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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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is the plaine word of God euery way absolutely directing in all points of faith and loue 2. Tim. ● 5 Paul wisheth Timothy to keepe the true patterne of wholesome words in faith and loue which is nothing else but the testimonie of Scripture in points of faith and loue comprised in the Decalogue and Apostles Creede The rule of faith therefore in expounding Scripture is Scripture it selfe The second thing necessarie by their doctrine to be beleeued not contained in Scripture is that the Canonical Scripture is Gods word which truth is absolutely necessarie to saluation to be beleeued but cannot otherwise bee knowne or beleeued but onely by the tradition of the Church Ans. As euery other Arte and Science hath certaine principles of truth to proue all other precepts by but themselues are to bee prooued by none so also hath Diuinity the chiefe of al other Sciences of which kinde this is one principle that Canonicall Scripture is Gods word which not granted inferreth a destruction of all other diuine rules this is a truth therefore confirmed not a thing testified from some other but as a ground of it selfe Secondly in diuine matters saith goeth before knowledge which in humane things is cleane contrarie for if a man would know whether fire bee hot let him put his hand vnto it he shall haue experience of it and then he shall beleeue it but in diuine things first a man giueth credit and yeeldeth consent to the word and then hath experimentall knowledge for although faith hath his knowledge yet experimentall knowledge followeth faith Abraham beleeued aboue hope here faith went before knowledge Ioh. 7.27 If ye do the will of my Father yee shall know whether the doctrine bee of God nor no. Thus then we may conceiue it the tenour of the word of God is this Thus saith the Lord. If the question now be whether the Lord said thus or no I answere to beleeue the Church herein before God is sacriledge but herein we are first to yeeld assent vnto God and then after this experimentall knowledge will follow that Canonicall Scripture is the word of God Thirdly wee know that Scripture is Gods word by Scripture and not by the Church out of which being in humilitie taught and acquainted with the excellent matter of it and manner of writing the end the glorie of God and our owne saluation wee cannot but haue sufficient perswasion of the author of it and that it can proceede from none other but God himselfe Thus notwithstanding the allegations of the aduersaries the written word retaineth that perfection which needeth no tradition to strengthen or further it in that end to which it is appointed Now to the reason it selfe amplifying this sinne in this verse which containeth three points to be considered First the person that durst not raile Secondly the goodnes of his cause which was very iust and yet he durst not raile vpon the Diuell himselfe Thirdly the manner of his speech The Lord rebuke thee The person that durst not raile was Michael the Archangell whom some affirme to bee Christ himselfe others that he is some chiefe arch and principall Angel which opinion is more probable For first the Apostle speaketh of him as one in subiection and standing in awe not daring to breake the law of God for he durst not reuile the Diuell Secondly in 1. Thess. 4.16 The Lord Christ shall come to iudgement with the sound of a Trumpet and the voyce of an Archangell where is a plaine distinction betweene Christ who should come in the clowdes and the Archangell Thirdly Peter explaineth it speaking the same thing and saith The Angels giue not railing iudgement against them 2. Pet. 2.11 It is more probable then that by Michael was meant a principall Angell rather than Christ. Doctr. First from the person wee learne that there be distinctions and degrees of Angels there bee Angels and an Archangell Quest. Is there but one Archangell Ans. The Scripture speaking of Archangels vseth alwaies the singular number neuer mentioning more than one and where the Scripture resolueth not we are not to determine yet I condemne not those who haue probably held that there are more than one Secondly wee haue here an example of Angelicall meeknes and modestie Tit. 3.1 Put them in remembrance that they bee subiect to principalitie and speake euill of no man but shew all meeknes vnto all 〈◊〉 the contrarie practise of railing slandering and obtrecting is a propertie of the Diuell whence he hath his name Reu. 12.10 the Accuser of the brethren and the Aduersarie 2. Pet. 5 8. who is euer readie with one accusation or other to stand vp against euery man the malitious man whose malice caused him to stand vp against Iob and falsely accuse him of hypocrisie vnto Gods own face Let slanderers and backbiters of their brethren see hence whom they imitate and most liuely resemble Secondly consider the goodnesse of Michaels cause which was this It was the wil of God that Moses body should be buried in a secret place vnknown to any man to preuent and auoid al occasion of superstition and Idolatrie amōg the Iewes The Diuell on the contrarie would discouer it that so the Israelites might fall to Idolatrie before it herein the Archangell resisted him and stroue with him for the performance of the will of God and the maintenance of his true worship and yet in this good cause Michael durst not reuile the Diuel himselfe In this cause consider two things First the fight and contention betweene Michael and the Diuell Secondly the cause and occasion of it about Moses bodie In the former wee may obserue that there is a sharp and serious contention betweene good and bad Angels in which the good Angels labour to defend all that are in Christ against the rage and furie of the Diuell and his angels As Psal. 34.8 The Angels of the Lord pitch their tents round about those that feare him And on the contrarie the Diuell and wicked spirits cast about how to destroy the bodies and soules of men 1. Pet. 5. Our aduersarie the Diuell goeth about continually seeking whom he can deuoure This combat concerneth and is conuersant about either first the persons or secondly the societies of men The fight about the persons concerneth either infants or men of yeres First for infants the Diuell seeketh how to spoyle and destroy them especially those of elect and faithfull parents in regard of their weaknes and tendernes both of minde and bodie but the Angels of the Lord haue charge giuen thē to defend them against this malice of Satan As Psal. 91.12 They shall beare thee vp in their armes that is they shall bee as nurces to beare them in their armes preseruing them from danger Mat. 18.10 Despise not one of these little ones for their Angels alwaies behold the face of my father which is in heauen Secondly concerning men of yeeres the diuell and his angels striue to driue them out
multiplication of loue towards God and man yea towards our enemies seeing the more this is multiplied the happier is our estate yea and the condition of the Church vpon earth Vers. 3. Beloued when I gaue 〈◊〉 diligence to write vnto you of the common saluation it was needfull for me to write vnto you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once giuen vnto the Saints Here begins the second part of this Epistle which is the Exhortation reaching to the end of the 23. verse In this verse two things are contained First the causes which mooued the Apostle to write the Epistle Secondly the matter of his exhortation The causes of his writing are three First his loue noted in the word Beloued Secondly his readie and willing minde of himselfe noted in the word diligence which signifieth a carefull endeuour and studie to doe the Church good and it is enlarged by three arguments first in that he gaue all diligence and not some part onely to further the Church Secondly when hee could not speake to the Catholike church he gaue diligence to write Thirdly he writeth not of small matters but of things most weightie such as concern● their saluation against which seeing it might be obiected that he was not able to write of such a weightie matter hee therefore calles it common saluation to cut oft that surmise as also to shew that it is common to himselfe and the whole Church of which therefore hauing a share therein he is not ignorant The third cause in the word needfull a necessitie was laid vpon him in that he was called to bee an Apostle and so bound to further the saluation of the Catholike Church Out of these three motiues which caused the Apostle to write obserue First that euery Minister that would deliuer the word faithfully must haue three things to excite him thereto first loue towards the Church to which he is called Secondly a readie minde to further the saluation of their soules Thirdly the bond of his calling stirring him vp to faithfulnes and diligence All these three concurred in Paul first his loue appeared 2. Cor. 5.14 Secondly his readie minde was not wanting Philip. 2.17 Thirdly for his calling that vrged him see 1. Cor. 9.16 Note hence also that whosoeuer would heare the word or reade it to saluation must bring three things in his heart first a loue to the word deliuered This caused Dauid often to muse thereupon Psal. 119.97 Secondly a readie and diligent minde to receiue and reteine it this was in the Bereans Act. 17.11 and in the Galathians when they receiued Paul as an Angell of God Gal. 4.14 Thirdly a consideration of the great necessitie of hearing and reading the word Prou. 29.18 Where vision failes people perish Thirdly in this example of the Apostle all Pastors must learne diligence in all good meanes for the furtherance of the saluation of their flock for which cause they are called Watchmen because they are to watch ouer their soules Yea Sauiours Obadiah 21. to put them in minde that they are to bothe meanes of sauing men They had no● need then be entangled with many charges and other businesses Fourthly as the Apostle writeth of the common saluation of which he hath good experience so euery Minister must see that he haue experience in himselfe of that he teacheth others and haue a taste of that in his owne heart which he would haue others seasoned withall els his teaching shall be cold The second part of this verse is the exhortation the whole matter and substance may be reduced to three heads First that faith is a notable treasure which hath many enemies Secondly that the Saints are the keepers of it Thirdly that the office of euery member of the Catholike Church is to hold and maintaine this treasure For the first that faith is a treasure appeareth 2. Pet. 1.1 where it is called pretious faith 2. Cor. 4.7 a treasure in earthly vessels and by this that a fight is here inioyned against the enemies of it For the cleering of which consider two things first what it is Secondly who be the enemies of it against whom we must fight and them we shal ioyntly obserue with the seueral groūds of faith For the first this faith is nothing els but the holesome doctrine of the Gospel called by Paul to Titus 1.1 the truth according to godlines So 1. Tim. 4.1 this faith which many shall denie is opposed to the doctrine of Diuels Now for our more orderly proceeding wee must consider that this doctrine of faith admitteth a distinction which Paul himselfe maketh 1. Cor. 3.11.12 Some doctrines are of the foundation without which religion cannot stand such as are set downe Hebr. 6.1 Others pertaine to the foundation but are not of it as gold and siluer built vpon the foundation It shall not be amisse here to stand a while to set downe the holesome doctrine of saluation which is fundamentall reduced by the Apostle to two generall heads Faith and Loue. The wholesome doctrine of faith containes things needfull to be beleeued The wholesome doctrine of loue containes things necessarily to be practised And both these are expresly set downe in Scripture as wee shall s●ew in their order Grounds of doctrine to be beleeued First That all the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles 〈◊〉 giuen by diuine inspiration 2. Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is giuen by diuine inspiration that is all the doctrine both for matter stile and words of Scripture is deliuered by the inspiration of the holy Ghost Hence it followeth that all Scripture is authenticall as hauing the authoritie from God yea and must be beleeued as if God from heauen should speake without disputation or calling any part of it into question This ground must first be laid If it be said the Scripture may be prooued by reason and by the generall consent of the Church Ans. That is vntrue for reason cannot settle the conscience to beleeue in any point But scripture telleth there is a God which reason prooueth Ans. Reason out of nature teacheth there is a God but by the word of God only I doe beleeue it inducements to faith may be brought out of nature but Gods word onely causeth true beliefe Secondly for the authoritie of the Church I beleeue not because the Church saith so but because the Scripture saith it and the Church I beleeue so farre as she consents with the word and speaketh out of it The aduersaries of this ground against whom we must fight First the Turkes and Turkish religion who denie scripture to bee giuen by inspiration and denie the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles and in stead of them stand to their Alcaran Secondly the Iewes who refuse the bookes of the new Testament Thirdly the Atheist who will beleeue nothing of all this Fourthly the painted aduersarie the Papist who vndermines this ground first saying that the Hebrew and Greeke text
is corrupted so as wee may not build vpon it that thereby they might bring their Latin Bible into credit as most authentical and yet that they might make the sentence of their Church the rule of faith the most learned of al that Church hold that the Latin Bible is also corrupt so indeede they couertly renounce all scripture that the sentence of the Church may obtaine the chiefe stroke Secondly in teaching that the authoritie of the Church in regarde of vs is aboue the Scriptures because wee knowe not the sense thereof but by the Church Thus putting downe the true and principall ground of Scripture that they might more easily set vp their own dotages The second ground concerneth the sufficiencie of scripture and is this The Scripture of the Prophets and Apostles is a perfect rule of faith and manners It is of all things to be beleeued or done to saluation 2. Tim. 3.16 The Scripture is profitable to teach improue correct instruct in righteousnes to make the man of God absolute yea perfect in euery good worke If it make him perfect in al kind of teaching it is also able much more to make euery man perfect to all the duties of his calling Gal. 1.8 If an Angell should teach otherwise that is diuerse or besides though not contrary to that which is taught hee shall bee accursed many doctrines indeed of Artes and other things are diuers and besides it but the meaning is that no doctrine of saluation must be brought no not besides it therfore the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles containe a perfect rule Many things which cannot bee found in scripture may be supplied by tradition Ans. Traditions can neuer settle the conscience for though diuerse of them are found in the writings of the fathers yet they were subiect to error and so might and did erre in them Aduersaries of this ground to bee contended with First all men by nature Iob. 22.14 Who say to the Almightie Departe from vs for wee desire not the knowledge of thy waies yea our common Protestants who in iudgement acknowledge this rule yet in their life they leaue it and take the leaden rule of naturall reason sense sight and feeling and few there be that liue by faith Secondly the Romish Church for first they make the written word a thing ruled by setting vp another Rule saying that there are two kindes of Scripture The first is inward written in the heart of all Catholikes which is the vniuersall consent of the Church The second is outward written by the Prophets and Apostles an inken scripture say they and a dead letter without the former Whereas the cleane contrarie is true the true rule being the scripture of the Prophets and Apostles and the other in the heart in this life but an imperfect patterne drawne according to the former Secondly they ouerturne the ground in ioyning to the written word vnwrittē tra●●tions so making it but half a rule and indeed as good no rule but where are these traditions In the writings of Fathers they say But how shall we know them to be scripture Because the Fathers say so But how shall wee know they say true Here must they flie to man whereof yet no man can assure vs. Thirdly in teaching that the true sense of scripture cannot be found without the Churches determination and so indeede make it no rule because a right rule both ruleth it selfe and is plaine to rule other things also The third ground is There is one true God By one I meane one in number not two 1. Cor. 8.6 To vs there is but one God that is to the Church to vs that looke to bee saued which is plaine by this reason for there can be but one infinite and if there were two or moe Gods there should be two or moe infinites which is impossible Aduersaries to this ground First the common Protestant who in iudgment holdeth one God yet in heart and life he setteth vp two or moe some riches some pleasure some one sinne or other for where a mans heart is there is his God Paul saith some make their bellie their God and that the Diuell is the God of the world Secondly the maine Enemie is the Popish Church which in word holdeth one God but diuers waies set vp diuers gods As first the Pope himselfe who by their reformed Canon law is to iudge all and to be iudged of none Who maketh himselfe a forgiuer of sinnes and that properly yea a maker of lawes to binde conscience aswell as Gods lawes which is horrible blasphemie Secondly the Virgin Mary whom they make a Goddesse as Christ a God as Christ a King so her a Queene as he a Lord so her a Ladie yea they set Christ below her whom they desire to commaund her sonne by the right of a mother yea and in some of their reformed Seruice bookes they trust in her for saluation Thirdly the Saints whom they pray vnto wherein they attribute vnto them the knowledge of the secrets of mens hearts and omnipresence for they must also be in all places which are things proper vnto God alone The fourth ground is that God is all sufficient in himselfe Gen. 17.1 I am all sufficient that is he hath in himselfe all perfection for first he taketh being from none but giueth being to all Secondly for substance he is a Spirit of perfect nature Thirdly euery way infinite in regard of time place attributes This may well be called a ground for whosoeuer placeth any want or imperfection in God denieth God and maketh him no God Aduersaries hereof First the common people who conceiue a God made all of mercie without his iustice Secondly the Papist who robbeth God of his perfection two waies first they attribute an imperfect iustice vnto him namely such a one as may be satisfied by mans satisfaction Secondly an imperfect mercie whereof our own merits must make a supplie teaching that indeed Christ must make vs iust but we must make our selues more iust and merit saluation The fifth ground is There be three in heauen the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and th●se three are one God 1. Ioh. 5.7 How can it be that three are one God Ans. It is a mysterie which the ancient Church answered thus They be three in person and one in substance so wee also say they be three in manner of subsisting but one in nature and Godhead Three they be distinguished in person the Father not being the Sonne nor the holy Ghost and so in the other persons 3. subsistences in one nature Ioh. 17.2 This is life euerlasting c. This is a groūd because wee must worship one God in three persons neither can wee aright thinke of God out of the Trinitie Aduersaries of this ground First Heretikes innumerable whose memorie is accursed as Arians of former and later times denying the Godhead of Christ. Secondly the Turke and Iew
the same Cant. 3. ● 〈◊〉 Christ where she shal be sure of him and not mi●●e of finding him in her necessitie he maketh answere she shall be sure of him in the Te●●s of shepheards Whence may bee truly concluded that neither are the assemblies of Turkes nor Heretikes the Churches of God because they fight against the truth neither is the Church of Rome a true Church of God because the truth of doctrine is for substance reuersed amongst them As also we may be confirmed that our Churches are the true Churches of Christ by this infallible note A Register is known by his Records so our Church is known to be Gods Register because it keepeth faithfully the records of the Prophets and Apostles Secondly that it stands vs in hand to whom this treasure is now committed so faithfully to keepe it that it be not taken from vs and giuen to others who will keepe it better which we shall do by making this vse of it that wee bring foorth the fruites of it in amendement of life else our vnthankfulnes shall iustly bereaue vs of it Concerning that circumstance in the text once giuen and not often it may b●are a double sense first it was giuen a● wee say once for all that is perfectly sufficiently as neuer after needing any alteration or addition Whence wee note first that all reuelations in matter of saluation and religion giuen since are friuolous and superstitious for there is but one edition of true faith and no 〈◊〉 edition of Reuelation besides or without the word such as the Papists haue deuised to confirme their Purgatorie prayer and almes for the dead Masse c. seeing all necessarie doctrine to saluation was once giuen perfectly Secondly that all Church traditions in matter of religion and doctrine of saluation are meere prophanations of true doctrine and argue it to bee vnperfect as those of the Masse of receiuing the Communion in one kind of the Popes supremacie of workes of satisfaction and many moe Secondly it may bee thus vnderstood Once giuen to the Saints that is not in writing but in the hearts of the Saints when they are truly enlightened and therefore if after enlightening it bee quite lost it is not giuen the second time and consequently cannot be recouered Heb. 6.4 If a man who hath bin once enlightened and tasted of the good word of God fall away it is impossible th●● he should be renewed againe by repentance From which wee must learne to beware of Apostasie and falling from the faith yea and of al steps and degrees leading thereunto as of declining from our grounds of religion for better 〈◊〉 it been for vs neuer to haue knowne the way of truth than after the knowledge of it to forsake the holy Commaundement 2. Pet. 2.22 Which is the more to bee remembred because religion hath been more cherished than now it is and the declining from it a great deale lesse If it be asked how may wee preuent Apostasie I answer neuer call any ground into question Here Cyprians rule is to be learned that diuine matters admit no deliberation The third point of the Exhortation is the office of the Church of God and euery member of it and that is to maintaine yea to fight for the maintenance of this ●reasure and this is not a bodilie fight by strength of arme or bow but a spirituall fight by spiritual duties which euery member of the Church must take vp and namely by foure duties First by doctrine for euery man in his place and calling must be a Prophet as Ioel 2.28 and must teach all vnder him the father must teach the children the Master his seruants and thus keepe out Satan and al Satani●●● doctrines Secondly by confession euery man being called must stand against the ga●es of hell by constant witnessing of the ●ruth ● Pet. 3.15 Sanctifie God in your hearts and be ready alwaies to giue an account of the 〈◊〉 that is in you Thirdly by example of a good life and vnblameable sutable to the doctrine Philip. 2.15 This maketh men shine as lights in the world Fourthly by prayer that the Lord would send forth labourers into his haruest to withstand al false doctrines and heresies that so the faith and religion wherewith hee hath honoured vs these many yeeres may bee maintained vnto vs and continued vnto ours for euer Vers. 4. For there are certain men crep● in which were of old before ordained to this condemnation vngodly men they are which turne the grace of our God into 〈…〉 and denie God the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ. HEre the Apostle proceedeth to confirme his exhortation by a reason drawne from the state of the Church in his time and it is thus briefly framed There bee certaine men which secretly seeke to vndermine and ouerthrow the faith therefore you ought the more earnestly to contend for it And that these aduersaries lurking amōgst them might the better bee descried hee describeth them by fiue seuerall adiuncts first by their hypocrisie in creeping in Secondly by their estate before God they are of old ordained to this condemnatiō Thirdly by their religion vngodly men they are Fourthly by their doctrine they turne the grace of our God into wantonnes Fiftly by their liues they denie the onely Lord. For the first There are certaine men crept in That is there be men who secretly haue insinuated themselues into your societies professing themselues to be teachers of the true faith but are indeede the destroyers and disturbe●s of it In which words two sins are la●d to their charge first that they cunningly ioyned themselues vnto the Church pretending themselues to be the seruants of Christ and of the Church and yet were enemies to both Here marke the subtiltie of Satan who causeth prophane men to ioyne themselues to the societies of the Saints that by this meanes mingling his instruments with the members of the Church he may by degrees corrupt the faith and ouerthrow the Church The Parable Matth. 13. sheweth that wheresoeuer the good husbandman soweth his good seede this malicious man scattereth his tares In Abrahams house shal be an Ismael in Isaaks an Esau in the Arke a cursed Cham in Christs familie a Iudas In the Primitiue Church the diuell raised vp of all sorts of Heretikes great numbers In our owne Church the Diuell stirreth vp daily troopes of Atheists and Papists to the corrupting and deprauing of true faith and Religion Vse First wee must not take offence when we see vngodly men in the Church much lesse cut our selues from it by separation but rather conceiue of the policie of Satan who for the hindrance of the faith thrusteth them in When the Israelites entred into the land of Canaan they must not dwell alone but be mingled with the Cananites the enemies of the Church least y● land being too much dispeopled wild beasts should preuaile and deuoure the people of God So the Lord ordering the malice of Satan to
was the seuenth from Adam Here two questions are to bee answered first whence had Iude this historie seeing it is no where recorded in the Scriptures and how knew he it to be Enochs I answere two waies first he either had it and learned it to bee his by some tradition which went from hand to hand or else written by some Iew or secondly he learned it out of some booke which went vnder Enochs name then extant in the daies of the Apostles though now lost it is certaine that one of these waies hee had it Hence the Papists gather that the Iewes had vnwritten traditions and consequently all their traditions are to be obserued Ans. We denie not all vnwritten traditions of which some are true and profitable but wee renounce and denie all those traditions which are made articles of faith rules of Gods worship necessarie to saluation for all such doctrines are written in the books of the Prophets and Apostles which containe perfect direction and rules concerning faith manners of which kind the Romane Church holdeth their traditions to be this is of another kind it being no article of faith nor necessary to saluation to knowe whether Enoch writ this prophecie or no. Againe from the second answere others who are no Papists conclude that some bookes of Canonicall Scripture are perished and lost But this is vntrue for then first the fidelitie of the Church which is the keeper of these Oracles should be called in question and secondly in the bookes Canonicall extant not one sentence or tittle no not the sense of any sentence is lost how then should whole bookes come to be lost It is alleaged that the books of Salomon are most of them lost Answ. The bookes of Salomon which were lost were bookes of humanitie and Philosophie for hee writ of all beasts birds trees euen from the Cedar in Libanus to the hyssop vpon the wall the books of humane truth might faile but no part of Canonicall Scripture Ob. Mention is made in the Scripture of the bookes of the Chronicles of the Iewes or Kings of Iudah but these are perished Ans. They were politique histories as are the Chronicles of England or other Countries Ob. The bookes of Nathan Gad Idd● Shemaiah and other Prophets are perished Ans. All these as is though by the learned are contained in the bookes of the Kings Chronicles and Samuel Ob. This book of Enoch is lost Ans. First it is doubted whether it was a booke or no or went by a tradition Secondly if it was a booke it was no part of Scripture for Moses was the first penman of Scripture who liued long after Enoch The second question why doth the Apostle make choise of this testimonie of Enoch rather than some other Prophet Answ. Himselfe giueth two reasons First he was the seuenth from Adam it is therefore an ancient testimonie to be receiued and reuerenced for the antiquitie but withall it sheweth what is true antiquitie namely when a doctrine of religion can bee prooued from some Prophet or Apostle for this testimonie was a prophecie and therefore that antiquitie which the Church of Rome challengeth to her religion and doctrine is but counterfeit because they are not able to iustifie the maine pointes thereof from any Prophet or Apostle yea in these wherein they dissent from vs they cannot bring their proofe and descent from within the first hundred yeeres after Christ. It is then a vaine plea and false pretence of them to boast of the antiquitie of their religion The second reason is in the word prophecied for Enoch spoke not this of his owne head or motion but from God for no creature Angell or man can foretell things to come it being a prerogatiue properly belonging vnto God Ob. Yes but the learned Physition can truely foretell the death of the patient to come Ans. He doth not properly herein foretell a thing to come for the death of the partie is present in the signes and causes of it Ob. But the Diuell could foretell Sauls death 1. Sam. 28.19 To morow shalt thou be with me and thy sonnes Ans. The Diuell could not properly foretell it but might see it in the causes and signes Againe hee might speake so to Saule because God had made him an instrument for the execution of that iudgement and destruction so as God only properly foretelleth that which is simply to come and no man or Angell The second point is the testimonie it selfe Behold the Lord commeth c. In which obserue three points first the comming of the Lord secondly the iudgement of the Lord thirdly the cause of it in the 15. verse To giue iudgement against al men c. First of the party comming Behold the Lord commeth Where the Apostle speaketh in the time present which is put for the time to come which forme of speech sheweth the certaintie of Christs comming to iudgement who shall as certeinly come as if he were now alreadie comming Concerning which certaintie it may be demaunded first whence commeth this comming of Christ to be so certaine Ans. From the vnchangeable will of God which hath certainly decreed the same For he hath appointed a day in the which he will iudge the world in righteousnes And thus are all other the articles of our faith most certaine in that they are grounded on the vnchangeable will and word of God Secondly how or from whence may we know this will of God to be so certaine Ans. From the manner of propounding the doctrine of it wherein the euidence of the spirit plainly appeareth saying peremptorily the Lord commeth euidently expressing the certaintie as if it were now present And the same may be spoken of the whole scripture which in it selfe is most sure and certain because it is the most vnchangeable will of God but how do we know it so to be will some say I answere by the euidence of the spirit the authoritie puritie maiestie effect and ends of the doctrine it neede not seeke euidence elsewhere than from it selfe not from man or the Church it selfe The Romish Church confesseth it is of it selfe and in it selfe sufficiently certaine but not to me or thee except the Church say so but this is a false position The Scripture is certaine both in it selfe and vnto vs and we know it so to be though neuer a man would acknowledge it the heart seasoned with grace will make the mouth confesse it Secondly the Apostle speaking in this forme he commeth for he will come wee learne to set before our eyes the comming of the Lord Iesus to iudgement and to make account of euery present day as the day of his comming the Scriptures euery where commend watchfulnes vnto vs which is to do nothing else but to make reckoning continually of this day But some will say we cannot make account daily of it for we see it commeth not neither may we enquire into the time of it Answ. Although wee cannot exactly
〈◊〉 for all offered whereby their sinnes are ●●p●ated that shall see the Lord in the holie of holies 4. Further let any indifferent and single eye behold and consider whether those bee but trifling differences which our reuerend Reignolds hath worthily disputed both against Bellarmine in his bookes intituled The Idolatrie of the Roman Church as also against Hart both in the two principall questions concerning Peters and the Popes supremacie by which their doctrine they would make Kings and Princes but vassals and ●eodataries vnto the Pope to whom they ascribe absolute power to excomm●●icate Kings to discharge their subiects from their obedience and allegeance to dispense with their oathes of loyaltie and faithfull subiection and dispose of their Crownes at his pleasure which no good subiect much lesse Christian can say is a triuiall point or a little to bee yeelded vnto as also in those sixe conclusions annexed wherein hee hath substantially and learnedly determined that the saith professed by the present Church of Rome is not the Catholike faith That their Church is so far from being the Catholike Church that it is no sound member of the Catholike Church and consequently that the reformed Churches of Great Brittaine France Germany c. haue lawfully that is by warrant of Gods word seuered themselues therefrom 5. Neither may wee yeeld that to be a circumstantiall question discussed betweene our learned Whi●taker and Stapleton concerning the Authoritie of the holy Scriptures which they so farre debase subordinate to their Church seeing through that great booke of his neuer like to bee answered by them he grauely prooueth that the foundation of Papisticall faith is laid vpon man and not vpon God and so it is an humane faith and not diuine vnto which their whole seruice is sutable according to Durandus his description in his Rationale And lastly none but inconsiderate men would auerre either that the most learned Protestāts of Europe haue spent their strength and beaten their braines only for the beating of the ●yre in matters immateriall or that those who haue a● yet vncontroleably published that the Popish Teachers haue reuersed the whole Decalogue with the most of the Articles of the Creede and Petitions of the Lords Prayer haue differed and squared in points not essentiall or that so many zealous Martyrs many of them of very profound knowledge should giue their liues and most innocent blood for matters of shadow as is pretended rather than of substance for thus to impeach the labours of the former or staine the sufferings of the latter would scarse beseeme any but either a Papist or some speciall fauourite of theirs Thirdly to such as are of minde that a harmelesse mediation may be made me thinkes it no other but the feeding of a fancie besides that it is not harder to make them preserue and yet neither without preiudice In which point as I would not seeme too rigorous or austere well knowing how sweete is the name and yet more pleasant is peace it selfe so would I chuse an honorable warre before a dishonorable peace a free and iust dissention before a base and slauish agreement such as theirs would be For Nahash the Ammonite will make no concord with Iab●sh Gilead vnlesse euery m●n suffer his right eye to be pulled 〈◊〉 that so he may bring some sha●● vpon Israel And first it seemeth to me a matter b●rder to bee b●●ught about than Loue of my shallow 〈◊〉 can expect e●er to see effected both in regard of our selues as also of them for if the truth bee with vs as wee are bound to confesse both in respect of i● selfe and the law whereby it is established th●n our turnings back● must not reprooue vs but hauing found the old way we are to walke in it without turning aside that wee may in it finde rest for our soules The Lords counsell to his Prophet must bee our direction in this case Sonne of man goe 〈◊〉 th●n to them but let them c●me to thee for to lose our hold of the truth much lesse to le●se any part of it ●s in exchange with falsehood were not onely a wrongfull betraying of it self but a wilful wronging of our selues and posterities whom Gods blessings for the present hath made able to ●old it entire not onely without danger but with encouragement power protection But more hopelesse or impossible rather in respect of them shall out meeting in the midway seeme to be to whomsoeuer with iudgement shall perpend these foure subsequent considerations First that their faith being not Apostolicall their Religion a false Religion their Church a false Church and their worship a false worship it will prooue not a matter of repairing as requiring lesse cost and labour but of founding their faith before they can bee raised vnto vs which how hard it is for them to bee brought vnto who are so setled in their lees and dregges for so many hundred yeeres they cannot be ignorant who know how difficult it is for a Bl●●kem●●re to ch●●ge his skin or a Leopard his spots for so hard is it for those who are accustomed to euill to be drawne to good Secondly that so long as the Pope holdeth his headship ouer the Church with that erroneous position that he cannot erre which hee is likely to lay downe with his Crowne and Crosier for sooner to part with them were a foule error if by much sweate some indifferent parley were cōpassed himselfe still remaining both partie and iudge as hee was in the Councell of Trent improbable yea impossible it were that any conclusions could on their part bee passed if on any at all propounded which any way might be derogatorie to his vsurped power and pre●ended supremacie Thirdly their cautelous circumspection lest by any meanes the knowledge of our doctrine might perhaps bee scattered among them argueth an vtter auersation in them for euer acknowledging it which appeareth in sundry their practises 1. In that they bind the consciences of all Catholikes to a perpetuall separation from all our Ecclesiasticall assemblies in religious publike duties which is the ground of all Recusancie to which purpose they teach it to bee a sinne to heare our sermons for that were a participation with blasphemies and for prayer with vs so straite laced are they as they may not say Amen in publike or priuate suppose at their tables if any Protestant bee present 2. In that they censure most seuerely al their subiects that trauell or traffike into Protestant countries blasting them with excommunication 3. In that they haue erected in their Cities an Inquisition to examine vpon oath any forreiner or stranger whereby they ransake not onely all his carriages but euen his conscience also lest he should bring any opinion within him or instrument without him that standeth not with their minds and liking wherein not onely some little escape but euen suspition it selfe prooueth often capitall 4.
person no vnrepentant sinner can be partaker of but onely the Church of the first borne as in Heb. the 12 whose names are written in the booke of life and who receiue daily spirituall increase for howsoeuer in the Catholike Church there be two sorts of men professing religion the one of them that do vnfainedly beleeue and are sanctified the other of them who make a shew of faith but indeede beleeue not but remaine in their sinnes of the former doth the Catholike Church consist and not of the latter who are no members s●t into the head of this body though they may seeme so to bee Secondly this confuteth the Romish Church who teach and hold that a reprobate may be a member of this Church Thirdly that none can bee the head of this Church and Catholique congregation but onely Christ for he only knoweth them who and where they be thorough the face of the whole earth not the Pope or any other creature hath any headship ouer this companie who are giuen and properly appertaine vnto the Sonne of God Fourthly that this Catholique Church is inuisible and cannot by the eie of flesh be discerned for what eye except of faith can see or discerne the depth of Gods election or whom he hath effectually called yea and who can infalliblie determine of the things that are within a man and therefore this is a matter of faith not of sense an Article of our beleefe not the obiect of our sight seeing faith is an euidence of thinges not seene which againe ouerthroweth that Romish doctrine which teacheth that the Catholike Church is visible and apparent vpon earth and so destroy that Article of our faith Fiftly that this Catholike Church being preserued by God the Father to life euerlasting cannot vtterly perish and bee dissolued all other congregations and particular Churches being mixed and the greatest part not predestinate may faile yet this cannot be ouercome Rom. 11.7 this election of God shall obtaine though the rest be hardened The gates of hell shall not preuaile against the faith of the Church because faithfull and true is hee that hath spoken and who will preserue in this Church a succession of wholsome and sound doctrine and heauen and earth shall be sooner dissolued than on iote of the same shall faile and perish But though that faile not the Church may fall from that and so faile That particular Churches and of them the most famous haue been ruined yea and fallen away and so may doe is euident by the Churches of Ephesus Corinth Galatia c. and no maruell seeing these consisted euer of mixed persons but the Catholique Church consisting onelie of a number elected and called though it also not being as yet without wrinkle may erre and faile in some smaller points yet being preserued by God to life cannot possibly faile in the maine and foundation This doctrine affordeth strong consolation to the elect of God both in regard of their frequent falles and infirmities whereby they might feare to cast themselues quite out of fauor as also in regard of the manifold assaultes and bickerings which in the world they doe and shall endure whereby they might seeme to the outward veiw to perish yet the truth is neither of both need so dismay them but that their faith and hope may still bee reuiued and strengthened seeing they are preserued to saluation Sixtly here are better notes of a true Church then the Papistes Antiquity Succession Multitude c. which can bee no notes Frst for Antiquitie in the beginning was a true Church but no Antiquitie Secondly succession failes for what men soeuer are called and sanctified are the Church Thirdly multitude no note for if there be a calling and sanctification of men there is a Church be there many or few But the true notes are the meanes of calling to the faith by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles and obedience thereunto proceeding forward in sanctification euen vntill death without which notes none can truly say they are of the Catholique Church By which we may know the Church of England to be the true visible Church of God called and sanctified in the truth Ioh. 8.31 Now to proceede wee are in the next place to intreate of the order which God obserueth in bringing men by degrees to life euerlasting And first of the calling mentioned which is a worke of God who of his meere fauour and grace calleth vile and miserable men out of the world and inuiteth them to life euerlasting to vnderstand which we must know that the calling of God is two fold The first is generall when God calles a whole Nation kingdome and countrie that is when hee offers them saluation in the meanes as when hee sends his word amongst them affordes them the Sacraments to seale the Couenant giue● leaue to approch him in prayer and all this in the Ministrie of men that man might call man yea when hee vouchsafeth priuate meanes farre inferior to the former yet often seruing for a generall calling a● is the reading of the Scriptures yea of mens writings and some time report● as in Rahab● example and the woman of Samaria by these meanes the Lord generally calleth men offering but often not giuing grace offered in great iudgement turning away from a froward people If God offer but giue not grace it is a deluding of men No for first a man was once able to receiue it secondly hereby hee maketh them without execuse whom he will destroy thirdly hereby he keepes the wicked in outward order Vse Considering to be called of God is the first step to life euerlasting and we in this Church of England are thus called it remaines that euery man should answere this calling How shall this be done Frame thy heart to answere God as Dauid did when God bad him seeke his face Thy face O Lord will I seeke see also Marke 9.23.24 of the father of the possessed child and Psal. 40.6.7 whē Dauids eare was pearced hee answered Lord I come this ought to be the Answer of our hartes to the Lords voice sounding in the Ministry The second calling is more speciall when grace is not only offered but giuen also by God thorough the effectuall working of his spirit in our hearts which is the beginning of grace in vs hee himselfe laying the first foundation of it by giuing power to receiue the word to mingle it with faith and bring forth the fruites of new obedience for the better conceiuing of the nature of it consider sixe pointes First the ground and foundation of it namely Gods eternall free election of vs vnto life euerlasting as 2. Tim. 1.9 when I say free I exclude not only whatsoeuer man can imagine within himselfe as vaine in procuring such good vnto himselfe as not of works saith Paul least any should boast but also placing the ground of all our good out of our selues in the counsell of God which the
greatest part who are inuocated as intercessors not onely by their prayers but by their merits in heauen Thirdly his Propheticall office is bestowed likewise vpon euery Pope who is without scripture to determine infallibly by an inward assistance of the Spirit locked vp in his breast of all matters concerning faith manners which is the proper office of him who is the proper Doctor of his Church Therefore this Romish doctrine established by the Councell of Trent is an hereticall and Antichristian doctrine making God an Idoll God which is concluded out of the place alleaged thus He that denieth Iesus to be Christ is Antichrist And againe He that hath not the Sonne hath not the Father But the Romish Church denie Iesus to be Christ and hath not the Sonne because it ouerturneth his person and oppugneth all his offices and therfore neither haue they the Father but an Idoll God and so consequently their doctrine is Antichristian and hereticall For which cause the reformed Churches haue iustly separated from them and ought euer so long as they denie this ground so to doe The 14. ground is He that beleeueth in Christ shall not perish but haue life euerlasting Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world c. For the better handling of it consider first for the meaning what this faith is Secondly that it is a maine ground of true religion Thirdly the enemies of it For the first In this faith are two things first knowledge Secondly application of the thing knowne The knowledge is of Christ and his benefits of which some measure must be had or else there can be no faith Esay 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous seruant iustifie many Ioh. 17.3 This is life eternall c. And this stands with reason that the thing to bee beleeued must first bee knowne for faith without knowledge is fancie The Romane Church hath then erred which teach that there is a faith to saluation whereto knowledge is not required such a one as standeth only in an assent to the faith of the Church The second thing in faith which is the more principall is an application of things knowne namely of Christ and his benefits vnto our selues in particular And herein standeth the very substance of true faith which is not caused by any naturall affection of heart or action of will but by the supernaturall action of the minde enlightened by the spirit of God resoluing vs that Christ and his merits belong vnto vs in particular That this true particular application is required in true faith is proued by these reasons First that which wee lawfully aske by prayer wee must beleeue by a speciall faith but in prayer we lawfully aske the pardon of our sinnes in particular and life euerlasting by Christ therefore we must beleeue the pardon of our sinnes and life euerlasting by Christ. The aduersaries can denie nothing but the first part of this reason which is the very word of God it selfe Mark 11.24 Whatsoeuer ye desire when you pray beleeue yee shall haue it and it shall be done vnto you Where in euery petition of prayer our Sauiour requireth two things first a desire of things promised Secondly a particular faith of things desired standing in assurance that they shall be granted Secondly whatsoeuer the holie Ghost doth infallibly testifie to vs particularly that wee must beleeue particularly but the holy Ghost doth particularly testifie by infallible testimonie to euery beleeuers conscience his owne adoption and pardon of sinne and acceptance to life euerlasting and therefore it must be particularly beleeued Here the Papist excepteth and saith that this testimonie of the spirit of God is not certain but probable onely and a man may be deceiued in it But the Apostle Rom. 8.16 answereth this allegation The spirit of God testifieth with our spirits that we are the children of God and cleereth this testimonie of fearfulnes and weaknes in the former words where he saith it is not the spirit of feare which wee haue receiued but such a spirit as maketh vs cri● Abba father and with a strong voyce yea and for the further assuring vs in this testimonie it is called the s●ale and earnest penny of the spirit in our hearts than which things what are more sure and certain ratifications among men whose testimony though it be but of two men but much more of three seale or earnest if it be sufficient confirmatiō vnto men how much more sure is the testimonie seale and earnest of the spirit of God vnto vs Thirdly that which God offereth and giueth vs particularly we must particularly receiue but God offereth and giueth vs Christ and all his benefits particularly in the Word Sacraments and therefore wee must haue particular faith to receiue him It will here be said we grant all this we must receiue Christ and his benefits in speciall but we doe it by hope as the Papists reach to hope well Ans. It is a work of faith alone Ioh. 1.12 As many as receiued him c. Who were they The next words shew euen they that beleeued on his name Againe in the Sacrament of the Supper Christ is offered as the bread and water of life to euery one in particular and therefore euery beleeuer must haue something in his soule proportionall to a hand and mouth for the receiuing and feeding vpon him which is nothing else but faith specially applying Christ and his benefits see Ioh. 6.35 Fourthly the example of beleeuers in the Scriptures prooue the same truth Abraham beleeued by a particular faith which was imputed to him for righteousnes Rom. 4.23 So also Paul Galat. 2.20 I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God who loued me and hath giuen himselfe for me Now both these are patternes and presidents for vs to follow that as they beleeued and particularly applied Christ to themselues so must we see Rom. 4.14 1. Timoth 1.16 Now frō these two namely knowledge and application followeth Confidence whereby wee trust and relie our selues vpon Christ and his merits thus knowne and applied vnto saluation which because it inseparably followeth faith is often in the Scripture put for faith it selfe I distinguish it from faith because it hath been said though falsely that it is a part of faith which indeed is a fruite and a follower of faith and the Apostle Ephes. 3.12 doth manifestly distinguish them By whom we haue boldnes and entrance with confidence by faith in him The second point in this ground is the weight of it That it is a maine ground of Religion appeareth thus If the inheritance of life saith Paul be not by faith it is not s●re Rom. 4.15 For if we were intitled by workes the promise should not be certaine he then that oppugneth this ground of particular faith ouerthroweth the Gospel as which cannot assure a man of saluation Secondly in the Catechisme of the Primitiue church faith in God is made one
which being taken away there will be no difference left betweene the kingdome of God and the kingdome of the Diuell Which power of the keyes in opening and shutting heauen by the ministerie of the word seeing wee haue established by the lawes of the land we haue the state of a true Church and therefore no man can in good conscience separate from vs as no Church and people of God indeed if it had not the power to open heauen vnto men it were time to separate from it 3. The Aduersaries of this ground are first the ignorant people who popishly thinke that this power is onely giuen to Peter whose office now is to open and shut heauen But this power was giuen to all the Apostles as well as Peter and in them to al Ministers Churches and Congregations yea and it is not exercised in heauen but in earth Secondly all Atheists and Epicures that contemne and skorne the Word Sacraments and all holy things yea euen the power of the Church it selfe Thirdly all Papists and the Romish religion who abolish all binding and loosing in the publike Ministerie and haue brought al to a priuate shrift and absolution which in truth is nothing else but a racke and a gibbet to the conscience for first men must seeke for it at the hands of the Priest secondly they must confesse all their sinnes to the Priest thirdly they must make satisfaction to the iustice of God euen such as the Priest shall enioyne them But all this is directly contrary to the word for first Ministers must offer pardon of sin before it bee sought for Secondly in Christ pardon is offered freely wee neede no satisfaction of our owne Thirdly they impose a heauier yoke than euer Christ or his Apostles did vpon men when they enioyne them to an enumeration of all their sinnes before they can be pardoned the depth of which policie hath been sounded Secondly that Religion hath turned this power Ecclesiasticall to a Ciuill power whereby they take vpon them to excommunicate Kings Emperours not only out of the Church 〈◊〉 also out of their kingdomes and Empires whom they say they may set vp and depose at their pleasure as hauing power to wrest the Scepter out of the hands of whatsoeuer Monarch shall not stoope vnder their Popes authoritie These bee the maine enemies of this ground against whom we must for euer contend The 19. ground of faith is There is hath been and euer shall be a Church one of which is no saluation This is an Article of our faith and a maine ground of religion for if there be not euer a Church of God Christ is sometime no Redeemer no King because there should be no people redeemed nor subiects to the rule of his word and spirit Of which consider two things first what this Church is secondly who be the aduersaries of this ground For the first The Church is a companie of men chosen to saluation called vnited to Christ and admitted into euerlasting fellowship with him See Hebr. 12.23 and 1. Pet. 2.9 Compare these two places and this discription wil easily bee gathered The properties of this Church are these sixe which follow First being the Spouse of Christ she is one onely indeed although distinguished in regard of time as the Church of the old Testament and of the new Secondly of place as of England Scotland c. Thirdly of condition as the Militant and triumphant all these make but one bodie of Christ. Secondly it is inuisible not to bee seene but beleeued for election vocation redemption can onely be beleeued yet some parts of it are visible as in the right vse of the Word and Sacraments appeareth Thirdly to this assemblie and no other belong all the promises of this life and the life to come especially forgiuenes of sins and life euerlasting Fourthly it consisteth onely of liuing members quickened by the spirit of Christ not of any hypocrites or wicked persons Fiftly no member of it can be seuered or cut off frō Christ but abide in him and with him for euer Sixtly it is the ground pillar of truth that is the doctrine of true religion is alwaies safely kept and maintained in it Obiect The Churches in earth are true Churches and yet in these are many hypocrites and Apostata●s who fall from their profession And therefore all are not liuing members Answ. In visible Churches are two sortes of men lust men and hypocrites who although they bee within the Church yet the Church is not so called of them but in regard of them onely who are truly ioyned vnto Christ who are the better part although not the greater Euen as a heape of wheate and chaffe together is called an heape of wheate or a Corne heape of the better part Aduersaries hereof are Papists who frame not the Church by these true properties but by other deceitfull markes as succession multitude antiquitie and consent for when the Church first began there could be none of those at least not the three former and yet was there a true Church Secondly all these agree to Heretikes as among the Iewes what was more challenged than these and yet Christ saith they were blind leaders of the blinde But the true marke is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles truly taught and beleeued A note of Christs sheep is the hearing of his voice Ioh. 10.27 And Ye are in the Father and the Sonne if ye abide in the word which yee haue heard from the beginning 1. Ioh. 2.24 See Ephes. 2.20 The 20. ground is That there shall be a resurrection of the dead in the end of the world This was one of the sixe grounds of Catechisme in the daies of the Apostles Heb. 6.2 Hymeneus and Philetus destroyed the faith of certaine in teaching that the Resurrection was past alreadie Aduersaries hereof are the Familie of loue who hold that there is no Resurrection but only in this life The last ground of doctrine is There shall be a generall iudgement of all flesh It is one of the grounds Heb. 6.2 In which iudgement euery mans workes shall be tried and euery man accordingly shall receiue sentence of life or death eternall The aduersaries hereof are first the Atheist who denieth God himselfe and consequently his iudgement Secondly the drowsie Protestants who in iudgement denie not the last iudgement but yet plainly shew in their liues that they are not perswaded of it for then would they make more conscience of sin and of pleasing God in all thi●●● These are the maine grounds of beleefe vnto which all other may be reduced Now follow the grounds of obedience and practise The first ground of practise is Luke 13.3 Except ye repent ye shall perish In which two things are to bee obserued First the dutie required that is Repentance the necessitie of which appeareth in that without it men perish Secondly the aduersaries Concerning repentance two
things must be taught first what it is secondly what is the vse of it For the first Repentance as Paul describeth it is a conuersion whereby a sinner turneth himselfe vnto God and bringeth foorth fruites worthie amendement of life There be two kindes of conuersion of a sinner first that whereby God turneth man Secondly that whereby a man being turned by God turneth himselfe by grace the former is not repentance properly but the latter Iere. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall bee conuerted Surely after that I conuerted I repented Quest. In what part is this conuersion made Ans. It beginneth in the minde but it is of the whole man the minde laying off all purpose of sinning the conscience calling backe from sinne the will not seeking to fulfill the lusts of it but the whole man endeuouring to please God thorough his whole conuersation further repentance is attended with diuers fruites worthie newnes of life These are the duties of the Morall law performed in faith and truth without hypocrisie which because they proceede from the same beginning are approoued of God as repentance is The second point in this dutie is the vse of repentance and that is not to be ● cause of saluation but only a way wherin men must walke to life euerlasting We are slandered by the Popish church while they exclaime that our doctrine requireth nothing but faith to be saued by and so wee become enemies to all good workes But this is not our doctrine for we hold the workes of repentance to be the way of saluation Indeed when we speak of the instrument wherby we lay hold vpon Christ that we say is faith onely not hope loue or any workes but when wee speake of a way to life then faith is not alone but repentance is required hope the feare of God and e●●●y good worke So women are said to be saued thorough bearing of children 1. Tim. 2.15 namely as a way wherein they practise their faith and obedience Thus Abrahams faith and workes went together Iam. 2.22 Secondly The Aduersaries of this ground are first professors of Religion who content themselues with a fained repentance for most men being pricked and stung with the sense of their sinnes for a while will hold downe their heads like a bulrush breake off their companie come to Church pray heare the word and performe other duties but when the remorse is once past they returne to their former course of licentiousnes and this is thought a sufficient repentance whereas it is but ceremoniall and a fig leafe whereby men seeke to couer themselues for true repentance changeth the minde will affections conscience yea all the actions of life Secondly the Romish Church which for many hundred yeeres hath ouerturned this doctrine as first in generall aboue these 500. yeeres penance and publike confession of persons excommunicated hath bin by them taken and deemed to be repentance it selfe any other hath been scarse taught or knowne in these partes of the world Secondlie repentance is by them turned into a iudiciall proceeding and sentence of the court wherein the Minister must be iudge the sinner must come vnder confession the Minister must passe sentence and the other must make satisfaction accordingly which is an high abuse of this doctrine Thirdly they hold the workes of Contrition Confession and Satisfaction to merit yea and to conferre pardon of sinne and so abolish the merit and satisfaction of Christ. Secondly the world hath bin by that Church deceiued in diuers particulars concerning this doctrine as namely first it hath bin taught that repentance for the originall of it is partly from nature partly from grace partly from God partly from our selues which is a false foundation ioyning light with darkenesse it being wholy from grace Secondly remorse of conscience which the very diuels may haue is made a parte of repentance Saul himselfe nay Iudas wanted not this contrition which is no grace but a preparation vnto it Thirdly they make Auricular Confession whereby euery man is bound to confesse all and euery one of his sins with their circumstances in the Priests eare so necessarilie vnto repentance as without which he cannot haue pardon which is a very gibbet to the conscience Fourthly they turne their Canonicall satisfaction into satisfaction of Gods i●●stice for sinne wherein blasphemously they ouerthrow the most perfect satisfaction of the Sonne of God We are therfore to praise God who hath taken from our neckes this yoke of the Roman Church which neither wee not our fathers were able to beare The second ground of practise is concerning the exercise of repentance Luk. 9.23 If any man wil come after me let him deny himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me In which ground we will consider three thinges first the meaning secondly the moment thirdly the aduersaries against whom wee must contend For the meaning If any man wil follow me that is will bee my Disciple for Disciples vsed to follow their Maisters and teachers hee must learne three duties First Le● him denie himselfe Secondlie take vp his crosse Thirdlie follow mee To the deniall of our selues three things are required First we must for the magnifying of the grace of God ab●se our selues euen to nothing An example whereof wee haue in Paul 1. Cor. 3.7 I I haue planted Apollo hath watred but neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watreth but God that giueth increase If the planter bee nothing much lesse the planted We are not able as of our selues to think a good thought And againe All our sufficiencie is of God Secondly wee must renounce our owne reason and will and bring them vnder subiection to the will of God wee must not striue to haue willes of our owne but let Christs will be sufficient for vs his wisedome must be our reason Thirdly wee must esteeme all things as dung for Christ and preserue within vs a readines to leaue and forsake friends riches honours yea ou● libertie and life it selfe if need be for his sake and a good conscience The second dutie is To take vp our crosse daily vnto which two things are required first euery member of the Church must make reckoning of and looke for daily crosses priuate and particular in his calling and in his profession Secondly when the crosse commeth it must be taken vp cheerfully and borne with reioycing Matth. 5.12 Reioyce and be glad namely euen when men reuile and persecute you Rom. 5.3 Iustified persons are able to reioyce in tribulations according to the exhortation Iam. 1.2 Count it a● exceeding ioy An example of the Saints Hebr. 10.34 who suffred with ioy the spoyling of their goods The third dutie of a Disciple is after the two former to follow Christ. For when Christ saith And follow me it is as though he had said I goe before bearing my crosse let my Disciples follow me step by step in bearing of this crosse This containeth in it the maine
the good of the Church suffereth seducers in the Church both to exercise the faith and patience of his as also to preuent greater dangers which they might in their secure condition fall into Secondly hence wee see that such hypocrites as these be though they be in the Church yet are they not of it they are no members of that bodie as the Romish Church teacheth for they onely creepe into it The second fault that is laid to their charge is that they are intruders thrusting themselues into the office of teaching not being called thereto but creepe into the calling Whence wee note that it is most necessarie that those who are to teach publikely in the church should bee first called thereunto Reasons First besides the auoiding of this sinne of creeping into the Church it is the order that God hath set in the same that he that is to teach should first be sent Rom. 10.14 And No man taketh this honour that is lawfully to himselfe except he be called as Aaron was Secondly the Ministerie is Gods and not mans because the Minister standeth in Gods roome and speaketh in his name which he can neuer doe truly vnlesse God send him and depute him in his stead Thirdly the Minister must maintaine that which he teacheth vnto which he had neede as in all the parts of his calling of Gods speciall protection for the which hee must bee alwaies instant in prayer which hee can neuer be assured of if he be not perswaded of the truth of his calling Fourthly the people cannot heare with comfort and profit if they bee not perswaded that God hath called the teacher to instruct them Rom. 10.14 How can they heare c. This truth extendeth it selfe also to all other offices as well Ciuill as Ecclesiasticall all which are to bee welded and executed by men lawfully called vnto the same All entrance then into any office in Church or Common-wealth by money fauour of men or any vnlawful meanes is intrusion and such are not called of God but are to be ranged among these seducers who creepe into places and come not in by Gods call or approbation The second adiunct whereby the seducers are described is their estate before God being men of old ordained to this condemnation That is they were before all times locked enrolled or billed vnto condemnation euen as though their names had been set downe in a booke By condemnation is meant iudgement as the particle This doth plainly shew which maketh this the plaine meaning They were of old ordained to this iudgement in this life to trie to exercise and molest the Church of God and so consequently to procure vnto themselues at length their own iust condemnation In which words we are taught first that God keepeth his bookes of Registrie and records in which all things are set downe the persons behauiours and eternall estate of all men which bookes are of three sorts first the booke of his Prouidence containing all particulars of things past present and to come in which the Lord saw the members of Dauid when he was yet vnformed Psal. 139.16 In the same booke the number of the haires of our heads and the falling of sparrowes to the ground are recorded The second booke is of the last iudgement in which the persons and sinnes of all men al enrolled Dan. 7 9.10 The thrones were set vp the ancient of daies did sit thousand thousands ministred vnto him and ●enne thousand thousands stood before him the iudgement was set and the bookes opened Reu. 20.12 I saw all great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened The third is the booke of life in which are written the names of those who are to be saued Phil. 4.3 Paul saith of Clement and other his fellowe labourers that their names were written in the booke of life Now by these books we may not grossely conceiue materiall bookes such as men note what they would remember in but the counsell election prouidence pleasure and knowledge of God wherein all these things are so certainly set downe as if any man should write them in a booke Out of which wee note two things first that in regard of God there is no chance neither any euent by it in regard of men indeed who know not the causes of things many chances may be but Gods prouidence and chance are contrarie he hauing all things written before him with their causes Secondly that nothing comes to passe without the decree of God no not the wicked actions of men Which God not onely foreseeth but decreeth for this Iude insinuateth saying they were ordained to this iudgement and euen that which is against the will of God commeth not to passe without his will God willing the being of that which he willeth not to effect and though hee esteeme not euill to be good yet hee accounteth it good that euill should be Further where hee saith ordained of old to this condemnation we learne that as God hath before all worlds decreed the electing of some to saluation so he hath decreed the refusall and reiecting of others to condemnation 1. Pet. 2.8 Many were disobedient vnto the which they were euen ordained 1. Thess. 5.9 God hath not ordained you to wrath but to obtaine saluation through Christ shewing that some are ordained to wrath who are not to obtaine saluation through Christ. Rom. 9.22 God is compared to a potter framing vessels of honour and dishonour vessels of mercie and vessels of wrath In the same place I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau that is I haue decreed so to doe For the whole chapter speaketh of Gods counsel vnchangeable decree Ob. If this be so will some say then God dealeth iniustly that absolutely ordaineth some men to condemnation and perdition Ans. We must know that wee are creatures and may not presume to prescribe a law of iustice to the Creator whose will is iustice it selfe whatsoeuer we may conceiue and maketh the things willed good because it is willed and not willed because it is good Secondly though God refuse and reiect men yet hee doth it in most wise order and iust proceeding in these two degrees first hee vouchsafeth to some men the riches of his grace tending to life euerlasting which speciall abundant grace hee denieth to some other passing by them who being left of him vnto themselues fall into sinne Secondly for sin God decreeth iudgement and condemnation so as he doth not simply and absolutely ordaine his creature to hell but in regard of sinne not that sinne is a cause of the decree moouing him vnto it but that hee decreeth not condemnation without respect of sinne and relation vnto it which speech wee neede not feare to speake because the holie Ghost so speaketh Vse First if some men be passed by of God we must humble our selues vnder his mightie hand and with feare and trembling worke our saluation Roman 11.20
loue therefore not obedience Ans. There bee two kindes of debt first a ciuill debt occasioned by contract and bargaining between man and man the second is a debt to which we are bound by Gods law and couenant the place is meant of the former so far as it lies in our power but wee are bound still to obedience and subiection by the latter Ob. Matth. 17.26 The Kings sonnes are free from tribute and therefore from subiection Ans. Christ speaketh that of himselfe who by his birth was heire to the Crowne and kingdome of the Iews and therefore by right was to pay none neither did but for auoiding of offence what is this to free other men from obedience to the Magistrate Obiect 1. Cor. 7. Ye are bought with a price be ye not the seruants of men Ans. The meaning is that seruants should not subiect themselues to men as to absolute Lords for wee must doe seruice one to another for Gods sake and not onely for God but in God Ob. Beleeuers are gouerned by the spirit of God and so are able to gouerne themselues euery way and need not any gouernment of man Ans. One thing it is what wee doe another what wee ought to doe we ought indeede so to liue as not to need gouernours but we doe not yea and if beleeuers could yet were the reason naught for the Church containes as well bad as good hypocrites as well as sincere Christians and therefore the best Churches neede Magistracie for the punishment of the euill doers and the praise of them that doe well Yea the Church lying open to the malice of Satan and the wicked standeth euer in neede of Magistracie to protect it by force and warre or otherwise The third generall point is vpon what ground doth the Apostle here blame and condemne these seducers for despising ciuill gouernment Ans. The ground is because it is a solemne ordinance of God called therefore by Peter a creation or creature which bindeth euery soule vnto subiection to the higher power Rom. 13.1 and that for conscience sake which respecteth not so much the rule it selfe as Gods commandement subiecting not only ciuill but all ecclesiasticall persons thereunto Christ himselfe taking vpon him mans nature was subiect vnto authoritie submitting himselfe vnto Caiphas and Pilate yea to apprehension arraignment condemnation and execution Matth. 26. Paul himselfe whose Apostolicall authoritie and spiritual weapons were able to bring downe euerie opposition yet acknowledged that he must be iudged by Caesar Act. 25.11 Ob. Ierem. 1.10 I set thee ouer nations and kingdoms to plant and pluck vp the Prophets therefore and their successors are not to be subiect vnto ciuill Magistracie An. The Prophet is set ouer nations kingdomes not to gouerne by the ciuil sword but the sword of the Spirit in his mouth and he is to plant and plucke vp kingdomes no otherwise than by declaring that God would plant or pluck them vp Ob. Esay 60.10 Kings shall come and serue the Church in the new Testament and therefore the Church is not to be subiect vnto Princes but they vnto it Ans. In the Church are two things first the persons of men secondly the things of God Now Kings are subiect to the Church but how not to the persons of beleeuers but to the things of God namely the Word Sacraments faith c. Obiect Kings and Magistrates are as sheepe Ministers are Pastors and shepheards therefore they are vnder the Ministers as the flocks vnder the shepheards Ans. In the Prophets Pastors and Ministers consider two things first their persons secondly their ministerie In regard of their persons all of them are subiect to their owne Princes and that for conscience sake but in regard of their Ministerie Princes and Magistrates are to bee subiect thereunto as wherein the Word is taught and Sacraments administred euen as a meane man being a Sergeant may arrest a Baron Earle or Duke who may not resist him because hee commeth with the Princes authoritie vnto which he must yeeld himselfe though not vnto the person of the Sergeant so must Magistrates to the Ministers comming not in their owne but in the name of God For this also must be marked that Magistrates are not simply subiects to the Ministerie but so farre as the word is rightly taught and Sacraments du●ie administred for else they haue power either to reforme or depose such Ministers as shall faile in their administration for euen in this regard themselues are shepheards As Isai. 44.1 Cyrus is called a shepheard though otherwise he be a sheepe so far as he is truly taught and directed by the Minister So much of the ground Vse By this doctrine we may discouer the wickednes and horrible rebellion of sundrie persons in this age First of the Bishop of Rome that most ancient Rebell who hath for many hundred yeeres taken vpon him an vsurped supremacie ouer all ciuill gouernment in the earth which is the highest rebellion which euer the world hath heard of seeing there is not a soule which must not bee subiect to the higher power Ob. Yea but that place is meant of those that are to be subiect but the Popes themselues are exempted Ans. But besides that the text commandeth euery soule to bee subiect it is made a note of Antichrist to exalt himselfe aboue God and all that is called God that is all Magistrates Ob. But they alleage the example of Vzziah the King 2. Chron. 26.20 who taking vpon him presumptuously the office of the Priest Azariah the Priest resisted him cast him out of the temple and deposed him from his kingdome Ans. Azariah resisted the King not by force or violence but by word onely and admonition whereby hee caused him to depart the Temple neither did he depose him from his gouernment but being by God striken suddenly with a leprosie he was by the law shut out from the companie and societie of men and so disabled to gouerne although the right of it still belonged vnto him Ob. They alleage likewise the example of Iehoiadah the high Priest who deposed Queene Athaliah from her kingdome and set vp yong Ioash to be King 2. Chron. 23. therefore the Pope hath authoritie to depose Kings and Emperours Answ. Iehoiadah the high Priest was next to the King in blood 2. Chro. 22.11 and was one of the states of the land who deposed her not alone but by the common consent of all the states and Peeres of the land as chap. 23.1.2 He indeede is chiefly named because he was the chiefe of them in blood neither did he set vp Ioas but helped to maintaine his ●ight which was vsurped by Attaliah in a word he protected the right heire but could not himselfe nor did not dispose the kingdome vnto him And of this kinde are all their allegations which yeeld no patronage at all to that vsurped
him such princely gifts as it is said God gaue him another heart his heart was changed in regard of other gifts than formerly he had so when Dauid was annoynted King and when Samuel had powred the horne of oyle vpon his head it is said 1. Sam. 16.13 that the spirit of the Lord came vpon him which furnished him with gifts and graces both of regeneration and regiment also In like manner the Lord tooke of the spirit of Moses and put it on the seuenty Elders Numb 11.17 whereby they were furnished with gifts of gouernment and enabled to beare rule and iudge iustly as Moses was such titles therefore as these are not ascribed vnto them without iust cause Yea how can they be fitlier called than Glories seeing there is no greater glorie in earth than to supplie Gods roome and to bee enabled with gifts for the sufficient discharge of it Hence learne that it is lawfull for Princes to beare an outward pompe in diet buildings costly apparell and troopes of men for they are dignities and their dignitie being outward in regard of men they may maintaine it by outward pompe to procure more reuerence and awe of men thereunto So Agrippa and Bernice came with great pompe and entred into the common hall which pompe is not there discommended but rather approued as by the circumstances of the text appeareth Secondly Magistrates ought especially to honour God because he especially honoureth them this must they doe by discountenancing and punishing vice and by setting vp and maintaining true religion and vertue Thirdly being in Gods place they are to execute iustice without corruption or partialitie in the face and feare of God 2. Chro. 9.7 Seeing the iudgement is the Lords let the feare of God bee vpon you take heede and doe it Deut. 1.17 Ye shall haue no respect of persons in iudgement but shall heare the small as well as the great ye shall not feare the face of man for the iudgement is Gods and herein stands a great part of their glorie Fourthly we are in all lawfull things to yeeld free subiection and obedience vnto our Magistrates and gouernours euen as vnto God himselfe whose roome they are in which duty the child oweth also to his father the seruant to his Master because they also are set ouer them in Gods stead Fifthly hence also is it lawfull for vs to giue to Princes the titles of Maiestie and Grace because it hath pleased the holy Ghost to ascribe them vnto them and by their titles to commend their persons and places vnto vs yea and to furnish them with such gifts of Magistracie as that they become not onely naked titles but iust significations of the true honour which God hath graced them withall Vers. 9. Yet Michael the Archangell when he stroue against the Diuell and disputed about the bodie of Moses durst not blame him with cursed speaking but said The Lord rebuke thee IN this verse is laid downe another reason amplifying their sin of these seducers by a comparison from the greater to the lesse and thus it standeth Michael the Archangell durst not so much as raile on the Diuell himselfe much lesse may these vpon Magistrates who are Gods and consequently their sinne is hainous who dare open their mouthes to reuile Princes and Magistrates Here one question is mooued namely whence the Apostle had this historie of the disputation betweene Michael and the Diuell concerning the bodie of Moses seeing it is not to bee found in the Scriptures I answere the substance of it is in the Scripture although though not the circumstances For in Deut. 34.6 is said that the Lord buried Moses but no man knoweth of his sepulchre till this day There is the ground of the historie the other particular concerning the contention of the Archangell and the Diuell wi●h this manner of rebuking is not found in the old Testament Quest. Where then had he this Ans. Either from some booke then extant among the Iewes which is not now to bee found or else from some tradition which passed amōg the Iewes from hand to hand as many things did as that 2. Timot. 3.8 where the Apostle saith that Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses the historie of which is not found in the old Testament Hence the Papists conclude that the word written is not sufficient and perfect in and of it selfe vnlesse the vnwritten word be added vnto it that is that word which is giuen by tradition both which say they make a perfect word but neither is perfect or sufficient alone grounding their opinion hence that Iude alleageth an example out of a tradition which is not found in Scripture But that is an hereticall doctrine and vntrue seeing the perfection of a thing is not to bee measured by euery thing that is wanting vnto it but by the perfect end of it for perfection is taken from the end Whence I reason thus If the written word be perfect and sufficient to the end to which it is ordained it is euery way perfect But it is perfect and sufficient to that end namely to the glorie of God in working out perfectly the faith saluation of man and is in nothing wanting for the atchieuing of this end but sufficiently teacheth all things to be beleeued and done and giueth perfect direction concerning faith and manners Ioh. 20.31 These things are written that they might beleeue and beleeuing might haue life thorough his name Rom. 15.4 Whatsoeuer things are written are written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope and therefore the word written is euery way most sufficient and absolutely perfect and neede no addition or tradition to helpe forward this end Ob. This place is a tradition and not written and many other true traditions were neuer written besides that the Church may make traditions Ans. We grant many true traditions are not in Scripture but such they are as a man may be ignorant of and not preiudice his saluation Againe the Church hath a power and hath had priuiledge to make constitutions and lawes which were to be knowne and receiued but these are such as only concerne the orderly gouernment of the Church and are not necessarie to saluation Ob. But some traditions are necessarie to saluation which are not contained in the written word and they alleage two first in Rom. 12.6 that Gods word must be tried by the rule of faith and so also by the same rule expounded This rule of faith is nothing else by their exposition but a general consent in the hearts of all true Catholikes together with the Pope assenting with them which of necessitie wee must beleeue and yet say they it is not in the Scripture and therefore some things must of necessitie bee beleeued which are not in the Scripture Ans. The rule of faith is not such a crooked rule as they would thrust vpon the world by their wicked exposition but the right rule of faith
necessarily obserued first there must be iust cause and that which is so alienated must bee employed to some good vse in the Church or Commonwealth and this is foure waies first in case of present necessitie for tenths haue bin in some cases of necessity lawfully paied in way of tribute and otherwise neither Church nor Common-wealth could haue been preserued Secondly in way of exchange when the alienation of some lands shall be rather more conuenient both to the Church it selfe and to whom such lands are alienated Thirdly when as some great profit shal ensue vnto the Church and common-wealth vpon which ground King Henry the 8. of famous memorie most iustly alienated most of the Church lands called Abbey lands that Monks Friers Abbots and such like idle Drones should neuer haue more footing in this our land Fourthly in way of reward for Kings and Princes that are the Patrons protectors of the Church may alienate Church lands where there are excesse vnto such as haue bin faithfull in the defence of Church or Common-wealth and that in way of requitall and reward of their seruice The second condition is that there must bee reserued a sufficient reliefe for the poore and maintenance for an able Ministerie Some there are which teach otherwise and they reason thus Tenths say they standing by Gods law are not to bee alienated but the goods and lands of the Church stand chiefly in tenths and therefore admit no alienation Ans. In England tenths stād not by Gods laws but by the positiue lawes of the land so as if it please the King he may appoint eights or more or lesse as well as they which if it were not so no Minister were to meddle with the tenths of his Parish for by Gods law tenths were brought to the storehouse of the ouerseers and distributed by them to the Leuites according as euery man had neede but the Leuites themselues neuer medled with thē Againe if tenths stood now by the law of God then the poore should haue euery third yeere all the tenths of the earth for so it was among the Iewes while they stood in force by Gods law Secondly they obiect that in the Prouerbs chap. 20.25 It is a snare to deuoure tenths Ans. The place is to be vnderstood of tenths thē standing in force by Gods law not of ours which stand by mans Thirdly they alleage that some decrees were made in the Primitiue Church that the alienation of Church lands should become sacriledge Ans. But those decrees concerned priuate persons who might not not may not on their owne heads impropriate the Church goods as also they debarred the taking away of necessaries from the Church for then the Church was farre from that superfluitie which sithence it hath obtained so that for a lay man to hold lands impropriate the former conditions obserued is no sacriledge Now if the question be concerning the impropriations of Colledges whether they lawfully hold them or no then I answere secondly that I take it they hold them by a more speciall right for they being giuen at the first vnto the Church they are not being impropriate to Colledges generally and wholie alienated from the Church but remaine in this speciall vse of the Church for the maintaining of the Seminaries of it without which the Church must needs decay and this seemeth a sufficient cause of reseruing vnto them this maintenance so as ca●e be had of the people and poore for their reliefe instruction Secondly whereas the Primitiue church first feasted and then receiued the Lords Supper wee note first the lawfulnes of feasts so as the poore be regarded superfluitie and riot auoided and the right end intended which is the praise and glorie of God expressed in thankfulnes for the abundance of his good blessings So after the sacrifices offrings Aaron and the Elders of Israel came to feast with Iethro before God Exod. 18.12 So Ezra 8. Goe your waies eate the fa● and drinke the sweete and send part to them for whom none is prepared for this is the day of the Lord. Secondly the Papists are deceiued who teach it necessarie to come to the Sacrament of the Supper fasting for these feasted before it Thirdly in the Primitiue Church and in the Apostles daies there was no priuate Masse in which one Priest should eate vp all alone but there were feastings which cannot bee performed by one man alone but the whole congregation Fourthly hence wee may note the end of the Lords Supper to be the increase of our fellowship communion with Christian men as well as our vnion with God and that wee are to come together in loue and Christian vnitie for the testifying of which charitable affection the ancient beleeuers in the Apostles daies had these feasts of loue before they came to the Lords table Further in that these seducers are called spots in these feasts I note first that open offenders should be hindred and repelled from the Sacraments being as spots in the face which because they are blemishes must bee washed away so ought these by the censure of excommunication to be vntill their repentance cut off from the face of the congregation Secondly that euery one that professeth the faith is not a true member of the Catholike Church as the Papists erroneously hold that let a man be what he will if he professe the faith it is sufficient to make him a member of the Catholique Church Whereas open offenders are to be accounted as spottes which no man will say are true parts of the bodie but blemishes to bee pared away that their bodie may be the more perfect and entire Feeding themselues without feare In feasting we are to preserue feare within our hearts which is two-fold first of God secondly of man The former is seene Exod. 18.12 The men of Israel feasted before the Lord. Iobes feare was lest his sonnes should cast this feare of God out of their hearts in their feasting and so offend God The latter is prescribed Prou. 23.1 ● When thou fittest to meate before a Ruler put the knife to thy throte that is bridle thine appetite haue respect not to passe the limits of sobrietie tempetance and moderation And as wee are to eate and drinke so also to season all other our actions with the feare of God and men which one grace would cut off many gracelesse practises euery where raigning amongst men But a speciall thing here aimed at is that we should neuer come to eate the Lords Supper without feare and reuerence which because the Corinths wanted Paul complaineth that one came hungrie another drunke and so prophaned that holy institution 1. Cor. 11.21 Ob. But in that place it seemeth Paul condemneth these Loue-feasts which Iude here dispraiseth not where hee saith euery man eateth his supper before vers 21.22 Ans. These Loue-feasts were indifferent and might bee vsed or not Paul condemneth the great abuse of them in Corinth because some were made by them drunke
and vnfit for the Lords Supper and the rich deceiued the poore but Iude commendeth them because they were in other Churches rightly and religiously vsed Clowdes they are without water carried about of windes These words containe the eighth and ninth sinnes of these wicked men which the better to know what they are let vs a little consider the meaning of them Clowdes they are without water I● pleaseth the Spirit of God in many places of the old Testament to compare Prophets and Teachers vnto clowdes and their doctrine vnto the dropping and distilling of the raine and sweet showers falling from these clowds So the Prophet Ezechiel is commaunded to set his face towards the way of Teman and drop his word toward the South and his prophecie towards the forrest Deut. 32.2 My doctrine shall drop as the raine and my speech shal distill as the dew as the shower vpon the herbes and as the great raine vpon the grasse Mich. 2.7 and 11. The word translated prophecie signifieth properly to drop or distill The reason of which comparison is rendred Isai. 55.10.11 Because as the raine falleth vpon the earth and returneth not in vaine but moistneth it and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may giue seed to the sower and bread to him that eateth so the word in the mouth of the Ministers returneth not voide but accomplisheth the Lords will and prospereth in the thing whereto it is sent in becomming the sauour of life to the saluation of some and of death vnto the death of them that perish The words then standing vpon this similitude beare this sense Though the propertie and vse of clowdes is to carrie water and raine for the vse of the earth yet some clowdes are without water euen so though all Teachers ought to bee filled and fitted with store of wholsome doctrine to powre it out for the vse of the Church yet these seducers are vtterly destitute thereof And againe as those clowdes without water are light and fitter for nothing than to be carried about with euery winde so these are altogether variable and vnconstant carried about with euery blast of strange doctrine The former of these similitudes condemneth their sinne of barrennes and vnfruitfulnesse the latter their ninth sinne of inconstancie and variablenesse Concerning the former seeing that the Apostle taketh it for granted that the clowdes are naturally ordained to containe water it may be demanded how it can be cōceiued that the clowds aboue being heauie with water should not fall to the earth seeing euery heauie thing naturally descendeth and tendeth downward Ans. The clowdes are heauie indeed for euen the windes themselues being by many degrees lighter than they haue their weight Iob. 28.25 No man therefore by wit or reason can resolue this doubt but onely from the word of God which teacheth that it is by vertue of Gods commandement giuen in the creation that the clowdes fall not Gen. 1.6 Let the firmament separate the waters from the waters by force of which commanding word the water hangeth in the clowdes and the clowds in the ayre and need no other supporters Iob setting out the Maiestie and greatnes of God in his works here beginneth That he hangeth the earth vpon nothing he bindeth the waters in the clowdes and the clowd is not broken vnder them Philosophie is too defectiue to yeeld the true reason of this great worke of God which commonly attributeth too much to nature and too little to the God of nature whose prouidence and power is herein to be acknowledged in that by his word he ordereth all his creatures vnto which he speaketh the word and they obey Secondly hence wee learne to conceiue the right meaning of that place Gen. 1.7 Let the firmament separate the waters that be beneath from the waters that be aboue By the firmament is meant the ayre or the distan●● betweene the earth and the starrie skie by the waters vnder this firmament are meant the seas and floods and the waters aboue are the watrie clowdes which are diuided by the firmament or ayre in which wee breathe called the firmament of heauē for it is the lowest of the three heauens which the Scripture maketh mention of ●eaching to the starres the second being the sta●●ie heauen the third being the heauen of heauens the seate of God where hee reuealeth his glorie to his Saints and Angels Those then are deceiued who out of this place dreame of a wat●ie heauen aboue the starres Now further in that these seducers are called Clowds without water because they are destitute of wholesome doctrine wee learne first that Ministers ought to bee such as are able to teach wholesome and sound doctrine 1. Tim. 3.2 Malach. 2.7 The Priests lips should preserue knowledge otherwise they are as clowdes without water keeping the field of God barren fruitlesse which abilitie supposeth yea and imposeth the performance of diligence herein or else whether they haue knowledge or not they come vnder the rank of them whom Esay 56.10 calleth dumbe dogs which cannot or doe not barke In former ages I grant indeede there were readers appointed in the Church who could not otherwise teach but yet none were called for Teachers into the Church but such as had this abilitie of watring Gods church by doctrine more or lesse vntill heresie and schisme came in Secondly Ministers ought so to teach as they drop and instill the graces of faith repentance and obedience into the hearts of the hearers euen as the clowds drop water vpon the drie earth which sinketh into the same This was Pauls desire to see the Romanes that he might bestow some spirituall grace vpon them Rom. 1.11 This is the right handling and diuiding of the word when men shew not words but power 1. Cor 4.14 That Teacher sheweth learning that sheweth men Christ and can bee a meanes to distill Gods graces into their soules let this be the scope of those who are set apart vnto this holy Ministrie else shall they be as vnprofitable as clowdes which containe no water in them at all Thirdly if the Ministers must be as clowdes hauing water in them then must the people be as drie ground not in regard of barrennes but of thirst and desire after these drops dewes of grace distilling from the Ministerie Psal. 143.6 My soule desireth after thee euen as the thirstie land vnto which disposition wee are to preserue two things within vs first look as in drie land parcht with the heate of the Sunne there is a great want of moysture so in our soules must bee retained a sense of the want of the graces of God with an heartie sorrow for our want Our hearts must bee perswaded that in vs and of our selues there is no good thing that God can take delight in yea and the griefe conceiued must not bee small but wee must feele our selues euen dried and parched with the heate of his wrath due vnto our sinnes vntill
ripe age in Christ which is not till death Now for the further cleering of this point two questions are to be resolued 1. Quest. Seeing it is a sinne for a man to seuer himselfe from the Church of God where and what Church is that to which a man may for euer ioyne himselfe with a good conscience Ans. That people which heare beleeue and obey the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles are the true people and Church of God vnto which a man may safely ioyne himselfe Diuers notes there be but the infallible notes of the true Church are knowledge faith and obedience vnto that doctrine these were the notes of the Primitiue Church next after Christ Act. 2.42 First they continued in the Apostles doctrine Secondly in fellowship wherein the duties of loue are comprehended Thirdly in breaking of bread that is the administration of Sacraments for the celebration of the Supper is put for both Fourthly in prayer that is inuocation of God with thankesgiuing In that Commission of the Apostles giuen for the gathering together of the Church of God they are enioyned first to teach all Nations that is to make them Disciples namely by the doctrine Propheticall and Apostolicall Secondly to baptise them that is to bring and admit them into the house of God Thirdly to teach them to performe all things which they were commanded In which Commission two of these notes are expressed Ephes. 2.19 The Church is founded vpon the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Ioh. 8.31 If ye abide in my word ye are truly my Disciples Ioh. 10.27 My sheepe heare my voyce and followe mee Psal. 147.19 He sheweth his lawes to Iacob and his statutes to Israel he dealeth not so with euery nation Hence we note that wee may not ioyne our selues with the Iewes or Turkes who renounce the words of the Prophets and Apostles neither yet with the Papists for though in word and speech they holde this word yet in deede and in the sense they corrupt it euen in the foundation The second question But what if there be errors in the Church or things amisse may wee not then separate our selues Ans. Things that may be amisse in the Church must be distinguished for some faults concerne the matter of religion some the manner the former respecteth doctrine principally the latter the manners of men First for things amisse in the manners of men wee may not separate but with Lot haue our righteous hearts vexed and grieued with the wicked conuersation of those among whom wee liue The Scribes and Pharisies sitting in Moses chaire teaching Moses his doctrine must bee heard howsoeuer the corruptions of their manners be such as they may not bee imitated Matth. 23.1 Yet here obserue further that although we may not separate our selues from such corrupt persons in the publike assemblies yet in priuate conuersation wee may abstaine from them 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is called a brother be a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such a one eat● not that is eate not priuately Secondly if the Church erre in matter of religion then must we consider whether the error be in a more weightie and substantiall point or in matter of lesse importance If it be in smaller points the foundation being kept wee may not separate our selues 1. Cor. 3.15 If any mans worke burne he shall lose but himselfe shall be safe yet as if it were by fire Now if the error of the Church bee in substance of doctrine or in the foundation then we must consider whether it erre of humane frailtie or of obstinacie if of frailtie we may not separate The Church of Galatia was through frailtie quickly turned to another Gospell and erred in the foundation holding iustification by workes yet Paul writeth vnto it as vnto a Church of God So likewise the Church of Corinth erred grieuously and ouerthrew the Article of the Resurrection and yet Paul behaued himselfe accordingly vnto it But if the Church erre in the substance of religion obstinately then with good conscience separation may be made 1. Tim. 4.5 If any man teach otherwise and consent not to the wholesome doctrine from such separate thy selfe An example hereof we haue in Act. 19.9 when Paul had preached in the Synagogue of the Iewes and could not preuaile with them but they began to blaspheme and speake euill of the waies of God then he withdrew himselfe and separated from them 1. Chro. 11.14.16 when Ieroboam had set vp the two Calues to be worshipped many of the best disposed Iewes departed from him and came to Rehoboam and ioyned themselues with Iudah and Ierusalem in the true worship of the God of their Fathers Whence wee see that no man may with good conscience separate himselfe from the Church of England seeing it teacheth beleeueth and obeyeth the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Further consider the manner of the separation of these wicked men there be three sorts of separation First by apostasie when a man falleth wholy from his religion from the Church and from common grace Heb. 6.4 It is impossible that they which were once enlightened if they fall away c. Secondly by heresie when men erre in the substance of doctrine and religion and that of obstinacie Thirdly by Schisme and that is when men hold the same faith and foundation and yet disagree and separate in regard of order and ceremonie These seducers separated themselues by heresies their heresies were these first that men being in Christ might liue as they list and so they were Libertines Secondly that among the people of God there ought to be no ciuil Magistracie and so they became also Anabaptists Here obserue that euen in the Apostles time and daies were many heretikes among whom was Hymeneus and Philetus 2. Tim. 2.17 and many wolues entred euen in their daies which spared not the flocke Which may serue to stablish our mindes against the Papists who obiect that our religion is the foundation of al heresies as at the rising of which many heresies were reuiued in so much as they call all our religion heresie and the professors of it heretikes by which reason they might as strongly prooue that the doctrine of the Apostles themselues was heresie and that the Primitiue Church in the Apostles time was hereticall and no Church for in the first hundred yeeres after Christ the Church swarmed with heresies sowen by Sathans instruments to the choaking of that holy doctrine which was sowne by the Apostles and their successors in the fielde of the Church nay rather we conclude our religion to be Apostolicall because the same heresies which arose vp in the Apostles times against their doctrine now reuiued againe vpon the reuiuing of our religion The second sinne of these seducers in this verse is that they are fleshly or natural men For so it is explained in the last words not hauing the spirit wherin consider
not hauing the spirit of God then euery one hath power to receiue the spirit of God Ans. This is no good reason but is all one as if because a bankrout is blamed for not discharging his debts to his creditors another man should conclude that surely he is therefore able to pay them But these wicked men were blamed here first because they professed Christ but yet had not his spirit secondly because that in Adam they were the causes that they were borne without the spirit of God and so made themselues vnfit to receiue him Secondly if naturall men bee iustly condemned much more those that are worse than they as Atheists prophane persons those which contemne the assemblies and neglect the meanes of their saluation and yet looke for saluation as wel as others The Gentiles who were without the law doe the things of the law by nature Rom. 2.24 and yet many that professe the name of Christ and liue vnder the Gospell goe not so farre as those naturall men in doing the things of the law so as euen those Heathens and naturall men shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne many a professor of Christ of whom euen many come short of the Diuell himselfe who beleeueth and trembleth and yet not a few professors neither know what the Diuell beleeues neither through h●rdnes of heart can tremble at the iudgements of God as he can doe Thirdly those come farre short that think themselues in state good enough because they liue ciuilly and deale iustly and neighbourly as they say for the naturall man can doe this and yet shall be condemned no plea shall stand at the great day of the Lord but that which assureth of the pardon of sinne sealed vp with the blood of Christ. Let a mans outward and ciuill righteousnes be neuer so great yea if it could be equall to the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which for outward appearance was without all exception yet if hee bring not a righteousnes exceeding that he can neuer be saued Fourthly in that the naturall man is blamed for being a naturall man this ouerthroweth all merits of congruitie which the Papists boast of because a mans person not being accepted before God all his works are sinnes the worke neuer pleaseth God till the worker first please him Fifthly euery professor of Christ must strip the naturall man and become a spirituall person that is such as the spirit of God dwelleth in for first as the Father worketh our saluation by giuing Christ and his merits so must the holie Ghost by applying the same vnto vs else can we looke for no saluation Secondly as the soule giueth life to the bodie which else were dead so the spirit of God is the soule of our soules and quickneth them with new life being dead in sinne Thirdly wee can neuer know that wee are in Christ or belong vnto him but by the presence of the spirit in our hearts 1. Ioh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit that he hath giuen vs. Quest. But how shall a man know whether hee hath the spirit or no Ans. Let him examine himselfe first whether he inwardly loue and feare God in his word of promise and threatning secondly whether he subiect his heart and life vnto him thirdly whether his heart be continually lift vp in inuocation and thanksgiuing All these are the workes of the spirit of God and they which 〈◊〉 of the spirit thus sauour and ●ffect the things of the spirit Rom. 8. Quest. But I feare I haue not the spirit how shall I obtaine it Ans. By vsing the meanes of reading the Word meditation and prayer especially Luk. 11.13 Your heauenly father giueth the holy Ghost to th●● that desire him Psal. 143.5.6 I meditate in all thy workes and stretch foorth my hands vnto thee Vers. 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holie faith praying in the holy Ghost IN this verse vnto the end of the 23. are set downe some meanes whereby all beleeuers may be fitted to the maintenance of the faith and true religion vnto the which the Apostle hath in the former part of the Epistle perswaded These meanes are contained in fiue rules here prescribed first concerning Faith secondly Loue thirdly Hope fourthly Meekenes fifthly Christian seueritie the first of which is contained in this twentith verse which is that they should build themselues vpon their faith which is not barely propounded but inforced and vrged first by a motiue in this word most holy faith secondly by the meanes of it which is prayer praying in the holy Ghost In the rule note two things first that faith is a foundation secondly that the dutie of beleeuers is to build vp themselues vpon this foundation Concerning the former first is may be demanded what is here meant by faith Ans. Here by faith is not so much meant the gift of faith as the matter of it namely the doctrine of faith and religion comprised in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in which sense it is said that the Ephesians were built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is vpon their doctrine Ephes. 2. The same was the rocke confessed by Peter vpon which Christ promised to build his Church and yet in the second place we must not exclude the gift it selfe for although the doctrine be a foundation in it selfe yet it is not so to vs vnlesse we beleeue it and applie it to our selues by this gift If any man aske what doctrine is this I answer the summe of it may be reduced to three heads the first whereof concerneth mans miserie by his sinne originall and actuall as also the dangerous fruits thereof The second the redemption of man from this miserie and his freedome by Christ. The third the thankefulnes which man oweth for this deliuerance and ought to testifie and expresse in newnes of life Hence learne first what is the infallible marke of the true Church whereby it may be discerned from the false and Apostaticall Church and that is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for this being the very foundation of the Church where it is there the Church must needes bee and this note of it selfe is sufficient to point out the true Church wheresoeuer Secondly seeing faith is the foundation of the Church and not the Church the foundation of faith beware hence of a damnable doctrine of the Popish Church which teacheth that there can be no certainty of the points of religion no nor of the Scriptures themselues but onely by the iudgement of the present Church of Rome and that Church must giue what sense soeuer she pleaseth to the Scriptures else hath it none wherein they play the part of preposterous builders laying the foundation in the top of the building Thirdly it may be demaunded how any doctrine becommeth a foundation vnto the saluation of men Answ. Properly to speake God and Christ is our foundation and
rock Psal. 18.1 but because God reueileth himselfe and the meanes of our saluation in the word it becommeth hence a foundation as also secondly because Christ who is the proper foundation is the summe of the doctrine therein contained Vse First let no creature draw vs from Christ for then wee are drawne from our foundation Secondly the affections of our heart towards Christ must exceed all affections of any thing besides our loue feare hope confidence and trust must settle themselues vpon him as vpon a foundation The second thing in this first rule is the dutie of euery beleeuer which is to build himselfe vpon his faith which that a man may doe sixe things are required first hee must haue in his heart a deepe sense and feeling of his miserie in such sort as not finding in himselfe whereon to be founded hee may feele himselfe to be founded vpon God and Christ euen as in laying strong and sure foundations men digge deepe and if they finde sure ground proceede on in their purpose So this wise builder laieth his foundation on a rocke Luk. 6.48 Secondly hee must haue knowledge of this doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for vnlesse it bee knowne it can bee no foundation Thirdly a holie memorie to lay vp the word of God in their heart as in a storehouse for he that remembreth not the doctrine of saluation can neuer build vpon it Fourthly faith whereby not only we beleeue the truth of it but applie it vnto our selues this knitteth vs vnto the foundation without which the word shall bee no more profitable vnto vs than the Iewes who mingled it not with faith Heb. 4.2 for this only applieth it vnto our hearts Iam. 1.21 Fifthly the doctrine beleeued and applied must take a deepe rooting in the heart it must descend into the affections and there be imbraced vntill it hath wrought out an experience of the sweet comfort of it Sixthly there must be an vnfained obedience vnto the whole word of God Not euery one that saith Lord Lord but he that doth the will of my Father Matth. 7.21 This man buildeth wisely vpon the rocke Quest. But what is that which must be done of vs Ans. Whatsoeuer is to bee done of vs may be reduced to three heads first faith whereby the beleeuer truly resteth himselfe vpon God cleaueth vnto Christ for the pardon of sinne and renounceth all other meanes in heauen and earth Secondly repentance whereby he truly turneth from all sinne vnto God Thirdly new obedience whereby hee endeuoureth to obey God in all his Commandements Vse First here is reprooued the carnall Protestant who holdeth his religion but for forme and fashion or for feare of lawes he is altogether without foundation and in a pitifull condition seeing when the great day of the Lord shall approach whosoeuer shall want Christ their foundation shall fall before him Secondly we must neuer suffer our selues to be drawne from our faith and religion nor lose our hold of the doctrine of godlines though wee should suffer losse of lands liuings liberties yea or life it selfe if this bee once wrested from vs wee are fillen 〈◊〉 the foundation and haue lost 〈◊〉 hold of happines and life i● selfe Thirdly wee may not take any ●est till we be builded vpon this foundation it being the foundation and ground-worke of all our safetie and securitie for Christian men are as houses built vpon the sea shore who must looke for the wa●●s and billowes of afflictions one in the necke of another euen as one surge in the sea ouertaketh another how should they hold out when this raine falleth these floods come these windes blow and beate vpon their house vnlesse they be founded vpon this rocke how else should not their fall be great but this sure foundation establisheth the heart against all calamities of this present life yea in the houre of death also which otherwise is the downfall to hell yea and in the day of iudgement the sentence shall passe on their sides who are laid on this foundation they shall be found worthie to stand before the Lambe when the diuell and his angels with all sinners and sinne it selfe shall be cast into the bottomlesse lake Now as euery particular Christian man is to be a practiser of this dutie in his owne person so also may it bee fitly applied to the state of the whole land which by Gods blessing hath had for many yeeres this foundation laid within it through the which it hath been able to withstand yea and subdue many rebellions treasons forces and powers intended against it and besides hath had securitie and safetie vnder Gods protection with much peace and prosperitie Would we now know the way to haue this peace and securitie continued to vs and ours the way is to continue and abide vpon this foundation not looking backe to Poperie or superstition but taking out the wholsome counsell of good King Iehoshaphat Put your trust in the Lord and yee shall be assured beleeue his Prophets and ye shall prosper In this dutie of beleeuers marke further first how the Apostle ascribeth power to the beleeuer to build himselfe for although by nature men want this power for the naturall man cannot of himselfe so much as thinke one good thought yet the regenerate whom the Lord by his spirit hath mooued haue a power giuen them to mooue themselues and build themselues that which was before to nature impossible is made possible by grace Secondly note further the force of the word build vp which requireth not onely a building but a going on and encreasing in building as if he had said Build vp your selues more and more A dutie which neerely concernes men in these daies wherein men decline to Atheisme and Poperie which also is but a painted Atheisme when men can cōtent themselues to goe backe and fall from their former loue and are afraid to bee found either hot or cold This disease of our daies hath this Apostle forwarned vs of in this Epistle being one of the last farewels of the Apostles to the Church Let vs then take notice of our declinings and doe our first works and goe on forward to perfection building vp our selues daily lest it come to passe that the Lord come against vs spue vs out of his mouth remoue our Candlesticke with his other blessings and leaue vs vnto our too late and vntimely repentance The motiue whereby this rule is inforced vpon the church is drawne from a propertie of faith which is that it is most holy Wherein to vnderstand it we will shew first what holines is properly secondly that faith is most holy For the former in this holinesse there bee two things first a freedome from all fault and blame secondly an excellencie or perfection consisting of many diuine vertues Holinesse thus vnderstood is two-fold vncreated or created Vncreated is the holines of God which is nothing else but the perfection of his properties and attributes this
holines is incomprehensible and infinite yea the fountaine of all other holines Created holines is a certaine gift of God which by some proportion resembleth this vncreated holines of God the subiect whereof are Angels man and Gods ordinances especially the written word so as this holines of faith is this deriued holines and not the former Secondly how is the doctrine of religion most holy Ans. First in it selfe being without all fault and error and hauing sundrie excellencies being full of diuine wisedome and truth and the onely instrument whereby Gods infinite wisedome and goodnes is made knowne vnto vs. Secondly in regard of the effect and operation which is to make the creature but especially man holy Ioh. 17.17 Sanctifie them in thy truth thy word is truth It sanctifieth men instrumentally in that it maketh them resemble God in many graces by this Dauid became wiser than his Teachers Psal. 129. and so resembled God in wisedome Iam. 3.17 This wisedome which is frō aboue of which the word is the instrument is pure peaceable easie to be intreated full of mercie and good fruites without iudging and without hypocrisie Thus wee see how it maketh men resemble God in all these yea and in all other vertues Thirdly it is most holy because it sanctifieth all inferiour creatures to the vse of man so as hee may vse them with good conscience 1. Tim. 4.4 Euery creature of God is good sanctified by the word and prayer Where by the way may be noted the superstition of the Romish Church which halloweth Bread Salt Water Palmes c. for the curing of diseases casting out of diuels working wonders which practise of theirs is nothing but the defiling and prophaning of the creatures by superstitious prayer seeming to hallow them yet without any word or warrant either of promise or commandement which is the principall instrument of sanctifying the creatures vnto their lawfull ends and vses Hence learne first that the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles is from God because it is full of wisedome without any follie full of truth voide of all falsehood as also most holy both in it selfe and in operation and effect and in the author as proceeding from him who is the fountaine of all holines it is not of men neither needeth the euidence of men by this propertie only if it had no more it carrieth with it and containeth within it sufficient euidence against the gates of hell that it is from God and holy as himselfe is Secondly the word being most holy it must dwel in our hearts plentifully and our care must be that it may be written in the tables thereof that it may bee an ingrafted word bearing rule ouer our wils and affections yea ouer our whole liues for where it ruleth it sanctifieth the whole man Thirdly the doctrine of true faith sanctifieth vs but as it is receiued beleeued and applied by faith and no otherwise when it taketh place in vs then it sanctifieth vs it is not the rehearsing of the articles of it nor the knowledge of it nor carrying about with vs the words of it that can worke grace but the hiding of it and mingling it with faith in the heart from which we gather that it is a foule error of the Papists to teach that the Sacraments conferre grace by the worke wrought and that as the penne writeth by the hand of the writer and that of it selfe the hand mouing it so the Sacraments of themselues sanctifie being administred by the Minister but this is erroneous for the Word and the Sacraments are both of one nature the Sacraments being none other but the word made visible but the word read or vttered sanctifieth not by the worke done but by being beleeued and applied by faith therefore no more doe the Sacraments by being administred but by apprehending Christ in them grace must be conferred by the spirit of grace and not by the vertue of any action in the Sacraments The last point in this first rule is the meanes whereby beleeuers are to build vp themselues in their most holy faith and that is prayer praying in the holie Ghost Wherein euery member of the Church is put in minde of a principall dutie namely that whensoeuer wee feare or foresee a falling and defection frō the faith by reason either of weakenes within or persecution without thē time it is to repaire vnto God by the prayer of faith crauing at his hands strength and power not onely to bee preserued from reuolt but also to bee confirmed in the faith and doctrine wherein we stand The Apostle hauing exhorted the Ephesians to stand fast and be strong in the Lord and hauing prescribed some meanes tending to that purpose in the 18. verse hee concludeth the principall of the rest to bee prayer praying alwaies with all prayer and supplication in the spirit and that it is so appeareth by two reasons first by prayer faith is exercised yea and increased according to the increase whereof the other graces of zeale hope patiēce and constancie are likewise confirmed and animated Secondly faithfull prayer hath a faithfull promise made vnto it Ask● and ye shall haue seeke and yee shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you these promises we must lay ●old vpon and applie vnto our selues for the stirring vp of continuall prayer and strengthening of grace especiallie in time of temptatiō and in sense of frailtie and then God will be good in hearing and helping as his promise is Now in this meanes obserue the manner of making prayer in these words In the holy Ghost which are added for foure causes first to giue vs to vnderstand that although a man be regenerate yet he cannot pray as he ought vnlesse hee be still mooued helped and stirred by the holy Ghost God giueth sundrie graces in the conuersion of a sinner first a preuenting grace which yet is not at all effectuall vnlesse it be seconded and helped with a supplie of a second grace for that is true euen of the regenerate without me yee can doe nothing Ioh. 15. God giueth first the will and then the deede Phil. 2.13 yea and the continuance of the doing of that which is truly good Hee that hath begun the good worke will performe or finish it chap. 1.6 Here let grace be euery way grace lest it be no grace at all let God who is all in all haue all the glorie of all as for the doctrine of mans merit and humane satisfaction which robbeth God to enrich man it here falleth to the ground The second is because prayer is a singular and especiall worke of the holy Ghost in vs who stirreth vp in vs these grones and sighes which we cannot expresse Rom. 8. and maketh vs crie Abba Father Zach. 12.10 this spirit of grace and compassion is promised to bee powred out vpon the house of Dauid and inhabitants of Ierusalem and from hence a man may examine and finde whether he be the
Luk. 7.47 Many sinnes are forgiuen her for she loued much where it seemeth that loue is the cause of forgiuenes of sinnes Ans. I answere this word for doth not signifie here a cause but a reason drawne from the signe as it is also elsewhere vsed this then is the sense many sinnes are forgiuen her and hereby ye shall know it because or in that she loued much Note hence first that doctrine of the Church of Rome to bee false whereby they teach that before iustificatiō there must be a disposition and aptitude in a man thereunto standing in a feare of hell loue of God c. for by this doctrine the loue of God in man should go before iustification which is a fruit and follower thereof Secondly that is as false that loue is the soule and life of faith for though in time they be both together yet in the order of nature loue followeth after faith therfore cannot be the forme and soule thereof Thirdly it hath bin the opinion of some that faith apprehendeth Christ by loue and not by it self but this is also erroneous for loue in order followeth apprehen●●on of Christ and therefore Christ is not apprehended by loue First we beleeue and being knit vnto Christ by faith then our hearts are knit vnto God by loue The third point is what is the measure of loue whereby we must loue God and man Ans. According to the two distinct parts of the word of God are prescribed two distinct measures of loue The measure of the law is to loue God without measure for it requireth that wee loue God with all the powers of our bodies and soules and with all the strength of all these powers Luk. 10.27 This measure is not now in our power to performe no not although wee bee borne anew for being still flesh in part some of the powers of our strength are withdrawne from the loue of God The Gospell is a qualification of the law and moderateth the rigour thereof it freeth a man not frō louing God but exacteth not this loue in the highest measure and degree but accepteth such a measure as standeth in 3. things first in beginning truly to loue God secondly in the daily increase in this loue thirdly in being constant in the same vnto the end this measure the Lord accepteth for perfect loue in those that bee in Christ in whom the imperfection is couered Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart that thou maist loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart and all thy soule that is as if the Lord had said I will ingraft the true loue of my selfe in your hearts which you shall increase in and constantly proceede in the same and then I will account and accept of it for the full measure of loue that my law requireth which distinction is the rather to bee considered because the Papists teach that the loue which the Lord requireth of Christians is the same for substance and measure which the law prescribeth and for the perfection of our loue they say a man may doe more than the law bindeth him vnto as if he gaue all his goods to the poore it is more than euer God in his law hath commanded and if wee loue God aboue all creatures which they say a man may doe though imperfectly it is the loue which the law prescribeth But all this is most false and so the Apostle Galath 3.10 concludeth it as many ●s are vnder the workes of the law are accursed If all men bee condemned by the law then is no man able to performe the loue and duties which it requireth but he taketh the former for granted for else his argument could not hold and therefore that none can performe the loue which the law enioyneth is true Secondly the common opinion of men is that they euer loued God with all their heart and it i● pitie hee should liue that doth not so but it is a m●●re delusion for if it were so what needed any qualification or moderation of the law by the Gospell The fourth point is wherein standeth the loue of God Ans. 1. Epist. Ioh. 5.3 This is the loue of God that ye keepe his Commandements Ioh. 14.13 He that keepeth my Commandements is he that loueth me the reason whereof is this he that loueth God loueth his word and he that loueth his word wil bewray his loue in yeelding answerable obedience thereunto and in one word this keeping of the Commandements standeth in these three things first in faith for it must bee the worke of a true beleeuer secondly in conuersion vnto God thirdly in new obedience which sheweth many a man how miserably he hath been heretofore deluded by Satan for euery m●n professeth and pretendeth the keeping of the Commandements and yet the most are so farre from doing them that they know them not neither care to know them The fifth point is how a man should preserue in him the loue of God and of m●n Ans. First the meanes whereby man may preserue himselfe in the loue of God is two-fold first euery one must labour daily to haue his heart setled in the sense of Gods loue towards himselfe for the more he shall feele Gods loue confirmed vnto him the more shall his loue bee inflamed and increased towards God againe euen as the more wee feele the heate of the Sunne the warmer wee are Secondly wee must keepe a daily obseruation of Gods blessings spirituall and temporall which is a speciall meanes not onely to confirme and augment our loue but preserue it constant to the end Psalm 18.1 I will loue thee dearely O Lord. Why what made Dauid thus resolue himselfe the reason is rendred in the next words The Lorde is my rocke my fortresse my strength and hee that deliuereth mee Secondly men must vse the meanes whereby they may preserue their loue to men and these are of two sorts for some stand in meditation others in practise The meditations are foure The first is the consideration of the spirituall and neere coniunction of all those that are true beleeuers of which number wee professe our selues all to be who haue all one Father God one Mother the heauenly Ierusalem the Catholike Church all begotten of the immortall seede the word of God all liue by one faith in Christ and all are heires of eternall life and glorie This was Pauls motiue perswading him hereto Ephes. 4.3.4 There is one Lord one faith one baptisme one God and Father of all see Phil. 2.1.2 The second meditation is that the duties of loue which man sheweth to man especially the faithfull God accepteth as done to himselfe so saith the Wiseman He that giueth to the poore l●ndeth vnto the Lord. And Matth. 25. When I was hungrie ye fed me c. namely in my members vpon earth The third meditation is the consideration of that curse which is due to them that neglect duties of loue to man when occasion is offered
men erre and offend two waies first in opinion and iudgment secondly in practise and life Againe those that erre in opinion are also diuersly to bee distinguished according to the diuersitie of their errors for some erre in the foundation of religion and matters of greatest importance as the Papists at this day when they teach inuocation of Saints iustification by workes a reall sacrifice for the quicke and dead in the Supper with other false doctrines racing the foundation others may hold the foundation but erre in smaller pointes of lesser importance As for example the Anabaptists holding that warre is not to be made nor othes to be taken erre grossely but yet herein though in other points they doe they race not the foundation These ought wisely to be distinguished for hee that erres in the foundation ouerturneth his faith and religion but he that holdeth the foundation and erreth in smaller points doth not 1. Cor. 3.12 If any man build on the foundation hay or stubble 〈◊〉 worke shall burne but himself may be safe One thing it is to beate downe a wall to pull downe a window yea some one side of a house and another to plucke vp the foundation for this destroieth al. Which difference if it had been made and minded many which haue separated themselues frō the Church of England had still remained members of it Secondly of those that erre in opinion some erre of ignorance and blinde zeale seeing no other truth than that they hold as the Iewes did Rom. 10.2 who had the zeale of God but not according to knowledge others erre of malice who know they are deceiued and yet persist obstinately in their error false opinion lest they should lose their credit as Heretikes Now betweene these also a difference is to be put Tit. 3.10 An heretike after once or twice admonition reiect for such a one is condemned of his owne selfe But if the error be of ignorance Paul speaketh If any be otherwise minded the Lord will reueile it Phil. 3.15 But here we must alwaies remember that seeing wee can hardly discerne the ground of mens errors whether they proceede of ignorance or malice wee are euer to condemne their error but haue respect to their persons and not passe sentence rashly against them For the error of the vbiquitie of Christs bodie hath been held and maintained b● many both godly and learned Protestants their error wee are alwaies able to condemne but wee may not condemne their persons no not although they haue defended it of malice or out of the pride of their hearts seeing the Lord might giue them repentance before or at their death Thirdly againe those that doe erre of ignorance must be distinguished for some of them are misled of simple ignorance as those who haue no meanes or very small meanes to come to knowledge others erre of affected ignorance which is when men are willingly ignorant hauing meanes of knowledge but refuse the same As aboue fourtie yeeres agoe the people of this land erred of simple ignorance because they had not the meanes which yet did not excuse thē but now their ignorance is wilfull and affected neglecting at least if not fearfully despising so great saluation and therefore as the sin of the land is greater so the more fearefull is the iudgement like to be if it bee not seasonably preuented by repentance Fourthly there is also wise difference to bee put betweene the author of sects and heresies and those who are by them seduced The Sect-masters and leaders are to bee vsed with more seueritie and sin more grieuously Rom. 16.17 Obserue them which cause diuisions among you as in a wisely ordered Common-wealth the heads of conspiracies and authors of treasons are most aimed at Secondly errors in practise or action is any actuall sinne or offence in word or deede and men that offend in these are not all to bee ranged in one ranke but to bee distinguished For of these first some sin of ignorance not knowing what they doe as Paul persecuted the Church of God ignorantly through a blinde zeale Now ignorance is two-fold first generall ignorance when the thing is vtterly vnknowne secondly speciall when the equitie of a particular fact or some speciall action is vnknowne as oppression and vsurie in generall are knowne to bee euill but many particular actions vnder this kinde are vnknowne to many so to be and sometime these two ignorances are ioyned both together according vnto which we may put difference betweene the faults and offences of men Secondly some sinne of infirmitie who know what they doe but yet are ouercarried by sudden and violent passions of anger feare sorrow or such like vnto euill Thus Peter denied his Master vpon sudden feare of danger Thirdly some sinne of malice being carried vnto euill by the malice of their own will not of ignorance or passion as the former of this the Apostle s●●●keth Heb. 10.26 If we sinne willingly ●●ter we haue receiued the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins Now of this malice of the will there be two degrees first particular when a man wittingly and willingly sinneth against some particular Commandement as Acts 7.51 The Iewes were stiffenecked and alwaies resisted the holy Ghost that is the ministerie of the Prophets in some things not in all Secondly generall malice when a man is carried wittingly and willingly to oppugne all the law of God yea Christ himselfe true religion and saluation by Christ and so reuerseth all the Commandements This is the sinne against the holy Ghost of this degree the Apostle saith there re●●ineth no more sacrifice for sinne this being an vniuersall and generall apostasie Now offenders according to these differences must bee distinguished Further of those that actually offend some sinne secretly when it is knowne but to some one onely and priuately when it is knowne but to some few and the scandall is the smaller Some sinne publikely when the sinne is notorious and the offence giuen great If the offence b● secret the Apostle ruleth the case saying that loue couereth a multitude of such sinnes For the second if the offence be priuate then must thou admonish the party betweene thee and him if hee heare thee thou hast saued and wonne him if not but hee persist in offending tell the Church But hee that offendeth publikely must be publikely reprooued that others may feare 1. Tim. 5.20 By these differences obserued a notable way is made for the recouerie of those that are sliding or fallen from the faith in matter either of doctrine or practise Hence wee learne first that it is our dutie to obserue one another in our speeches and actions or else wee can neuer put any difference in them the end of which obseruing must be not as the manner of many is to imitate others in their euils or traduce or floute men but that of the Apostle Heb. 10.24 Let vs consider one another to
Eph. 5.23 The Sauiour of his bodie that is his Church More plainly the persons that are to be saued by him are such as truly beleeue in him and testifie their faith by their conuersion vnto God and forsaking their sins For the euidence whereof consider two things First that it is most necessarie that the person that is to be saued should be thus qualified if hee bee of yeeres for with infants it is otherwise for ma●ke the order prescribed to be obserued in the Word and Sacraments in which God requireth in the first place repentance and faith and then afterwards maketh promise of saluation by Christ Luk. 24.47 That repentance and remission of sinnes should be preached in his name Repentance for sinne must goe before remission of sinne Acts 2.38 Repent and be baptized there is the first for remission of sinnes there is the second This is the rather to be obserued because many go preposterously to worke beginning there where God endeth comforting themselues in their Sauiour and in the promises of life by his meanes but let goe faith and repentance at least deferre them This is the cause of much wickednes and a false comfort not fetched from that order which is appointed by God Secondly those who bring the beginnings of faith and repentance if so be the beginning be true constant and still increasing to these Christ becommeth a Sauiour Matth. 9. Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance that is those who acknowledge themselues to bee sinners confessing and forsaking their sinnes and not such as presume of their owne righteousnes Matth. 25. I am sent to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel euen those who in their owne iudgement are lost who are in the mouth of the lion and in all mans iudgement lost Isai. 45.1 The well of water of life is promised to all those that thirst that is such as want water and long after the welsprings of it and wish after nothing so much Isai. 42.3 A bruised reede he will not breake the smoking flaxe he will not quench euen small beginnings of grace be they neuer so weake nor feeble so they be true he despiseth not Thus are the persons to bee qualified vnto whom Christ will become a Sauiour Now because all men are not thus disposed it followeth that redemption and the worke of saluation is not vniuersall Vse First the multitude of our people are iustly blamed as enemies of Christ for if they bee asked how they look to be saued they answere by their good seruing of God and their iust and honest dealing among men Now this their seruing of God is but to repeate ouer the Tenne Commandements the Creed and the Lords Prayer and their good dealing is but to deceiue no man or not to offer them open iniurie and here they stay themselues not all this while euer looking after Christ as men not standing in neede of him or of his righteousnesse but set vp themselues for their owne Sauiours and know not any other way to life then their owne which carrieth them from Christ. Secondly wee are taught to conceiue of Christ as of our Sauiour which wee shall doe if wee bee touched with the sense of our sinne and danger by it and with the neede wee haue of his most precious blood which will cause vs to prise it aboue the most precious things which the world can conteine When our hartes are thus affected then wee conceiue of him as we ought Thirdly wee must carrie our selues as persons saued alreadie by Christ for he is a Sauiour vnto vs euen in this life and our saluation is begun and is in part here This we doe when wee ioyne with the profession of faith a true conuersion vnto God Reasons hereof First because regeneration although it bee no cause yet it is a part of our saluation for by it a man is freed from the corruption of his sinne in part which whosoeuer looketh for remission of sinnes must atteine vnto Secondly whomsoeuer Christ saueth from hell he first saueth them from their sinnes he redeemeth men not only from deserued condemnation but also their vaine conuersation If thē thou wouldest know whether Christ hath saued thee from hell or no looke into thy selfe and trie whether his death hath wrought the death of sinne in thee or no for if thou art not turned from sin thou art not saued from hell Thirdly to whomsoeuer Christ is a Sauiour by merit to him he is a Sauiour by efficacie also for he is a Sauiour both these waies by the former he procureth pardon of sin by the latter hee turneth the heart of the sinner from sin vnto God this if it bee wanting there can be no true assurance of the other Lastly the saluation of a sinner standeth not in the fruition of riches honours wealth or deliuerance from the miseries of this life but properly in righteousnes and life eternall the recompēce of the same which fruite whosoeuer would reape he must sow the seedes thereof in righteousnesse and cease from hencefoorth to be the seruant of sinne The third generall point in this conclusion is the praise of Christ it selfe in the last verse Be glory and Maiestie and dominion and power both now and for euer Amen Which words cōtaine the forme of the praise of God and Christ where foure things are to be considered first what bee the things that are here ascribed to Christ and they be foure first Glorie by which wee are to vnderstand an infinit and incomprehensible excellēcie wherby Christ excelleth all things that euer were are or euer shall be Now as there be in God two things distinct first essence which is the Godhead it selfe simply considered Secondly person as Father Sonne holy Ghost so accordingly the glorie of God is two-fold first the glorie of essence secondly the glorie of person The glorie of essence is the Godhead it selfe or God himselfe who is glorie it selfe or the excellencie of the diuine attributes is the glorie of God Rom. 1.19 That which may be knowne of God is his wisedome glorie power iustice and mercie And vers 23. They turned the glorie of the incorruptible God c. Whatsoeuer therefore that may be knowne of God is a part of his glorie Exodus 33.19 Moses desireth the Lord that he would let him see his glorie the Lord answered him Thou canst not see my face and liue Where to see the face of God and his glorie is all one and so of all diuine attributes The glorie of the persons is distinct from the other as the persons themselues are by their personall proprieties as the Fathers glorie is to beget the Sonne the Sonnes glory is to be begotten of the Father the holy Ghosts is to proceed from them both Thus Heb. 1.3 Christ is called the brightnes of the glorie and the ingrauen forme of his Fathers person Ioh. 1.14 We saw the glorie thereof as the glorie of the onely
iust in God to destroy likewise his creature ouer which hee hath infinitely more soueraigntie than man hath ouer them 4. Vse We are to be afraide to sinne against God we must resigne our will vnto his whatsoeuer it is and simplie subiect our selues vnto the obedience of the same fearing in the least thing to offend him and all this because of his Maiestie power and dominion ouer vs for this is the liuing holy and acceptable sacrifice which he requireth of vs Rom. 1.12 euen our reasonable seruing of him Further whereas all these are to bee giuen to God alone note first that the wicked Astrologer with his Arte is here condemned seeing all glorie is properly belonging vnto God but the Astrologer arrogateth to himselfe that part of Gods glorie which consisteth in the foreknowledge of things to come in that by erecting of a figure and the aspect of the starres he takes vpon him to foretel things meerely casuall and contingent as of life and death woe or wealth peace or warre wherein he entreth vpon Gods possessions Isai. 41.23 Besides that the starres neither by creation nor by any ordinance of God can bee any meanes to foretell things to come Secondly detestible is the Romish doctrine which giueth the glorie and power of God to Saints as of hearing the prayers of all men in all places and knowing the hearts Secondly it giueth to the Pope power to make lawes and to binde the conscience Thirdly it ascribeth to the Pope hi● Shauelings power to forgiue sins properly all which bee incommunicable properties of the Godhead Now for the time for euer Learne that it is the duty of euery child of God to dedicate himselfe vnto the praise of God and that continually Psal. 119.117 For this shall be the eternall c●●ling and condition of those who shall possesse the kingdome of glorie and 〈◊〉 must be begun euen in this life Lastly from the affection in the word Amen Note that whatsoeuer wee are to performe in the seruice of God 〈◊〉 must bee not of fashion but with the earnest affection of our hearts Psalme 103.1 My soule praise the Lord and all that is within me praise his holy name It is said of Iosias that hee turned to God with all his soule and all his heart according to all the law of Moses so wee in like manner in our conuersion to God in our prayers praise● or whatsoeuer holy worship and seruice we tender vnto him must beware lest in drawing neere him with our lips wee withd●●w our hearts from him which wee shall the better performe if we carry in mind his owne commandement My sonne giue me thy heart FINIS Laus Christo nesci● finis THE PVBLISHERS POST-SCRIPT MAny excellēt points might I as gemmes and pearles in this Commētarie commend vnto thy cōsideratiō Christian Reader but that one shall suffice to giue notice of and direct thee vnto as worthiest of my penning and thy perusing which as it is most ioyned with the scope of this whole Epistle so most seasonably is it fitted to our present cōdition and most diligently trauased by this our Author namely that The seducers of the last age especially here aimed at by the spirit of God de●iers of the maine grounds of Religion in doctrine and practise are the Papists and the present Romish Church The necessarie consequent whereof is directly prooued namely That we may neuer ioyne with them in their religion but for euer contend against them for the faith once giuen to the Saints which wee can neuer doe if wee auoide not their doctrines as the rockes on which wee shall necessarily suffer shipwracke or death it selfe vnto which they cannot but carrie the professors The antecedent or former part seemeth by the way to be a direct and naturall answere vnto a Popish pamphlet alreadie by three learned men sufficientlie confuted wherein H.T. by twelue triuiall articles in comparison goeth about the bush to prooue that Protestants haue neither faith nor pietie religion nor good life To whom our Author in the exposition of the third verse reioyndeth and doubling the number of those articles with aduantage in the same order prooueth the Romish faith to be aduersary in sixe and twentie seuerall solid and maine grounds vnto Christian faith and practise I will no longer stand on this part than I haue shewed who these Papists be meant by the Author from whom wee must depart and that for this end that the sequell of our separation from them may bee acknowledged most iust and necessarie By such a Papist wee vnderstand not euery one who in some things may bee Popishly affected for true faith may stand with some errors and the end of that faith be the saluation of mens soules so bee the partie aberring be framed to these two rules First he must of necessitie h●ld the foundation namely that in Iesus Christ alone and in no other name either Angell or man himselfe or others saluation is to be sought for If a man vpon this foundation build some wood nay stubble or chaffe though these shall be burned yet himselfe shal be saued notwithstanding as it were through fire Secondly those errors must not be ioyned with either a willing 〈◊〉 wilfull ignorance for such errors are desperate and bring swift damnation And thus where God reueiles no more but naked Christ and where there is a subiection of the heart to the word causing it to depend on the Ministrie for further and more full instruction the acknowledgement of euery diuine truth is not of such absolute necessitie to saluation but that true faith may stand with some euen Popish errors The Ruler is said to beleeue and that was by a iustifying faith when as yet he was onely ouercome by the Maiestie of Christ appearing in the miracle of raising his sonne to assent vnto and acknowledge the maine truth that Christ was the Messiah but so as himselfe and his household depended on his mouth for further instruction and became his disciples Yea euen the Disciples themselues were long after their calling and conuersion very ignorant in no small points of Christianitie Philip of the first person in Trinitie Lord shew vs the Father Others of them cōceiued of Christ as a worldly King whence two of them desire to sit the one at his right hand and the other at his left when he came to his kingdome Others of them euen after his resurrectiō harping on the same string and hearkening after temporalities expect it Others aske him when he would restore it to Israel Peter himselfe held not as hee ought the doctrine of the passion seeing hee disswaded Christ frō it Wherein marueilous ignorance descrieth it selfe in them being true beleeuers but so much the more tolerable in that first Christ reueiled no more vnto them either not opening the things or their vnderstandings to apprehend them till afterwards that hee sent the spirit of truth And secondly this ignorance
doctrine else but a Pharisaicall leauen alwaies to bee purged out of Churches and states as the Iewes vpon some occasions were to purge al leauen out of their howses Let no man say it is but a little and such a difference which may be tolerated for euen the Pharisies doctrine was much of it more true thē this Pharisaicall doctrine of theirs yet was their leauen hid in it as in this the nature whereof is though it be but little yet to sowre the whole lumpe In a word as Caleb Ioshua said of Canaan the land is a very good land If the Lord loue vs hee will bring vs vnto it euen so if the Lord loue vs hee will expell these Giants from vs and giue vs security in our owne land from the Anakims or if not if any of these strangers abide with vs our faithfull prayer and hope is that as Salomon numb●●ing all the strangers in the land set them to worke in his Temple euen a hundred three fiftie thousand and sixe hundred so our wise and peaceable Salomon and Soueraigne will continue to set euen thousands of these to worship with vs in the Temple yea and in this one circumstance passe Salomons wisdome in not chusing ouerseers of themselues to cause them to worship The Lord Iesus strengthen his Highnes heart vnto this and many mo honorable workes and make vs happie in his long and prosperous Raigne to his renowne and glorie in this life and fruition of the blessed Crowne of righteousnes at the peaceable end of his through comfortable daies Amen FINIS COMMON PLACES OF CHRISTIan Religion more largely handled in this Commentarie 1 ACtuall sinnes pag. 121. 2 Angels their nature and fall pag. pag. 63. The combate between good and bad Angels pag. 84. 3 Apostles and Apostleship pag. 119. 4 Bookes of God pag. 48. 5 Callings pag. 43. 6 Catholike Church pag. 32. 7 Charitie pag. 135. 8 Christ a Sauiour pag. 151. 9 Christs comming to iudgment pag. 112. 10 Christian liberty pag. 30. 11 Church properties and markes of it pag. 32. 12 Church Censures and excommunicacation pag. 143. 13 Commandement first pag. 35. second pag. 36. third c. pag. 39. 14 Crosse to be taken vp pag. 34. 15 Diuinity of Christ. pag. 149. 16 Feare of God pag. 85. 17 Hope pag. 138. 18 Images pag. 36. 19 Intemperance pag. 89. 20 Iudgement day pag. 68. 21 Iustification by faith only pag. 26. 22 Keyes of the Church pag. 31. 23 Knowledge in the creatures naturall reasonable spirituall pag. 88. 24 Loue of God towards man contra pag. 15. 25 Magistracie pag. 76. 26 Mercy of God pag. 13. 27 Naturall corruption pag. 127. 28 Peace with God Man the creatures pag. 14. 29 Perseuerance pag. 11. 30 Regeneration pag. 28. 31 Repentance pag. 33. 32 Resurrection pag. ibid. 33 Reprobation pag. 48. 34 Saluation by Christ alone how to whom pag. 151. 35 Sanctification pag. 7. 36 Table second pag. 41. 37 Vngodlines pag. 49. 38 Vocation pag. 5. 39 Wisdome of Christ. pag. 150. 40 Worship of God pag. 38. DOCTRINES MORE CHOISE and generall collected and vrged in this Exposition 1 TO bee a seruant of Iesus Christ is more honour then to bee allied to Princes pag. 3. 2 Faith is a most excellent treasure pag. 17. 3 The Saints are the keepers of this treasure and must fight for it pag. 45. 4 It is a subtiltie of Satan to thrust the profane and wicked into the societies of the Saints pag. 47. 5 Publike teachers in the Church must of necessity be called and why pag. ibid. 6 Gods grace may not bee turned into Wantonnesse pag. 51. 7 No outward priuiledges are profitable 〈◊〉 of their right vse in faith and repentance pag. 56. 8 Great iudgements are at the beeles of great mercies if abused pag. 57. 9 Distractiō followeth vnbeliefe which is therefore to be vnma●ked and auoided pag. 57. 10 Gods seruice is the only liberty and freedome in sinne is to be chained in bondage pag. 67. 11 The mercy of God euery way matcheth his iustice pag. 70. 12 To take a view of the sinnes of the last times is necessarie for euery Christian pag. 71. 13 Our bodies are the Lords and therefore must be giuen vp to his seruice and preserued in holines pag. 75. 14 Sleepe in sinne and spirituall dreames the cause why so fewe embrace thē Gospell pag. 73. 15 A Christians dutie is to watch and be sober pag. 74. 16 Not to speake euill of but blesse Magistrates pag. 80. 17 Scripture is knowen to bee Scripture by Scripture pag. 83. 18 The Diuel the author of Idolatry pag. 8● 19 Not to requi●e euill for euill a Christian precept and an angelicall practise pag. 87. 20 Christian meeknes must be tempered with Christian zeale pag. 89. 21 Caines way may not bee beaten by Christians pag. 90. 22 Couetousnes in all but teachers especially to be auoyded and why pag. 96. 23 Contentation a speciall vertue and how atteined pag. 98. 117. 24 In feasting Gods feare must be preserued in the heart pag. 102. 25 All Ministers must be able to teach sound doctrine pag. 104. 26 Hearers ought to be as parcht land to to receaue it pag. ibid. 27 Christiās being trees of righteousnes must be 1. wel rooted 2. liue 3. beare fruit 4. beare good fruite in Christ the stocke pag. 106. 28 Wicked men are inwarly as vnquiet as the raging sea pag. 108. 29 Ministers as startes must receaue their light from Christ the sonne of righteousnes pag. 109. 30 All secrets of heart and life naked before God pag. 114. 31 The duty of the Church to remember the words of the Prophets and Apostles and why pag. 119. 32 To mock and scorne godlines a maine sinne of the last age pag. 121. 33 It is the property of the vngodly to follow and walk after their owne vngodly lustes pag. 122. 34 It is a great sinne to sep●rate from the assemblies of Gods people pag. 124. 35 To be a naturall man a fearefull sinne and who he is pag. 126. 36 Euery one ought to build vp himselfe vpon his most holy faith pag. 129. 37 The doctrine of faith a most holy doctrine pag. 131. 38 Euery man is to preserue loue towards man and the meanes pag. 135. 39 The duty of euery beleeuer is to restore and recouer offenders and the meanes pag. 141. 40 All glorie dominion maiestie and power is to bee ascribed to God and Christ of all his creatures in all things for euer Amen pag. 154. QVESTIONS DETERMINED AND the most of them disputed in this Commentarie 1 WHether this Epistle be Canonicall Scripture pag. 1. 2 VVhether a man may change his name pag. 3. 3 Whether sanctification bee from the Parents pag. 8. 4 Whether sauing grace may be lost pag. 11. 5 Whether the Scripture be to beleeued for it selfe pag. 17. 6 Whether it be sufficient of it selfe pag. 18. 7 Whether God created all things pag. 20. 8 Wherein
the Law and Gospell consent and dissent pag. 21. 9 Whether Christs bodie can be present in many places at once pag. 23. 10 Whether Christ as redeemer hath any partner fellow or deputie pag. 24. 11 Whether the child of God may be assured of his saluation pag. 26. 12 Whether Images bee to bee worshipped pag. 37. 13 Whether God decreed before all worlds to reprobate some men pag. 48. 14 How can God punish children with their parents who sin not as they pag. 69. 15 Whether Magistracie be lawfull and hereunto adde 1. Wherein doth the authority of Magistrate Minister differ pag. 76 2. How farre doth ciuill gouernment extend pag. ibid. 16 Whether the Pope be the archrebell of the world pag. 79. 17 Whether traditions besides the Word are needfull pag. 82. Or of necessity to be beleeued pag. 111. 18 Whether a man may not reuenge in his owne cause pag. 87. 19 Whether drunkennesse may be approued pag. 90. 20 Whether the Apostle might curse the false teachers pag. 91. 21 Whether Cora● was swallowed vp of the earth or burned pag. 99. 22 Whether Church lands and liuings may be impropriated without sacriledge pag. 101. 23 Whence had Iude the history of Enoch the 7. from Adam pag. 110. 24 Why made be choyse of that before any other historie in the Canon pag. 111. 25 How could the Apostles daies be called the last time pag. 120. 26 Which Church is that to which a man may safely ioyne himselfe pag. 125. 27 Whether separation may bee made if errors be found in the Church pag. ibid. 28 Why it is a sin to be a natural mā pag. 127. 29 Why prayer must bee made in the holy Ghost pag. 132. 30 VVhether wee may pray to the holie Ghost pag. 133. 31 Whether the loue of God be in man by nature pag. 134. 32 Why are wee not commanded to keepe our selues in the loue of man aswell as of God pag. 133. 33 How should a man preserue himselfe 〈◊〉 the loue of God and man pag. 135. 34 How we may recouer offenders pag. 140. 35 Whether by the deliuery of a sinner to Satan be ment the censure of excommunication pag. 143. 36 How can mens flesh or garments bee vncleane and hated seeing they bee the good creatures of God pag. 145. 37 Whether and how farre wee may keepe company with an obstinate offender pag. ibid. 38 Whether Christ be God against the Arrians pag. 149. 39 How Christ can bee saide to bee only wise seeing other creatures are wise also pag. 151. 40 How can we giue any glory to God seeing hee can receaue no more then he hath pag. 155. PLACES OF SCRIPTVRE EXPLANED AT large in this Commentarie Cap. Vers. Pag. Gen. 17 1 19 Exod. 20 4 35   5 36   12 41 Esay 8 13 40 Micha 6 8 41 Matth. 4 10 38 10 23 20 18 18 30 Luc. 9 23 34 13 3 33 Ioh. 1 14 22 3 5 28   16 24 Rom. 3 28 26 1. Cor. 7 20 43 8 6 19 Gal. 5 1 30   14 41 1. Tim. 1 19 44 4 7 50 2. Tim. 3 16 17 1. Ioh. 2 22 23 5 7 19 OTHER PLACES MORE BRIEFELY EITHER EXPLAned or cleared from cauill and corruption Cap. Vers. Pag. Genes 1 7 104   26 77   27 21 3 15 77 43 34 88 Num. 16 27 99   32 26 10 100 1. Sam. 28 19 111 2. King 23 25 15 2. Chro. 15 15 15 23 11 79 29 20 79 Psalm 106 17 99 Esay 60 10 78 Ier. 1 10 78 Hagg. 1 6 90 Matth. 17 26 78 18 17 142 Ioh. 2 8 90 14 28 150 Act. 20 35 ibid Rom. 13 1 76   8 76 1. Cor. 5 5 143 7 23 78 11 3 150 15 28 ibid. 2. Tim. 1 5 82 Titus 2 11 51 53 Iames 2 26 14 2. Pet. 2 19 51 Christian Reader s●●ing my self could not attend the Pr●ss● 〈◊〉 ●oules thou maies meet withall but seeing they are the most of them literall such as 〈…〉 the most ocul●●● and diligent Pr●●ter and none of them such so farre as I find as much change of trouble the sense I reserue the correction of them to thine owne humanitie ERRATA For Nesikius and Aleminus reade Neskius and 〈…〉 and pag. 8 for 〈…〉 13. reade Ioh. 1. ●3 and pag. 165. margent for 〈…〉 a 1. Sam. 2.30 b Ioh. 8.49 c Mal. 1.6 d Iob. 11.7 e Philip. 2.13 f Luk. 17.10 g Psal. 16. ● h Iob. 35.6.7 i Ester 6.6 k Dan. 5.7 l Ester 6.8 m Gen. 41.43 Reformed Catholike Isa. 50.4 Iudg. 20.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euripid of●elsa●●us ●elsa●●us a ●unnagate Frier Obiect 1. Obiect 2. Answere Obiect 3. Answere Obiect 4. Answere Quest. 2. 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Beza writ two Homilies concerning the sacrament vnder the title of Nathaniel Nesekins and Caluins Institutions printed vnder the name of Alcninus the Master of Charles the Great Anno 1534. The Scrip●tures writ●ten proper●ly for the Church that it might be ga●hered and streng●thened thereby Obiect The church 〈…〉 to persons or places but 〈◊〉 Christs 〈◊〉 Obiect Answere Question Answere Answ. Sanctification followeth effectuall calling Religion rectifieth affection● but abolisheth th●● not Questio● Answere * Who ca● bring a cleane thing out of filthine● there is n● one Obiect Answere Question Answere The first diuision of sanctification Question Answere The second diuision Minde Memorie Consciē●● Will. Affectio●● 4. Grounds to prooue the perseuerance of the elect Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere● 〈…〉 christ 〈◊〉 in the 〈◊〉 place 〈◊〉 bee 〈◊〉 for aboue all things in the world a 1. Cor. 13. b 1. Tim. 1.5 c 〈◊〉 8.7 Iam. 2.26 2. Tim. 1.13 1. Ground Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Papists enemies to Hebrew and Greek 2. Ground Obiect Answere The myst●●rie of iniquitie sup●ported by mysticall Scriptur● ● Ground Popery a ●onster 〈…〉 heads 〈…〉 many Gods 4. Ground Papists rob God of his mercy and iustice 5. Ground Quest. Answere Papists become An●itrinitaries 6. Ground Obiect Answere Question Answere 7. Ground 8. Ground Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answer● ● Ground ●● Ground Papists controule the Apostle where he saith that sin entred by one ouer all 11. Ground Obiect Answere 12. Ground 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quest. Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere 13. Ground 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Ministris vtitur Christus non Vicarijs ●ucer de regno Christ. cap. 2. Obiect Answere Papists wor● than the ●ouldie●s in pa●ting christs garments The 〈◊〉 Church 〈◊〉 Iesus 〈◊〉 be Christ. 14. Grou●● The cast●● of Romish faith hang●eth in the ayre without foundation Obiect Answere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * 1 Cor. 1. 〈◊〉 Obiect Answere Aduersaries Indeed no word 〈◊〉 thou 〈…〉 Pope Iohn the 2● shalt be ●aued Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere Obiect Answere 15. Grou●● 〈◊〉 5.18 Note Aduersaries The Popish church fallen from grace Obiect Answere Obiect Answere 16. Grou●●
the Sonne of God suffring although it was not for halfe a day it was as much as if all men had died for euer so infinite and endlesse it was though not in time yet in merit and efficacie 2. Vse Seeing Christ hath such an absolute wisedome distinctly knowing all things wee are taught to feare tremble before him doing all things as in his presence he beholdeth vs with all our actions there is not a word in our tongue but hee knoweth it wholy yea he vnderstandeth our thoughts and that a farre off See Psal. 139.2.3 3. Vse Such as are in distresse resting themselues vpon Gods mercie in Christ may herein stay and vphold themselues with this comfort that Christ is God and able to relieue them yea hee is the only wise God and therefore hee knoweth all their miseries distinctly he knoweth how farre foorth it is good for them to suffer how to turne their suffering to the best vnto them as also the best and fittest time when to deliuer them seasonably out of their trouble and therefore patiently commit thy selfe into his hand and reli● thy selfe vpon him as on a mercifull redeemer 4. Vse If Christ bee only wise then we must take counsell of him and learne wisedome of him Learne of me If it be asked how shal we learne of him seeing he is in heauen I answere hee hath left his word with vs in the Scriptures there we may learne his wisedom there we may haue his directions If it bee asked what is the summe of that counsell there contained I answere it standeth in the hearing and doing of his Commandements to which three things are required first to beleeue on him and depend vpon him alone for saluation Secondly to turne vnfainedly withall our hearts vnto him Thirdly to obey him in our liues and conuersations This is the right wisedome for the teaching of which Wisedome her selfe vttereth her voyce and calleth to the children of men Prouerbs 8. vers 4. The third reason is taken from the worke of our redemption in the words Our Sauiour The which reason that we may rightly vnderstand foure points are to be propounded First what kind of Sauiour Christ is Ans. He must bee conceiued first a perfect Sauiour sauing perfectly all that are saued Heb. 7.25 He is able to saue perfectly all that come vnto him yea hee perfectly saueth by himself and not by any other creature whosoeuer attaine to saluation for this also is required vnto his perfection Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set out to be a reconciliation through faith in his blood Hebr. 1.3 By himselfe hee hath purged our sinnes Where note an error in the Church of Rome which teacheth that Christ did by his death merit that we might by our owne works merit saluation but this is false Christ saueth not man by man or by any creature but by himselfe yea he should not so be a Sauiour but an instrument by whom we must saue our selues Secondly hēce wee learne to acknowledge him an alone Sauiour without any fellow partner or deputie Acts 2. There is no other name vnder heauen giuen to saue vs but the name of Christ and if hee haue any partner he is but halfe a Sauiour Hence wee see that the Romane Religion although in word it honour Christ yet in deede it denieth him in ioyning to Christs all-sufficient satisfaction others satisfactions and so likewise they ioyne to his sacrifice vpon the Crosse their sacrifices in their Masse to his meritorious intercession the intercession of the Virgin Mary and other Saints and that not by way of request but of the merit of their intercession Thus they set vp many Sauiours in stead of this our perfect and alone Sauiour The second point is from what danger doth he saue vs Ans. Saluation euer implieth perdition so saluation by Christ implieth endlesse destruction which is the thing from which he doth saue vs. In which endlesse perditiō note first the foundation of it that is our sins noted in the exposition of his name Mat. 1. He shall saue his people from their sinnes Secondly the degrees which are three first in this life a subiection to all kindes of miseries inward and outward in soule bodie goods name in our selues and others Secondly in the end of this life death being in it self a curse and an entrance into hell Thirdly after the first the second death which is euerlasting destruction in hell fire for euer Now Christ is a Sauiour to saue and free vs both from this foundation our sins themselues as also from the degrees from the bondage to Satan by sinne secondly from the first death so far forth as it is a curse thirdly from the second death and euerlasting destruction The third point is How doth Christ saue men Ans. According to that order which God hath set downe in the couenant not of workes but of grace wherein God promiseth to giue Christ with all his merits and graces to euery beleeuer Now according to the tenour of this couenant first Christ with his merits is giuen vnto the beleeuer hee againe is giuen vnto Christ by vertue of which donation a man may say Christ is mine his benefits are mine also as truly and as surely as my land is my owne Hereupon to make this mutuall donation effectuall followeth a second thing which is the vnion of vs with him by the bond of the spirit and this is a mysticall but a true vnion whereby he that is giuen vnto Christ is made one with him After this commeth a third thing which is a communication of Christ himselfe and all his benefits vnto beleeuers This is done two waies first by way of imputation which is an accounting and accepting of his obedience and sufferings as ours for the discharge of our sinnes and acquiting vs from them Secondly by a kinde of propagation whereby grace is deriued from his grace and infused into those that are set into him For as many candles receiue light from one great Torch or light and as many streames flow from one fountain or head spring and as from one roote proceed many branches euen so al his members drink of his fountaines are enriched by his treasures of wisedome and knowledge yea indeed liue by no other life than that which by his spirit hee inspireth into the faces of their soules and hereby he sheweth himselfe to bee a roote euen that roote of Iesse and that second Adam conueying vnto all his branches righteousnes and life as the first Adam being a roote also deriued corruption from himself to al his posteritie springing and arising from him so is that place 1. Cor. 1.30 to be vnderstood He is made of God to vs wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption because he is the root and fountaine of all these graces vnto vs of whose fulnes wee receiue them The fourth point is Of whom is Christ a Sauiour Answ. Our Sauiour that is a Sauiour of the Catholique Church