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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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Gospel wherby are signified those things are done which went before in Christ Neither is therefore any change in God as there is none in the father of a family who commandeth not the same things in sommer and in winter How do the Sacraments of the old new Testament agree In the Author the end the generall parts in the thing signified in manner of Phrase For God is one and the same Author of the Sacraments of each Couenant a Heb. 1 ● There is the same end that they should bee signes of the fauour of God toward the Church There be the same parts for the Sacraments both of the newe as also of the Old Testament do consist of a signe and a thing signified and in them both the signe is one thing the thing signified another The thing signifyed or the substance is alone and the same Christ and the selfe same benefits of his namely remission of sins iustification regeneration and spirituall nourishment Rom. 4.11 Abraham receiued the signe of the righteousnesse which he had receiued in his foreskin 1. Cor. 10.2 3.4 All were baptized vnder Moses in the cloud and did all eate the meate to wit that wee doe and did all drinke of the same spirituall drinke And cap. 12.13 For by one spirit we haue all beene baptized into one bodie both Iewes and Gentiles both bond and free and wee haue all drunk into one spirit For the same thing which Circumcision did signify doth our baptisme now signifie that which the lamb did doth the Supper And therefore the fathers vnder the Law were partakers by faith of the same Christ and of the same gifts of his that we bee now vnder the Gospell they beleeued in the selfe same Christ and had the verie same promises b Heb. 11 2 c. And Iesus Christ the same yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 And the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Re. 13.8 And Augustine saith Whosoeuer did conceiue Christ in the Manna did eate the same spirituall meate that we doe Lastly the manner of speach in them both is the same to wit Sacramentall that is fytting and well agreeing to that argument Of what sort be the Sacramentall speeches Sometime they be proper to wit when that which belongeth to the signe is attributed to the signe or that which belongeth to the thing signifyed is ascribed to the thing distinctly or else when the vse and office is plainely expressed As Circumcision is the signe of the Couenant betweene mee and you Gen. 17 11. The bloud of the Lambe shall bee a signe to you of the Passeouer Exod. 12.13 Abraham receiued the signe of Circumcision and the seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4 11. Baptisme is that whereby the filth of the flesh is washed away 1. Pet. 3.21 But for the most part they are figuratiue when the names and effectes of the things signifyed are attributed to the signes And on the contrary when the names of the signes and their effectes are attributed to the thing signified by a Mutonimie or changing of the names And such phrases are in indeede vsuall in the holy Scripture and so be placed in the common vse of the Church and yet figuratiue which may be vnderstood by the nature conference of the words and things whereof the words speake or by the coherence of the parts Yet cleare because eloquent and manifest types do not obscure but illustrate an oration Now they are such because the nature and essence of a Sacracrament doth require the same which commonly is defined to bee a visible signe of sacred things And therefore if the words in the Sacraments be vnderstood nakedly without a trope simply they shall be no longer Sacraments because they shall bee no longer signes but the things themselues Now they are of the number of those which haue relation to another thing Therfore the trope is not in the things but in the words 1. Because of the analogie proportion and relation of the signe vnto the thing signified 2. Because of the similitude and comparison of the effects Whereupon Augustine saith that Sacraments from the likenesse of those things whereof they are Sacraments doe for the most part borow the names of the things themselues Quest vpon Leuit. 17 Whereupon also that Rule is to be kept the vse whereof is vsuall and much in the Scriptures The names and properties of things which be most diuerse because of some proportion similitude and likenesse of the effects are oftentimes changed and affirmed mutually one of another for instruction and admonition sake So Christ and a vine bee the names of diuerse things yet Christ doth tearme himselfe a Vine a Ioh. 15.1 for the likenesse of the effects Againe because of the pawne and certainty of the promise of God added to the signes as the Rainebowe or the bowe in the clouds is the Couenant of God b Gen. 9.9 Circumcision is the Couenant c Gen. 17 10 The Lambe is the passouer or the passing ouer of the Lord d Exod 12 11.27 So Baptisme is the lauer of Regeneration e Tit. 3 5 and the stipulation of a good conscience f 1 Pet. 3.21 The like speaches are vsed in the types and shadowes as Gal. 4.24 those two mothers Agar and Sara are two Testaments In the holy Supper the breade broken is the bodie of Christ the wine the bloud of Christ The cup is the New Testament in the blood of Christ Not because of the chāging of the signe into another thing as our Transubstantiaries would haue it Or the including of another thing in the signe as the Consubstantiaries say Not properly and of themselues but because by a Metonimie or changing of the name they are signes and testimonies pawnes yea euen meanes or instruments of the Holy Ghost in the lawfull vse whereof there is wrought through the free operation of the holy Ghost a true and not an imaginarie communication of the things which are promised in the word beeing added to the Sacraments no lesse certainly then the Minister of the Church doth certainely exhibite the sacred signes which are called Sacraments This Rule is also perpetuall in the nature of things that in the affirmation of things that bee diuerse one from another and affirming of one of them of another the speach must needes be euer tropicall or figuratiue in any kinde of things and neuer proper For as oft as in any proposition the verbe Substantiue est doth ioyne together things that bee diuerse which differ in their speciall formes then the affirmation is not proper but figuratiue As so often as the first substance or this singular Indiuiduum existing truely and actually without the minde is affirmed of another first substance such an affirmation is figuratiue But yet these figuratiue speaches must bee reduced to proper and bee explained by them as Circumcision is the Couenant that is to say it is the signe
neglect and contempt of both tables yea and of the lawgiuer himselfe because there is but one and the same lawgiuer of all the precepts and the bodie of the law is entire and vnseperable 5 The person is not accepted and taken into Gods fauour for the workes sake but on the contrarie the works doe then please god when the person hath firste found grace and fauour in Gods sight And for this cause it is that it is written Gen. 4.4 that god had respect vnto Abell and his sacrifice And Hebrevv 11.4 By faith Abell offered vnto God a greater Sacrifice then Cain 6 Saint Paul 2. Cor. 5.18 testifieth that the preaching of free reconciliation with god is perpetuall in the Church so that the faithfull to the end of this life haue no other righteousnesse then that which is there described VVhy then doth Saint Iames Chap. 2 verse 21. say that Abraham vvas Iustified by vvorkes Because he speaketh not there of the cause but of the effect whereby iustification may be discerned For when Abraham had offered Isack his sonne vpon the alter he was Iustified through workes saith he that is he was found to be iustified euen before that time by faith that by his works as testimonies of his iustification And so a man is iustified by workes that is by the holinesse of his life he is approued to be such a person as is iustified by the obediēce of Christ which holinesse doth follow iustificatiō as an effect therfore is also a testimonie witnesse of the same After this sort also god is said at the latter day that he wil iustifie his elect by their workes For whereas there are two beginnings of things one of existence the other of knowledge Faith as the beginning of Existence causeth vs to bee iust and workes as the beginning of knovvledge make vs to be knowne to bee iust And therefore the Lord at the last day will propound the beginning of knowledge of the righteousnesse by faith which shall appeare in the eyes of all creatures Mat. 25.34 Come yee blessed of my father c. For I was an hungred and yee gaue mee meat c. VVhat vvas the state of the Question concerning Iustification in Saint Paules time or vvhereof was the controuersie in old time Of the efficient and meritorious cause of Iustification namely whether it were the satisfaction of Christ apprehended by faith or else our workes And the reliques of that controuersie remaine yet in poperie For although the subtiller sort of Papists doe ascribe the beginning of iustification that is the first iustification as they call it onely to the merit of Christ yet the progresse and proceeding in iustification which they call the second iustification that they attribute to the merit of workes But now by the subtiltie of the diuill the whole nature of iustification is called into question For indeede in the Apostles time the question was not whether iustification were a naturall motion as it were from inherent vnrighteousnesse to inheren● righteousnesse or whether iustifycation were seated in the sentence of the Iudge pronounced which is the question at this day but the state of the question thē was whether iustifycation placed in the sentence of the iudge pronounced vpon the guiltie person were in regard of workes or by reason of Christ By vvhat arguments or reasons doth the Apostle Paule take avvay from workes the cause of Iustification 1. Because wee are all sinners and from an impure nature it cannot be that there should proceede pure and perfect obedience toward God to whom nothing is acceptable vnlesse it be euery way sound absolute not spotted or stained with any corruption which neuer yet could nor euer shal be found in any man 2. Because the Scripture pronounceth that there is no man righteous by the works of the Law no not one And this sentence remaineth euer firme and stedfast Cursed is euerie one that abideth not in all things that are vvritten in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3.10 But there is no man no not the holiest man that euer was that could satisfie the whole law of God as appeareth by the complaint of the Apostle Paule Rom. 7. 3. Because if righteousnesse be by the Law then Christ dyed in vaine Gal. 2.21 and. 5.2 4. Because God will haue no man to glorie in himselfe Least anie man should boast Eph. 2.8.9 Rom. 3.26.27 5. Because by the Law came the knowledge of sinne and the Law causeth wrath that is to say it denounceth death and Iudgement against them that doe not performe perfect obedience in their works and actions a Rom. 4.15 6. Bec use the law was giuen after the promise of iustification and life eternall b Gal. 3.17 7. Because the inheritance or life euerlasting is of free gift and not of merit c Ro. 6 23 Gal. 3.18 Eph. 2 8 8. Because all our sufferings are not worthy of the glorie which shal be reuealed shewed vnto vs therfore our actions are not worthy of it Rom. 8.18 And 2. Cor. 4.20 Our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glorie By what arguments doth the Apostle confirme the righousnesse of faith 1. Because it alone hath the witnesse of the Law Prophets d Ro. 3 21 Gen 3.15 22 28 the end of the Law was Christ Ro. 10.4 Circumcision was the Seale of the righteousnes of Faith Ro 4.11 The Sacrifices Ceremonies did prefigure Christ the righteousnesse which is by faith Haba 2.4 The iust shall liue by his Faith Psa 32.1 Blessed are they vvhose iniquities are forgiuen And on the contrarie Psal 132.2 In thy sight shall no flesh be iustified namely by the obedience of the Law Act. 10.43 To Christ giue all the Prophets vvitnesse that through his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes 2. From the comparison of like and equall things because Abraham the father of the faithfull in the example and excellencie of faith was iustified by faith e Gen 15 6. Ro. 4.13 14. and not by the Law Now God is alwaies like himself and the case is alwaies alike of the beleeuing father and the beleeuing children 3. Because saluation is not promised vnto him that fulfilleth the Law for that were a vaine promise and so our saluation alwaies doubtfull and vncertaine because no man doth fulfill the law and wee our selues should be also vncertaine whether wee had sufficient good workes for the attaining of this righteousnesse but it is promised to the beleeuer Therefore the inheritance is by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure as relying wholy vpon mercie for that which proceedeth from the grace and fauour of God through Christ is firme and stedfast but so is not that which proceedeth from vs and from our workes Rom. 4.16 4. By an argument of the like
free from al sin Also that it might be made manifest that saluation proceedeth out of the blessed seed of Abraham which is Christ 3. God would haue Infants to be circumcised to the end that being once receiued into fauour through the Couenant being made copartners of the Couenant together with faithfull Abraham they might as it were be sealed vp by the signe of the couenant euen as their faithfull Fathers were according to the promise I will be thy God of thy seed after thee Gen. 17.7 yet for the beginning of the calling of the Gentils the Gentiles also were taken in the fellowship of gods people if they wold so be circumcised Ought not such a Sacrament seem to be ridiculous No it ought not For if it seeme absurd to any man that the signe of so excellent and singular grace was giuen in that part of the bodie he must needes be ashamed also of his saluation which issued out of the loynes of Abraham And The Crosse of Christ was a stumbling block to the Iewes and foolishnesse to the Gentiles 1. Cor. 1.23 And Iulian the Apostata as also Celsus made a scoffe of this that an apple was forbidden our first parents And Naaman the Syrian thought it a matter to be laughed at to wash seuen times in Iordane a 2 King 5 11 But the word of God ought to be preferred before all the world And the foolishnesse of God that is that which mad men not without impietie call foolishnesse is wiser then all the wisdome of men For although the Princes of this world haue their glorious seales yet for all that their promises are often broken But God with his much baser markes neuer deceiued any man What was the manner of Circumcision That is to be seene in the Time Ministers Place Instrument and Adiuncts First then the Infant of eight daies old was circumcised that is when the eight day was come for circumcision was to bee performed vpon the eight day precisely b Gen. 17.12 Leuit. 12.3 Luk. 1.59 et 2.21 that God might haue regard of their tender age and so might testifie vnto the Iewes his fatherly loue vnto their children for then the age of the child vseth to become strong 2. Because euerie childe was vncleane seauen daies by reason of the bloud and the eight day was accounted pure c Exod. 22 30 Leuit. 12 3 Lib 3 Epist 10 3. Because this was a Sacrament of that eight day wherein Christ rose againe for our iustification after that he had condemned sin in the similitude of flesh as Cyprian writeth to Fidus. 4. As also to shew that we are to thinke of the mortification of the flesh during the whole course of this present life which is noted by seauen daies because it is finished by the continuall reuolution of weeks or of seauen daies but yet it is not accomplished saue on the eight day that is after the end of it 5. Least we should imagin that those are excluded from the Couenant which cannot obtaine the signes thereof seing manie which not liuing to the eight day prescribed died without circumcision Whereby also it appeareth that that time prescribed was a part of that ruder kinde of Gouernment vnder which it pleased GOD to keepe the olde people For at this day there is permitted a greater and larger libertie in the administration of Baptisme whereby we are not bound vnto a certaine number of daies Neither did Abraham Ismaell and the seruants that were bought sinne against the law because they were not circumcised the eight day but when they were come to mans estate because the inioining of the eight day was not imposed generally vpō all but especially to infants alone 2 Touching Ministers although there is no law extant yet it is probable by the circumcision of Iohn d Luk 1.59 Abrahams example e Gen. 17 23 thy euery family did administer it by themselues not in the presence of two or three but in some forme of an Ecclesiasticall assemblie whereunto the neighbours and all the kinsfolke did come 3 It was administred at home in the house of the parents to wit because circumcision could not be performed without exceeding paine vnto the infant that so without delay there might be vsed a remedie for the wound 4 The instrument of circumcision was a knife eyther a sharpe knife as some take it else a stone or verie sharpe flint as most men iudge a Exod 4 25 Ios 5 3 For men say that in the East countrie there bee stones found which cut as sharp as any raysor To signifie that eyther with the knife of the law of God the flesh is to be mortifyed or rather to bee cleane cut off by the Rocke Christ 5 The adiunct of circumcision was the giuing of the name 6 That by the remembrance of their name those which were circumcised might be put in minde of their dutie Now the example of Zephera the wife of Moses a woman of Madian not sufficiently instructed in the will of God who to deliuer her husband from death wherewith the Lord sought to slay him for neglecting to circumcise his sonne and that in their iourney and in an Inne being disturbed with feare circumcised her sonne and moreouer did not goe with her husband any further but sent backe againe by Moses to her father b Exod. 18 2 it is singular c Exod 4.25 and therefore may not be imitated VVhich were the vses and ends of Circumcision 1 That it might be a couenant and an agreement that is a signe of the couenant of grace betweene God and the posterity of Abraham whereby they might confirme their faith and might know that they were in the gouernment of their Lord and possessor against all their enemies According to the promise I will be a God vnto thee and to thy seede after thee namely in a speciall manner whereby I will make thee partaker of my spirit of my righteousnesse of all good thing in one word of heauenly life d Gen 7.7 2 That the people might be distinguished by that signe and badge of their profession from other nations and profane people and that the people might be discerned of whom that promised Redeemer must be borne Whereupon circumcision by a Metonymie is put for the Iewes circumcised e Titus 1.10 as also vncircumcision for the vncircumcised or the Gentiles f Rom. 2.26 And Christ is called the Minister of circumcision g Rom. 15.8 that is not of the law which he did abrogate by his comming or rather fulfilled but of the Iewes within whose bounds he contained himselfe so long as hee was conuersant among men as he testifieth of himselfe Math. 1.24 And yet so as he would haue the Gospell also in his time appointed to be published to the Gentiles h Ioh. 10.16 But especially by the spirituall and internall circumcision the Iewes were both distinguished from them and also
it vseth these meanes helps and instruments to worke our saluation In which sense the Church is said to be sanctified and washed in the lauer of water thorough the word Ephe. 5.16 Tit. 3.5 Baptisme is called the Lauer of Regeneration Renonation And Act. 22.16 Be baptized washed from thy sins in calling vpon his name Hereupon Augustine hath this saying whence commeth this vertue to the water that it should touch the bodie in Ioh. Trac 80 and wash the heart but that the word causeth it not because it is spoken but because it is beleeued And that the grace of God ought not to bee tyed to the outward signes Peter teacheth speaking thus of Baptisme 1 Pet. 3.21 It saueth vs not that Baptisme whereby the filthinesse of the flesh is cast away but whereby it comes to passe that a good conscience maketh request to God by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ Cornelius receiued grace before Baptisme a Act. 10.5 For God vseth meanes and instruments to worke our saluation but yet so as hee worketh by his owne proper and inward vertue most freely when how and in whome hee will and doth not yeelde vp his power and vertue to the outward signes As also in that seuen times washing of Naaman the Syrian in Iordan was not placed the purging of him from his Leprosie which then the power of GOD alone wrought in him b 2. King 9 ●4 Hence it comes to passe that some receiue grace without the Sacrament as Abraham was iustified before Circumcision and the Theefe on the Crosse without Baptisme and the Lords Supper Some receiue the Sacraments and not grace because they want faith as Iudas of whom Augustine saith Hee receiued the bread of the Lord but not that bread which was the Lord. Others receiue both together as it were by a certaine coniunction of the thing with the signes as the faithfull who take the Supper worthily Whether doe the Sacraments imprint any stampe or anie spirituall worke in soule and that such as cannot be blotted out Not of themselues or their owne power nor yet by anie supernaturall verture inherent in them not by a reall and essentiall imprinting of some signe as the printing of a picture or signe is made in wax or money For the Scripture alloweth none such But yet God doth as it were marke out and seale vp his Sacramentally spiritually by them as instruments giuing the pledge of his spirit and the light of faith whereby they are made conformable to Christ and discerned from infidels and are marked out vnto the profession of Christ And this note in the purpose of God is such as cannot bee blotted out 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God is sure hauing this seale The Lord knoweth who are his And 2. Cor. 1.21 He which hath annointed vs is God and who hath sealed vs and giuen vs the pledge of his spirit And Ephe 1.13 In whom also yee beleeuing yee were sealed with the holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of the Inheritance And Chap. 4.30 Doe not yee greeue the holie spirit of God by whom yee are sealed And Ezech. 9.4 The markes of the letter Tau is saide to be made in the forehead of those men which sigh and mourne And Reuel 7.3 The seruants of God are marked in their foreheads as on the contrarie the children of perdition are saide to bee marked with the marke of the beast Reuel 13.16.17 To whome doth it belong to administer the Sacraments To them only to whom it is permitted to exercise the office of Preaching the Gospell According to that saying Goe yee forth teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father son and Holy Ghost Math. 28.28 and 1. Cor. 4.1 For the Sacraments bee the appurtenances of the Ministerie of the word of God and the seales of Gods promises which cannot lawfully be set too without the vnfolding of this word of God For neiher can their be an accessorie vnlesse their be a principall And it belongeth to the same man as the Chancelor vsing the Kings authoritie to write the tables of the Testament faithfully and to seale them with his seale Whence doe the Sacraments receiue their power and excellency From the institution of God so that that forme be obserued which he hath prescribed that by a publick person either rightly called or at the least by a common error vsing the publicke function and not of the manners merit and excellencie of the person working administring Phil. 1. But whether doe the Ministers to whom is committed the lawfull administration of the Sacraments and are called Gods fellow-morkers deliuer also with their hands the matter of the Sacrament No but they do outwardly giue the earthly signes and doe onely performe the outward dueties and God doth inwardly conferre the heauenly gifts represented by them giues increase because God alone doth Circumcise the heart a Deut. 30 And therefore this Circumcision is said to be made without hands b Col 2 11 And Iohn the Baptist confessed that hee indeede baptised them with water but the Lord Iesus did baptise them with the Holy Ghost and with fire Math. 3.11 And onely the heauenly father giueth that bread which is indeede heauenly Iohn 6.32 Otherwise sometimes that is ascribed to the Ministers of the word which belongeth to God alone For that is the nature of words which belong to one thing that that is attributed to the instrument which belongeth to the principall efficient cause Where and when ought the Sacraments to be admininistred In the assembly of the Church and vsually no where else to wit when the whole Church is gathered together or a great part thereof not out of the assembly of the Church Which ought to be the forme and manner of administration That those signes should bee vsed without change which Christ himselfe hath prescribed And that the words of the institution then also of the Lords promise be recited and explaned not in a strange but in a knowne speach before the Sacrament bee administred and deluered a Act 19.3 4.5 1 Cor. 11 23 For the Apostle doth expresly forbid 1. Cor. 14.19 to vse a strange language in the Church And such ceremonies ought to bee vsed which are not humane and receiued but appointed and commaunded by the authority of the son of God as also praiers and thanksgiuings After the example of Christ who commaunded the Church to doe this Doe ye this And Act. 22.16 Be thou baptised and be thou washed from thy sinnes in calling vpon the name of Iesus Now the comelines and dignitie of the Sacrament is to bee esteemed by the word of God Also the multitude and pompe of humane rites doth occupie the senses and the mindes and doth ouerturne the Ceremonies appointed by God To whom are the Sacraments to bee administred The Sacraments indeed are common to the godly and vngodly and also other outward things in the Church
comforter from the Father And vnto him is attributed a voice k Act. 13.2 and his good pleasure l Act. 15.28 and free will m 2. Cor. 10.11 and a peculiar appearing in a bodily forme n Cap. 2.3 all which be the properties of a person truly subsisting And Ioh. 5.7 There be three which beare witnesse in heauen the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one What then is the holy Ghost He is the third Person of the Trinitie eternall coessentiall to the Father and proceeding from them both ioyntly and inseperably together with the Father and the Sonne the Creator and Conseruator of all things who is sent into the hearts of the elect to sanctifie them together with the Father and the Sonne equally to be worshipped As for his sending foorth it is in operation not in essence the which being vnmeasurable in that it is true God changeth not place neither is in a place but euery where as God Ga. 4.6 Proue that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father Ioh. 15.26 He that proceedeth from the Father and Mat. 10.20 It is not ye that speake but the spirit of your Father that speaketh in you Proue that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Sonne Ioh. 14.26 and 15.26 he is said not onely to be sent and to be giuen of the Father but also of the Son and Ioh. 16.14 to receiue all things from Christ He shall receiue of me and declare all things vnto you Rom. 8.9 and Gal. 4.6 He is called the Spirit of the Son Moreouer Augustine saith that Christ gaue the holy Ghost by breathing him into them that he might shew that he proceedes euen from him a Joh. 20.22 Ob. 1. Christ saith that he proceedes from the Father therefore not from the Sonne Ans Christ doth not say that he proceedes onely from the Father therefore this proues nothing Ob. 2. If the holy Ghost be one he must haue but one beginning and so proceed from the Father alone Ans It followeth not seeing that breathing of the Father and the Sonne by which the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne is onely one What then be the proprieties whereby the Persons are really distinguished amongst themselues Not to be begotten or the Paternitie or fatherhood is the incommunicable proprietie of the first Person of the Trinitie whereby it comes to passe that the Father is of no other but of himselfe not made not begotten but from all eternitie begetting the Sonne Now ●o be begotten or generation or the sonneship is that whereby the Sonne doth receiue and hath in himselfe all and his whole essence from the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Proceeding flowing or comming from being likewise taken passiuely whereby the holy Ghost from all eternitie doth receiue that self same and whole essence from the Father and the Son and hath it whole in himselfe Therefore the holy Ghost is said to proceed from the Father and the Sonne not when he is sent or powred foorth vpon the house of a Zach. 12.10 Dauid but in respect of his essence which from all eternitie he receiued communicated vnto him of the Father and the Sonne Is there then a difference betweene generation and proceeding There is but I saith August know it not neither am I able nor sufficient to distinguish them because that as generation so proceeding is altogether vnspeakable Yet this difference may be yeelded that as the same Augustine saith whatsoeuer is begotten doth also proceed but not of the contrarie whatsoeuer doth proceed is also begotten These proprieties by what other names are they called They are called the workes of the Trinitie within because they be effected within the very essence without all respect to creatures after an incomprehensible manner They are also called workes diuided or distinct and incommunicable For to be a Father agreeth onely to the Father to be a Sonne onely to the Sonne Proceeding onely to the holy Ghost What call you the workes of the Diuinitie without Which in respect of the creatures are done of the whole Trinitie or which the three persons ioyntly together effect in the works of creation and redemption And they are said to be vndiuided because they be common to the three Persons whence comes this rule The workes of the Trinitie without are vndiuided Gen. 1.26 Let vs make man after our owne image And Ioh. 5.17.19 What things the Father doth the same things in like manner the Sonne doth also but yet so as there is kept the proprietie of the Persons the order of doing and the difference b 1. Cor. 15.57 Rom. 11.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the worke of incarnation being taken actiuely is a worke of the whole Trinitie in regard of the * accomplishing of it if you consider the effect although onely the Sonne be incarnate What names are giuen to the holy Ghost in the Scriptures He is called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Comforter that is the Aduocate c Ioh. 14.16 15.26 16.7 not of Redemption nor of Mediation or of Reconciliation betweene God and men for Christ alone in this respect is Mediator but of comfort namely teaching vs to pray comforting the afflicted teaching the truth begetting those vnutterable gronings of which Paul speaketh Rom. 8.25.26 He is called the Spirit of truth a Joh. 14.26 because he teacheth the truth effectually Also the spirit of adoption b Gal. 4.6 because he sealeth vp the adoption of the sonnes of God in our hearts Also the Spirit of sanctification or the holy Ghost c Rom. 8.15 not so much in regard of his essence as for his effects d Rom. 1.4 What be the effects of the holy Ghost 1. In generall to quicken to sustaine to rule to gouerne in speciall to giue testimonie vnto Christ e Iohn 15.26 2. To leade the elect into all truth to regenerate f Iohn 16.13 the minds of the faithfull Tit. 3.4 He hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and by the renewing of the holy Ghost which he worketh whilest that he illuminateth our minds with the true knowledge of Christ createth in vs faith in Christ by the hearing of the Gospell and by faith bringeth forth in vs newnes of life incorporateth vs into Christ g Eph. 3.5.16 and applieth Christ and the offices and treasures of Christ vnto vs. Also to seale vp vnto vs the promises of God Ephes 1.13 He is called the Seale the earnest of our saluation and the earnest of our inheritance 2. Cor. 1.22 because by his testimonie he doth establish confirme and seale vp in our hearts the assurance of our inheritance to come What ●e the Epithets which are ascribed to the same holy Ghost in the Scriptures 1. He is called the finger of God Luke 11.20 If I by the finger of God cast out diuels by whom do your children cast them out because
will when a man disposeth of his goods how they shall be ordered after his death The Grecians doe properly and peculiarly call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 According to the vse of Scripture it is vnderstood to be a couenant or agreement betwixt God and men who before were at variance in which couenant God doth promise to man those benefits which himselfe hath namely saluation and eternall life and man on the other part doth relie vpon God by confidence in his promises and doth confirme his faith nourish it by the testimonie of the couenant a Heb. 7.22 And for this cause is called of the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith which properly signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke that is a couenant betwixt them which liue 3 Metonymically with addition of Old or New it signifieth the bookes and distinct parts of the Bible The old Testament signifieth the writings of Moses and the Prophets and the new containeth the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles 2. Cor. 3 6. God hath made vs able Ministers of the Nevv Testament And verse 14. Euen vntill this day the same veile remayneth in the reading of the Old Testament Seeing the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith doth not signifie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a testament but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a couenant amongst them who liue 1. Reg. 5.12 why doe the Greeke interpreters of the Bible call the couenant made by God with men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a testament Because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a generall word signifieth also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a bargaine or couenant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which generally signinifieth to couenant and agree vpon a bargaine Luc. 23.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. I make a couenant with you as the father couenanted or gaue order to me 2 Againe because this couenant of God with men hath some thing common with a testament and differing from other couenants for in other couenants nothing is lesse required then the death of them who enter couenant heere on the contrarie it behooued that the couenant made betwixt God and men should be confirmed by the death of Christ For these causes also the Apostle Hebr. 9.15.16.17 Doth keepe the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and draweth an argument from the proper signification thereof And it is called a testament because it is a certaine testimonie of the will of God Of what parts consisteth the Testament betwixt God and men Of three 1. A free promise on Gods part 2 Faith in the promise on mans part 3 The outward testification or marke of the same euery of which parts by a Synecdoche a part for the whole receiue the name of Testament as Gal. 3.17 The law doth not make void the couenant confirmed before by God where the word Testament is vsed for a promise made by God to Abraham a Gen. 17.7 2. God said to Abraham b v. ● Thou therfore keep my Testament Psal 44.18 All these things are come vpon vs yet doe wee not forget thee neyther deale falsely concerning thy Testament where the word Testament is vsed to signifie the faith of man towards God 3. Gen. 17.18 This is my Testament that euerie male among you be circumcised and Luke 22 20. This cup is the new testament in my bloud and Act. 7.8 God hath giuen to Abraham the testament of circumcision It is vsed Metaphorically for an outward signe or testimonie and badge of the testament Gen. 17.11 Hath God made more or onely one couenant with men As since the time of the fall of our first parents hath beene and is the same way to attaine saluation by Christ so there is one perpetuall couenant or testament of God whereby God bindeth himselfe to giue saluation to all those who beleeue in Christ But doth not the scripture mention two couenants It doth indeed because of the dispensation of the same couenāt which at diuers times was diuersly appointed by god wherof the one is called the Old Testament the other the New Yet we must note that the old Couenant is vnderstood and called two waies somtimes in respect onely of Moses his lawgiuing and it is called the couenant of the law the sanction and establishing whereof is described Exod. 24. and sometimes to signifie the couenant of grace or free couenant in what manner it was made with Abraham and his posteritie Gen. 17.7 But by the appellation of the new couenant is vndestoode no more then the free couenant Of both these Ierem. 31.31.32 speaketh thus Bebold the daies shall come saith the Lord and I will make with the house of Israell and with the hovse of Iuda my couenant not according to that couenant which I made with their fathers in the day when I tooke them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Aegypt but this is my couenant which I will make with the house of Israell After those daiet saith the Lord I will giue my law in the middest of them and I will write in their heart and I will bee their God and they shall be my people and I will be mercifull to their iniquities After which words the Apostle addeth Hebr. 8.13 VVhen he saith a newe one he hath abrogated the former And Galat. 4.24 He teacheth that Agar the seruant was a shadow of mount Sinai from which was giuen the Law and that Sarai the free woman was a f●gure of the heauenly Ierusalem from which sprung the Gospell and he addeth that by these are signified the two Testaments the one bringing forth children vnto bondage that is slaues and the other to libertie or free men and in the ninth Chapter to the Hebrewes he maketh a comparison of the Old and New Testament the summe whereof commeth to this purpose that the Old testament was a shadowe of the New and the New a fulfilling of the Old the new was folded vp in the Olde and the New enfolded in the Newe But in this place where the question is concerning the likenes and difference of the Old and New Couenaunt we by the name of old vnderstand onely the free Couenant in such sorte as it was made with our fi●st parents straight after the fall and was confirmed to Abraham of which the law of Moses was an helpe and at length it was renued in Christ Dan. 9.27 How are these two testimonies one which are so diuers In substance or in respect of all the causes thereof to wit Efficient Matter Forme and End How do they agree in the efficient cause Because the antecedent cause of both the couenants was the wonderfull descending and as it were abasing of God whereby he stooped so low as to binde men in league and couenant vnto him which thing Moses testifyeth Deut. 8.17 9.5 Offering the pure mercie of God against the merits of the Iewes and Iosua 24.2.3 But the antecedent and meritoriovs cause is the death of
the Mediatour a Apoc 13.8 Dan. 9.27 How are they all one in matter Because the foundation and substance th●reof is onely Christ the Mediator without whom God cannot receiue men into fauor and this is he who is that blessed seed in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed b Gen. 12.2 So Paul 2. Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ not imputing their sinnes and Heb. 13.8 Christ remaineth the same to day and yesterday and for euer 2 Because both the Sacraments haue one signification yea the Sacraments of both couenants are the same I say the same in signification and vse that is testimonies of the same grace as Paulo testifieth that the Israelites had the same Baptisme and the same supper which we haue 1. Cor. 10.2.3 for although there appeare some diuersitie in the matter of the signes and the number therof yet here is no matter to be made therof as in the mariage ring vsed to make contracts there is no regard made whether it be of gold or of siluer whether it be one or more but only the end and promise made to the confirmation of that wherof it is made How doe they agree in the forme Because the mean or maner whereby we cleaue to God was one alwaies namely faith as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 11. and Christ Iohn 8.56 Abraham reioyced to see my day and he saw it namely by the eyes of faith and Paul Rom. 3.21 that the righteousnes Which is of Faith hath testimonie from the Law the Prophets And Gen. 15.6 Ahraham belieued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse which was written for vs c. How agre they in the end or marke whereat they driue Because the old testament as also the new doth did stirre vp the elect not vnto a carnall or earthly felicitie and the benefits of this present life but much more vnto hope of blessed immortality How prooue you this 1. By the forme of the couenant it selfe which was one both before and after Christs manifestation in the flesh for God alwaies made such a couenant with his seruants as he did with Abraham Gen. 17.1.7 I am Schaddai that is God all sufficient thy God and the GOD of thy seede after thee keepe thou my couenant walke before me and be vpright Leu. 26.12 I will bee your God and you shall bee my people in which words euen the Prophets themselues declared that life saluation and all blessednesse yea euen heauenly blessednesse is cōprehended For he declareth to thē that hee will not bee the God of their bodies onely but especially of their soules but the soules vnlesse they bee ioyned vnto God by righteousnesse are separated from him and remaine in death Yea moreouer God hath professed himselfe to bee the God of them who are alreadie deceased namely Abraham Isaac and Iacob a Exo. 3.6 Mat. 22.32 2. By the examples of the fathers Adam Abell Noah Abraham Isaac and Iacob who neglected this present life amidst the many temptations sorrowes which happen in the whole course of their life did with all their hearts labour to come vnto the habitation of eternall felicitie so as both they and they also who belieued vnder the new testament did aime at the same marke Which thing the Apostle confirmeth Heb. 11.9.10 By faith Abraham tarried in the Land of promise as in astrange country as one that dwelled in tents vvith Isaac and Iacob who were partakers of the same inheritance For hee looked for a citie hauing a good foundation vvhose builder and maker is God And vers 13. All these dyed in faith and receiued not the promises but savv them a farre off and beleeued and receiued them thankfullie and confessed that they vvere strangers and pilgrimes in the earth Gen. 47.9 Whereupon wee necessarily gather that the promise of that land made vnto them by God is not principally and properly to bee vnderstoode of that very land it selfe and of an earthly felicitie but of eternall life signified by it Therefore also they desired to bee buried in that land as being a pledge of eternall life giuen them by God a Gen. 47.29.30 50.25 And Iacob being readie to die professed that hee waited for the saluation of the Lord b Gen. 45.18 3 By the testimonie of Balaam himselfe who was not void of the knowledge of this end when as he said Numb 23.10 Let my soule die the death of the iust and let my last end be like his The same thing Dauid afterwards expounded Ps 116.15 when hee saith that the death of the Saints is pretious in the sight of the Lord but the death of the wicked is very euill 4. By the testimonie of the Prophets who in a most full perfect light did beholde and expect eternall life and the Kingdome of Christ as Dauid psalm 39.13.14 I am a soiourner and a stranger as all my fathers And v. 6.7.8 Euery man liuing is vanitie euery man walketh like a shadow and now O Lord what is my expectation my hope is euen in thee But aboue all others most notable is the saying of Iob. cap. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liueth and I shall see God in my flesh My hope is vvithin me The Prophets also do testifie that this couenant made by God with the fathers was spirituall eternall and heauenly c Isa. 51.6 66.22 Dan. 12.2 5. Because Christ promising heauenly felicitie to his Disciples saith that they shall sit downe with Arbraham Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of Heauen Mat. 8.11 6. Because the holy fathers were endewed with the same spirit of faith wherwith we are a Gen. 15.6 2. Cor. 4.13 Heb. 11 Out of which and other like places that is euicted which we were to proue namely that in the old testament the same end was proposed to the faithfull which is proposed to the beleeuers in the new testament Seing that in substance there is one onely Testament why is it called 2. Testaments namelie the Old and the New By a diuision not of the Genus into Species but of the subiect into accidents that is the substance is not diuided but the diuerse accidents which are without the essence of it make things seeme diuerse which in it selfe remaineth one the same in substance Therefore in what doth the diuersitie of the couenant consist It is wholy in the adiuncts which are outward and accessarie things or in the maner of administration and circumstances of the dispensation thereof VVhat is the first difference It is taken from the maner of leading vnto the end propounded to both testaments namely to eternall life for vnder the old testament the Church which was yet in her nonage and tender yeares was led as it were by the hand vnto the heauenly inheritance by the helpe of earthly benefits especially by that grosser and plainer type of the Land of Canaan Therfore Abraham is not suffered to rest in the promise of
should teach the way thereunto What is the vse of this Doctrine 1. The exaltation of Christ doth shewe that the Mediator was not onely a man but truely and essentially God that so our trust in him might bee the more stedfast 2. It lifteth vp our mindes to heauen and causeth vs to be there conuersant in minde and affection where our head is euen as now wee are in him out of this world 3. Wee see what wee also must hope for that are the members of Christ Both which vses the Apostle doth vnfolde Phil. 3.20.21 Our conuersation is in heauen from whence also wee looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile bodie that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body according to the mightie working whereby hee is able to subdue all things vnto himselfe· 4. Heb. 4.16 Let vs goe boldly vnto the throne of the grace of God seeing that Heb. 8.1 Wee haue such an high Priest that sitteth at the right hand of the throne of the maiestie in heauen What is contrarie to this Doctrine 1. Their errour who do call the personall vnion of the Diuine and humane nature the sitting at the right hand of God or do affirme that Christ then sat at the right hand of God when the two natures began to bee vnited or doe apply the personall vnion of the two natures for the expounding of his sitting at the right hād of his father for by that meanes they confound the Articles of our beliefe 2. The errour of the Vbiquitaries who doe cal the sitting at the right hand of God a measure of maiestie whereby they thinke the flesh of Christ was made omnipresent or to haue a beeing in all places at once which is to take away from Christ the trueth of his flesh 3. The errour of the Papists in their intercession and protection of Angels and Sainrs deceased as if these were our Patrons aduocates and Mediatours to procure grace for vs by their praiers and merits and to present our prayers to God contrarie to that that is saide 1. Tim. 2.5 There is one Mediatour betweene God and man the man Christ Iesus And contrarie to the commaundement of Christ Iohn 15.16 and 16.23 Whatsoeuer yee aske of the Father aske it in my name And to that Esay 63.16 Abraham is ignorant of vs and Israell knoweth vs not The nine and twentieth common place Of Faith Whence is Faith deriued THE Latine word Fides is deriued from fio to bee done because that is done that is spoken or promised by any man and sometimes it signifieth actiuely sometimes passiuely as in him that promiseth it signifieth to giue a mans faith or to keepe a mans faith in him that beleeueth the promise it signifieth to haue faith In Hebrewe it is called Emunah from the firmenesse and constancie of words and promises and is deriued from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was true from whence commeth Amen a word knowne to euery man Let it be true or firme or ratified The Grecians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the third Praeterperfect tense Passiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from whence commeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am taught I am perswaded I assent and I doe plainely beleeue as Rom. 8.39 I am certainely perswaded that neither death nor life nor any thing else shall separate vs from the loue of God in Christ Iesus The verbe Actiue is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I perswade I teach as 1. Iohn 3.19 Wee shall before GOD assure or perswade our hearts The preterperfect tense meane is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I perswade my selfe As Romanes 2.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou perswadest thy selfe that thou art a guide to the blinde And Phil. 1.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am perswaded or I doe certainely knowe or beleeue this same thing that hee that hath begun this good vvorke vvill performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ So that the word faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth well answere his originall that it should bee a daughter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a teacher or perswader Hence it is that Valla thinketh faith to bee rightly termed a perswasion or firme assent vnto a thing Hereof commeth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to assent to beleeue to assure as in that of Phocylides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is to say Beleeue not the common people for it is an inconstant rabble one while allowing another while disalowing this thing or that thing What differeth faith from opinion and knowledge That is said to bee opinion which inclyneth to one side not without feare or doubt of the trueth of the other side Knowledge ingendreth a firme assent Syllogismus scientificus but yet by the application of demonstration for demonstration is a Syllogisme which causeth knowledge But faith rests vpon authoritie and yeeldeth free assent vnto the word of God as it maketh for vs by the inspiration of Gods spirit and relyeth vpon the authoritie of GOD himselfe What are the significations of Faith in the Scripture They are diuers and those diuerse significations make diuerse kindes and sorts of faith 1. It signifieth fidelitie trueth and constancie in the keeping of promises and couenants Rom. 3.3 And so it is vsed in the cōmon verse of Sophocles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith dieth vnfaithfulnesse buddeth 2. It signifieth the Doctrine of faith or the Gospell which we do beleeue for the master of the Sentences in his third booke and 23. distinction learnedly saith That faith sometime is that wherwithall wee beleeue and sometimes that that wee doe beleeue Gal. 1.22 Hee which persecuted vs in times past now preacheth the faith which before he destroyed Tit. 1.13 Rebuke them sharply that they may be found in faith 3. The profession of religion whether it be true that is to say the zeale of religion Rom. 1.8 Your faith is published throughout the whole world that is to say your profession of the Christian faith is commended or whether it be onely a fained and outward profession Iam. 2.24 A man is iustified by workes and not by faith only And this faith is called a dead faith vneffectuall and hypocriticall a Math. 17 20. b Mat. 14 3● 4. It signifieth the bare knowledge of the benefit of Christ and the perswasion of the whole word of god as in the same place of Iam. 2.24 And so the Diuels beleeue and tremble Iames. 2.19 This is called an Historicall faith common both to the godly and the vngodly and therefore groweth onely from the light of nature from arguments which mans reason is able to comprehend without any peculier enlightning of the holy spirit 5. It signifieth a knowledge assent and perswasion of the grace of God but yet brickle and vnconstant as not taking roote in Christ as it is taught in the parable of the seed Luk. 8.13 But it is as a tree which being not
in the word and sacraments or faith is the organ instrumēt or meane whereby man being a sinner apprehendeth and applyeth to himselfe Christ wholy with all his benefits and is vnited vnto Christ and liueth in him The Apostle Heb. 11.1 describing faith saith thus Faith is the substance of things which are hoped for the euidence of things that are not seen And Paul Ro. 4.20.21 painting out faith as in a map bringeth in the example of Abraham the father of the faithfull and saith Hee doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeleef but was strengthened in the faith gaue glory to god being fully assured that hee which had promised was also able to doe it Is that discription of faith Heb. 11.1 differing from the rest No forasmuch as therein there is exact mention made both of the forme of faith which is declared in the words Substance and Euidence also of the obiects namely things hoped for and things not seene For by the word Substance hee meaneth not a person as in the article of the Trinitie a Heb. 1.3 but the ground and as it were the prop whereupon a godly minde must stay and relie it selfe to signifie that faith is a certain sure safe possession of those things which are promised vnto vs by God As Psal 39.8 My Hypostasis or substance that is to say My hope is euen in thee And Heb. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we keepe sure vnto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning wherewith wee are vpholden or vnderpropped Some translate the word Hypostasis existence or subsistēce because faith in some respect causeth things to haue a beeing as if they were which in trueth are not that is to say it setteth things before vs as if they were present which onely are in expectation Budaeus translateth it Strength or Courage In which signification it is vsed 2. Corinth 9.4 Least wee should bee ashamed 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. In this constant boasting Cha. 11.17 By a word deriued from the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to sustaine to except not to giue placc to violence Hereupon it is that a souldier is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is bolde and hardie and turneth not his backe to his enemie but goeth to meete him and resists him and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldnes whereby a man standeth stoutly to it and without stirring his foote receiueth his aduersarie that inuadeth him And surely this notable signification doth well agree with faith For in the act of beleeuing wee haue neede of strength and patience we must resist the flesh we must conquer reason we must withstand our owne conscience sinne the wrath of God and all other things whereby the consent of faith is hindered and oppugned Wee had neede to be armed with such a strong shield that wee may receiue and quench all the fyrie darts of the diuell Ephe. 6.16 and ouercome the world 1. Iohn 5.4 As for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Euidence it is not a refutation or a reproofe but an argument demonstration that is an assurance wherby the minde being conuinced by diuine testimonies doth most stedfastly embrace the diuine promises But by the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are hoped for and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are not seene is vnderstood the Gospel those things which are offered in the Gospel namely fellowship with Christ forgiuenesse of sins iustification Resurrection and life eternall For these are the things we hope for and which doe not appeare and of themselues are not conformable vnto our reason and so are they the misteries of saluation in themselues and in their owne nature inuisible But those things which we see with our minde and in hope we do behold them in the word of God and doe accompt them as if they were done accomplished and present before vs. How many sorts of Faith are there Not many sorts but only one faith Ephe. 4.5 One Lord one Faith one Baptisme Now faith is one not in respect of the subiects for after that sort there are as many faiths that is to say giftes of faith as there are beleeuers but faith is and alwaies hath been one in Specie that is in respect of the thing beleeued and of the obiect whereupon it rests And this is the only obiect of faith namely the grace and mercie purposed and ordained for all beleeuers in Christ from the beginning of the world What is the efficient cause of Faith God himsefe working freely and giuing faith to whome hee will euen of his owne free good will Iohn 6.29 This is the worke of God that yee beleeue in him whom he hath sent Act. 16.14 God opened the heart of Lydia so that shee attended vnto the things which Paule spake Rom. 12.3 God hath dealt to euerie man the measure of faith Phil. 1.29 It is freely giuen vnto you for Christs cause not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for his sake The causes together with God the father are the son and the holy Ghost for as it is said in another place The workes of the Trinitie without are diuided Luk. 24.32 Christ opened the minde of his disciples that they might vnderstand the Scriptures And Heb. 12.2 Looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. Cor. 4 13. We haue the spirit of faith that is to say we haue faith by the inspiration and gift of the same holy spirit The workmen together with God are the ministers of the worde 1. Cor. 3.5 Who is Apollo and vvho is Paule but the Ministers by vvhome that is by vvhose preaching ye beleeued The instrumentall cause of faith is the hearing of the word of God by the which word the holy Ghost vttereth his power Ro. 10.17 Faith is by hearing hearing by the word of God Esa 57.19 And Act. 10.44 VVhile Peter spake these vvords the holy Ghost fell on alll them which heard the vvord Furthermore another instrumentall cause is the beholding and vse of the Sacraments And to this end God ordained a ministerie in his Church yet so as no force is to be attributed either to the Ministers that speake or vnto the words themselues or to the Sacraments forasmuch as they haue no other effect but only to represent vnto our minds those things for the declaring whereof they are applyed by the ordinance of God but the force and power of them a Mark 16 20 1 Cor 12 6 commeth onely from God and there is but one and the same installer of man into life eternall who was the Creator of him vnto this life temporall 1. Cor. 3.7 Neither hee that planteth is any thing neither he that watereth but God vvhich giueth the increase And Cha. 15.19 I haue laboured more then they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with mee or which vvas present vvith mee And so the voice of
the preacher outwardly serueth Christ speaketh vnto vs inwardly by his holy spirite Hence it is that the Gospell is called the power of God Rom. 1.16 And Esa 53.1 The arme of God that is to say the instrument of God truely mightie and powerfull to sauation Cannot God by inward inspiration beget faith in his seruants vvithout preaching of the vvord or the ministery of the Church Hee can doe it as he did in times past in Paule but that is extraordinarie and very seldome neither must we wish for that or rashly admit it But the perpetuall rule to discerne faith whether it be truely from god or no is that it must alwaies agree with the words of the Prophets and the writings of the Apostles Doth God create in our hearts full and perfect faith in one instant No but by certaine degrees and increasings in what measure and when it pleaseth him and by these meanes whereby hee doth plant the same in our hearts as the Philosophers say that we are and are nourished of the selfe same things as an infant is nourished and brought vp by the same bloud whereof it is formed the same being turned into milke by the same meanes doth God cherish and strengthen our faith namely by the continuall hearing of the worde of GOD. 1. Pet. 2.2 As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the vvord that yee may grovv thereby For saith Chrysostome Our faith is like a burning Lampe vvhich is easily put out vnlesse oyle bee still povvred into it Now the oyle is the word of God 2. Our faith is increased by the often vse of the sacrament of the Supper according to Christs commaundement Eate yee and drinke yee 3. By daily and continuall prayers saying with Dauid Psal 68.29 Stablish O God that vvhich thou hast vvrought in vs. And with the Apostles Luk. 17.5 Lord increase our faith 4. By the practise of holy life and charitie towards our neighbour 1. Tim. 1.19 Keepe faith and a good conscience And 2. Pet. 1.10 By good vvorkes vve shall make our calling sure Is Faith giuen in one and the same measure to all beleeuers No but to some more to some lesse a Rom 12 3 6 Ephes. 1 16 yet no man hath lesse giuen him then may suffice vnto saluation God so ordaining the matter that they that haue more cōbats to vndergo in whom he doth set forth vnto the world more tokens of his glorie and power to them he giueth a more abundant measure of faith not that thereby they might attaine the greater saluation but that they might serue for the more excellent illustrating of his glorie and might bee presidents and examples vnto those that are weaker then they Is not that the Obiect of faith whatsoeuer the Church doth commaunde So doe the Papists affirme and yet in the meane while they do not set downe which be the lawfull markes of that Church but onely delude men vnder this glorious name whereas there is no other Church but that which b Ioh. 10.3 5.57 heareth the voice of the bridegroome Of the same opinion are those that doe commend an implicite faith or the Colliers faith which without inquirie or knowledge generally beleeues that which the Church beleeues and neuer cares for the vnderstanding of the particulers which it doth beleeue But wee deny it because faith rightly so called is the acknowledgement of the truth c 1 Tim. 2.4 Tit. 1.1 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a demonstratiue and d Heb. 11.1 conuincing euidence And therefore it is not an ignorance in reuerence to the Church but an explicite and manifest knowledge of God and of his fauourable goodwill towards vs of Christ giuen vnto vs of his father for righteousnesse sanctification redemption which knowledge is no where taught but in the word of God Whereupon Paule Rom. 1.17 describeth faith to be that which is reuealed in the Gospell Seing implicite faith is no faith is it necessarie that euery man haue that faith that is in all respectes explicite and vnfolded If that be true faith which is explicite not of all the parts of the Scripture in generall but yet of the cheefe heads and those that are needefull to be knowne to saluation then it followeth that that is true faith wherein there is a knowledge of the chiefe principles of Religion and a desire to profit from day to day But are there not still many things hidden and folded vp in the Scriptures which notwithstanding we must beleeue Surely there be so because we being still compassed about with many cloudes of ignorance doe not reach vnto euery thing wherof we may obserue many examples in the Disciples of Christ not hauing yet obtained a full illumination and so also in them who being onely stirred vp with Christs miracles went no farther then onely the acknowledging of Christ to be the promised Messias Io. 2.23 and 6.26 And likewise in them who are onely instructed in the first principles of religion whose faith may yet be called implicite faith But to commend grosse ignorance of diuine matters and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 senselesnesse whereby a man doth assent vnto the iudgement of the Church for matters altogether vnknowne to commend this I say as an implicite faith is a verie absurd thing For as it is said Rom. 1.17 The iust man shall liue by faith And Rom. 16.19 I would haue you wise in that which is good that is in the knowledge of the truth and instructed also in wisedome that you may embrace that which is good auoide that which is euill and escape the sleights and traps of the false Prophets yea and openly withstand them but contrarily that ye be simple in that that is euill And 1. Cor. 11.28 Let euerie man trie himselfe and 2. Cor. 13.5 Proue your selues whether you be in the faith and 2. Pet. 1.5 VVith all manner of diligence ioyne vnto your faith vertue to your vertue knowledge and vnderstanding By which places it appeareth that the conceit of implicite faith is but a base and vnsauory fiction Seeing it is said of Abraham Rom. 4.20 That he did not doubt ought not wee therfore without all iudgement and inquirie simply to beleeue all things which are deliuered vnto vs to be spoken by God 1 It is certaine that Abraham did very well vnderstand the promise which he did beleeue 2 There is one iudgement which is merely humane and proper to the vnderstanding of the flesh which iudgement appeareth in a naturall man and this surely in the matter of faith is not to be admitted but there is another iudgement of a spirituall man who discerneth all things that is he vnderstandeth perceiueth them by the power and inspiration of the holy spirit but he himselfe is iudged of no man 1. Cor. 2.14.15 I say of no man for euen then when the Prophets doe iudge of the Prophets 1. Cor. 2.14.29 It is not the iudgement of man but of the holy
Ghost such is the excellency of the Gospell 3 Of those things which are reported as spoken by God some are so indeed but some other are fained like vnto them by those that doe foolishly vnderstand the Scripture When therefore God doth directly affirme a thing we must simply beleeue him but when men speake we must not without all iudgement and enquirie beleeue euery thing bur rather trie all things and examin them according to the analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 and keepe that which is good now good and true are all one 1. Thes 5.21 What is the subiect of faith wherein it is The soule of a man and that both in the minde a knowledge or vnderstanding a luk 24.45 Ephes 4.23 and a iudgement and consent resting in the word and promise of God and likewise also in the will and heart an apprehension or embracing of the same Act. 16.14 The Lord opened the heart of Lydia that she should attend the things which Paule spake and Rom. 10.10 VVith the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse VVhat is the subiect of faith to whom faith is giuen Not all for all men doe not heare the Gospell b act 17.30 neither doe all that heare it receiue it with a pure heart as it is in the parable of the sower Math. 13.3 Neither doe all obey the Gospell c Rom. 10.17 for the Prophet Esay 53.1 saith who hath beleeued our report Faith therfore belongeth not to all but onely to the elect d 2. Thes 3 2 Iohn 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods word you therefore heare not because you are not of God and Act. 13.48 As manie as vvere ordained to eternall life beleeued 2. Tim. 1.1 Paule an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the faith of the elect of God From whence wee gather that faith is vnto vs an vndoubted argument of our election And therefore the reprobate although they doe sometimes seeme and are said to beleeue in Christ as those Temporizers Luc. 8.13 Simon Magus Act. 8.13 yea are endued with a temporarie taste of hauenly gifts e Heb. 6.4 yet they haue not a liuely and sauing faith in as much as they haue not the spirit of adoptiō bestowed vpon them that so they might with open mouth and a full confidence crie Abba Father Gal. 4.6 But they haue onely an hypocriticall and temporarie faith Haue infants actuall faith No indeed not that fayth which commeth by hearing seeing to them the Gospell is not preached For it is playne that those little ones which beleeue Math. 18.6 Are so described by Christ not in respect of their age but of their small vnderstanding forasmuch as hee disputeth of them who may be offended in word or in deed which thing cannot befall vnto infants being as yet of no vnderstanding Although it must not be denied that they are gouerned by a certaine peculier prouidence of God and that there is a certaine seede of faith infused into the infants elected Is there one faith without forme and another formed So certaine schoolemen will haue it who call faith without forme such an assent whereby euerie man euen he that despiseth God doth receiue that which is deliuered out of the Scripture without any godly affection of the heart And they call faith formed when to that assent there is added a godly affection of the heart namely Charitie but this is but foolish For faith rather belongeth to the heart then to the braine Rom. 10.10 With the hart a man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse 2 Seeing faith proceedeth from the spirit of adoption it embraceth Christ not onely vnto righteousnesse but to sanctification also and a fountaine of liuing waters a Iohn 4 14 3 Charitie or the affection of Godlinesse doth no lesse accompanie faith then the light doth accompanie the Sunne And as Gregorie saith Looke how much wee beleeue so much we loue And therefore faith is not without forme neyther can be any way seuered from Godly affection vnlesse it be hypocriticall which is not to be called faith vnlesse it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by aequiuocation and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by abusion but rather a shadow and likenesse of faith But seeing it is said Gal. 5.6 Faith working by Charitie is not Charitie the forms of faith No more then the bodie is the forme of the soule in that the soule worketh by the bodie And this is but fondly spoken inasmuch as one qualitie is not the forme of another qualitie And if it were yet Charitie doth not forme faith but on the contrarie fayth formeth Charitie for that Charitie is an effect of fayth For Charitie fetcheth his ofspring from faith and not on the contrarie faith from charitie 1. Tim. 1 5. Charitie out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith vnfained Now the cause is not said to be formed by the effect And therfore by that speech true liuely faith is distinguished from a dead counterfeit and barren faith by the marke and effect thereof namely that it is an effectuall working and fruitfull faith which bringeth forth good workes And faith Iames. 2.22 is not called perfect whereunto nothing is wanting for as long as Abraham liued he caried about him flesh and therfore stood in need of that prayer Lord increase my faith but it is said to be perfected by works as the first act is said by the Philosophers to be perfected by the second act namely because by working it doth shew and manifest it selfe which before it began to worke lay hid as if the goodnesse of a tree should be said to be perfected when it bringeth forth some excellent fruit For inasmuch as by the effectes we iudge of the cause therefore by the proportion of the effects the force of the cause doth seeme after a sort to be increased or diminished VVhat is the forme of iustifying faith Trust in the mercie of God through Christ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a firme confidence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a full perswasion of the grace of God the father towards vs whereby any man doth as it were with a full course striue toward the marke VVhich be the adiuncts or properties of faith 1 That it be certaine and without doubting 2 That it be continuall and neuer faile 3 That it be liuely effectuall and working How prooue you that certainty belongeth vnto faith 1 Iohn 3.2 The faithfull know themselues to be the sonnes of God but being rather confirmed in the perswasion of the truth of God by the holy Ghost then taught by any demonstration of reason 2 By the consideration of the truth of the promises and power of God For Psal 18.31 The word of the Lord is a tried shield to all that trust in him And Rom. 4.20 Abraham did not doubt of the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strengthned in the faith and gaue glorie to God being fully assured that he which had promised was also able to doe it 3
perfect obedience of Christ but our sanctification hath the Lawe for his obiect 4. In the nearest efficient cause Iustification hath not the cause in vs because it dwelleth not in vs Sanctification hath the will which is the beginning of all humane actions for the beginning of action is deliberation of deliberation will and reason And in respect of the persons efficient for Tit. 3.5 Regeneration and Renouation are attributed vnto the Holy Ghost as to the efficient But iustification is wholy ascribed vnto Christ In thy seede shall all nations be blessed Gen. 22.18 5. In effects Iustification absolueth and acquiteth vs beefore Gods Iudgement Seate Sanctification doth not so 6. Iustification is an act vnseparable but Regeneration is an act separable because it is not perfected in an instant but by a certaine order or successiuely and by degrees according to the good pleasure of God and it is here begunne and shall be perfectted in the life to come Moreouer Iustification is a matter of meere gift but regeneration is a matter of our obedience 7. Paule doth notably expresse the difference of him that is to bee iustified and him that is to bee regenerate for hee that is to be iustified lamentably crieth out of his inherent righteousnesse Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death But flying to imputed righteousnesse which is grounded only vpon mercie hee doth exceedingly reioyce and with a ful confidence tryumpheth ouer life death and al aduersities whatsoeuer Rom. 8.33.34 c. What are the instruments or meanes of iustification The instrumentall cause outwardly shewing and offering the benefit of iustification is the voice of the Gospell Rom. 1.16 The Gospell is the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue that is to say it is the instrument of God truely powerfull and effectuall to saue For the righteousnesse of God is thereby reuealed from faith to faith Hereupon it is called the word of beleefe a Act. 5.20 the vvorde of saluation b Act. 13.26 the word and ministerie of reconciliation c 2. Cor. 5.19 The administring causes and witnesses of this blessing but not the sellers thereof are the ministers of the Gospell according to that Iohn 20.23 Whose sinnes yee remit they shall bee remitted and whose sinnes yee retaine they shall bee retained And 1. Tim. 4.16 Take heede vnto thy selfe and vnto Doctrine continue therein for in doing this thou shalt both saue thy selfe those that heare thee namely because faith is by hearing and hearing is by preaching The instrumentall cause inwardly is also twofold 1. The instrument giuen by God or the hand apprehending and receiuing the grace of Iustifycation offered is sauing faith infused into the beleeuers by the Holy Ghost Rom. 3.28 Therfore vvee conclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the lawe So euery where By faith d Gal. 2,6 Through faith e Eph 2.8 of faith f Rom 3 28 for these are all of one signifycation but in no place are we said to be iustified or saued for faith Rom. 10.8 This is the vvord of faith which we preach And hereupon it is called righteousnesse of faith in regard it is apprehended by faith when the Gospell is beleeued 2. The inward sealing cause is the holy ghost who sealeth Iustification in our hearts so as wee cannot doubt therof Eph. 1.13 Wherein also after that ye beleeued ye were sealed with the Holie spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritāce And 1. Cor. 6.11 You are iustified by the spirit of God in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ 3. The outward sealing causes are the Sacraments the one of initiation or entrance the other of Redemption Rom. 4.11 He receiued the Circumcision as the seale of righteousnesse which is by Faith Also 1. Cor. 11.23 and Tit. 3.5 He hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the holy Ghost In what sence then are we said to be iustified by faith Not by any inward dignitie or merit of faith it selfe not as it is a worke or new quality in vs not by any force or efficacie of Iustifying taken from Charitie nor because it hath charitie adioyned to it or worketh by it not because faith doth participate of the spirit of Christ to the end the beleeuer may be made righteous for that wee are commaunded to seeke righteousnesse not in our selues but in Christ a 2. Cor 5 2● But wee are iustified by faith in regard it doth receiue and embrace the righteousnes that is offered in the Gospell Rom. 1.16.17 The righteousnesse of Christ is reueiled from faith to faith For as to iustification faith is a thing meerely passiue bringing nothing of our owne to procure vs fauour with God but receiuing that from Christ which is wanting in and toe our selues How then is faith said to be imputed for Righteousnesse Not absolutely but by Relation namely when it is vnderstood not to be alone but with his obiect Christ crucified as Rom. 3.22 The righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all that beleeue And verse 25. through faith in Christes bloud In which places by the word faith by a metonymie of the thing cōtaining for the thing cōtained Christ crucifyed is vnderstood but as he is apprehēded by faith In this sence Faith was imputed to Abraham vnto righteousnes or for righteousnes Rom. 4.9 And faith is imputed for righteousnesse vnto euerie one that beleeueth that is to say Christ crucifyed apprehended by faith is accounted our righteousnesse It is accoūted I say of god pronouncing from his tribunal seat the sentence of righteousnesse Euen as therfore the hand that receiueth a treasure that is giuen doth not enrich vs but the treasure that is it that enricheth so neither doth the work or action of faith iustify vs but Christ himself whom we apprehend by faith And this is that that the sound Diuines say that we are iustifyed by faith Correlatiuely that faith is imputed for righteousnes by reason of the obiect which assertion is plainly proued by that of Paul Rom. 3.27.28 Gal. 2.16 Where this sentence We are made righteous by faith is opposed vnto this proposition Wee are iustified by vvorkes as beeing contradictories Wherefore it is manifest by the nature of contradiction that no man is iustified by faith as it is a worke either our worke or Gods worke in vs but as it includeth the merit of Christ To speake properly and simply incredulitie is repugnant vnto faith and to the workes of the Lawe not working or the intermission of good workes is opposite but in respect of Iustification faith which resteth vpon the merit of Christ and workes which rest vpon the merits of Christ are contraries Hereupon also it is that Paule doth oppose the righteousnesse of the lawe and the righteousnesse of faith as contraries betweene themselues when Phil. 3.9
It is double 1. For comfort that we are freed from the dominion of sinne which maketh vs strangers from God The other for instruction that we should be thankfull to him that hath deliuered vs and with all care to take heed we do not againe intangle our selues in the snares of sinne least the later end be worse then the beginning c 2 pet 2.20 that is least our last estate be more miserable then our former d Mat. 12 15. Therefore Rom. 6.14 Paul reasoneth thus sinne ought not to raigne in vs because wee are not vnder the lawe which maketh vs guilty and prouoketh vs to sinn for which cause it is called the power of sinne e. 1. Cor 15.56 but vnder grace that is indued with the spirit of Christ by vertue whereof we do subdue the reliques of sinne Gal. 5.13.14 VVhat is the second parte Freedome from the morall law not in regard of obedience but in regard of iustification and condemnation that is from the dominion rigour extreame iustice the importunate exaction and iustification of the lawe or from the necessitie of perfect fulfilling of the law to attaine to righteousnesse Againe from the binding ouer to punishment and therefore from the care and feare of the anger and curse of God or of eternall death for breaking the law Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redemed vs from the curse of the law being made a curse for vs that is he susteined the curse inflicted by the law that we might escape the same and that we might obtaine the blessing of Abraham in Iesus Christ and that we might receiue the promise of the spirit by faith Hence Paul saith Rom. 6.14 we are not vnder the lavv because we are not vnder the curse nor vnder compulsion And that the lavv is not giuen for the Iust to vvit in regarde of the burden of the curse and compulsion VVhy are not wee freed thorow Christ from the first death as well as from the second death seeing both of them are the vvages of sinne and depend vpon that threatning Gen. 2.17 whensoeuer thou sinnest thou shalt die Because the kingdome of Christ is not of this worlde Iohn 18.36 Though he hath not cleane taken away the first death yet to the faithfull he hath changed the nature of it So as it is the vtter abolishing of the reliques of sinne and a gate vnto eternall life according to the rule Rom. 8 27. to them that loue god all things are a furtherance for their good which Dauid meaneth Psal 116.15 pretious in the sight of the lord is the death of his saints And Paule Philip. 1 21. death is to me aduantage And verse 23. I desire to remooue from hence and to be with Christ And. Eccle. 7.2 the day of death is better then the day of ones birth And Cyprian saith death is the gate to life the victorie of warre the hauen of the sea 3 We must put a difference betweene the times of the Kingdome of grace and the glory of Christ and the distinct times of the benefits of God the soule of the beleeuer is regenerate in this life but the body must of necessity first die before it be regenerate 1. Cor. 15.36 43. That which thou sowest is not quickned except it first dye now saith he verse 44. it is sowne a naturall body but it riseth a spirituall body not in substance but in quality for he calleth that a naturall body which liueth by the soule alone and a spirituall which together with the soule is quickned with the spirit of God 4 For the exercising of the faith hope inuocation and of the dutyes of charity of the faithfull in the conflict 5 Because the death of the flesh according to the saying of Paule 1. Cor. 15.26 is the last enemy which must at length be abolished by a glorious resurrection VVhat is the vse or effect of this libertie That the beleeuers haue a quiet conscience they doe no more tremble at the law but are delighted with it a They beleeue that their obedience though imperfect is acceptable to god as to a father b VVhat is the third parte of Christian lihertie The giuing of the holy ghost which is the inuisible inward sealing vp of the former Rom. 8.15.16.18 ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare but the spirit of adoption whereby we cry abba Father And. Verse 16. And he testifieth with our spirit that we are the sonns of God now if we be sonnes then heires also euen the heires of God and fellow heires with Christ He doth also take away the vaile of our heart that is that miserable slauery of blindnes and the yoke of darknes whereunto we are subiect by reason of sinne and doth enlighten the heart conuerteth it to the Lord and maketh vs fit to behold the light of the Gospell that we may be deliuered from this slauerie of blindnesse into the libertie of light Therefore 2. Cor. 3.17 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie that is quickening or illumination thorow the holy Ghost by the preaching of the Gospell whereby that vaile of ignorance darknesse and weakenesse is taken from our hearts that we might be able to behold the glorious face of Christ and lastly it causeth vs to obey the law not by constraint but willingly and chearefully Psal 51.14 What is the fourth part of Christian libertie Freedome from the rites of Moses his Law or from the ceremoniall Law and much more from the traditions and inuentions of men which are ordained for the worshipp of God and first from the sacrifices and sacraments commaunded of God to the people of the Iewes which because they were but types and shadowes of the truth ought to cease after the truth was reuealed as now being fulfilled and hauing obtained their end for which they were ordained as the Apostle teacheth in the whole Epistle to the Hebrewes concerning which we must obserue this rule All the ceremonies of Moses before at or after the comming of Christ in the flesh are abolished so as he which will obserue them falleth from the libertie which we haue in Christ Gal. 2.4.5 and chapt .. 3.25 After that faith came c Ep. 2.15 Ga 2.14.16 vvee are no longer vnder the Schoolemaister Further from the necessitie of obseruing certaine legall things concerning things indifferent as of the choyse and eating of certaine meats obseruing of daies and such like of both which parts of libertie Gal. 5.1.2.13 a What call you things indifferent Basill calleth them such things as be in our power and indifferent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazianzene such things as be placed in the meane Chrysostome vpon the Rom. calleth them things indifferent So then things indifferent are workes or actions which of themselues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in their owne nature are neyther good nor euil but are iudged good or euill by the circumstances of the vse of them Or else those things or
owne motion and instinct but all how manie soeuer doe come are called of God How many waies is the name of church vsurped in the scriptures 1 Largely or politiquely for euerie ciuill companie of men as Act. 19.32 There was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a confused assemblie Verse 39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lawfull or comely assemblie which is not onely contrary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a seditious and tumultuous congregation but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to an assemblie solemnly proclaimed 2 Spiritually and. 1. strictly for the multitude of the Godly alone who doe all and in seuerall cleaue fast to the true god by true faith a Act. 20.17 28. 1. Tim 3 15 2. more strictly for an ecclesiasticall synode or councill because it is gathered together in the name of the whole church whereof it hath charge and it is called by Paule a presbyterie c 1 Tim 4 14. 3 b Math 18 17 most strictly for a little Church that is the faithfull seruants of some familie d Rom 16. ● 3 Commonly for an holie multitude either of one prouince or of the belieuers dispersed through the world wherein truly the godly and the hypocrites are mixed in this earth e 1. Cor 11 18 22 4 For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a place wherein the faithfull doe assemble togither to heare or to preach the word of God f 1. Cor. 14 34 5 It is abusedly taken for the false church which is called the malignant church g Psal 26.5 which is a conuenticle and conspiracie against Christ and his trueth what is a church It is a multitude of men Elect and effectually called from the world by the preaching of the gospell and so of Christians or such as belieue in Christ and depend on him as on their only head and do openly professe their beliefe on him and doe know and worship God by their beliefe and by his word reckoning also those that are newly instructed and the children of the Elect and sometimes also of hypocrites although by reason of their yong yeares they are not capable of vocation or of the Sacraments h Ro. 10.14 Act. 2.39 1 Cor. 7.14 Or it is a companie of men dwelling euerie where called by God from the corruption of all mankinde into the spirituall kingdome of Christ by the voice of the Gospell seuered and distinguished from other companies of men by the hearing of Gods word by faith by the sacraments by inuocation by holynes of life and by profession which is grounded on Christ the corner stone that God may dwell therein and may be therein worshipped according to the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for euer Iohn 10.4.5 My sheepe heare my voice not the voice of another The definition is cleare by the example of Abraham who with his familie being called out of Hur of the Chaldees and from amongst the Idolaters obeied the voice of God and sequestred himselfe by his obedience toward God and the profession of his faith from the prophanenes of the world a Gen. 12.1 13.18 15.6 17 23. Acts. 7.3 Rom. 4 13 c. Or in a word b 2. Cor. 2 14. a church is a communion or societie of men through faith which is by hearing of such as are iustified and sanctified in Christ Iesus through the holy Ghost and not such a society as consisteth in a Platonicall Monasticall Anabaptisticall communion of substance or possessions but in spirit Doctrine Faith hope bountiefullnes and in other exercises of Piety In the outward companie whereof neuerthelesse there are many hypocrites How maniefold is the church It is one onely because there is but one bodie of Christ compacted of diuers members as there is one god the Father and father of all one Christ the mediatour and one onely head of this mysticall body one faith and one hope through the holy spirit both these are one not in number but in kinde last of all there is one eternall life It is said to this whole church Gal. 3.28 All ye are one in Christ Iesus that is as one man to signifie a most excelent coniunction And. Ephes 4.4 There is one body of Christ one spirit of life euen as ye are called in one hope of your vocation And. Cant. 6.8 My done is one and vndefiled prefigured in Noahs one Arke c Gen. 6.14 1 Pet. 3 20 And Iohn 10.16 There is one sheepefolde and one shepheard Moreouer there is one by consent of doctrine by a conformable interpretation of the places of scripture vnto the Analogie of faith by a pure administration of the sacraments One by the author and head of saluation by the subministration of one spirit and by the bond of the same spirit lastly by coniunction of mindes d Act. 4.32 though diuers be called thereunto at diuers times and in diuers places But is not that one onely church deuided Yes and that diuersly 1. In respect of the Essence for there is one called a church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 simplie of the same signification an other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in part aequiuocally The church simplie and of the same signification is whereunto that former definition of the essentiall church doth agree namely that it is a companie of men which knoweth and worshipeth the onely God in Christ according to his written word and obeyeth him sincerely in all things and yet after a sundry measure which also is called the Orthodoxe pure and well aduised Church But that is called a church after a sort which departeth from that knowledge of God and from performing the worship of him according to his word which is wont to be called a straying erring hereticall or schismaticall church be it in faith or charity or in both So the companie of christian men which are now in Greece vnder the Turkish Empire so the crew of Anabaptists or heretiques that haue not vtterly falne away from the doctrine of the Gospell so the rable of papists likewise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aequiuocallie after a sorte are churches as a man polluted with the leprosie and madd ceaseth not to be a man Whereupon Tertull. lib. 4. contra Marcion The waspes make coambes and the Marcionites make churches also But among these companies which are are called churches in part onely and equiuocally or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those who retaine more of that definition are also more rightly named a church and those who come short of that definition are more improperly and lesse truely called a church 2 A church is deuided in respect of degrees for one is called a perfect another an imperfect church The perfect is that which firmely consisteth on these two partes namely on the full knowledge of Gods word by his word and on the full obedience to his reuealed will a Iohn 1.14 17.23 Ephes ●
the Liturgy of Basill Chrysostom c. Againe each professor of Christ hath the name of Deacon or minister giuen vnto him Ioh. 12.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If any man wil be my Minister let him follow me But more specially this word Diaconia doth signifie prouision for the poore and that collection it selfe is so called k 2. Cor. 9. Diaconissa and properly 1 Ro. 12.7 men Deacons were such as were ouerseers for the poore and women Deacons in the Ecclesiasticall Historie who looked to the poore being sick or who were as the publick hostes to entertaine Christian strangers a Rom. 16.1 1 Tim. 5.9 10. But Christ he is called the minister of Circumcision Rom. 15.8 Not of circumcision it selfe or of the Lawe which he by his comming did abrogate or rather fulfill but of the Circumcised Iewes amongst whome he onely liued so long as he vpon earth liued b mat 15 24. Hee is called the Apostle of our profession that is of the Gospell c Heb. 3. ● as he who immediatly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was himselfe sent frō the Father Now in this place wee take the word Ministerie as it generally signifieth for an Ecclesiasticall function VVhy doe you call this Function a Ministery Because it is not a chiefdome Dominion Magistracie or imperious office but rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 care and Diaconia seruice yea a painfull seruice and ministerie Neyther are the Ministers of the Church as Ministers such rulers or Lords as may chalenge to themselues dominion ouer eyther the Cleargy or mans conscience or the members of the Church or vnto ought to haue power to make lawes and translate kingdomes but they are the seruants and ministers of that one Prince and Lord of Lords Christ Iesus For after this sorte to domineere Christ expressly forbiddeth his Disciples both by word and example Rom 1.1 Phil. 1.1 Iac. 1.1 2. Pet. 1.1 Iude. 1. by word Luke 22.25.26 The kings of the Gentiles rule ouer them it shall not be so with you and by example verse 27 and Iohn 13.4 and. 13. yea and Peter himselfe exhorteth all Pastors to be not as Lords c. but as ensamples to the flock of Christ This made Bernard writing to Eugenius the Pope to say Dominion was plainely forbidden the Apostles be not thou therfore bold to Challenge to thy selfe either ruling Apostleship or being Apostolicke rule Thou art quite forbidden both If thou wilt needs haue both together in the end thou shalt loose both What is Ministerie It is an Ecclesiasticall function vpon earth assigned to preach the worde to administer the Sacraments to practise Christian Discipline and things which are called Ecclesiasticall What is a Minister of the Church He is a person lawfully called to teach Gods word administer the Sacraments Church gouernment and things ecclesiasticall according as they are prescribed in the word of God How many sorts of Church Ministers are there in the scriptures Two some of the olde Testament others of the new and againe the Ministers of the Church of the Old Testament were some perpetuall and as it were ordinary as Patriarchs Leuites Priests Scribes others Temporarie and as I may say extraordinary as the Prophets were As for the Pharisees and Saduces they were rather names of Sectes then publicke functions as appeareth Act. 23.9 What were the Patriarckes The heades of Families or heads of Fathers in their kinreds a Exo. 6.13 2. Chro. 8.10 Act 7.9 or they were men of the Olde Testament before and after the Deluge till Moses vnto whom God reuealed himselfe by Angels Visions in the night apparition by day and by dreames b Gen. 8 16 6.13.14 12.7.20.13.28 12.46 2 Num 12.6 And that by a voyce perceptible to man and framed to the speach vsuall amongst men And by these onely in liuely tradition hee taught their families religion they being in the families as Prophets and Priests Thus Adam whilest hee exp●unded to his wife and children the promise of that seed of the woman taught them a twofold seruice of God and offered Sacrifices vnto God c Gen. 4.4 And Henoch the seauenth from Adam is thus said to haue prophecied d Gen. 5.22 Gen 14 ● And so Noah is called a Preacher of Repentance e 1 Pet. 3.19 4.6 2. Pet. 2.5 Righteousnes the Gospell and of Christ because all those hundred and twentie yeeres before the floud be ceased not by words and works to admonish that wicked world how great a measure of Gods wrath did hang ouer their head After this the chiefe in each family are said to haue been teachers and Priests So in the land of Canaan at Salem which was after called Ierusalem Melchisedeck who as some thinke was Sem a Priest of the most high God and who was also King of Salem f Gen. 14.18 Heb. 7.1 so Abraham performed the office of a Doctor and a Priest g Gen. 13.18 17.23.20.17 22.10 13 and by faith is said to haue offered sacrifice h Heb. 11.7 Gen. ●3 20 35.7 49.2 After Abraham Isaacke after Isaacke Iacob who himselfe as a prophet instructed his people at diuers places erected diuers Altars and offered sacrifices i At the length when it was now time not to teach onely priuate families but many people in the true knowledge of God Moses being stirred vp by God a Exod. 3.2 did establish a seruice and Church among the people and to this purpose he ordained Priests and Leuites to whom from God he prescribed certain Lawes according to which God would haue the people of Israel gouerned not onely by liuely voyce as before but by writing and at Gods commaundement he deliuered the word of God For before Moses we read not of any Scripture giuen by inspiration from God What were priests They were men immediatly called out of Aarons posteritie for they onely were Priests and were called the sonnes of Aaron and annointed with oyle and consecrated in the sight of the people b Exod. 41 29. Leuit. 8 2 that they might teach others the doctrine mediatly receiued from GOD offer sacrifices blesse the people and might make intercession for themselues and the people c Leuit. 9 7 16.6 Num. 17.6.24 2. Chron. 1.4 Mat. 2.4 and these were superiours who ministred to the people in the Tabernacle among whom some were called High Priests d 1. Chron. 1. these were the heads of their families For the which cause they were called Princes of the sanctuarie and deuided into twentie foure ordes or classes e Hebr. 5.6 all which were figures of Christ but yet was there euer some one aboue the rest he was the eldest of Aarons sonnes and posteritie who was called the high Priest and was especially in his function a figure of Christ the head of his Church f Heb. 6 5 he alone might goe into the Sanctuarie g Hebr. 9.11 Leuit. 16.2 and he alone might appeare
quicke d Numb 16.26 so was Achan e Ios 7.7 so in the New Testament Alexander the copper-smith seemes to bee cursed by Paule f 2 Tim. 4 according to that VVould to GOD they were cut off which trouble you Galath 5.12 so that R. Emperour Iulian the Apostata was cursed by the Church in such sort that afterward prayers were not made for him but against him But may excommunication and Ecclesiasticall censures take place where there is a Christian Magistrate who doth punish with the sword those who liue dissolutely Yea if that Christ as head of the Church may bee heard seeing that wee haue Christ his expresse word and a perpetuall custome of all ages and that the Magistrate ought to bee the keeper of Diuine constitutions because Christ doth lay out vnto vs not a temporall but a perpetuall order of the Church Mat. 18.17 where following the custom euen obserued in the antient Church of the Iewes he hath signified that the Church cannot want that spirituall iurisdiction which was from the beginning Neither surely doth that tell the Church signifie to tell the Magistrate of the people who hath power to kill but it appertaineth to the Ecclesiasticall Senate neither doth that vnlesse hee heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an Ethnick and publican signifie vnlesse hee heare the Magistrate who is of the same religion with him but if thou sue him before a prophane Magistrate thou maist sue him as if he were an Heathen or Publican as though Christ spake onely to the Iewes of his time for that promise whatsoeuer yee binde on earth appertaineth not to one people or to one yeare or to fewe persons neither to the Magistrate Secondly this Ecclesiasticall gouernement did florish vnder the Christian Emperors and they did submit themselues to it neither without cause for a good Emperour is within the Church not aboue the Church so Theodosius for murther committed at Thessalonica was depriued the societie of the Church vntill such time as he publickly deplored and bewailed his sin in the Church and desired pardon Were it not better to vse means for the receiuing of most into the Church then to expell them from it and is it not more beneficiall to inuite all men to the Sacraments which are incitements to piety then for their sins to expell them from them who before being baptized do notwithstanding professe Christian Religion Both is to be done and the later of these by the mandate of Christ speaking not onely of the enimies of the gospel but of profane dispisers thereof Mat. 7.6 Giue not that which is holy to dogs neither cast your pearles before svvine by the exāple of Paul who 1. Cor. 5.2 commandeth the incestuous person to be taken a vvay from amongst them but not to kill him for who would haue thought that Paul would giue that authoritie which was peculier to the magistrate to the Ecclesiasticall synod neither did he deliuer him to the Diuels to bee tortured and tormented with some disease or killed some other way but to exile him from the company and societie of the faithfull yet notwithstanding all thinges are to be done to edification and wee must bee verie carefull to knowe what they are able to beare with whom we haue to deale and we must take heede of Scisme yet so as wee may be found to serue God not men VVhat is the common extraordinary discipline Which is not tyed to time neither hath any setled forme prescribed out of the word of God but is left in the power of the pastors and gouernors of the church as the necessity of them shal require as 1. If any thing happen vnexpected to wit the deliuery of some Church or of some great men out of dāger the happie successe of the Church the ministery of the word the propagation of the Gospel in other nations the dutie of the Pastors in this case is but with the suffrages of the godly Magistrate or some principal mēbers of the Church at some certaine time to call and inuite people to thankesgiuing 2 If any thing of great difficultie or importance be in hand either for the good or ruine of the Church 3. If that warre famine or pestilence shall beginne to rage 4. If any Church shall either bee ruined or endangered 5 If there be any crime publickly committed which is more capitall then the people is to be assembled exhortations to repentance by fasting and prayers to be made as examples teach vs a Iud. 20.26 1. Sam. 7.6 2. Par. 20.3 Eph. 4 16 Neh. 9●1 Ioel. 1.14 2.15 and Mat. 9.11 when the spouse is taken away then they shall mourne in those daies 6. By which places it is euident that fasting although it be not of it selfe a kinde of Gods worshippe for the Kingdome of God consisteth not in meate and drinke Rom. 14 17. but onely respectiuely or accidentally hauing relation to some other thing namely the true repentance prayer and other godly exercises was b Act. 13.3 14 23. instituted not onely by the tradition of man but by the word of God What is fasting 1. Not that which is imposed by God neither that which is voluntarily chosē or by shutting vp of the clouds the earths hardning or when euery thing is depopulated by militarie tumults insurrection as it was in the times of Abraham Isaac Iacob Elias d Gen. 12.10 41.53 1 King 19.2 and it is called a famine which to vndergoe and endure exceeding great faith and repentance is required 2. Neither is it such an hunger or fast which is vpon necescity for want and penurie of victuals as Act. 27.21.33 when as Paule and his companions had not tasted any meate for the space of fourteene daies in the shippe by reason of the tempests and feate of shipwrack or as if any such thing happen by reason of diseases people are said Hyperbolically to haue remained fasting this is not that fast which we speake of properly 3. Neither that of Paul Act. 9.9 who being amazed by a vi●ion for the space of three daies he did neither see eate nor drinke 4 Neither that fasting of Christ a Mat. 4.4.2 or of Moses b Ex. 24.18 34.28 1 Reg. 19.8 and Elias who by vertue of one dinner did walke for the space of fortie daies and nights vnfed c because it was miraculous and a fast which cānot bee imitated of man for wee must not imitate euery fact of Christ or his Prophets 5. Neither is it simply daily temperance sobriety frugality and parsimony in dyet or abstinence from too much meate and drink and from vnlawfull pleasures forbidden in the Old lawe Whereby the life of the godly through their whole course ought to bee temperate according to that watch and be sober 1. Pet 5.8 d Gen. 1.29 1 Rom 13.14 But it is a willing abstinence not from flesh egges or milke for certaine daies but from dinner if
vp in them through faith Or else it is a visible signe of inuisible and sauing grace of God instituted of God to seale and confirme that grace in vs. Or a Sacrament is a testimony of the grace of God toward vs in Christ confirmed by a visible signe with the mutuall testification of our faith and religion towards him b Gen. 17 7 10.11 1 Cor. 11 23 Who is author of the Sacrament God alone for as it belongs to God alone 1. To promise and to giue grace 2. To make a couenant with the Church 3. To bestow the gift of righteousnesse So also it belongs to him alone to institute a signe of grace or of the couenant and remission of sinnes 1. Cor. 11.23 I haue receiued of the Lord that which I haue also deliuered vnto you Therefore may wee not receiue any other Sacrament into the Church then those which God hath ordained to that vse neither yet is the forme or manner of the institution any manner of waies to bee violated For Thomas saith well The ordaining of Sacraments is a note of the excellencie power and maiestie of God Why did God adde the Sacraments to the word 1. To the intent that they might be visible Sermons of his promises applyed to our capacitie who be stil carnal wherupon Augustine saith that the Sacrament is a visible or a sensible word 2. That they might be signes whereby men yea such as bee most ignorant and rude might bee stirred vp to perswade themselues that God doth not mock men when hee promiseth his grace and eternall life vnto them and that by such signes they might bee led by the hand vnto the thing promised as it were present For if thou hadst beene spirituall saith Chrysostome God would haue propounded his spirituall gifts spiritually vnto thee But now seeing the soule is vnited to the bodie hee propoundeth his spirituall gifts vnto thee by those which are corporall 3. That he might vnderprop and confirme our faith in his promises none otherwise then ciuill contracts being subscribed by the Secretarie the Princes seale is wont to bee added that so there may be a strong euidence or authenticall instrument 4. That by signes of his owne institution hee might call vs back to worship him might hold vs therin and might put a difference betweene vs and other sects Whereby it comes to passe that the first man yea being pure and free from sinne hereupon earth had neede of Sacraments because hee was made earthly and naturall a 1. Cor. 15.45 But after that we shall bee in heauen heauenly and spirituall and haue once obtained the promises wee shall then haue no more neede of them In what predicament is a Sacrament To wit of Relation so farre forth as it is considered as a signe or a thing signifying in respect of the end or the scope whereunto it is ordained for a signe hath relation to the thing signified Therefore a Sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in the predicament of Relatiues that is of those things which haue relation to others For Relatiues are such whose essence is nothing else but this by some meanes to haue relation or reference to another thing And it is also in the predicament of Action so farre as being a visible action it is commanded to be done with a certaine ceremonie For the water simply taken by it selfe is not the baptitisme but the sprinkling of the water in a conuenient manner together with the institution of Christ Neither are the bread and wine simply by themselues vnderstood the Supper of the Lord but the bread together with the breaking distributing taking and eating of bread and drinking of wine as it is ordained by Christ for the remembrance of him What is the genus of a Sacrament A signe because it signifieth something For euery Sacrament is a signe but not euery signe is a Sacrament but a signe in lawfull vse for that golden rule is infallible nothing hath the nature of a Sacrament out of the vse instituted of God Now a signe as Augustine defineth it ●ib 2 doc● Christ is a thing that besides that forme which it offereth vnto the senses maketh some other thing thereby to come into the minde So Gen. 17.11 Circumcision is called the signe of the couenant And of signes some bee naturall which signifie of their owne nature as the dawning of the day is a signe of the sunne approaching some be at the will of the Institutor as the signes of families And these are such as either haue some Analogie and likenesse with the thing they do signifie of which sort be the sacraments Whereupon Augustine saith If the sacraments should not haue a certaine likenesse with those things wherof they bee sacraments they should not bee sacraments or else such as haue no similitude with the thing signified but doe altogether depend of the institution In which sense words are signes of things and the ringing of the bell a signe there shall be a Sermon How many sorts of signes be propounded to be considered in the scriptures Three sorts some of Doctrine or of the word as the extraordinarie and vniuersall worke of God or miracles which are seene with the eyes where at the mindes of men doe wonder which giue testimonie of the infallible trueth of the word vnto the glorie of God As in the old Testament Abrahams smoking furnace and burning firebrand a Gen 15.17 the bush burning and not consumed b Exod. 3.2 Epist 23.40 Bonif Moses his rod c Exod. 4.2 3 the pillar of a cloud in the day and that pillar of fire by night d Cap. 13.20 the drying vp of the red sea e Ca. 14.14 water flowing out of the rocke f Cap. 17 6 the standing still of the Sunne g Iosu 10.13 the signe of the Prophet Ionah In the new the healing of the sick raising vp of the dead casting out of Diuels h Mark 16 17 18 c. Some of Anger and those either threatning with some fell iudgements to hang ouer mens heads for their sinnes as namely wonders in heauen comets tempests earthquakes the signe of the sonne of man i Mat 24 30 or else punishing both temporal as thunders lightnings famine pestilence wars euill beasts as also spirituall to wit heresies corrupting of Doctrine idolatry schismes which the Lord sendeth that men being admonished and corrected by these might repent and there be signes which God shall send before the day of Christs comming k Mat 24 4 5 Others be the signes of grace which are added to the promises of God and doe testifie of the grace of God toward vs. Wherfore they are not signes simply which serue to shadow out signify only the things with God promiseth but seales pledges because they seale vp vnto the beleeuers the things promised l Gen. 9.22 37.9.10 Of how many essentiall parts doth a Sacrament consist Of
of the Couenant whereby God doth testifie that he doth truely receiue the beleeuers into his Couenant How doe the Sacraments of the old and new Testament differ 1. By outward adiuncts and the circumstance of time For those continued vntill the time of Restitution for those things are said to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right which passe not with a certaine crooked turning course but are directed straight vnto their marke but these must endure vntill the end of the world or vntill the state of glorie in which all trueth shall clearely and perfectly bee made manifest and therefore there shall bee no neede of Sacraments a Heb. 9.19 2. In the manner or condition of their signifying for the Sacraments of the old Testament foretold Christ as it were to come but the Newe declare him as it were exhibited And ●●erefore they cannot possibly both stand together seeing the time to come can neuer bee the time past and the time past can neuer make the time to come to bee more ancient b Heb. 8.13 3. In the diuersitie or qualitie of the signes or in the signes and ceremonies which differ much for there bee some signes of the Olde and other of the Newe Testament 4. In the number measure of signifying vertue and easinesse 1 For ours saith Augustine are fewer in number whereas in the Old Testament the signes were more in number because the people of Israell were as yet vnder the gouernment of the Law and therefore as children vse to bee were kept vnder more figures and rites 2. Ours were better in regard of the profit 3. More excellent or manifest not in outward shew or worldly pompe but in the vnderstanding and signification of heauenly and diuine things 4. Ours are greater in force that is of greater efficacie to confirm our faith 5. More easie to bee done for there is nothing in Baptisme or the Supper of the Lord which is hard troublesome or bloudy But Circumcision and the Sacrifices were more troublesome bloudie and required greater paines Yet all this maketh not that our Sacraments and the sacraments of the ancient fathers should not be the same in substance What Doe not the Sacraments of the old Testament differ from ours in the effect because those did only shadowe forth and signifie grace which these offer present vnto vs No because in either testament there is the same grace of Christ yea the same Christ propounded And the Apostle testifieth that the old Fathers did eate the same spirituall meat with vs and drinke the same spirituall drink 1. Cor. 10.3 I say the same with vs not as some expound it only amongst themselues which is vnderstood by the purpose of the Apostle the tenour of the text the name of Christ and the word baptizing there vsed and receiued the seale of the righteousnesse which is of faith and therfore that they were made pa●takers of Christ which is righteousnesse to all that beleeue in all ages Rom. 4.11 And yet I grant that the sacraments of the fathers were figures pictures and shadowes of ours not in regard of the things themselues but in as much as they shadowed things more darkly and obscurely signified by them a 1 Cor. 10.6 In which respect they may be called types of ours but types not without trueth Why then doth Paul say Gal. 4.9 that the Sacraments of the Fathers were weake and beggerly and carnall Elements which were not able to sanctifie the conscience because of their weaknesse and vnprofitablenesse Heb. 7.19 9.10 1. Because he speaketh of them not simply as that they were naked elements which could offer or seale no grace but in some respect as now abrogated by Christ 2. Hee speaketh of them as he saw them receiued of the Iewes seuered from Christ and his promise that is as they are considered in themselues and by themselues seuered from the things signified in cogitation and as bare signes because the sanctification dependeth not of the signes either old or new but wholie and only of the vertue of the holy Ghost Did the Fathers eate the flesh of Christ seeing that as yet it had no beeing actually and corporally in the nature of things Yes because although it was not extant simply or actually in regard of his bodily substance yet in some respect namely as it was to bee giuen for the life of the world it was that spirituall meat which might no lesse bee eaten of them then that Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world is eaten now of vs by faith b Reu. 13.8 2. Because Iesus Christ is the same to day yesterday for euer Heb. 13.8 one and the same Sauiour of both Testaments In whome alone it pleased the Father to gather together all things Ephe. 1.10 3. Because those Fathers were indued with faith which maketh those things to be which are hoped for and doth demonstrate those things which are not seene Heb. 11.1 And therefore although in those ancient times the humane nature was not assumed of the word yet it was presēt to the faith of the godly in former times which did conioyne them then with Christ that should be borne So that that which had no beeing as yet in the order of nature yet neuerthelesse had euer a being by the force and efficacie of faith Therefore Christ saith Abraham sawe my day and reioyced Ioh. 8 56. But they did eate the flesh of Christ which should be giuen for them wee eate it being alreadie giuen for vs. The times are changed saith Augustine but faith is not shall bee giuen and is giuen shall come and is come in Ioh tract 4 these words differ saith hee but yet Christ is one and the same Doe the Sacraments giue remission of sins and doe they conferre or containe grace and are they ordained to iustifie and to regenerate or whether is grace tyed to the Sacraments No. 1. Because they are the signes not the causes of grace 2. That which is proper to God ought not to be bestowed on the creature 3. The subiect of grace is not the body but the spirit 4. No bodilie thing doth worke vpon spirituall things Againe not by the work done or as an efficient cause by them selues or their owne vertue working any thing or flowing from their essence as they speake in the schooles but ministerially or Instrumentally yet effectually so farre forth as they support nourish our faith Not by any inward power or vertue of their owne but by vertue of the principall agent or worker in that sence that Paul affirmeth the Gospel to be the vertue and power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 1.16 1. Tim. 4.16 he saith that the remedie of the holy Scripture doth saue a man not that there is any magicall vertue in the letters syllables or sound of the words for the Apostle saith Heb. 4.2 The word profited not them beeing not mingled with faith but because
b 1 Cor. 11 27.29 As for example Abraham and his household c Gen. 17 23 Absalon Achitophel the people d Sam. 15.12 Iudas e Luk. 22.21 Simon Magus f Act. 8.13 But they belong to thē only for whō they are appointed and such as be conteined in the couenant of God according to his words But not to them that be without which doe not professe the name of Christ and to such too as bee liuing and present but not to the deade and such as bee absent Wherein doe the word and Sacraments agree In the Efficient cause for the same person is the Authour of the promise of grace and of the Sacraments to wit the sonne of God the head King Doctor and Priest of the Church and in the instrumentall causes for the selfe same ministers of the word be also the disposers of the Sacraments g Mat. 28.1 1 Cor. 4.19 2 In the matter intelligible or the principall subiect for the same thing is promised in the word and the lawfull vse of the Sacraments the same Christ with his benefits of saluation Therfore as the Gospell testifieth those which turne to God are washed and sanctified by the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God 1. Cor. 6.11 And that they are begotten by the Gospell and borne anewe by the worde of the liuing God 1. Corinth 4.15 h 1 Pet 1.23 1 Rom. 6.3 Tit 3.5 And that Iesus Christ is that breade of life Iohn 6.35 So the sacramentes doe testifie that those which are baptised into Iesus Christ are baptised into his death k Ioh. 3.33 36 R●● ●4 23 He● 11 6 Habac 2 4 and are saued by the washing of the new birth 1. And the bread which wee breake is the communion of the body of Christ 1. Cor. 10.16 3 In the forme manner and Instrument wherby we receiue the thing to saluation for the word and sacraments profit none but those which haue or shall haue faith k Ioh. 3.33 36 4 In the end common to them both For both the word and the sacraments are meanes whereby the sonne of God dooth teach and gather the Church vnto himselfe and doth in this life communicate himselfe and all his benefits to them that shall be saued yet so as he is able without eyther of them to worke in the hearts of the godly so often and when it pleaseth him 5 In the effects For as the word of life is to the godly the sauour of life vnto life to the vngodly the sauour of death vnto death 2. Cor. 2.16 So the Sacraments in themselues are to saluation to them that beleeue but vnto the vnbeleeuers they turne into iudgment and condemnation a 1. Cor. 11.29 Euen as a sweet oyntment is healthfull to the doue but it is present death to the flye And as the seed of the word preached so the vse of the sacrament doth not presently bring forth his fruit but in that time which is appointed of God 6 Lastly as the holy Ghost doth begin and strengthen faith by the word so also by the sacraments he doth stirre vp and confirme the same Out of all which followeth that there is such a coniunction and agreement of the outward and inward word as there is of the earthly signes and heauenly things Wherein do the word and Sacraments differ 1 In nature Because the word of the Gospell doth in expresse words declare to wit that we by faith are made partakers of Christ Iesus and of all his merits the sacraments doe represent them by signes or that doctrine which the word doth deliuer cleare and more manifest the Sacraments doe propound the same in a mysterie and not so expresly 2 In the instruments The word is deliuered with the mouth receiued with the eares but the rites of the sacraments are administred with the hands and they are subiect to the eyes and the other senses and doe lead vs as it were vnto the thing present as though wee should nowe in some sort touch Christ himselfe with our handes see him with our eyes perceiue him with our taste and feele him with our whole heart 3 In the subiect to whom The promises of the word are generally and in common pronounced to all alike as well to the vnbeleeuers as to the beleeuers For the word must be preached euen to the vnbeleeuers But the sacramēts are to be communicated seuerally to them which be probably known to be members of the Church and they doe apply and restraine the promises in a speciall manner to euerie one that doth rightly vse these rites that as certainely as thou doest vse the visible Ceremonie according to Christ his institution So certainely thou mayest and oughtest to conclude that Christ also and all his benefits do belong vnto thee 4 In the measure of signifying for the word doth especially teach but the speciall office of the Sacraments is to seale and further the word doth signifie and apply spirituall things but the Sacraments doe rather and more especially represent and applie 5 In order for whereas the Sacraments are the appendices of the word which doe confirme faith it is meet that in such as bee of yeares the preaching of the word should goe before to begin and to increase faith together with a manifest profession of faith before they be rightly administred to any 6 The word is auailable euen without the sacraments as may be seene in Cornelius a Act. 10.2 3.4.44.45 But sacraments without the word are of no force For a seale without a Charter is nothing worth 7 The preaching of the word and that effectuall is required in those that be of yeares that they may bee saued For Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10.17 Except it please GOD extraordinarily to worke in their hearts But the Sacraments are not altogether expresly nor absolutely so necessarie that without exception whosoeuer inioyes them not should therefore despaire of the certaine hope of saluation For that saying of Bernard is most true Not the want but the contempt of the Sacraments is damnable 8 Lastly the word considered by it selfe alone if it bee compared with the sacrament considered by it selfe alone is better and more excellent then it Although if the sacrament bee added to it it doth yet become more excellent and powerfull and more effectuall for the confirmation of faith Therefore we may not ascribe the greater honour to the sacraments then to the preaching of the gospell that is to say we may not attribute more to the seales then to the written Testament of Iesus Christ What ought they to doe who are depriued of libertie to come to the holy assemblies of the Church wherein the ordinarie dispensation of the word and sacraments is performed They ought to inquire for them but if they cannot find them they must then exercise themselues in daily meditation at home both because the kingdom
of God which especially shined to the church in the time of Christ when as the Gentiles imbraced the preaching of the gospel concerning which Heb 13 15. 6. 56. 66 Let vs by Christ himselfe offer to God the sacrifice of praise 13 And whereas Daniell 12.11 saith that in the last times Antichrist raging a docilie sacrifice shal be offered that is to be meant either of the daily legall sacrifice which was interrupted in the time of Antiochus and afterwarde quite taken away in the destruction of Ierusalem as Chrisostome will haue it in the oration against the Iewes or metaphoricallie of the worship of God prescribed out of his worde to be taken away Antichrist possessing the worlde as Hierom will haue it vpon Daniel Chap. 12. 14 But although Melchisedech was a figure of Christ yet not in regarde of outward sacrifice whereof there is no mention made Gen. 14.18.19.20 neither in all that comparison of Christ with Melchisidech which the Apostle doth vnfold most accurately Heb. 7. But 1. because Melchisedech was a King and also a priest 2 Because the same Melchisedech as a Priest blessed Abrahā that is he prayed for the grace and fauour of God to him saying blessed art thou Abraham of God most high 3 Because he is set forth vnto vs in the scripture without genealogy as though he were eternal 4 It is gathered that he was more excellent then Abraham his posterity by that that Abraham offered tithes vnto him Notwithstanding that we may graunt which is not spoken that Melchesedech before he entertained Abraham with a banquet returning with his seruants from the conquest tooke parte of the bread and of the wine and sacrificed that is oblation being made gaue thanks to God for the victorie and for the wholesome vse of bodily foode and for all other benifites which was the custome of the holy fathers and which also went forward from them to the Gentiles as Atheneus doth praise Homer because he describeth the Grecian Princes neuer to sit downe at the table or to depart without Sacrifice and praiers it doth not therefore follow that that thanksgiuing was a Sacrifice applyed for Abraham and his companie that it might merit for them remission of sins So in the Lords Supper there is made a most holy Sacrifice that is the bodie and bloud of the Lord being tasted wee giue thanks for spirituall nourishment and for so great victorie whereby Christ hath ouercome sinne and death for vs and hath made his conquest common vnto vs but this thanksgiuing doth not deserue for our selues or others remission of sins It doth much lesse follow that Christ in the Supper offered himselfe to God in the forme of bread and wine but onely in an argument Allegoricall it followeth that the bread and wine offered of Abraham were types of Christ who offereth himselfe to vs in the Supper to be receiued by a true faith In which sense the Fathers doe apply the type of Melchisedech to the Supper of the Lord. Which thing Lombard doth inough declare Melchisedech shewed the rite of this Sacrament b 4. Sentence distinct 8 when as he offered bread and wine to Abraham Lastly wheras the ancient fathers doe euerie where call the Eucharist a sacrifice they do it 1. For the blessing of the signes 2. Because in this mystery there is a commemoration of that onely sacrifice which was made for vs vpon the crosse and a certaine representation of it vnder the image of the Sacrament 3. Because it is an Eucharisticall sacrifice by reason of the solemne profession of faith praiers and especially of a peculiar giuing of thanks 4. Because in it we consecrate our selues wholy vnto God Ro. 12.2 5. Because in old time it was a custome that when the holy Supper was celebrated the faithfull did offer almes wherewith they might helpe the needie brethren which also is a kind of spirituall Sacrifice a Heb. 13.16 Distinct 2 Lombard saith Christ died once vpon the crosse and there Sacrificed in himselfe but he is daily offered in the Sacrament because in the Sacrament there is a remembrance of that which was done once b 4. senten And Distinct 13. It is called a Sacrifice as it were a holie thing done because by a mysticall prayer it is consecrated for vs in remembrance of the Lords passion Because in the celebration of Mysteries there hath beene alwaies a threefold oblati●n obserued in the Christian Church one meere spirituall whereby euery one doth present himselfe before God with a contrite heart and endued with faith another visible euery one bringing something least he should appeare before God emptie Ex. 23.15 The third both of the bodie and of the bloud of the Lord himselfe whether are both the latter iustly taken away by our Churches Yea rather neither of both if they be rightly vnderstood is taken away but rather renued For although now almes are bestowed not as in times past whereby both the common feasts which they did call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loue feasts were furnished and also the ministers and the poore were helped and which serued for other necessarie vses of the Church which were wont to be laid either vpon a table or a cupbord made for that purpose which in the Canons which they call the Apostles Canons Canon 3. is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or an Altar and by solemne prayer vnto God consecrated to holy vses the bread wine first of al being set apart which they did blesse seuerally to the vse of the Sacrament yet notwithstanding the loue feast being now taken away according to the Precept of Paul If any man be hungry let him eate at home not in the Church 1. Cor. 11.34 and so by little and little things being so ordained in the Christian Church that wee neede not labour to seke goods wherewith Ecclesiasticall persons are nourished but rather wee must bee carefull that the wealth wherewith they do abound be bestowed in good vses It was not needefull to retaine in our Churches these kinds of offerings prescribed by no lawe in the word of God but it is better to take heede by what means both iust stipēds may be paid to the ministers of the word and also that the poore of euery place may be prouided for and also that an eye may be had to setting vp of schools and to nourishing of poore schollers to maintaine the buildings of Churches neither yet is the collection of priuate almes therefore to be neglected Therefore the offering of the vnbloudie sacrifyce doth remaine among vs sound whether you regard the blessing it selfe of the signes that is the rehearsing and explication of the Lords institution ioyned with prayers wherby after a sort the passion it selfe of the sonne as Cyprian speaketh is offered to God the Father and the whole Church shewing the death of Christ after a sort doth sacrifice and vowe it selfe to God whether by name of a sacrifice you
Christ because it signifieth Christ So we say with Cyprian that the forme that is that the appearance and sight of bread and wine are not changed but that the substance of breade and wine are changed into the Sacrament of the bodie and bloud of the Lord which before they were not So Chrysostome That which belongeth to the signes he attributeth to the thing signified especially in respect of faith and the cogitation of the minde What meane the ancient fathers whiles that euery where they doe admire with astonishment the mysterie of the Supper they call it the Fearfull mysterie they require Faith they celebrate the power of God they deny that the order of Nature is to be sought in the bodie of Christ they attribute a conuersion to the signes They signifie a change made by grace not of the substance that is of the naturall matter and forme but of the qualitie that is of the former office condition calling end and vse of the Elements which is the consecration appointment and adhibition or traduction of the signes from a common vse to an holy mysticall vse or office that is to the obsignation and testimony of eternall life that surely they may be nourishment not for the bodie onely for this life as in our ordinarie table or before the blessing but that by reason of Gods ordinance because they are now the Sacraments of the bodie and bloud of Christ they may feed the soule also for as much as they are taken that they may bee vnto vs most sure pledges of the bodie and bloud of Christ and of eternall life flowing vnto vs from him Whereupon Paule doth not simply call it the Supper and the cup but the Supper and cup of the Lord and 1. Cor. 10.4 he calleth the rock of which the Israelites did drinke in the wildernesse spirituall Dial. 10 8 From hence Theodoret saith The Lord honoured the signes which are seene with the name of his bodie and bloud verily not chaunging the nature it selfe but putting grace to nature because these Elements are made Sacraments or spirituall things that is outward meanes of the holy Ghost and instruments of strengthning keeping and increasing the communion of Christ in vs. Therefore this change not essentiall but Sacramentall the fathers admire as wonderfull and supernaturall and that worthily For it cannot be done without the power of God that that earthly and decaying thing which is appointed properly to nourish the bodie should begin to be vnto vs a most holy thing a spirituall and heauenly foode Neither is it a worke of nature that those signes should moue the minde so powerfully and effectually and should offer and exhibit the bodie and bloud of the Lord to bee apprehended also of our minds by faith like as it is not a worke of nature that water should be made the lauer of regeneration or washing of the new birth Tit. 3.5 Although the Sacramentall change is no more a thing miraculous and vnspeakable then when of common waxe is made an authenticall seale of a publick instrument but because that is diuine and a cause of diuine things but this is humane and an ordinance instituted to establish mens matters Whereupon Augustine saith that Sacramēts may haue honour as religious things De trinit B. 31. c 10. but not astonishment as wonderfull things Moreouer the same fathers doe require faith because faith is heere especially necessarie whereby wee may firmely determine that the breade is the bodie of the Lord that is that wee by the lawfull vse of the bread are truely made partakers of the bod●e of Christ Finally they doe grant that that vnspeakeable and truely meruailous fellowship of vs with Christ is established wherin the order of nature is not to be sought for because it goeth beyond all humane sence Whether when we say of a firie sword of an infant lying in a cradle of wine contained in a vessell and the like This is Fire this is an Infant this is wine And Deut. 12.23 The bloud is the life because it containeth the life by which speaches the presence of the Attribute is manifestly affirmed are therefore the words of Christ to be vnderstoode of his bodilie presence at the place where the bread is No for truely the fire doth set the sword on fire doth pierce through the whole substance thereof but it changeth not the nature of the Sword saith Theodoret and in a fired sword the fire doth keepe still the force of burning as the sword of cutting neither hath the sword the operation of fire Dial. 2 c 19. B. 3 c ●9 but the burning is the effect of fire as cutting of the sword saith Damascen By which simile the ancients declared the most streight vnion of the two natures made without confusion and not a reall effusion of the Properties of the Deitie into the humane nature But heere is a great dissimilitude For those are naturall coniunctions whereby either new qualities are applyed to bodies or substances to substances but here all things are supernaturall by the institution of Christ Besides Christ is present in the Supper not for the bread but for the man for Christ spake not these words This is my bodie for the bread as though hee were about to make a substantiall change thereof or were about to communicate his bodie to the bread but hee gaue a promise to the disciples concerning the communication of his bodie whereby he doth ioyne vs to himselfe as it were members of his bodie What is therefore the naturall and proper sense of the words of the Lords Supper This that is bread which being broken Christ did reach with his hands to his disciples is not substantially or essentially or naturally in it self but mystically or by a Sacramētal promise not by a simple bare signification but also although spirituall yet a reall signification that is true and not imaginarie but hee himselfe because nothing is so truely done as that which hee doth by exhibition of the holy Ghost vnder cōdition of faith that he himselfe My bodie or as Paul doth vnfold it 1. Cor. 10.16 The bread is the Cōmunion of the body of Christ that is the seale effectual token or instrument or meanes of the communion of the bodie of Christ Which interpretation Augustine doth confirme The Lord doubted not to say This is my bodie when he gaue the signe of his bodie And Tertullian Against Adimantus c 12 Against Marcion b. 4 hauing taken the bread and distributed it to the Disciples he made it his bodie by saying This is my bodie that is a figure of my bodie Neither doe wee otherwise interpret that enuntiation This or this cup is my bloud that this may bee the sense of the words of Christ As often as yee which are my Disciples and beleeue in mee doe eate this bread and drinke of this cuppe let it be vnto you a sure remembrance and testimonie that you are truely but yet
spiritually fed with my bodie giuen for you and my bloud shed for you and are nourished by it to life eternall Why had the Lord rather vse this phrase This is my bodie and this is my bloud then to say this signifieth my bodie and my bloud Because the word of signifying worthily seemed vnto him somewhat light and he would more expresly declare that those signes are not propounded that they may bee considered as they are in themselues but that it behoueth the receiuers so to behold and spiritually to apprehend with the eyes of a faithfull minde those things only in those signes which are represented by them as if that breade and that wine were not the signes of those things but those things themselues which they doe signifie Whether if the bodie of Christ bee denyed to bee in the bread of the Supper therefore Christ himselfe is said to bee altogether absent from his Supper No yet so that whole Christ is present but not the whole for Christ man is truely present 1. By the grace and operation of his spirit Where two or three are gathered together in his name Mat. 18.20 2. And by his power and maiestie a Math. 28.20 Heb. 7.26 3. That he which being absent in bodie and made higher then the Heauens yet may be whole most present by his vertue wherby he doth spiritually communicate both himselfe and all his great things to vs truely by faith 4. And by the promise of the Gospell he doth lift vp the hearts of the faithfull to himselfe euen into heauen that there they may behold namely in the celestiall sanctuarie the sacrifice offered vpon the crosse so may feed vpon it by faith Finally Christ doth truely and fully without all doubt accompish that which he promised Is the bodie of the Lord truely and Substantially present in the Supper It is present not truely by conuersion of the whole substance that is both of the matter and forme of the bread and wine into the bodie and bloud of the Lord either by impanation or assumption of the bread or locall inclusion not as an infant in the cradle for neither is it present in outward signes by in existence or indistance nor in regard of the place where the bread is neither also is it present in the bodies of men or is put into the mouth for if you respect the place the bodie of Christ is in heauen circumscribed But in the minds of the faithfull and in regard of the faith of a man lawfully vsing the holy Supper of the Lord. For that is the strength of faith that it may ioyne together most streightly things neuer so much distant asunder Therefore a true and liuely presence of the bodie of Christ in the Supper and communion of him with the beleeuers in the ministerie of the Sacraments is not reiected but onely that manner of presence which is fained at the bread is denyed Are these propositions contradictorie Christ is corporally in heauen and Christ with his body and bloud is in the Supper Not a whit because this latter is nor rightly vn●erstood of the presence at the place of bread but of the communion with man which is sealed and exhibited by the rite of the Supper Is not the Supper of Christ made voide if the very flesh of Christ be determined to be so farre essentially absent from this action as the heauens are from the earth In no wise because the bodie it selfe and bloud of Christ are set forth in these mysteries not simply and so farre forth as they are things subsisting in themselues but to be cōsidered intellectually and are offered to the minde not to the bodie to faith not to the senses to be taken also in the mind by faith alone For truely like as those things which are heard are to be perceiued by the hearing those things which are seene by the sight so also those things which are vnderstoode by the vnderstanding so those things which are beleeued by faith neither are these things alike present to their obiects But the perceiuing of faith is a great deale more certain then all comprehension of the senses or of reason how faith can make a thing present Paule declareth Gal. 3.1 where hee saith that Christ was described in their sight and among them crucified Are earthly and celestiall gifts present after the same manner of presence Not after the same because there is no other presence of Christ in the seale of grace then in the word or promise of grace But the presence of Christ Iesus in the word adde also in baptisme yea in the whole ministerie is only spirituall not corporall or locall For as there is not made an inclusion of Christ in the voice of the minister outwardly sounding so neither in the Sacramental symbols or signes For Paul saith that Wee whiles we are strangers in the bodie are absent from the Lord and doe walke by faith and not by sight 2. Cor. 5.6.7 Neither that wee know Christ henceforth after the flesh but after the spirit vers 16. Also that Christ is aboue Col. 3.1 That Christ shall descend from heauen in the day of iudgement 1. Thess 4.16 And truely that he shall come not daily and euery moment and otherwise then he ascended that is to say inuisibly and vncircumscriptiuely but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is in that manner not otherwise wherein he was seene to ascend into heauen a Act. 1.11 Wherfore the presence of Christ also in the Supper is spirituall which you may call celestiall Diuine supernaturall but not corporall or natural Which therefore is the thing signified of the Lords Supper Christ himselfe offering himselfe with all his benefits spiritually to bee apprehended in our mindes by faith for in the Lords supper wee are made partakers not onely of the operation or of the benefits and gifts of Christ but of the substance of the liuing bodie of Christ What is vnderstood by naming of bodie and bloud in the Attribute of these propositions This is my bodie and This is my bloud Not a signe thereof which some fathers call a Sacramentall bodie that is to say Sacramentally vnderstood euen as when they say that the bodie of the Lord is seene touched brused with the teeth doth fall vpon the earth is created made consumed Also not the mystical body which is the Church a Eh. 5.32 Eph. 23 For so the faithfull should seeme to cate either the signes alone or the Church although we doe not deny this that the mysticall bodie is shadowed and moreouer established by the signes of bread an● wine b 1 Cor. 10 16 but Synecdochically the whole humanitie of Christ both altogether and in respect of parts the true and naturall bodie of Christ deliuered for vs crucified and buried The true bloud shed for vs and his true soule yea also the whole person of Christ For truely his humanitie without the Deitie of the word
birth of baptisme some are admitted who discharge the office of Midwife and instructor in things belonging vnto faith and a Christian life but yet such witnesses are to be chosen as both know sufficiently and can probably performe that which they promise for the childs holy education if neede require VVhy haue children names giuen them in baptisme Because it was also the manner in Circumcision a secondly that we may know that we then obtaine name and fame at Gods hands when we are borne againe and are become new men namely the sonnes of God renouncing our former name wherby we were named the children of wrath Thirdly that as often as we remember our name we should likewise call to minde Gods couenant and promise our Baptisme and what it meaneth and further our dutie who being baptised into the death of Christ we may likewise die with him vnto sinne and rise againe to newnesse of life and lastly that being entertained into Christs seruice we may fight valiantly vnder his Banner against his enemies VVhat manner off names ought we to giue They were first giuē either vpō the euent of things as Isaack Iacob or of the Prophetical instinct to note some secret work of God or in remēbrance of some thing past as Adam Israell or somthing to come as Eua Abrahā Iohn Now although it be in so great plenty of names a thing of it selfe indifferent what name a man haue giuen him seeing the name furthereth not a mans saluation at all yet no man will denie but that the faithfull may make a profitable choyce in this case in omitting such as belong nothing to their profession and dutie prophane and vnknowne names and calling them by proper vsuall knowne and holy names such as may bring with them some instruction and admonition as namely such whose godlinesse is published it the Scriptures and so stirre vp in vs an Imitation of them or else of our ancestors or others whose names haue not beene polluted through Idolatrie but may put vs in minde of godlinesse of innocencie and vprightnesse of life or of Gods benefits and may not recall into our mindes the remenbrance of any euill example or such as are taken from wicked and bloudy men which ought rather to be forgotten amongest all godly men a Luk. 1.54 Psal 16.4 then thus reuiued Is the Office of preaching the Gospell greater then his that baptiseth Yea For Christ whose office was to teach neuer baptised b Ioh. 4.2 and Paule baptised verie fewe For the Lord sent mee not saith hee to baptise to wit peculiarly and fully but to preach the Gospell 1. Cor. 1.10 And Peter baptised not Cornelius his family whilest hee was there present but gaue order to haue it done afterward A●ct 10.48 Though therefore the Sacraments bee most holy yet it is no wisedome to attribute too much vnto them Wherein doe baptisme and the Lords Supper agree and wherein doe they differ First they differ both in the signes in the action and in their neerest ends For in Baptisme water is vsed and the spinckling thereof outwardly and the inward sprinckling of the bloud of Christ inwardly Also the neerest principall end therof is the washing from sin ct adoption to be the sons of God or the ingrafting into Christ into his Church but in the Supper is vsed bread which we break eat inwardly there is a pertaking of the body of Christ likewise there is a cup vsed out of which wee drinke and also a communion of the bloud of Christ lastly the end of the Lords supper is the spirituall foode of the inner man this is a manifest differēce between Baptisme the Lords Svpper Secondly they differ in vse for Baptisme is not to bee iterated whereas the often and religious vse of the Lords Supper ought to serue for a Commemoration of the Lords death Thirdly they differ in subiect for Baptisme properly belōgeth to children though the vse thereof pertaine properly to those of age whereas the Lords supper doth only belong to them that are of yeares But in these things they both agree they haue both one genus both one Author both consist of two parts the one earthly the other heauenly both one generall end both one signification for both doe signifie the Communion of Christ both are seales of the Couenant and of the promise of grace the dignitie of both is equall and alike for of baptisme Paule testifieth that we are ingrafted into Christ and doe put on Christ a Rom. 6.75 Gal. 3.27 but the one propoundeth Christ our lauer vnder the signe of water the other our foode vnder the signes of bread and wine Is not one of these Sacraments better and more worthy than the other No not in being that is not because in baptisme we receiue only the gifts or graces of Christ but not Christ himselfe but in the Supper the body and bloud of Christ although al doe not receiue his graces as our aduersaries wil haue it because they haue both one end to wit our consociation and coniunction with Christ which as the forme also of both is sealed both in Baptisme the Lords Supper But they differ onely in some respect both of our originall beginning in Christ and also of our encrease and conseruation in the same For by how much it is somewhat more to be begotten then to be nourished by so much the Sacrament of regeneration is to be preferred before the Sacrament of our norishmēt which is the Lords Supper but by how much it is a more excellent thing to bee nourished and cherished to eternall life that so thou maiest neuer faile to bee a man regenerate in this respect the Supper is to be preferred before baptisme But seeing that the dignitie of both of them dependeth vpon the thing signified namely vpon our Communion with Christ although Baptisme doth commend the same vnder the forme of a Lauer and the Supper vnder the forme of food yet it is better to moderate this comparison and so shall nothing bee derogated from either of them For the water of Baptisme in the Sacramentall vse is the bloud of Christ no lesse than the wine in the Super a 1 Pet. 1 2 nor is it any thing lesse in Baptisme to bee ingrafted into Christ to be crucified dead buried and rise againe with him and to put on Christ than to eate his flesh and drinke his bloud in the Supper And to conclude Christ is propounded vnto vs in Baptisme as a bath as an entrance into the house of the Lord and as a garment And in the Supper as meat and drinke to be entertained more and more by faith What are the ends of Baptisme There are two 1. That it may stand our faith in steede before God the latter that it may manifest our confession before men and that first because it setteth forth Christs death buriall and resurrection teaching the remission of sins and confirming the
same as a Diuine seale vnto the beleeuers b Act. 2.38 Secondly it is a document of mortification and renewing of our nature which Christ witnesseth that he both doth and will effect in vs by his spirit which though it be imperfect in this life yet it effecteth so much that though sin dwell yet it raigneth not in vs but rather is daily mortified more and more by the grace of the same spirit c Eph. 5 26 Tit. 3.5 Rom. 7.10 The inner man is renewed daily 2. Cor. 4.16 Thirdly it is the badge of our vnion and societie with Christ that we may knowe that we are conioyned vnto him as members to the head and therefore that we are now made pertakers of his goods and shall at the length be made partakers of himselfe together with his inheritance 1. Cor. 12.13 Wee are baptized into one bodie and hereof Paul proueth that we are the sonnes of God because we haue put on Christ in Baptisme d Gal. 3.26 that is because that we are conioyned vnto Christ the sonne of God by the Testimonie of baptisme Forthly it is an instrument whereby the plentifull effusion of the holy spirit vpon vs is communicated with his gifts of faith hope and charite and other vertues Tit. 3.6 by the Bath and renewing of the holy spirit which hee hath powred vpon vs plentifully as Augustine saith wee are made by Baptisme the members of Christ and of his fulnesse we haue all receiued Iohn 1.16 Fiftly it admonisheth vs sith wee shall become like vnto the Image of the sonne of God who is our head both in bearing the Crosse in his death and buriall as also in his setting of vs free his resurrection and glorie to come a Rom. 8.29 Sixtly it stirreth vs vp to innocencie to charity towards the saints to perpetuall mortifying of our selues and repentance and to frame our liues to Gods glorie b Rom. 6.4 Seauenthly it serueth as a full perswasion and confirmation of our faith likewise a consolation in tentations and tryals for that it is a Testimonie that God is wel pleasedl with vs in his son into whom wee are ingrafted by baptisme whose merits and benefits doe all belong vnto vs in whom wee are adopted to be the sonnes of God and that the father will gouerne vs by his spirit deliuer vs from eternall death and giue vs eternall life in the end Are all these benefits receiued by baptisme equally by all those which receiue the same No for they are not alike for the ingrafting into Christ and the benefits which follow it are not bestowed vpon the reprobate although they be offered them when they are baptised For God calleth and iustifieth regenerateth and glorifieth effectually them whom he hath elected predestinated to these things Rom. 8.3 but the elect aswell Infants as they of yeares are equally incorporated into Christ either in or before baptisme and are endewed with the imputation of his righteousnesse forgiuenes of sinnes and the right of eternall life for they are all alike the sonnes of GOD but regeneration is not wrought alike in all nor are the gifts of the spirit Faith Hope and Charitie giuen alike vnto all or receiued alike of all but according to the pleasure of God as the parable of the Talents teacheth c Mat. 25 15 and Ephes 4 7. To euery one is giuen grace according to the measure of the gifts of Christ we doe see that the effectes of Regeneration are more and greater in some and in other some fewer and lesser What is the other end of Baptisme That it may serue for our confession before men and is as it were a millitarie signe or note whereby we professe openly before men and Angels that we are incorporated into the visible Church of God to serue therein vnder Christ namely whilest wee doe protest that we doe consent with all Christians in one the same worship of the true God the Father sonne and holy Ghost and in one and the same religion and that wee are strangers from all the sectes of the Gentiles which do not truely worshippe God as he hath manifested in his word which confession of ours belongeth vnto Gods glorie What is the effect of Baptisme The sealing of the wholsome gifts of Christ and of our righteousnesse before God and the stipulation of a good conscience with God on Gods part whilest hee offereth and promiseth free saluation through Christ and the conscience on the other side answering and receiuing through faith that promised grace whence ariseth tranquillitie of conscience before God in him whom hee accounteth reconciled vnto himselfe through the resurrection of Iesus Christ 1 Pet. 3.21 And lastly a sure hope of being receiued into the kingdome of heauen Doth sinne remaine or is it all washed away in Baptisme It remaineth in Act by reson of the state of nature if wee respect the disease or roote of sinne and the matter it selfe but it is taken away by reason of the state of the person as touching the gilt or forme which is not imputed vnto the faithfull for their is now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesu Rom. 8.1 that is all sinnes both originall and actuall are pardoned in baptisme b Ezech. 36 75 Zach. 13.1 Marc. 1 4 1 Cor. 6.11 Heb. 10.2 Rom. 11.1 Gloss ad Rō 6 Whence Ambrose saith The grace of God forgiueth all things freely in Baptisme yea concupiscence is taken away not that it should cease to be but that it should cease to hurt Secondly it is daily more and more mortified Non vt non sit sed vt non obsit till at length it bee vtterly extinguished and taken away in death They are therefore deceiued which thinke that wee are by baptisme restored in this life vnto the same righteousnesse puritie of nature which Adam had before his fall For sinne is left to continue and dwell in him still who hath yet obtained the remission of all his sins by baptisme d Rom. 7 17 18 Yet not to reigne but that he that is borne againe might afflict it as an Enemie ouercome and bound And as we read of Adonibezeck e Iudg. 1 6 ouercome by the Israelites he must cut off the hands and the feete of sin so mortifie it till it be quite dead Furthermore the punishment of hell is taken away together with the afflictions of this life though they abide awhile for our exercise and our greater glorie that sinne dwelling in vs may bee mortified and our faith and pietie exercised and encreased as it is said Iud. 3.1 These are the Nations which the Lord hath reserued that he might instruct Israell by them and that the members might not be vnlike their head whereunto they are incorporated Rom. 8.17 for we suffer with him that we may be together glorified with him VVhat is the right and lawfull vse of Baptisme If we referre it to those ends