the Saints but they are all bestowed on the man Christ 10. That Christs humanity is really every-where yet not the essence of his soule and body 11. That the flesh of Christ is God 12. That the man Christ is not God naturall 13. That Christs humane nature did visibly die on the Crosse at Hierusalem and yet at the same time it was invisibly dead and alive every-where within and without the Sepulchre before and after the Resurrection 14. That Christs flesh in respect of its union with the Word which is illocall hath farre surmounted all locality and hath obtained an illocall kinde of existence in the Word 15. Adde this falshood of the Ubiquitaries that not all but halfe Christ is suffers doth that which Christ is suffers and doth according to either nature and not according to both Upon this ground they have falsly accused the Nestorian Churches of Nestorianisme for it would necessarily follow that onely halfe Christ from eternity was begotten of the Father borne of Mary walked on the earth died for us was buried rose againe and ascended to heaven which opinions we condemne and reject as hereticall ARTICLE II. of Christs death and merit I. WE beleeve that Christ our Redeemer did truly a die in the b flesh for our c sins and that with one oblation he hath for ever consecrated those who are d sanctified Testimonies of Scripture a Mat. 27.50 When Jesus againe cried with a great voice he gave up his Spirit b 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ was mortified in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.1 Seeing then Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh c Rom. 4.25 Christ was delivered to death for our offences d Heb. 10.14 Christ with one oblation hath consecrated for ever those that are sanctified II. We beleeve also that this death of Christ alone is a perfect and sufficient ransome to expiate and abolish all the a sins of the whole world that the merit of his justice is immense that the medicine of his death is universall the ever-flowing and inexhausted spring of life b eternall Testimonies of Scripture a Acts 4.12 Nor is there salvation in any other nor is there any other Name under heaven which is given among men by which they can be saved b John 1.29 Behold that Lamb of God who takes away the sins
Whether God hath bestowed his Son upon all the world that is on all and every man to be a Saviour even to the ends of the earth of all them that embrace him by faith whereas we do both know and ●each the same thing from the mouth of Christ But Puccius and Huberus on the contrary cry out That Christ is given as a Saviour to all men absolutely and hath saved all men effectually whether they beleeve or not It is well then that Osiander fights for us and refutes his owne brethren himselfe ARTICLE III. Of Christs ascension into Heaven I. WE beleeve that properly and without any trope Christ ascended from earth into a heaven by a true and locall motion of his body by his divine power in the presence of his Disciples and that he is for our sakes in b heaven untill he returne to judge the quick and the c dead Testimonies of Scripture a Acts 1.9 10 11. And when he had spoken these things while they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight And while they looked stedfastly towards heaven as he went up behold two men stood by them in white apparell Which also said Ye men of Galilee Why stand ye gazing up into heaven This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven b Heb. 8.4 If Christ we upon earth he were not a Priest Heb. 9.24 Christ is not entred into a sanctuary made with hands c. but into heaven it selfe that he may appeare in the presence of God for us Col. 3.1 Seeke the things which are above where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God Acts 3.21 The heavens must containe Christ untill the time of restitution of all things which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy Prophets since the world began c Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven Mat. 24.30 Then shall appeare the signe of the Son of man in heaven and they shall see him come in the clouds of heaven with power ●nd great glory Mat. 25.31 But when the Son of man shall come in glory and all his holy Angels with him then he shall sit downe upon the throne of his glory 1 Thes 4.16 For the Lord himselfe shall come downe from heaven with a great shout with the voice of an Arch-angel and with the trumpet of God Phil. 3.20 From whence we expect our Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ II. What heaven that is and what place it is unto which Christ ascended we will not inquire but leave it to those that are curious seeing it is written Isai 64.4 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him Notwithstanding we beleeve piously and with the Scripture that it a is a place not on this b earth nor c below nor every-where but above and without this visible d world the heaven of e heavens the habitation and throne f of God in light g inaccessible the house of h our Father the City of the living i God the Saints native k country where Christ is l now at the right hand of God interceding m for us and preparing a place n for us from whence we expect he will o returne downeward into the p clouds that he may receive us unto q himselfe Testimonies of Scripture a 1 King 8.30 Heare the supplications of thy servant and of thy people Israel which shall pray in this place heare thou from the place of thy habitation that is from heaven heare and spare John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions if it were not so I would have told you I go to prepare a place for you Phil. 3.20 From whence we expect our Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ b Jer. 31.37 Thus saith the Lord If the heavens above can be measured and the foundations of the earth beneath c Luke 16.26 Besides all this betweene us and you there is a great gulfe fixed so that they which would passe from hence to you cannot neither can they passe to us that would come from thence d Ephes 4.10 He that descended is he also that ascended far above all heavens that he might fulfill all things Heb. 4.14 Having therefore our High-Priest Jesus Christ who hath entred into the heavens e 1 King 8.27 The Heaven and heaven of heavens do not containe thee Psal 115.16 The heaven is the Lords but the earth he hath given to the sons of men f 1 King 8.45 Heare from heaven from the place of thy habitation their prayers 1 Tim. 6.15 The King of kings and Lord of lords inhabits light inaccessible g John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you h Heb. 11.10 Abraham did looke for a City having a foundation whose builder was God i Heb. 12.32 You are come to mount Sion to the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels k Heb. 11.14 For they that say such things declare plainly that they seeke a countrey l Heb. 9.24 Not into the sanctuary made with hands is Christ entred but into heaven it selfe that he might appeare now for us in the presence of God m Rom. 8.34 Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us n John 14.2 I go to prepare a place for you o Phil. 3.20 For our conversation is in heaven from whence we looke for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ p Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven 1 Thes 4.16 17. The Lord himselfe shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the trump of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then we which are alive and remaine shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall we ever be with the Lord. q John 14.3 I will come againe and will receive you unto my selfe that where I am there you may be also John 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me III. Thither not often but a once not in his mothers womb but the fortieth day after his b resurrection not every-where but on mount c Olivet not apparently but by the true motion of d his body not invisibly but his Disciples looking on and accompanying him with their eyes not with their feet he e ascended and left the f world by a corporall departure entring
exalted him and hath given him a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven on earth and under the earth and that every tongue should confesse that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father VI. The glory of Christ the Mediatour doth first consist in that high perfection and dignity of the person of the Mediatour even according to that nature which was assumed being adorned with unspeakeable excellencies of endowents with happinesse and majesty and with that sublime exaltation above all principality power and dominion all things being put under his feet that he might be the Head of the a Church by which the Father governes all things in heaven and b earth the natures remaining whole and unconfused as also the properties of nature in this glory Which as Austine saith gave to the flesh to be immortall but tooke not away the c nature Testimonies of Scripture and of some Ancient Doctors a Ephes 1.20 21. God placed Christ at his right hand in heaven far above all power c. b John 5.22 For the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne Acts 17.31 God will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man whom he hath appointed c August Epist 57. ad Dardanum Doubt not then but the man Christ Jesus is now there from whence he will returne call to minde and hold faithfully the Christian Confession because he is risen from the dead hath ascended into heaven sitteth at the right hand of the Father nor from any other place but from thence will he come to judge the quick and dead and so he will come as the Angell witnesseth after the same manner that he was seene to go into heaven that is in the same forme and substance to whom he gave immortality but tooke not his nature away VII Secondly it consists in the glorious administration of his Propheticall Sacerdotall and Regall offices by which as Mediatour he declares himselfe even in his assumed humane nature that he is appointed Lord and Judge of all a things and that he rules most powerfully in heaven and b earth gathering to himselfe out of the race of mankinde a perpetuall c Church by the holy Ghost and the Word making intercession for d her and defending her by his divine power on e earth untill having freed her from all molestations and from her enemies he glorifie her in f heaven Testimonies of Scripture a Acts 2.36 Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made that same Jesus whom ye have crucified both Lord and Christ Acts 5.31 God having exalted him at his right hand hath made him Prince and Saviour that he might give to Israel repentance and remission of sinnes See Act. 17.31 John 5.22 b Psal 110.2 Beare thou rule in the midst of thine enemies 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet c Ephes 4.11 He gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Doctors Rom. 1.17 The Gospell is the power of God to salvation to every one that beleeves Marke 16.21 The Lord did cooperate and confirmed the word with signes following d Rom. 8.34 Christ is at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for us Heb. 9.24 Christ hath now entred into heaven that he might appeare before God for us 1 John 2.1 We have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous e Mat. 16.18 The gates of hell shall not prevaile against her John 10.28 I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of mine hand f John 17.24 Father I will that they whom thou hast given to me may be where I am that they may behold my glory VIII Lastly in the perfection of that honour and worship due a to the Mediatour gloriously reigning even in our humane nature to wit that he is acknowledged by Angels men and all creatures and by them is adored and celebrated as their head and Lord as it is written And let all the Angels of God worship him Also Psal 1.6 Psal 97.7 Phil. 2.10 At the Name of Jesus every knee shall bow of things in heaven on earth and under the earth Testimonies of Scripture a Acts 9.14 In this place he hath power from the High-Priest to binde all that call on thy Name 1 Cor. 1.2 To all that call upon the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ in any place c. Rev. 5.9 Thou art worthy to receive the booke and to open the seales thereof because thou hast beene slaine and hast redeemed us by thy bloud out of every Tribe Langue People and Nation See also Rev. 4.11 and 8.13 and 19.5 6 7. IX Therefore these and such like doctrines of the Ubiquitaries are false and prodigious 1. That Christs humanity presently in his conception when the Word was made flesh did sit at the right hand of God 2. That to sit at Gods right hand is nothing else but to be united personally to the Son of God who is the Fathers right hand 3. That it is all one with his ascending to heaven 4. That it is to be made man and to become God 5. That it is all one with Christs humanity filling heaven and earth and being every-where ARTICLE V. Of Predestination I. TO deny in God an eternall predestination of mankinde is to deny God himselfe and to give the lye to the holy Scripture for as Luther (a) De servo arb cap. 143. saith truly God being spoiled of his power and wisdome in electing what will he be else but the Idoll of Fortune by whose power all things are done rashly or at randome And at length it will come to this that men are damned and saved with the knowledge of God as who hath not discriminated by a certaine election those that shall be saved and damned but a generall lenity tolerating and hardning being proffered to all then a correcting and punishing mercy he hath left it to mens choice whether they will be saved or damned he himselfe perhaps being gone to feast with the Ethiopians as Homer saith Austine in his booke De bono persever c. 18. averreth That no man can dispute except he will fall into error against this predestination which saith he we defend according to the holy Scripture and cap. 21. Therefore it savours too much of contention saith he to contradict predestination or to doubt of it II. Therefore of predestination we must speake and be silent with the Scripture for what God will have concealed must not be enquired after and what he hath revealed must not be neglected lest in those we be found unlawfully curious in these damnably ungratefull as (b) l. 1. ad Monimum p. 8. Ambrose excellently III. Neither that we may give this caution with Fulgentius is there any coactive necessity of mans will to be expressed by the name of
can receive a good or evill specification according to the naturall mans will 70. Or that it is a speciall influx but onely suasive the efficacy of which is in mans will against these Scriptures God giveth to will and to do And No man can come to me Phil. 2.13 John 6.44 except the Father draw him 71. Another impious falshood That they whom God predestinated to glory were by their fore-seene merits predestinated or after and for their fore-seene merits against these Scriptures Before the children had done good or evill Rom. 9.11 Ephes 1.4 5. He elected us before the foundation of the world that we might be holy and without blame He elected us according to the purpose of his will unto the praise of the glory of his grace 72. Which Pelagian dreame is not to be called predestination but post-destination 73. Another impious falshood that they can absolutely fulfill Gods Law against this Scripture In many things we offend all And Jam. 3.2 Rom. 8.3 What was impossible to the Law 74. Yea that they can do more then by the Law they should do against this Scripture When you have done all you can say We are unprofitable servants Luke 17.10 we have done what we ought to do 75. Yea that they can be free from all sin in this life if they will against this Scripture Surely there is none just upon earth Eccles 7.21 who doth good and sinneth not 76. Of this the Pelagians of old did brag Mat. 6.12 Luke 11.4 therefore were bid blot out of the Lords Prayer these words Forgive us our sins that is to make an officious lye or to mock God 77. And another impious falshood That by good works they merit life eternall of condignity Rom. 6.23 against this Scripture Life eternall is the gift of God 78. Another falshood That by reason of their good works they can be confident in the day of Gods judgements Psal 130.3 against this Scripture Lord if thou observe our sinnes who can indure it 79. Another blasphemy That by their merits they make God indebted to them that if he do not give them life eternall he must be unjust who forsooth may be sued for such an injurie against these Scriptures Rom. 2.13 11.35 9.20 We are debtors Who gave to him first and it shall be restored to him What art thou that answerest God 80. And it is no lesse blasphemous that Christ alone is not our Mediatour but the Saints Canonized by the Pope make Intercession for us 1 Tim. 2.5 as mediatours in heaven against this Scripture There is one Mediatour of God and man the man Christ Jesus 81. Such as this that They who depart in the faith go into Purgatory fire to suffer for their veniall sins against the Gospell Blessed are they from henceforth who die in the Lord. Rev. 14.13 John 2.24 He that beleeveth in me hath life eternal neither doth he come into judgement but passeth from death to life 82. Another hypocriticall falshood is That the Sacraments instituted by God are not signes of grace confirming faith but vessels containing and confirming grace by the work wrought against this Scripture Rom. 4.11 Abraham received the signe of Circumcision the seale of the righteousnesse of faith 83. And this also of the seven Sacraments of the New Testament unknowne in the Gospell and in the primitive Church 84. And this also of forbidden meats which in the New Testament the Apostle calleth the doctrine of Devils 85. And this doctrine which prohibits Bishops to marry against this Scripture 1 Tim. 3.2 Tit. 1.6 Let a Bishop be the husband of one wife 86. And this blasphemous falshood That the Priests by the five words of consecration do transubstantiate in the Masse the Host into the very body of Christ daily sanctifying it to God the Father and destroying it for the sins of them that live on the earth or that are dead in heaven and Purgatory Rom. 6.9 Heb. 10.13 against these Scriptures Christ dieth no more By one oblation he hath consummated all 87. And who is able to rehearse their other falshoods impieties and blasphemies concerning the Cup of which sacrilegiously they have robbed the people of Contritions Confessions Satisfactions Indulgences Jubilees Holy-dayes Fastings c 88. Therefore Popery by maintaining so many false impious blasphemous doctrines hath fallen from the faith and hath overthrowne salvation both to it selfe and friends 89. Which apostacy from the Faith the Spirit hath plainly fore-told 1 Tim. 4.2 3. That in the latter times some shall fall from the faith giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of Devils speaking falshoods forbidding to marry and commanding to abstaine from meates which God hath made to be received with thanksgiving 1 Thes 2.3 90. The Apostle also foretold that this apostacy should be the signe of revealing the Man of sin and son of perdition that is Antichrist 91. This is that great earth-quake by which Christ the Son of righteousnesse was made black as a sack-cloth the Moone that is the Church was turned into blood the Stars that is the Bishops fell from heaven to earth the firmament of the Scripture being foulded up departed in the second vision of the Revelation 92. This pestilent fume whilst the fifth Trumpet blew openly flying out of the bottomlesse pit by Antichrists meanes that apostaticall Star the black inchantments of Papall decretals and of Schoole Divinity by which Christ the Son of righteousnesse and the heire of heavenly doctrine was obscured and the innumerable vermine of Clericall and Monasticall Locusts eating up the greene pasture of the Church and tormenting men were brought into the Christian world in the third vision of the Revelation 93. These are the great blasphemies but yet not all to which the Beast that came out of the sea opened his mouth And this is the Dragon-language of that earthly Beast making shew of the Lambs two hornes in the fourth vision of the Revelation 94. These are the darknesses with which his kingdome was obscured when the fifth Violl was powred out upon the Beasts throne c. in the fifth vision of the Revelation 95. We have the apostacy of Popery from the Faith fore-told long agoe by the Angel to John and the revolution of an age being accomplished it is revealed againe by the renewed light of the Gospell 96. Which was the most urgent cause why our Parents forsooke Popery and this is the cause why we do the same and so it is concluded 97. That a Church apostatising from faith it to be deserted and forsaken for 2 Cor. 6.14 15. What union is there betweene light and darkenesse 98. Popery is that Church that is fallen from the faith as is said 99. Therefore Popery is to be deserted and avoided II. The horrible Idolatry of Popery 100. God onely is to be religiously worshipped 101. For Religion by Lactantius his definition is the bond of piety by
apostasie fascinated by idolatrie it had never submitted it selfe to the slavery and yoke of Antichristian tyrannie 159. It is tyranny to oppresse undo a Common-wealth got by right or wrong against all right and equitie 160. The Pope hath invaded and oppressed the Church State of Christendom with a double tyrannie to wit spirituall and corporall 161. He invaded the Church in a spirituall tyrannie when by his pride he overthrow the Apostolicall discipline of the Church 162. The Apostolicall discipline was Oeconomicall that under one head or master of the family our Saviour having gone to heaven as it were into a far countrie divers houshold servants as Apostles and after them Bishops equall in power should every one of them disperse their owne talents according to every mans place for the benefit of the house of the living God 163. For Let a man so esteeme of us saith the Apostle as of the ministers of Christ 1 Cor. 4.1 and stewards of the mysteries of God 164. And we reade that Christ ascending into heaven gave to the Church besides Apostles Prophets and Evangelists Doctors also and Pastors or Bishops 165. But wee reade not that hee gave to the Church a Prince of Priests or high Pontifie 166. For there is but one Bishoprick saith Cyprian which is communicated by parcells to every one 167. Neither any of us saith the same Father hath made himselfe a Bishop of bishops or by tyrannicall tyrannie doth compell his colleagues to a necessitie of obedience 168. But when the Church began to increase and withall the ambition of Bishops for orders sake because Rome was the head of the Empire to the Bishop of old Rome the first seat was given 169. Yet observing the Canon under written by Austines hand the Bishop of the first seat is not called the Prince of Priests or high Priest or any such like thing but only the Bishop of the first seat 170. This order and this Oeconomicall discipline continued in the Christian Church for six hundred years after Christ 171. Boniface the Third was the first that was stirred up by Satan out of desire of government and pride to break downe the bars of Apostolicall discipline and with much contention played the Tyrant in the Church being pronounced universall Bishop by Phocas the Tyrant But by the sentence of Gregory his predecessor Antichrist was declared to the world 172. From him began these words of tyrannie to be used in the Roman See lest their tyrannie might not be knowne So we will So we command 173. In the Chaire of universall pestilence scarce did he sit one full yeare according to the Proverb Too rigid Lords never raigne long 174. From thence the fume of Catholick pride by Satan was blowne upon the Romane Chaire which hath propagated the Ecclesiasticall tyrannie and encreased it unmeasurably 175. Hence the Pope hath an heavenly power 176. The Pope hath the same Consistorie with God the same Tribunall with Christ 177. The Pope is a certaine Deitie representing some visible God 178. The Pope hath all lawes within the cabinet of his breast 179. The Pope is Bishop of the whole world to whom all Bishops and Patriarchs ought to be subject necessarily upon salvation 180. The Pope is an universall Prince King of kings and head of all within the militant Church 181. The Pope hath all men for his subjects 182. To the Pope every humane creature is subject 183. To the Pope all power is given in heaven and earth 184. The Pope is made Judge over the angels 185. From the Pope there is no appeale no not to God 186. The Pope is above all Councels he alone hath power to call direct confirme disanull them 187. The Pope conferres jurisdiction upon all Bishops 188. The Pope cannot submit himselfe to Councels 189. The Pope makes lawes to compell the conscience 190. The Pope alone judgeth all men but is judged of none 191. If the Pope should send head-long to Hell many thousands of soules no man must say Why doest thou so 192. The Pope can doe all that God doth 193. The Pope is neither God nor angell nor man according to that Verse O Pope the amazement of the world who alone art the greatest of things thou art neither God nor man but a neuter between both 194. Yea the Pope is God 195. The Pope is the cause of causes and Lord of lords 196. The Pope is Gods supreme Vicar and whosoever speaks the contrarie is a lyar 197. We must stand to the Popes judgement though the whole world should think to the contrarie 198. None is equall to the Pope but God 199. The Pope is the head and bridegroom of the Catholick Church 200. Hence we must beare and with pious devotion endure the yoke which is imposed by the holy See though it may seem intolerable 201. But hee that makes himselfe a God the Churches husband is not hee the enemy of God and of Christ even the Antichrist 202. Now except the Serpent devoure the Serpent it cannot become a Dragon as it is in the Proverb 203. So if the Pope had not devoured the Roman Empire he had not been Antichrist 204. With the spirituall tyrannie hee snatched also the secular 205. By vertue of that feigned patrimony of Peter or of the Church let the Pope be one of the Princes of Italy by humane prescription 206. The Pope being clothed with the Emperiall robe and crowned with the Emperors crowne holding the sword in his hand and saying I am Cesar is not he the Tyrant of the Empire and Cesars enemy 207. Neither did any one Pope this by chance the Papall ambition for these eight hundred years hath devoured the Roman Empire and trod upon the Emperors 208. The Emperor should take the oath of allegiance and obedience to the Pope 209. The Emperor should depend on the Popes judgement and not the Pope on the Emperors as is said 210. The Emperor should bow himselfe to the Pope whilst hee takes horse hee must stand by as a Lackie and must hold his bridle and stirrop 211. At a feast the Emperor should hold water to the Pope whilst he washeth his hands 212. The Emperor ought to carry the first dish to the Popes table 213. The Pope can excommunicate depose and kill the Emperor 214. The Pope hath power over all Kings and Princes over all the Kingdomes of the world directly or indirectly and can give them to whom hee will 215. Hence the Pope hath two bodies and two chiefe Pontificalities like another Numa Pompilius One way hee is like the Gentile Archflamine another way like the Roman Emperor after the Emperor left off the profane title of Pontifex maximus which Gratian did first abandon as some think 216. Hence he is armed with two swords the spirituall and secular because Boniface the Eighth said Behold Luke 22.38 here are two swords 217. Neither did he obtaine this great tyrannie by force onely at which you may wonder but
by art also and that three waies by Simonie by Cunning and by Cursing 218. By Simonie he made all the Clergie throughout the world subject to him in selling the sacred wares of Patriarchats Bishopricks Dispensations Absolutions Indulgences Purgatory fire Humane soules lastly of Hell and Heaven he drew to Rome the treasures of Kings Churches and Nations And what could not the Popes monie doe 219. By deceit especially of three sorts as it were with so many spells he did so enslave the Christian world to him that not to obey his words deeds and beck by a blind obedience was counted an hainous crime 220. First by a forged Vicarship of Christ and Saint Peters seat and succession then by the pretence of the Roman Catholick Church to which all upon necessitie of salvation must be subject by which vizard as by Gorgons head they turned as it were into stones Kings and the inhabitants of the earth both great and small rich and poore free and bond and had them at his beck 221. To these he added prodigies and lying signs and sometimes poysoned hosts by which he proved himselfe a God in the very event according to the Apostles oracle 2 Thes 2.7 10. Whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signes and lying wonders and with all deceivablenesse of unrighteousnesse 222. Hee did easily suppresse by stirring up the people and absolving them from the oath of allegiance to those Princes whom he struck with the thunder of excommunication if they seemed to slight it 223. By this meanes Gregory the second drove out of the Exarchat of Italy Philip and Leo Emperours of the East because they forbade Image-worship which is condemned by Gods word 224. And a little after Pope Leo the Eastern Emperours upon the same pretence being quite driven out of Italy challenged to himselfe the Roman spoiles invaded the whole Exarchat neither did hee ever restore it againe to the succeeding Emperours though Image-worshippers 2 Thes 2.3 4. 225. This then is that man of sin sitting in the Temple of God as God and exalting himself above every thing that is called God 226. This is that double beast having a double rising out of the sea and earth like an Amphibion and of two formes of a double nature in emulation of Christ both as a secular Monarch and as an Ecclesiasticall seducer the Antichrist figured in the fourth vision of the Revelations Rev. 17.1 7. 227. This is that Whore clothed with purple and scarlet drunk with the bloud of the Saints and of the Martyrs curbing with a bit the beast which she sits upon in the fifth vision of the Apocalyps 228. This is that Babylon great proud tyrannicall Rev. 18.4 saying in her heart I sit as a Queen and am no widow nor shall I see mourning 229. Here we have the double tyrannie of Poperie of old fore-told by the Angel to S. John and now after the revolution of an age detected by the renewing light of the Gospel 230. Which third cause was most urgent for our fathers to forsake and for us to avoid Poperie And so we conclude 231. The tyrannicall Church Babylon is to be deserted and avoided according to the voice from heaven Rev. 18.7 saying Goe out of her my people lest you be partakers of her sins and receive of her plagues 232. The Pontificalitie with Roman Poperie is a tyrannicall Church and Babylon 233. Therefore the Pontificalitie with Poperie was to be deserted and is to be avoided 234. Whosoever then continues a Papist formally as they speak that is whosoever dies without repentance in this Apostasie and in this Idolatrie and under this tyrannie of the Pontificalitie and Poperie shall without doubt perish eternally 235. In saying of this we condemne not nor do we teach that their persons should be deserted or avoided God is our witnesse but onely their errours and excesses above named which are condemned by Gods word 236. But rather charitie so commanding us we heartily pray to God for all that live in Poperie for kings and subjects for great and small for the Pope himselfe and his whole Clergie that according to his great mercie he would open the eyes of their hearts and would convert such as are to be converted and save such as will be saved being sealed with the seale of God in their fore-heads for Christ Jesus sake our Lord. To whom be glory power and honour for ever Amen The CREED of blessed Athanasius concerning the most sacred Trinitie and the Incarnation of our Lord JESUS CHRIST the Son of God With the Notes of D. David Parrie Of the Catholick Faith concerning the Trinity ARTICLE I. I. Whosoever would be saved before all things it is needfull that he hold the Catholick Faith which except every man keep whole and inviolate he shall doubtlesse perish everlastingly The Declaration 1. WHosoever So the necessitie of the Catholick faith to salvation is every-where declared in Scripture Mar. 16.16 He that beleedeth and is baptised shall be saved but hee that beleeveth not shall be condemned Where it is manifest that the first thing required is the beliefe of the Trinitie out of Mat. 28.19 Heb. 11.6 Without faith it is impossible to please God Therefore it is impossible to be saved 2 Thes 1.8 The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ They then that know not God nor obey the Gospel they hold not in every point the Catholick faith therefore cannot be saved but shall doubtlesse perish everlastingly ARTICLE II. 2. And this is the Catholick faith 3. that we worship one God in Trinitie and the Trinitie in unitie 4. neither confounding the persons 5. nor dividing the essence The Declaration 2. THe Catholick faith That is called the Catholick or universall faith not which is beleeved by all but which is necessary to be beleeved to salvation by all For so Euphronius Presbyter in his exposition of this Symbole of Athanasius saith That is called the Catholick or universall faith that is the right faith which the universall Church should hold It is set down in two heads chiefly in this Symbole of Athanasius to wit the faith of the holy Trinitie and the faith of the Incarnation and Mediation of the Son of God 3. That one God This is the first and chiefe mysterie by which Christian faith is discerned from the sects of Pagans Jewes Mahumetans and Hereticks For to them it is thought an absurditie to worship one God in Trinitie and Trinitie in unitie that is to say to worship and beleeve one God in essence and three in persons Father Son and holy Ghost As though forsooth it were lesse absurd in humane reason by which they measure faith to beleeve the worlds creation of nothing and mans of the earth or as the Alchoran feignes of a bubble of water and the resurrection of the
evils And these though hell repines doth he work and witnes by the miserable cryes of men As it is said 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of the strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ And having in a readinesse to revenge all disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled As therefore the basenes of the vessell detracts nothing from the worth of the wares it containeth so our meane and infant expression of the doctrine may not so far be slighted as than it should derogate one whit from the weight of those motives which invite you to an ardent study of Divinity But whiles I meditate with my self that I am to take a view of some of those motives in this rehearfall Preface I am sensibly so overwhelmed with an infinite masse of matter of main importance that scarcely can I resolve whence to make an entrance But seeing that some of them must come into consideration The necessity of Catechismal instruction is pressed from these motives 1. Gods command we will put that foremost which ought to rule all our actions and indeavours namely the serious will of God expressed in apparent commands For now we which are citizens of the Church have conference together and know for certain that the books of the Prophets and Apostles are most infallible declarations of the mind and will of God And in them here and there are certain precepts delivered and rehearsed which injoyn men a diligent search and knowledg of the doctrine contained in those books Such is the precept of the Decalogue touching the Sabbath Such is that speech of our Saviour Luke 10.41 One thing is necessary The knowledge of this wisdom saith he is eternall life This David commendeth as frequently in other places so in the first Psalme which he writeth as an Epitomie of it for that it is a companion of true blessednes But these have not satisfied our man-loving heavenly Father that is solicitous of our salvation He addeth further peculiar precepts touching that summe of doctrine that is to be published to all especially the youth namely the doctrine of Catechismall instruction Deut. 4.9 Teach them thy sons Deut. 6.6 7. These words shall be in thine heart Thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children c. And thou shalt binde them for a signe upon thine hand and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes Here doe we heare Parents and those to whom the charge of Parents is committed commanded that they care to teach or see taught the youth the youth commanded that they learne and both are commanded that they daily inculcate rehearse and meditate on this doctrine This doctrine would the Lord have both to be delivered unto children and also to be in our view continually And its apparent that brevity and plainnes are required which what else they but a Catechisme or summe of doctrine neither prolixe nor obscure So Saint Paul 2. Tim. 1.13 Hold fast the forme of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus In this precept of using and holding his Catechisme we heare the definition of ours The forme of sound words of C●●echism●l instruct●o● described 1 More largely The Apostle meaning a draught or plat-forme of sound positions concerning each point of doctrine methodically and briefly comprised as if it were painted before the eye together with a kinde and maner of teaching and expression as is both proper plain and agreeable with the stile of the Prophets and Apostles Therefore doth he name sound words delivered by him concerning faith and love in Christ i.e. in the knowledge of Christ as in sundry places he reduceth all piety to faith and love A Catechisme then is a summe of doctrine delivered by the Prophets and Apostles concerning faith and love in Christ 2 More briefly two wayes Or is a summe of doctrine of Christianity briefly methodically and plainly couched together For it is not for us to invent opinions but of necessity we must referre our selves as it is Esay 8.20 to the Law and the Testimony And there must be added an exposition which may be both a manifestation of the parts and method and an interpretation of words and phrases This reason if there were no more is of efficacy to them that are not of prophane minds to excite them to the study of this sacred doctrine For to such the command of God is a cause of all causes though nothing more be added But when as God is so indulgent to our weaknes as to declare unto us the causes of this command needs must we weigh them wtih reverence Now God avoucheth that therefore must we learn this doctrine because by the knowledge thereof 2. Motive our salvation and not any other way will he convert and save all that by age are of understanding and are to be made heires of eternall life Marvelous confidently is that spoken of Saint Paul Rom. 1.16 The Gospel is the power of God to salvation c. And 1 Cor. 1.18 The preaching of the Crosse is to them that perish foolishnesse but unto us which are saved it is the power of God And Ver. 21. It pleased God by the fool shnesse of preaching to save them that beleeve But this opinion howsoever it be delivered and confirmed by divers and weighty testimonies of the holy Spirit is oppugned by the utmost endeavours of Sathan Against the Zwenckf●●dians touching the point of the ●fficacy of the Spirit by the ministiy of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the Father of lyes seeing how the Paradox of the foolishnesse of preaching the Crosse of Christ doth not a little pierce the minds of men snatcheth an occasion of suborning fanaticall minded men who cry out that the worke of the ministry is nothing lesse than the means of converting men but that God communicates himself to us immediately and that wee Ministers make our voice an Idoll They babble forth many wonderfull words carrying with them indeed a shew of special illumination but heare and consider I pray upon what foundation they relye and how they oppose their wisedome to the divine The omnipotent God say they doth not at all need that voice ministry reading meditation to convert men Therefore he useth not this instrument neither is a necessity of labour in learning it to be imposed upon those that are to be saved Now say I to you young men Is there any one among you so weak and childish in judgment that doth not perceive such a one to be hissed at that would so argue God can by his omnipotency easily bring to passe that one without bookes teachers study should become skilfull in all learning and doctrine as the Apostles and others of the Primitive Church spake with tongues
which they never learned He can make the earth fruitfull and bring forth fruit without the help of husbandmen He can sustain the nature of man without food as Moses and Christ forty dayes Therefore it s not a necessary labour that is undertaken or any cause of the thing we hope and expect whiles Schollars ply their bookes and studies Teachers goe to their schooles Husbandmen to their ploughes entring their shares harrowes and engines into the ground and each man spends his life time to maintaine life You see upon what rockes of blinde madnesse the Divell doth split unhappy men which having neither learned the grounds of Piety or the more excellent Arts nor list to take the paines of learning them are forward notwithstanding to seeme what they least of all be and dare exalt themselves against the knowledge of God and bring the eternall wisdome under their censure And they have as little wit as modesty when as for their opinion they alledge the example of them that were converted by miracle as Paul or those indued with extraordinary gifts as the Apostles at the Pentecost or the multitude of them that heard the Gospel and did not beleeve or the Scriptures which speake of the office of the holy Ghost We know and acknowledge that by the blessing of God God can without the labour of teaching or learning convert those that he will And this to be the end of miracles The end of miracles that it may appeare that the order whereby God is effectuall in nature is made and freely preserved by him We so certainly know that conversion is the gift of God alone as that by how much it is a greater and more wonderfull worke to restore lost man to salvation than to make him not having any being by so much the more were it impudency and madnes Conversion greater than Creation to attribute this conversion more than that creation to the efficacy of mans voice But withall we know this too for a certain that it pleaseth God by the foolishnes of preaching to save them that beleeve Why it pleaseth God so to do there is no necessity he should give us an account yet he lets us understand some reasons of that his counsell but he propounds not the same reasons to the godly and godlesse To the godlesse he gives this reason Reasons why God converts by mans ministry 1. In regard of godlesse 2. In regard of godly Because by this meanes hee would before the whole Church and their consciences also being witnesse more manifest his justice in condemning the malice of those that oppugne the word revealed But other kinde of reasons take place in our consideration namely such as make for our instruction and consolation viz. Whereas the voice of the ministry and all our thoughts of God are darksome through which we now see God and his will the Lord admonisheth us of the greatnesse of our fall whereby it cometh to passe that wee no longer now injoy the very sight of God but he speaketh to us at a distance and as by an Interpreter and so exciting us that we aspire to that celestiall Schoole in which we shall immediately see God who shall be all in all Besides the Lord would not have the searching meditation and profession of the doctrine concerning him and his will even in this life to lye secret onely in the mindes of men but would have it audibly to sound and to be set forth in the assemblies And therefore tyed us with all possible necessity unto this doctrine promising thereby to recover us againe to salvation And so when God would make men to be co-workers with him in the most excellent divine work giving us to his only begotten Sonne for that purpose how could he have more manifested his great esteem of our miserable nature We averre therefore that the reading hearing knowing of this doctrine is a necessary meanes of our conversion Necessary not in regard of God but in regard of us not as if God could not any other way convert as a Carpenter cannot build an house without his tooles but because God will not convert any other wav It is true it is true indeed that true faith is nones but Gods gift and worke alone but such a gift and worke as the holy Spirit workes in us by hearing of the Word 1. Cor. 3.6 Paul planteth Apollo watereth but God giveth the increase To the same effect also Paul calleth the Gospel by him preached the power of God to salvation Rom 1.16 Ephes 4.11 the Apostle saith He hath given some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministry and the edification of the body of Christ Can a more glorious speech be uttered touching the office of teaching Let us not therefore take upon us to be wiser than God neither let us so much regard the pride contumacy and mischiefe of those that contemne the voice of the Gospel as thereby the lesse to love and respect the fruit and efficacy of the divine ordination in the meanes of mercy Nor let the sluggishnesse and obstinacy of some Schoolemen prove impediments of all good proceedings and goodnes who perswade others that instruction study and doctrines to get or increase vertue are unnecessary things but rather with obedient thankfull mindes let us injoy that sweetest consolation whereby we are assured that neither our endeavours are unpleasing to God nor undertaken in vaine according to that Eccles 11.1 Cast thy bread upon the waters for after many daies thou shalt finde it And 1 Cor. 15.58 Your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. Matthew 18.20 Where two or three are gathered together in my Name I am in the midst of them Unlesse these promises were known to be certain amidst so great outrages of Sathan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and miseries of mankinde of which its too truly spoken The most are naught the best teacher or the greatest lover of the common good should be in the unhappiest condition hardly sitting fast in his own place For mine owne part I feele my selfe to be so affected that mee thinkes my sorrow permits me not to stand in this Pulpit but shuts up my speech within my bowels and jawes but that I know for certain that in this our assembly there are whose hearts entertaine the t●e and saving doctrine are inflamed with the holy Spirit in a due manner knowing calling upon God being lively temples of him shall hereafter praise him in the celestial Quire We speak not this to that end as if we did expect equal knowledge understanding or the same gifts of the holy Spirit in all men For the Apostle commands us Rom. 12.3 To think soberly of our selves according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith But all them that will be saved must of necessity hold the same foundation that is that
from the Father against Noetus and Sabellius and their Sectaries who would have the same to be the person of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost which in respect of diverse functions and actions is now called the Father now the Sonne now the holy Ghost And therefore were they called Patripassians Also against Servetus who confounded the Sonne and the holy Ghost That the Word or Sonne of God is diverse and distinct from the Father and the holy Ghost not in office onely but also in subsistence and person is proved by foure arguments No one person can be both Father Son in respect of himselfe None is the same person with him whose sonne he is nor with him who proceedeth or floweth from him otherwise the same thing in one respect should be relative and correlative But the Word is the Son of the Father and from the Word the holy Ghost proceedeth and is given Therefore the Word is neither the Father nor the holy Ghost Christ another from the Father John 5.32 37. 9.16 5.19 14.16 Christ expresly calleth himselfe another from the Father and the holy Ghost There is another that beareth witnesse of mee namely the Father in the same Chapter My doctrine is not mine but his that sent mee The Son can doe nothing of himselfe save that hee seeth the Father doe I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter Three persons expressed in Scripture 1 John 5.7 Gen. 1.26 Joh. 10.30 14.26 15.26 The Scripture doth plainly affirme that the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are three There are three which beare witnesse in the heaven the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one Let us make man in our image he doth not say I will make but Let us make I and my Father are one he doth not say am but are The Comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name hee shall teach you all things When the Comforter shall come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the spirit of truth which proceedeth of the Father hee shall testifie of mee Teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost The holy Ghost descended in the shape of a Dove the Son was baptised in Jordan and the Fathers voice was heard from heaven Mat. 28.19 Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased The properties of the persons are di●tinct diverse The attributes of properties of the persons namely sending revealing and their offices are diverse The argument is this Whose properties are distinct they are in themselves distinct But the properties of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are distinct Therefore the Sonne is neither the Father nor the holy Ghost The Minor is proved because the Son onely and not the Father or the holy Ghost was begotten of the Father conceived by the holy Ghost made flesh sent into flesh manifested in the flesh made Mediatour baptised did suffer and died The Father of himself worketh by the Son Mat. 11. ●9 The Son not of himselfe but of the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost of the Father and of the Sonne No man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne These wordes cannot be expounded after this sort No man knoweth me but I and no man knoweth me but I As the Father knoweth me 〈◊〉 14.13 so know I the Father The sense of these wordes cannot be this As I know me so I know me The Son of God therefore Christ is another from the Father and the holy Ghost THE THIRD CONCLUSION The Word is equall with the Father THat the Word or the Son of God Christ is no made God or inferiour to the Father or created of the Father before other things as Arius Eunomius Samosatenus Servetus and others the like Heretickes imagined but is by nature true and eternall God and equall unto the Father in God-head and in all essentiall perfections of the God-head is confirmed 〈…〉 16. ●● C●● 2.9 By testimonies of Scripture We are in him that is true that is in his Son Jesus Christ. The same is very God and eternall life All things that the Father hath are mine In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God-head bodily As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given unto the Son also to have life in himselfe Jo●●3 ● Ph●● ●● Who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God whatsoever things the Father doth the same things doth the Son also that all men should honour the Son 〈…〉 as they honour the Father But the Father is to be honoured as God Therefore Christ is God equall in honour with the Father Christ 〈…〉 God 〈…〉 He that hath the whole essence of the God-head is necessarily equall with the Father But the Son of God hath the whole essence of the God-head communicated unto him for this because it is infinite is indivisible therefore the whole must needs be communicated unto whomsoever it is communicated Therefore the Word or Son of God is equall in all things with the eternall Father in the God-head The Minor is proved Generation or begetting is a communicating of the essence the Word was generated or begotten of the essence of the eternall Father● because he is his Son proper naturall and only begotten Therefore the whole Deity was communicated unto the Word He hath the same properties of the God-head The Scripture giveth the same properties and perfections of divine nature unto the Son which it doth unto the Father as namely eternity omnipotency immensity omniscience the searching of the heart and reines He is eternall Prov. 8.25 John 1.1 John 3.13 Eph 3.17 For Before the mountaines were settled and before the hils was I begotten In the beginning was the Word He is immense or unmeasurable No man ascendeth up to heaven but he that hath descended from heaven the Son of man which is in heaven That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith He is omnipotent Whatsoever things the Father doth John 5.19 Phil. 3.21 Heb. 1.3 the same things doth the Son also According to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himselfe Bearing up all things by his mighty word He is omniscient or of infinite wisedome knowing all things His name shall be called Counsellor Esay 9.6 Mat. 11.27 No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Son c. He is the searcher of hearts But Jesus did not commit himself unto them John 2.24 25. because he knew them all And had no need that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man Now we know that thou knowest all things He is the sanctifier of his Church