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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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by the Scriptures and by the Spirit of God in them If there be other Traditions without writing they also for the main agree with the Traditions written but some circumstances may differ and some must needs be lost in both But still the Traditions in Writing must needs be the surest and most lasting wherefore God himself wrote the two Tables with his own hand and commanded Moses to write the rest for a perpetual Record As for Traditions without writing they must needs be more hazardous because of the shortness of mens lives the weakness and varieties of mens apprehensions and memories the Interest of parties c. Nor are Writings impregnable but in the changes of times if they escape the fire and other ruines they cannot escape the ignorance and perversness of Scribes But God hath hitherto among both Jews and Christians secured the main Oracles written and unwritten and will secure them for ever SECT III. As for an exact Representation of the holy Catholick Church it cannot easily be imagined either in the Head thereof which is Christ Representative Church there being no express warrant for such a Representative Head or in the Members for such a Representative Body For who can represent the mind of Christ but the Spirit of Christ which is in him or who can represent the mind of Christians but the Spirit of Christians which is in them For Christ will not needs not come in Person to declare his will because he hath sufficiently done it already and Christians cannot meet all together to declare their will because there are most in Heaven from whence it is impossible for them to come and the rest are in all parts of the World from whence it is little less than impossible they should gather together and if they should they would all agree most certainly in the same Faith and Holiness but in Forms and Circumstances they could not And besides there would be Hypocrites among them do what they can for all that Profess have not faith And moreover men as men have various conceptions apprehensions and reasonings and languages and humors and interests And words are too few for things and are ambiguous and Idioms are diverse and there will be mistakes and there is no help for it and few have the true Arts of right reasoning therefore in these cases they must be contented to bear one with another and keep the peace well enough We may thank God that he hath left us the Scriptures and they are sufficient for salvation and be contented and judge as well as we can So men are fain to do in Civil Laws with some helps of Judges because mens Laws are not so plain as they should be but Gods are and they must rest satisfied with what they know till God shall come in into them by farther discoveries upon their honest search and endeavours after saving truth But still where scruples are some body must determine Some body must determine because of practice and because of peace I mean in matters of Discipline and so people must be contented though not satisfied but in Faith and a good Conscience every one knows sufficiently and every one is satisfied So in a Ship the Pilot must steer as well as he can though he may fail and some body else may know better For every one hath liberty to judge for himself but not altogether to act for himself much less for others That 's left to Governours who are as Gods yet they may erre as men it being Gods Prerogative only to know all good and evil and yet under God we must be guided by them who with reverence and godly fear do determine hard cases as the Turkish Mufti who when consulted to give his Judgment sets it down in writing and subscribes modestly This is my Judgment but God knows better And now what would the World have or what can they have more than they have and why will they not be contented with what they have and God thinks fit for them to have Why call they for a Judg when God is their Judge as the Israelites called for a King when God was their King This is to reject the Judgment and Government of God and trust to the judgment and government of Men and to have greater assurance than God thinks fit to allow them Pride There is an itch of Power in all this in the Clergy that are forbidden by their Master to seek after Greatness and leave the care and government of the Church and Commonwealth to Kings and Princes to whom it is committed to be Nursing Fathers and Nursing Mothers of Gods People Let every Soul be subject to the higher Powers Let them give their Advice to Kings humbly and teach their People truly and give them good Examples and they have done their duty God is not will not be wanting to his People for soul or body for this life or for a better But still the noise of an Earthly Judg rings in mine ears and I cannot be quiet for it And the sound thereof takes with the Vulgar and they are too willing to be cheated and some body thereby gets no small advantage O good God when shall we be at peace A Faction a stream of Worldly-mindedness and glory runs high The true Spirit of Christianity is lowly and lovely and quiet and looks up to God in the midst of all distractions What should poor Souls do but trust to their good God and be silent acquaint themselves with him and be at peace Calumnies They tell us we have no Church we are without a Head we have no Shepherd no Guide no Assurance we are utterly lost and out of the bosom of the Church c. Soft and fair Are we not Men have we not our reason and senses about us have we not Faith and a good Conscience within us What should we have more They that have ears to hear let them hear We will speak for our selves once more O ye that call your selves the Darlings of God the only True Church give us leave to own the same God and Faith with you and God will own us we doubt not whether you will own us or no. We are men and Christians still for all you our Senses and Judgments and Wills are our own still for all you There is Grace sufficient for us and you notwithstanding all your Anathema's and Curses against us Though you curse yet we bless All the Evidences cannot be on your side we have something to say for our Religion as well as you Scriptures The Scriptures of God we say under God are our Judges We go to the Law and to the Testament of God These you say are not Evident they are dead letters they cannot speak We say that the mind of God in them is a living letter and the Spirit speaks in them and is to be trusted to when the Spirits of men fail and are not to be trusted We understand
serious and profitable services in Church and State as the Ambassadors of God the Counsel of Souls the Priests of Justice and Equity the Legates of Princes and States the Guides of Souls in all religious and civil Transactions by their Preaching Praying Praising Pleading Judging Treating and Executing of Laws Divine and Humane I have reason therefore I think to wave the laziness of such men of good Talents but not improving them to the best advantage but staying behind in the enjoyment of Vulgar notions content themselves with Vulgar errors Mercurial Spirits There are in this latter Age of the world men of Mercurial spirits that by their labours have advanced all kind of Learning to a higher pitch than ever No disparagement to our Ancestors at all who some of them fairly aimed at the same mark but were unhandsomly cried down and discouraged in their several Ages as Trismegistus Plato Socrates Hierocles Hippocrates c. of old and Paracelsus Helmont Harvy c. of late So for Divines Clement Ignatius Irenaeus Justin Hierome Chrysostome Basil Theophylact c. of old and Cassander Melancthon Arminius Grotius Hammond Lushington Taylor c. of late This may be granted perhaps in Philosophy Physick and Mathematicks and in Mechanick Arts as of Navigation c. but to assert any improvement in Divinity will be thought Heresie Schism or Innovation at the least which is counted dangerous Principles sure As for the Foundations and Principles of Faith there is no doubt but they alwaies have been and are and will be the same but for the superstructures and consequences they are now by Discerning men more clearly drawn out for Spiritual advantages than ever they were before by a more perfect understanding of the Scriptures without the mixture of Traditions or the Doctrines of Men. Christianity unmixt The Reason is because at the first Christianity was compleatly revealed by Christ to his Apostles who with him taught the purity and perfection of Divine worship far above the Jewish dispensation and the Wisdom of the world But this Treasure after their daies was a little hid yea in the Apostles daies this mischief began to work which was by them wisely observed especially by St. Paul who in all his Epistles especially to the Romans and Galatians clears up the absolute independent necessity of the Gospel without Moses and the help of vain Philosophy against the Jewish and Heathenizing Christians But in the daies of their Disciples and their Successors the streams that arose from pure fountains ran farther through the channels of Judaism and Heathenism and though they kept themselves in their own nature unmixt and do still yet Men of weak Judgments through Ignorance and of Corrupt minds through too much Worldly wisdom did and do taste too much of their own muddy waters and keep the savour of them as is apparent in their Expressions and Superstitions to this very day And why then should not some if they can Aspire to perfection be wiser and honester too than some Must we be always Children dwell always upon beggarly Elements be always biassed by Parties and Sides for favour and gain The older the World is it should grow the wiser and not stand at a stay It is no Solecism to say We are elder in our Generations than our Fathers and have more experience than our Teachers and our Children and Disciples will be wiser than we And that Antiquity which we so admire and trust unto is Junior and Neoterick properly to us The first Ages are the Youth of the World in their Minority but we are the Antients and Adult We are beholding to them and they would now if alive be beholding to us Neither are the Truths among them altered at all but the same far better understood and kept pure by themselves and enlarged to more profitable uses It is a dull thing to fit still like Children and venture no farther than we have been taught to go All men have not the same drowzy spirits all men will not be so contented Some men will put on lively and try to add something more upon the old stock and not suffer themselves to be led by the nose as for those that will be deceived there is no remedy let them be deceived And they are for the most part of these kinds Vain Sciences Such as for ostentation heap up variety of Learning from vain and unnecessary Logick Philosophy History Tongues Mathematicks Antiquities c. and little regard Morality for life and action to govern themselves and others Hence they become Imperious and Magisterial in their Determinations though for the most part unprofitable and too often hurtful to the Publick good 2. Such as call themselves and are called Poets and Orators fine tongued fellows that can seemingly set off what smattering knowledge they have the easier to gull themselves and others by false Reasons guilded over by fucous enticing expressions by whom a full clear grave and solid style conveying the digested conceptions of the mind to the ears and minds of men by significant terms and fit to do business is derided as rude and barbarous These profound Sages with other folks learning as the Bird with strange feathers or the Asse with the Lion's skin are mightily elevated with their great Parts of Memory and Utterance How they can recite Councils Fathers Philosophers Historians Pick Hebrew Greek and all kind of Roots Coin subtil Distinctions without difference and engross all knowledge to themselves Although all this cry makes but a little wool all is but borrowed nor can they manage the stock of others but spoil it mar it in the using This is meer Pedantry here 's nothing of Judgment and right Reason of their own nor a spirit to discern but to quit the Authorities and Sentences of the Ancients Right Reasoning But where is the true and solid way of Reasoning and Method which a Piercing man without all these Tawdries principally aims at He that follows his own sound Reason without favour and affection to any extream and does his work as is pleasing to his own mind with his own well chosen and disposed materials shall make a far better structure than he that busily collects several materials of several mens framing and fashioning which being all jumbled together must needs be botching A man 's own clear Notions maturely disposed fully expressed in genuine terms is his best Wisdom and most flourishing Rhetorick A structure strongly and usefully contrived and beautified with serviceable and agreeable stuff is better than a Medly or Hotchpotch gawdily painted without frame or fashion Still he that builds for his own conveniences and is neat in his own Nest prosecutes his own end and uses the means accordingly But several mens fancies and contrivances especially wanting Art do not fit the scope of one Man's work That therefore which we call Learning acquired Sound Judgment is an excellent thing in it self but unless a man have sound
Correction Work Payment Church Elders Bishops Priests Deacons High Priest Altar Sacrifice Tithes Oblations First fruits Dedication Consecration Expiation Propitiation Excommunication Idol Faith Vow Covenant Contract Promise Oath Stipulation Sacrament Seal Intercession Hand-writing Mediator Obligation Assurance Evidence Conveyance Alliance Affinity Consanguinity Tribe Stock Familie Degrees Line Birthright Succession Dominion Lordship These and other learned Titles of the Law with the profound judgments of renowned Antecessors upon each of them serve more to the enrichment of the treasury of wisdom for the furnishing of apt Interpretations and Glosses upon the Laws divine than all the Arts or Learning of the World Besides the aptitude of resolving cases and doing business with prudence honesty and gallantry is created by them after the rellish of those equitable and brave Souls that made them The CONTENTS Of the Laitie's Calling AND as to the Laity I say consider your Calling we may not speak the mind of God in learned and unknown Tongues to the high ones only that Pearch on the Towers but in Vulgar language to the meanest that sit on the wall Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus tractari debet That which concerns all ought to be understood by all We will not hoodwink you to make your Ignorance the Mother of your as blind devotion we will not captivate your minds by Magisterial dictates of us men and hide from you the Royal Commandments of your God TITLE VI. Of the Laitie's Doctrine I. I Say then boldly Consider your Calling For Doctrine 1. From beyond the lowest Law of Nature 2. From beyond any Laws written upon Tables 1. To the Law of the Spirit and of Grace 2. To the Law written upon the Heart To the best of Precepts of Evangelical perfection taught by Christ in his famous Sermon upon the Mount and other occasional Discourses and by the Apostles and other holy Men of God that had the same treasure in earthen vessels To the best of Promises Viz. Forgiveness of sins Liberty Adoption Spirit Resurrection eternal life These are the Laws that are so high and yet so easie few favourable and pleasant for the wayes of Wisdom are wayes of pleasantness and all her paths are peace I exhort them therefore to a high belief and full assurance of Heaven by the seal and earnest of the Spirit to be partakers of the holy Unction of Wisdom and Perfection to be a Royal Priesthood and a peculiar people by vertue of the promises that belong to you and to your Children of high exemptions and priviledges of great honour and estate TITLE VII Of the Laitie's Persons II. FOR your Persons Look therefore to your selves that ye walk worthy of so great Salvation and having such an hope in you so full of a glorious and blessed Immortality see that ye purifie your selves even as God is pure and become a people altogether zealous of good Works perfecting Holiness in the fear of the Lord that at last you may obtain an inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith which is in Christ Jesus Fear not therefore little Flock for it is your Father's good Will and pleasure to give you a kingdom Your hope is laid up for you in heaven And neither eye hath seen nor ear hath heard neither can it enter into the heart of man to conceive what things God hath laid up for those that fear him When Christ the favourable Mediatour and Executor of God's Testament shall put the Faithful into actual possession of Eternal Glory saying Come ye Blessed Children of my Father receive the kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the World Aim therefore at a Gospel-Spirit 1. Care not for unnecessary Disputes God's Testament is a plain Testament of Grace Mercy and Peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ As Men's Testaments are to be seen and read by all that are concerned so is God's Will to be seen and read by all Col. 2.6 c. As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him rooted and built up in him and stablished in the faith as ye have been taught abounding therein with thanksgiving Beware lest any man spoil you through Philosophy and vain deceit after the traditions of men after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ 2 Tim. 2.23 But foolish and unlearned questions avoid knowing that they do gender strifes also Genealogies and contentions and strivings about the Law for they are unprofitable and vain 1 Tim. 1.4 Neither give heed to Fables and endless Genealogies which minister questions rather than godly edifying which is in Faith If any man teach otherwise 1 Tim 6.3 c. and consent not to wholsome words even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ and to the doctrine which is according to Godliness he is proud knowing nothing but doating about questions and strifes of words whereof cometh envy strife railings evil surmisings perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth supposing that gain is godliness Jude 27 c. from such turn away Remember ye the words which were spoken before of the Apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ how that they told you there should be mockers in the last time who should walk after their own ungodly Lusts these be they who separate themselves sensual having not the Spirit But ye Beloved building up your selves in your most holy Faith praying in the Holy Ghost keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal Life and of some have compassion making a difference and others save with fear pulling them out of the fire hating even the garments spotted by the flesh Let the Clergy exhort and teach these things and whatsoever else belongeth unto sound doctrine with all long suffering and patience as the stout Soldiers of Jesus Christ 1 Tim. 6.20 And let them be sure to keep that which is committed to their Trust avoiding profane and vain bablings and oppositions of Sciences falsly so called which some professing have erred concerning the Faith Tit. 1.14 Let them not give heed to Jewish fables and commandments of men that turn from the truth nor yet to endless genealogies which minister questions rather than godly edification 1 Cor. 2.4 Let not your speech nor your preaching be with the entising words of mans wisdom but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power Speak Wisdom among them that are perfect the wisdom of God in a mystery even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world unto our Glory For other Foundation can no man lay than that is laid 1 Cor. 3.11 c which is Jesus Christ Now if any man build upon this foundation Gold Silver Pretious stones Wood Hay Stubble every man's work shall be made manifest for the day shall declare it because it shall be revealed by fire and the fire shall trie every man's work whatsoever it is If any
Christ's Mediation to bring us to God Cross to be gloried in Cross outward and inward Effect of Cross-crucifixion Procured by outward cross Philosophy Christianity Christ the Sacrifice and Priest Christians true Sacrifices and Priests Decrees Christ's doing and suffering our doing and suffering Corollaries Christ a Priest Christ quickened by his eternal spirit Christ a Prophet Christ a King p. 224 APPENDIX OR Application to the Clergy and Laity Title 1. Of the Clergie's Calling Word Sacraments Gospel-spirit p. 243 Title 2. Of the Clergie's Doctrine Precepts Promises Conditions p. 244 Title 3. Of the Clergie's Persons p. 246 Title 4. Of the Clergie's Study Law Law-terms p. 247 Title 5. Of the Laitie's Calling p. 251 Title 6. Of the Laitie's Doctrine ibid. Title 5. Of the Laitie's Persons p. 252 Title 8. Of the Genius of the Gospel Joy Fear Decrees Gospel dispensations Worship spiritual Ceremonies Difference of Mosaick and Christian Rites Church of Rome Perfection of Christianity Spiritual perfection Ritual worship abolished No other Rites to be superinduced No Rites ever pleased God Greater perfections in the Christian Religion Prayer and other duties are Relativi Juris p. 254 THE CONTENTS OF THE Second Volume of the Estate of God The First Book Of Rights Title 1. Of Things TRansition Testament Things Method God's Donation Things to be had Things to be done Free-will Right p. 287 Title 2. Of Persons Personality Forfeiture Freedom Falling Recovery p. 293 Title 3. Of Rights Transition Right Definition Instances Independency Indifferency Liberality Creation Donation Declaration Faction Reception Justification Private right Publick right Justice Rights to God Rights to body and soul Rights to wife Rights to children Rights to estate and honour Rights not to be violated Day of Judgment Shame To be right To make right To bestow right To have right To do right Collections Rather hurt self than others Moral honesty not doubted of Vse Reason Reason of Nature Equity of Conscience Tricks in law Severity of old in the Church Man's judgment Relations Friendship Possibility of law Fates Justice in God and Man Wrong none Truth evident Caution p. 295 Title 4. Of Actions Transition Intention Execution Free-will Imperfection Willingness Implicit faith Social actions Jussion p. 316 The Second Book Of Titles Title 1. Of a Sinner Transition Vnjust legally Vnjust morally Vnjust jurally Oppressed Blemished Distressed Tainted p. 322 Title 2. Of Original sin Rom. 5.12 explained Recapitulation Accounting Adam's will not ours Levi's paying of Tithes All mortal in Adam Righteous in Christ Immortal in Christ Every Individuum acts for it self Sinner legal Sinner moral Sinner jural Psal 51.6 explained Ephes 2.3 explained Soul a spirit Good most common Good lovely v. lib. 7. Tit. 3.2 Vol. Argumenta Laciniata p. 326 Title 3. Of a Just man Just Just legally Just morally Just jurally Right Accounting God righteous 349 The Third Book Of Justification Title 1. Of the Name of Justification The term Justifie Accounting Synonyma Bondage Freedom Burden Corporation Other names p. 357 Title 2. Of the form of Justification Imputation Logick Logistick Christ's Righteousness p. 364 Title 3. Of the Matter of Justification Right Corporation Impunity Liberty Provision Protection Audience Alliance Resurrection Jurisdiction Glory Rights of Christ Expectation Supplication Possession p. 371 Title 4. Of the Title of Justification Free grace Titles Birth Purchase Desert Favour Condemnation Gifts Impunity Election Glory Boasting Will of the Receiver Will of the Donor Free grace begins at God's will Free grace makes the Title stronger Free grace makes for God's grace and glory Justification is the best state of love All Rights are from Grace Donation Election Promise God justifieth Christ justifieth The wrong title Law Allegory of the two Covenants Ishmael and Isaac Hagar and Sarah Law a Covenant of bondage Gospel a Covenant of liberty Jacob and Esau Works p. 380 Title 5. Of the Continuance of Justification Relapse a revolt from God Breach of one Party disobligeth the other Mutability of Justification Kingdom of God Natural man Spiritual man Forfeiture Example of Israelites p. 398 Title 6. Of the Tenure of Justification Transition Works James 2.18 explained Works of love p. 405 Title 7. Faith Notions of Faith Credence Trust Promise given Promise taken Re-promise Courage Hope Covenant Faith in Christ Christ the conveyer of faith Christ the author of faith Declaring God's will Proving God's will Testament ad pias Causas Physical operation Moral operation Saving faith Means of faith A new heart 409 The Fourth Book Of Sanctification Title 1. Of the Spirit Transition Spirit the first Agent Hidden man Outward man Natural man Supernatural inspiration Penal and grievous Beneficial and gracious Holy spirit Spiritual man p. 421 Title 2. Of Conscience Definition Seat Vnderstanding Will Memory Reflection p. 424 Title 3. Of the disposition of Conscience To direct To urge To register To testifie To accuse Before the action In the action After the action p. 425 Title 4. Of the indisposition of Conscience Suspension of the offices of Conscience In good men In evil men Ignorance Learning Riches Poverty Self-love Idleness Prejudice Companions God 's not regarding Cross sins Success Satisfaction Want of a spiritual Clergy p. 431 Title 5. Of the restitution of Conscience Believe Conscience Not believe Conscience Self-examination Forsake sin Confess sin Collections p. 440 Title 6. Of a New Creature Transition Old man Old leaven Natural man Carnal mind New man New lump Spiritual mind New birth First resurrection Old creation Concurrency of God and man p. 444 Title 7. Of the Flesh and Spirit Transition Sensual and Spiritual life Mind and will of Flesh and Spirit Life in man threefold Spiritual senses and passions Life of Faith Corollaries Conclusion p. 450 The Fifth Book Of Assurance Title 1. Of the Nature of Assurance Transition Promises Publick Faith Spirit Waiting p. 455 Title 2. Of the Grounds of Assurance Matter of Fact Matter of Right Matter of Witness Spirit of Assurance Ability Sealed Earnest p. 460 Title 3. Of the Kinds of Assurance Names Species p. 465 Title 4. Of the Abuse of Assurance Doctrine of Masses Of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church Of lying still in sin Imputed Righteousness Collections Cautions Obstructions Rules Election p. 468 The Sixth Book Of Tenures Title 1. Of Allodium Transition Estates Allodium Lordship Model from the Goths Etymology Crown Lands Caution Apology p. 476 Title 2. Of Feudum Name Definition Promise Investiture Felony p. 481 The Seventh Book Of Christ's Church and Kingdom Title 1. Of a Feudal Kingdom Transition Feudal Customes Feudal Kingdoms best Goths and Vandals Goths honest Goths endowed the Church first with Lands and Lordships Jus Feudale Manners of Goths Resemblances of a Feudal Kingdom Blessedness Cursedness Church Militant Church Triumphant Tenure of Heaven conditional Holding of God Absolute dominion Feuds a middle government Christ sole Judge Customes in a Feudal kingdom Excellency of a Feudal government Collections Parables run not on all four Tenure of
a Testament is the most Noble of all Deeds or Conveyances And that Because it is most Solemn Nuncupative 1. For Nuncupation if by word of mouth Declarative 2. For Declaration if it be written Witnesses 3. For Witnesses seven of old amongst the Romans at least and those all rightly qualified Citizens honest and of good report Plainness 4. For clear expression of mind For if at any time a Wise man will declare his meaning more than ordinary it must be in his last Will before his death because after that he can never interpret if he have left any doubts or flaws therein Heir 5. For Institution of an Heir to succeed the Testatour in all his Rights and to fulfil all his Will as if he himself were alive to do it Finishing by Hand and Seal 6. For exact finishing signing and sealing of his Will at the time of the Declaration thereof to be his true last Will and Testament Death 7. For Death sadly ensuing upon it to ratifie all that was Willed Testament most Gracious Because it is most Gracious In giving all 1. In giving all universitatem bonorum For the Heir succeeds into all the Rights and Priviledges of the Testator all is the Heirs originally as it was the Testator's though some Legacies be taken out of the Inheritance and sprinkled upon the Legataries by the hand of the heir as the Testator might have done while he was alive This is delibatio Hereditatis but a Taste of the Inheritance the main body is the Heirs In dying 2. In leaving all by dying Goods and Life together greater Love than this can no Man shew than to lay down his life to give all to his Heir And there can be no Person more dear than he whom a Man doth make his sole Heir and Successor to live as it were in his stead and to enjoy use and act for him to all intents and purposes as if he were still alive The Form of old expressed this Love quando ego ex rebus humanis excessero tunc tu charissime Haeres meus esto Loe here I dye and leave thee my most beloved Heir to represent my person still and to possess immediately after my decease my Honour and Estate and to do every thing therein which I would or should have done and especially what I have enjoyned to be done according to my quality and degree as if I were alive my self to do it And moreover in particular it is the most noble and gracious Deed above a Covenant SECTION V. Because a Covenant is not so solemn an Act as a Testament is Reason 1 Testament most solemn For Covenants may be made and are made in Mirth and Jollity at a Market or a Tavern without any sad Consideration of Death ensuing But a Testament is alwaies upon most serious Consideration either in a Closet or on a Man's Death-bed or upon any dangerous Adventure or Travel or in acie or when a man is at the point to dye and then is no dallying when Death is before our face Thus Christ a little before his Death declares his last Will to his Disciples and took the solemn Symbols of Bread and Wine that by them they might remember the last Will of their dying Saviour viz. What gifts he gave unto them My Peace I leave with you my Peace I give unto you c. And what Duty he required at their hands to do or suffer for the Gospel's sake saying Take eat this is my Body which was given for you do this in remembrance of me and this is my Blood of the new Testament which was shed for you drink you all of this and by this they were to shew the Lords Death until his second coming for the full Performance of the Will of God which then he dyed to confirm when he shall give actual possession of the Inheritance of the Kingdom of Heaven to all Believers SECTION VI. Because a Covenant is not so liberal as a Testament is Reason 2 Most Liberal it is more penurious strict and covetous tying men up oftentimes to hard Conditions and is without pure Love the Parties covenanting not daring to trust one another without Bonds and Securities double and treble and desperate Forfeitures and Penalties But a Testament is a bountiful Donation of all to the Heir in whom he puts full trust and confidence and whom he most dearly loves above all the World besides And if he do require Conditions they are sutable to the Love of him that dyes to give him all and to the condition of him to whom all is given that he would no more hurt or dishonour him by these Conditions than he would hurt or dishonour himself if he were to live to perform them SECTION VII I know Marriage there are other Contracts and Covenants of great excellency and vertue as between Man and Wife Friend and Friend of rare Endearments to each other but nothing like this of a Testament In Marriages there are gifts mutual the Wife brings her Dowry to her Husband and he gives his gifts ad sustinenda onera Matrimonii and settles a Joynture upon her there is one for the other yea there is a Communion of all things divine and humane between them yea they give their own Bodies to each other for life and when the Husband dies he leaves her part of his honour and third Part of the Estate and by the Imperial Law she goes away with her Dowry that she brought him SECTION VIII A near Union It is a very near and intimate Union I do confess both in Law making but one Person and by Copulation but one Flesh and a Man and Woman must forsake Father and Mother and they two must cohabit and become one Flesh And besides the resignation of Bodies to each other so that they are not their own but have power over each other they may and ought to give their minds and affections mutually and thereby they are not only one Flesh which may be with Harlots but one Spirit also All which things agree most rarely well with the spiritual Mariage which is between Christ and his Church But this Notion is not shut out of the Testament of God but comes in very well under it For we that are by Faith the Sons and Heirs of God are also his Allies and Friends yea his Spouse and Wife and all the intimate Relations that can be imagined Matrimonial Love is of great concernment as to Procreation being the Fountain of all Societies and the enlargement of Mankind but still it makes but one Flesh as it may be with Harlots but the main thing is a harmony of Humours and Conditions and this makes them more one Soul and one Spirit as friends are and they may not be Conjugal Benefits are great to Wives for Honour and Estate but Paternal Benefits are greater to Sons and Heirs for Honour and Estate And for Law
no Comparison A man's Heir is himself in all Successions and with himself still represented goes along the Possession of all his Honours and Goods for ever A man's Wife is part of himself and carrieth part of his Estate and Honour with her as a Wife should do But his Heir hath all himself and his Estate and Honour too as an Heir should have SECTION IX Acquisition of Goods Other ways of acquiring Goods there are but only in part as first Ocupation Invention Accretion Donation c. But this is in full to go away with all by right of Testamental Inheritance Let every comfortable and benefical Relation therefore be taken in especially that of a Father which is Christ's own Relation by Nature and ours by Grace and Adoption in Christ the principal Son of God and Heir of all things this hinders not but includes the Love-respects of Wife Spouse Sister Brother Friend or Allies Love of God All Love in God is great towards all his Creatures but chiefly to Mankind and more especially to his Church Love of Souls This Love of God to the Soul passeth all knowledge to express the height and length and depth and breadth thereof And again the Love of the Soul to God is unexpressible Stay me with flagons and comfort me with apples for I am sick of Love It is the Soul's ravishment and admiration to an Extasie to see it self thus beloved of God and not know how nor why and to feel what she is not able to conceive or express The blessed Cherubims and Seraphims burn with this Love But for the description of God's Love that kindles all other Love we must draw a Curtain Silence best expresses what we are not able to understand The Communion and fellowship with God Communion proceeding from the mutual love between God and the Soul and the influences of the Spirit is the great mystery of Christ and his Church Behold what manner of Love this is Adoption that we should be called the Sons of God! And we know that we are now the Sons of God but we know not hereafter what we shall be but this we know that when he appeareth we shall appear with him in glory and of Carnal be made Spiritual of Corruptible Incorruptible of Mortal Immortal A man may have many Friends very near and dear unto him Heir the most Beloved and which may bestow upon him many and great gifts and to whom he may give many and great gifts also but the Son and Heir of his Body lawfully begotten or the Son and Heir of his Love lawfully adopted receives most favour and profit by him because he is himself represented and his Off-spring forever So Christ is the beloved Son and Heir of God in whom he is well pleased and in whom we are the beloved Sons and Heirs and Coheirs with Christ The rest go away with their several gifts and honours from him and set up several houses and families of their own but the Son and Heir is full and continual Successor to his Father in all his Honour and Estate as Lord Earl or King with all the Lands and Revenues for ever entailed upon him by his Father who thus never dies But a Wife after her Husband's departure is a Widow free for another man loses a great part of her Lustre and Priviledges and enjoys only her Dowry which she had before from her Father or her Joynture which she received from her Husband so that her Widowhood by her Husbands death is a diminution to her head But it is the augmentation of an Heir by his Father's decease And thus God would have it be in the manner of the conveyance of his Estate to us by way of Testament that we should be his Heirs Thus Love is contained in God's Promises Laws Constitutions Decrees and Testaments at large wherein is the Royal Charter of God's great Donation to his Church and faithful People instituted to be his Heirs and Co-heirs with Christ in toto solido every one of them without any diminution of happiness though there be degrees thereof And under this Grant they claim their Right by their Faith or Promise or Covenant with God to accept of his Love and to obey his Laws An high honour to be the Friends and Allies of God but a far higher to be his Sons and Heirs in all Honours and Inheritances entailed and never to be cut off by God but only by their own Refusal or Apostacy else the Promise of God standeth sure and they remain spiritual Prophets Priests and Kings for evermore This is the only difference between earthly and heavenly Heirs that the Earthly succeed in Flesh and Blood Honour and Estate and in all things but only Vertues and great Parts but the Heirs of God succeed not only to the Inheritance of Glory but to the Vertues Gifts and Graces and Likeness of God To conclude in a word there are many and great acts of Grace in the World but none of them nor all together are so gracious as that of a Testament And such is the Gospel the New Testament of God's Grace SECTION X. Definition of the Gospel This is a Definition of the Gospel so large in extent that we can reach nothing beyond it to prove it by Not because it is no true Definition but because it is so highly true that there is no cause or reason above it wherewith to prove it A prime Verity an Axiom a Principle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Causa Postulatum ut Triangulum est rectilinium Trilaterum A Demonstration so of reason so true that no body in his right wits can deny A Nominal or Grammatical Cause may be given for the words Gospel Testament or Covenant but no Rational or Real Cause because it is a Definition Nevertheless though it cannot so properly be proved because granted and a Principle yet it may well be illustrated or declared more to the understanding thereof Definition of a Testament And so a Testament is a just Decree of things to be had or done after the Testators death according to that of Justinian Testamentum est voluntatis justa Sententia de eo quod quis post mortem suam fieri velit Called by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a Disposition or Decree of the Will and by the Latins Testamentum or solemn Testation of witnessing of the Testator's mind declared to fit persons And in this the Wisdom and Goodness of God to us appears in condescending to our shallow Capacities by setling the Inheritance of Eternal life upon mortal Men by an Immutable Testament after the manner of Men more impossible after the Death of Christ to be revoked than all the Laws by the Medes and Persians that by this way and means all Believers might be assured that they are Instituted the Sons and Heirs of God by Jesus Christ in his last Will and Testament because it is so ratified by the Death
all these So the Church hath her Pupillage and Tutorage and also her Majority and full Age. However God revealed himself at sundry times and after divers manners by his Servants to the infant Church in former Ages Heb. 1.2 yet in these last and riper daies he hath more fully revealed himself by his Son Who are kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 10 11 12. ready to be revealed in the last time of which Salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the Grace that should come unto you searching what or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified before-hand the Sufferings of Christ and the Glory that should follow unto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they did minister the things which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven which things the Angels desire to look into And these all having obtained a good report through Faith received not the Promise God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect SECTION II. Jews a childish People The Jews are reckoned a childish People who though they had perpetual Oracles Miracles and Prophets among them as evidences of God's Presence and Protection yet they fell of shamefully to Idolatry A Prodigy GOD being daily in their eye and as it were handled by them in Egypt at the Red-Sea by a Pillar of Fire by night and of Cloud by day in the Wilderness giving them the Law and Manna from heaven c. in the Tabernacle and in the Temple when they came into the Land of Canaan That all along they should distrust his Goodness and Rebel against him But after seventy years Captivity that sore and lasting Calamity for all their Idolatries they began to come to their Wits arriving at some degree of maturity and growth The Temple so destroyed and now so proudly re-edified and their Enemies still increasing upon them and God withdrawing his visible presence from them by little and little and no Angel nor Prophet appearing to comfort them they were taught that there was some higher Worship and more Spiritual happiness intended for them than the Law did promse And they began by degrees to elevate their minds to seek him in his proper dwelling place of Heaven and to rely upon Coelestial and Eternal Promises as appeared by the constancy of their Sufferings under Antiochus even to Martyrdom in the Hope that their Fathers the best of them had That they might obtain a better Resurrection Heb. 11.35 Thus their Affections were weaned by degrees towards the dawning of the Gospel and the Day-spring from on high which was shortly to visit them All hopes of Temporal happiness failing them being put under the Roman-yoke also which they so much abhorred the Wisest among them did look up higher than this World and waited for the greater Consolation of Israel who was to be the Hopes of all the ends of the Earth The Glory of the Scepter being at last departed from Judah first ravished from them by one of the Limbs of the Macedonian Lion and afterwards grasped by the Talons of the Roman Eagle after this deadly gripe the Royal Stock was quite extinct and the Office of Aaron perplexed and all things in Church and State so blended contrary to their Original Institution that they were at their wits end as to any Temporal recovery which made the Understanding Party look up higher but the Generality were sorely abused by their Leaders and Teachers Then came John the Baptist the Preacher of Repentance to the Poor people and to the Scribes and Pharisees that generation of Vipers warning them to flee from the Wrath and to embrace the Mercy that was to come and to bring forth fruits worthy of Repentance and not to say any more in their hearts That they had Abraham to their Father for God was able out of the Stones to raise up Children unto Abraham not to trust in the Temple for not a stone shall be left upon a stone and the Axe was laid to the Root of the Tree and every Tree that brought not forth good fruit was to be hewn down and cast into the fire Also Christ was to come with his Fann in his hand who would throughly purge his floor and gather his Wheat into his Garner and burn up the Chaff with unquenchable fire And except men were born again and except their Righteousness did exceed the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees they should never enter into the Kingdom of heaven but must be baptized not with VVater but with the Holy Ghost and with Fire Many mighty Miracles were done by Jesus Christ and his Disciples in all the Regions round about so as it was never heard of or seen before since the VVorld stood At this hearing and seeing of these VVonders the People were amazed and all sorts began to enquire saying What shall we do The Law and the Prophets were until John Luk. 10.16 since that time the Kingdom of heaven is taken by violence and every man presseth into it Thus was the way of the Lord prepared and his paths made streight Every Valley was exalted and every Mountain and Hill brought low Luk. 3.5 c. and the crooked paths made streight and the rough waies made smooth and all flesh was to see the Salvation of God And the Axe laid to the Root of the Tree and every Tree that brought not forth good fruit was to be hewn down and cast into the fire So the Jewish Church was in its Minority under the Law as under a School master which taught them Elements and gave them Corrections i. e. Elements of civil Conversation with others and sobriety in their own persons Principles of Morality as forbidding of Murther Adultery Theft c. sitting them thereby for the prohibition of Anger Malice Lust c. in the New Law of Christ who saith Math. 5.28 Whosoever looketh on a Woman to lust after her hath committed adultery already with her in his heart And he that hateth his Brother is a Murtherer And from Usury he teacheth to lend freely looking for nothing again and from Oaths not to swear at all but let their Yea be Yea and their Nay Nay and from Shadows and Ceremonies to bring them to Substantial and Spiritual worship and from Circumcision with hands in the Flesh to Circumcision without hands in the Spirit Coll 2.11 in putting off the Body of the Sins of the Flesh by the Circumcision of Christ All this Service was Servile as 1. To be subject to positive Laws against the Laws of Nature and forced to Punishments for breaking of them An ignorance or neglect of a Statute was expiated by a Sacrifice or Sin offering but a wilful breach by Presumption was
'T is very hard But Noble Spirits cannot brook it their Tongues and Pens and their whole Bodies may be captivated against their Wills but in their Souls they will be free Is there any greater Idleness Idleness than to stay and rest on that which men have formerly done said or written to attribute all to the Ancients without leaving any thing to be mended by those that come after them Surely all the Mysteries of God and Nature are not yet discovered the greatest things are difficult and long in coming and Truth is the Daughter of Time Many things which were hidden are come to light and more will come to light and our Successors will wonder that we were ignorant of them We do not build now adaies after the fashion of Vitruvius Improvements nor Till the ground or plant according to Varro or Columella we use not food or physick after the rules of Galen or Hypocrates we judg not exactly after the Civil Law of the Romans or the Feudal Customs of the Lombards neither plead we as Demosthenes and Cicero nor govern as Solon or Lycurgus did we war not fail not sing not c. as did the Ancients but much better And therefore the World is beholding to those brave Souls that have adventured by long Study care charges and bodily Labours to excel their Predecessors in finding out such rare secrets as serve more for the benefit of Mankind The Antipodes the Sailing by the Compass the Circulation of the Blood the Chymistry of Plants and Minerals Guns Printing c. were strange things to be believed before the truth of them was seen by Experience The Wisest men may not scorn better helps though offered by far meaner hands It must be pride that rejects teaching though from an Ant or Sow And let them be choaked that refuse to be drawn out of a Dungeon by Ropes and rotten Clouts Let the infection of Leprosie stick close to their Skin that scorn to wash it off in a narrow or shallow Stream Knowledg does very ill to puff up so as to scorn Ignorance much more to despise greater knowledg A Sickness a Disease of the Mind in men of high parts is hard to be cured but if their Bodies be in danger they will not disdain Album Graecum or the Receipt of a poor Beggar While they ail little or nothing they will resolve to die by the Book but if all the Great Doctors give not ease to the Gout or Stone Strangury or Flaming Feaver an Emperick a Quack an Old Woman any body that can be gotten for God's sake at any rate and thank you too a thousand times Obj. It is not safe to leave the old Road. Sol. What if it be rugged What if it be about c. What is he that will read in no bodies book but his own or that shuts his good book is wise enough and will read no further that begins to build and leaves off in the first story that goes half his journey and then comes back If Columbus had not discovered another World and Americus Vespucius conquered the same it had been no world still to us We must have wanted our Plantations of Virginia New-England c. and the King of Spain his Gold and Silver Mines Is there no progress to be made Must we stand at a stay Look into all Mechanick Trades Mysteries and Professions they grow more ingenious every day to their great Commendation Observe Lawyers Philosophers and Physicians Oratours Poets c. improving daily God's Blessing on their hearts for so doing Obj. But Divines must not stir a foot others may Sol. No Why so Stay let us consider more of this matter It is for certain that no other Foundation can be laid than what is already laid of Gold and Silver and pretious Stones But we may build upon this foundation suitable matter which will endure the Fire Christ Jesus delivered the full perfection of all truth the most pure precepts and highest promises in the Gospel The Apostles but it was a long time first understood it and preached it to the world The chiefest things which Christ did suffered and spake are written in the Gospels as also the Sermons Miracles and Acts of the Apostles in the Epistles also are occasionally taught the pure Doctrine of Christ unmixed with Moses and Vain Philosophy The Apostles by Inspiration understood the whole Will of God and preached infallibly and from their Light we all receive Light But Inspiration and Infallibility dying with them the Disciples of the Apostles and their Disciples were good men and kept the Faith which was delivered to them and so it hath been kept and would have been kept by constant tradition of Preaching if so much had not been written as is written In a word the Will of God was plainly revealed Corruption and as plainly understood but some after the Apostles days grievous Wolves entred into the Flock of Christ even Jewish and Gentile Christians who wrested the Scriptures both Old and New to their own destruction and too much trusting to art and subtilty corrupted the simplicity of the Gospel Then as mens Pride with their wealth and worldly polities encreased came in the Doctrines of Infallibility Supremacy Transubstantiation Purgatory Masses worshipping of Saints and Angels innumerable Superstitions of Will-worship and carnal services And though in all these ages good men saw the clearness of Gospel truths through these mists of vulgar errors yet could not swim against the Stream and the common sort relying upon men of mighty names grew careless to search any further believing all that was told them by their Leaders The rest contented themselves and sate still under those Tyrannies wishing for Reformation but they were poor and weak and the violence of the Powers and Multitudes was too strong against them Such was the humour of those dark and ignorant ages when the modest Disciple would not presume to know more than his admired Master though he were fit to be a Master himself to others And so the world lay in a trance for a long time and fetcht a sound sleep and was almost dead especially in and about the Eleventh Century that unhappy age overspread with Ignorance and Barbarity Reformation Till by degrees some more Heroick Spirits appeared and boldly told the world those glorious truths which they had discovered as Luther Melancthon Cassander Calvin c. who weeded out many Tares that the Enemy had sown while good men were fast asleep And since that greater men than these have more and more illustrated the Spiritual Dispensation of the Gospel to all mankind far different from that which was before the Law and under the Law And still we go on to perfection not for a new Faith or Religion but for the understanding of the old way of God more perfectly The Reformation grows higher and higher every day and the Faithful grow more and more spiritual and fitted for glory walking more sublimely and
as fully every way as upon those vulgar or scholastick notions that they have been used to and spent their oratory upon in the Geneva knack of sermonizing Now whether Preaching have not been extremely abused let the sober judg When the plain simplicity and purity of the Gospel is left and sentences of Fathers and Councils or School-subtilties or Casuistical Mootings but especially Rhetorical flourishings mingled with Poetical flashings and ginglings are all hudled together in a Pulpit to amaze the Hearers that the Preacher may be admired for a deep Scholar and a precious man of God All the Learning that hath been in esteem for the most part was the learning of the Antients and of the latter Schools and to stuff our Books with their Sayings was our greatest glory but give me the men that can invent of their own and add better to the former labours of learned men Lord what great care and psins is there taken and what vast expences made to search in forrain Parts for old ends of Gold and Silver Brass Wood and Stone in Coins Mettals Plates Marbles Statues Tables Pictures Banners Escucheons and Manuscripts to print them in stately Volumes to know the customes and habits of Idolatrous Heathens or superstitious orders of ignorant Monks and Friers and to what purpose How do some men stretch their memories for there is nothing of judgment in the case to understand the Oriental Tongues consuming the precious time and strength of rare Wits in Criticisms upon words and Idioms of strange tongues by Lexicons only which might be far better imployed in the understanding of things profitable to the Church and State I deal freely and ingenuously with my Reader I care not to pump and plod for other mens notions less proper for my purpose and so lose my own If I meet with any better I shall not stick to use them and so to make them mine in my own composition without plagiary He is no fool that saith Potest homo sine Magistri ductu Claubergius Invention suo remigio è solâ mentis suae Tabulà mundi vasto volumine studere imò pluris in rebus naturali lumini subjectis facienda est una veritas proprio Marte reperta quàm decem ab aliis acceptae dantur exempla eorum qui è semetipsis mundi libro studentes magni viri evaserunt Every man may without the conduct of a Master guide himself by his own steerage and study in the Book of his mind and in the large volume of Nature and one truth so found out by a man 's own ingenuity in those things which are evident by the light of nature is of more worth than ten that are conveyed to us from the wits of other men And there are not wanting examples of many that being students of themselves and of the world have attained to be very great and learned men The Mind is sensible of the Distemper of the Body but the Body is not sensible of the discomposure of the Soul Most men not using their rational faculties lead more an animal than an intellectual life Our reason began to be disturbed as soon as ever we began to speak and that corruption corrupted our speech afterwards and most men go clear away with false reasons or flashes of wit for sense And by custome for want of observation this cheat is established and none but discerning and honest unbiassed men do seriously mark it An Oratour or a Buffoon makes us merry and gets applause when a sober plain wise man cannot be heard and especially when mens interests come in to get favour or gain any thing is swallowed and the cunning man will not own it that he cheats another or is cheated himself If therefore we use the common way of speaking we shall speak truly but if we use the common way of reasoning we shall not reason truly For right reason is a very hard thing to come by and few have it and yet every man pretends to enjoy it Fearfulness For my own part I am distrustful of my self and this is the only satisfaction that I can give my own Soul that I am sensible of nothing more than of mine own weakness I do therefore fearfully commend my Thoughts to the world and because I have few or no succours nor encouragements I am come a begging to every wise man's door for his relief in charity to tell me truly where I am and how I am likely to be accepted and whether all this be worth my labour I confess I may be over-conceited of my own conceptions and dote upon my own homely Brat I would fain know my errors which my own self-favouring spirit may not suffer me to understand Act. 8.26 I seem to aim as Apollos was taught by Aquilla and Prissilla to understand the way of God more perfectly The things I deliver are the same but they have not had the luck to be clothed altogether in the habit And what then have I done And what will become of me How shall I be slash'd for my presumption Some body I hope will take my part for I look to be hated because I single my self from the company of other men Giants to me and whose Books I am not worthy to carry nor be named the same day with them Yet still my little Candle may give a small Light amongst those vast Tapers Tell me some good body my fortune in this case and what I am likely to trust to for I am by nature very fearful Imperial Law If in this great case of God's disposal of rights to his Church and their Justification to them by faith I have made use of the Terms of the Imperial Law of the Romans or the Feudal Law of the Lombards Feudal Law I hope it is not without good grounds And if in any point I have erred I shall be glad to be convinced thereof that I might amend it And if in any thing I have afforded any light towards the right understanding of the Two Testaments and the great cases of Justification and of Christ's Church in order to a fair composure of needless Controversies I shall be mightily satisfied and heartily thankful to God and good men And I hope by this Essay some stately spirits will rouze up their Lion-like strength Essay and carry all before them with an high hand laying all the perverse disturbers of the Church at their conquering Feet and tumble them into their everlasting graves from ever rising up again to perplex the world any more at least in a degree if God so please If any be so scornful as to slight me or so cruel as to smite me with reproaches I shall never reply but lie still and defend my self with my good intentions to be serviceable in the Tabernacle of God though but as a Hewer of Wood or Drawer of Water And why may not a Dwarf carry Arms for a Giant Or a poor Boy run
taken or received this is jus habere in them that have power to consent SECT VIII Creation 1. The creating all Rights as of all Things is absolutely in God the fountain of all Being and Justice who giveth power unto men subordinately to make Laws and to do acts of Grace in imitation of that absolute Supremacy Legislative power and Prerogative that is in him alone this is Jurisfaction or making of Rights SECT IX Donation 2. The giving of all Rights as of Things is absolutely in God the fountain of all Beings and Graces from whom every good and perfect gift doth proceed who giveth power unto men to do acts of kindness and good will in imitation of that absolute Bounty and Liberality that is in him alone this is Jurisdation and Mercy SECT X. Declaration 3. The declaring of Rights is absolutely in God the fountain of all Wisdom who giveth power to men to know good and evil Right and Wrong that they might give every one his due in commuting just valuations and distributing proportionable rewards or punishments to vertue or vice in imitation of that infinite wisdom prudence justice and bounty that is in him eminently alone This is Jurisdiction and Justice SECT XI Faction 4. The Doing of Right is absolutely in God for there is none good but God the fountain of all goodness who giveth power unto men to do good and eschew evil by the practice of all vertue and honesty in imitation of that infinite goodness and integrity which is highly in him alone This is Righteousness and goodness SECT XII Reception The Taking of Right is absolutely in God who hath all right properly in and from himself who giveth power unto men to receive and take from him and them to whom he hath given Rights to such things as may be their own by free gift or law in imitation of that infinite possession and profit which is in him transcendently alone This is owning and enjoying Right SECT XIII Amongst all Rights whatsoever Justification the act of Justifying others unto Rights is the best and highest act of Justice or Judgment because it produceth or bringeth forth all original Rights as the parent or stock to the off-spring and branches that spring from the same For if he do right that either deals right or declares right much more doth he do right who creates that Right whereby actual Right is done by a neighbour to his neighbour or by a Judg to his Client When a Tenant pays thee his Rent he doth thee right but when thy Father gave thee thy Estate he did thee more right for he made that right and gave it to thee whereby thy Tenant doth thee right When I was questioned for my Living the Judg justified me by declaring me to have a good right thereunto but when my Patron presented me he justified me much more for he created and gave to me that right which the Judg declared me to have SECT XIV Of Rights some are private and some publick 1. Private Right Private Right is that which belongeth to the honour or benefit of every private person as they are in private capacity and society with themselves 2. Publick Right is that which belongeth to the honour and benefit of all persons as they are considered in publick capacity and communion with the State or Commonwealth which things are farther illustrated in the Civil Law In the Church of Rights some are private and some publick 1. Private Right is that which belongeth to the honour and profit of every particular person as Faith Justification Sanctification Love Hope Patience Temperance c Adoption Resurrection Ascension Glory SECT XV. 2. Publick Right Publick Right is that which belongeth to the honour and benefit of the whole communion of Saints and Body of Christ as 1. The Rights of Creation Protection Maintenance 2. The Rights of Redemption as Victory over World Flesh Death Devil 1. The Rights of Creation or Nature are common to all men good and bad and to all creatures and are the same that ever they were and ever shall be to the world's end And though the wicked amongst men are unrighteous legally and morally and therefore jurally have no spiritual Rights of the Gospel yet they are not unrighteous naturally to the use of the Creatures for food and raiment or temporal Dominion which are not founded upon Grace but upon natural and Civil Establishments Thus God left not the heathen that worshipped him not as God without Witness Act. 14.17 but gave them rain from heaven filling their hearts with food and gladness 1. The Rights of Redemption or Grace are peculiarly enjoyed by the Faithful only and are the same that ever they were and ever shall be world without end These Rights of Grace by Regeneration and a new Creature which were lost by the Fall of Adam are restored by the Redemption of the Second Adam Christ Jesus And all that have put off the Old man with the corruptions and lusts and have put on the New man which after Christ is renewed in righteousness and holiness are the righteous Heirs of God that have right to themselves and to their own spiritual actions and to the food and clothing of the Soul and all things that conduce to their everlasting welfare Rights are considered as private or publick 1. Natural in all natural Entities 2. Civil in all Corporations Politick 3. Religious in all Civil Communions 1. Singly to each person 2. Jointly in Divine or Humane Society SECT XVI Justice All Rights are Dues and may be claimed and Just and therefore Sacred and therefore not to be violated or profaned Because they are allowed to those to whom they do belong by the Laws of God and Man And therefore God forbid but every man should have his due that is his own Just Rights And this way of Justice and Honesty if it were trod in exactly would bring peace and quietness into the world and for want of it is all strife war and misery SECT XVII Rights to God My chiefest Rights of my Soul and Body Wife and Children Honour and Estate are of and to and from my God whose I am and all mine SECT XVIII Rights to Body and Soul My next Rights of my Soul and Body are to my self for I have Right to my self to be mine own for God hath given me my self my Soul and Body to be mine under him and for him and they are mine as they are his and therefore they are mine because they are his and because he hath given them to me and therefore he hath given them unto me which is his act and deed that I might give them again to him and this is my act and deed and so we have Rights interchangeably to each other And so I am contracted to my God and my God is contracted to me and I am his and he is mine I have interest in him and he
have them more My virtues or vices can no Man have but my self but others may have the like Ergo no Individual Rights can be reckoned to another Person but specifical only The particular right to such a place Dignity or Profit may be taken away from one Man and given to another but if it belong not to a Place but to a Person only then the specifical right of one may be taken away from him and given to another Man No reckoning or accounting any thing to any Man but rights Faith is accounted and Right is accounted Faith for Right and Right for Faith The righteousness of the Law is not imputable or transferrible to another But the Man that doth them shall live in them Gal. 3.12 and no other And the unrighteousness of the Law is not imputable or derivable to another but the Man that doth them shall die in them for the Soul that doth well that Soul shall live but the Soul that sins that Soul shall die If it be objected that we are united with Christ and therefore all that is Christ's is ours I answer It is all for us and our union with Christ is our capacity to have a righteousness imputed to us from Christ by our Faith in Christ and therefore was Christ united unto us that we might be united unto him Hence there is a sympathy between Christ and us Saul Acts 9.4 Saul why persecutest thou me Heb. 4.15 In asmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me He was touched with the feeling of our infirmities So if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him Rom. 8.17 He hath raised us up together Eph. 2.9 and made us to sit together in Heavenly places in Christ Jesus My Beloved is mine and I am his Christ espoused our Nature Cant. 2.16 and took our sins and sorrows upon him and Christ espoused our Persons and we take his Righteousness and Glories upon us And all things are ours 1 Cor. 3.22 and we are Christ's and Christ is God's As Christ was made sin by imputation not inhesion for us so we are made righteous by imputation but not inhesion by him Is 53.6 The Lord hath laid upon him the iniquities of us all and by his stripes we are healed God hath made him to be sin for us that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him And be found in him 2 Cor. 5.21 not having our own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ Phil. 3.9 the Righteousness which is of God by Faith So Christ's righteousness that justifies us is not the righteousness of Christ in us but a righteousness put upon us and imputed unto us by Faith Ro. 4.6 And Blessed is the Man to whom God imputeth righteousness without works Justification is not the discharge of a sinner acquitted from blame and punishment but the collation of a right from the justifier to some farther benefit Not a legal right to the sinner that was illegal but a jural right to the Quasi-sinner that had no jural right by his Faith the means to make him imputed righteous and morally righteous to walk accordingly Which righteousness though it be not exact coming up to the perfection of the Law yet it is accepted for exact in and through the perfection of Christ Here is still no imputation of Christ's Personal righteousness to be found given out and bestowed upon us but an imputation of righteousness by Faith for Christ his righteousness sake not our own We are accounted righteous before God saith our Church * See the 11. Artic. of Religion That is the merits of Christ's righteousness hath so far prevailed with God in our behalf that by and upon our Faith we shall be accounted righteous before God in Christ by our Faith which in it self and by it self justifies not but instrumentally and as the means of justification So God looks not upon a justified Person as if he had done and suffer'd sufficient to justifie him but upon Christ and the justified in Christ who did and suffered sufficiently for him It appears on all hands that there is such a thing as Imputed righteousness but at no hand is there found any agreement what this should be 'T is true that Christ's righteousness is imputed to us but not as they mean who in a popular pleasing phrase tell us That we put of the rags of the Old Adam and put on the rich Robes of the New that we are clothed with garments of our Elder Brother as Jacob was with Esau's that we as he may steal away the Blessing What dint of argument will such weak sayings endure So the Adulterer may say he is chast with Christ's chastity the intemperate sober with Christ's temperance the Rebel obedient with Christ's obedience the malicious loving with Christ's love and every wicked Person righteous with Christ's righteousness May it not as well be said That as we are holy with Christ's holiness so we are redeemers with Christ's redemption for he who is said to be our righteousness is as much said to be our redemption Many strange and dangerous consequences may issue from such imputations as they fancy If any eye can pierce farther into the Letter and find more than Imputation of Faith for Righteousness and not Imputation of sins for Christ's Righteousness sake let him follow it as he pleases so it be not to dishonour Christ and cheat his own Soul by taking no care to be any thing that is good because Christ is all in all unto him not flinging in so much as a mite into the Treasury of Holiness because Christ hath poured in that Vast Talent which at the last day he accounts of his own Head shall be reckoned to him as his own proper goods to all intents and purposes The better to fix the true sense of Imputation in our minds we must know That Imputation is a Genus to these three things Justification Condemnation and Oppression which how different soever and opposite they are among themselves yet they all agree in this one common general that they are an imputation whereby some good or evil is ascribed accounted and imputed to us For Condemnation is an imputation of that punishment to a Man which he hath deserved by Law Oppression is an imputation of that punishment which he hath not deserved by Law And Justification is an imputation of that benefit which he hath deserved by Law or not deserved by grace and favour And besides we have no word whereby to express our owning of any thing that is ours but this of Imputation Hence sin is imputed to us because it is properly our own as we have made it by our evil will and punishment is said to be ours because by our sin it is justly imputed to us And Righteousness is imputed to us because it is made ours by
drowning himself under the water a sign of dying unto sin being buried with Christ and rising again out of the water a sign of rising with Christ unto newness of Life So that if thy Faith oblige thee to the duty of a Son it will oblige God to the Blessings of a Father and he will not only by Nature and Grace adopt thee to be his Son but by Covenant and Pact institute thee to be his Heir and if thy faith oblige thee not to the duty of a Son it will disoblige God from the Blessings of a Father and he may disinherit thee having broken the Covenant for thy treachery and rebellion The Faithful have a promise I will be to thee a Father 2 Cor. 6.18 and thou shalt be to me a Son So they believing and accepting God for their Father he accounts their Faith to them for their right to be his Sons and gives them the Spirit of his Son to cry Abba Father imputing a present right to a future inheritance of Sons and Heirs and Joynt-heirs with Christ Ro. 8.17 Gal. 3.29 Gal. 4.7 Hebr. 1.14 Heb. 6.17 James 1.5 Heirs of God according to the promise Heirs of God through Christ Heirs of salvation Heirs of promise Heirs of the Kingdom which God hath promised to those that love him Now an Heir is a Person justified to a future Estate so that to be justified by Faith and to be made an Heir of God are things either all one in effect or the later is but the property or consequent of the former as the Apostle saith That being justified by his Grace we should be made Heirs according to the hope of Eternal Life SECT III. The Faith we have hitherto described to be Faith in God or of God Faith in Christ Mar. 11.22 Acts 3.16 John 14.1 is also Faith in Christ or of Christ Have Faith in God or of God through Faith in his Name or of his Name i. e. Christ Ye believe in God believe also in me Ye have been taught to believe in God as the Creator and Conservator of the World Psal 78.7 so do ye also believe in me the Son of God the Author and preserver of the Church 29. Joh. 6.27 the Prince of Life whom God the Father hath sealed This is the work of God that we believe in him whom he hath sent 1. Faith in God is an high esteem of God's Existence Goodness and Greatness and an acceptation of his will and kindness So 2. Faith in Christ is an high esteem of Christ's Person the Son of God and the Son of Man the Mediator between God and Man and an acceptation of his promises Hebr. 9.15 For this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that they which are called might receive the promise of his eternal inheritance The Devils have an Estimatory Faith Thou art the Holy one of God Mar. 3.11 Mar. 1.20 22. A Preceptory Faith also to obey Christ as when he cast them out of the herd of Swine and at other times A Judicatory Faith Math. 8.29 that Christ is their Judg Art thou come to torment us before the time Luc. 8.28 But they have no Promissary Faith in God or in Christ Not that they want a will but they have no Promises but altogether threatnings and instead of being justified to a present right to a future Blessing they are condemned to a present right to a future curse which is everlasting fire Math. 25.14 prepared for the Devil and his angels Reserved in everlasting chains of darkness Jude 6. unto the judgment of the great day For to Mankind only are the promises made by God in Christ by the Will of God to be justified by Faith because Christ only took upon him our Nature and not the Nature of Angels Faith in the Patriarks was immediate in God Faith in the Jews was mediate by Moses Faith in Christians is mediate by Christ called therefore the Faith of Jesus Christ SECT IV. Christ the conveyer of Faith 1. Because Christ is the Conveyer of it through whom we believe in God For that our Faith may meet with God aright it must pass unto him the same way whereby his promises are conveyed unto us Now his promises are conveyed unto us 1. immediately and so our Faith passes immediatly unto God 2. mediately in Christ therefore our Faith must pass by Christ unto God Thus God did immediatly declare his promises to Noah for the saving of himself and others in the Ark. Gen. 6.18 Gen. 15.4 And to Abraham for a Son and Heir of his own Body Thus God did mediatly declare his promises to the Israelites by Moses for their deliverance out of Egypt Exod. 3.16 2 Sam. 7.4 Jer. 29.10 As also to David by Nathan for the everlasting establishment of his Kingdom to his Seed As to the Jews by Jeremiah for their return out of Captivity As to Zacharias by Gabriel That his Wife Elizabeth should have a Son Luc. 1.13 And as all God's promises in the Gospel are by Jesus Christ whose Ministery is most excellent therefore by him our Faith must pass unto God Hebr. 1.1 Heb. 8.6 Who in these last daies hath spoken unto us by his Son who is the Mediator of a better Covenant established upon better promises Therefore as God's promises arrive at us immediatly or mediatly so our Faith arriveth at God immediatly or mediatly Joh. 13.20 For Faith in God's Messenger is Faith in God who sent him He that receiveth whosoever I send receiveth me and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me i. e. believeth And on the contrary He that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me i. e. diffideth So God punished the Jews for not believing by the means of a Messenger with the Sword and Famine because they did not hearken to his words Jer. 29.18 which he spake unto them by his Servants the Prophets rising up early and sending them but they would not hear So Zacharias was stricken dumb for not believing the Angel Gabriel that came to him from God Such a mediate Faith had the Israelites who believed in Moses but their faith terminated in God Loe I come to thee in a thick cloud that the People may hear when I speak unto them Ex. 19.9 and believe thee for ever In the Original it is Believe in thee Christ said the Israelites trusted in Moses yet God was the ultimate end where their Faith rested and Moses the means through whom it passed Faith mediates in Christ Joh. 5.45 but terminates in God The trust we have to God-ward is through Christ 2 Cor. 3.4 Through him both Jews and Gentiles have an access by one Spirit unto the Father By Christ we do believe in God Eph. 2.18 1 Pet. 1.21 that our Faith and Hope in Christ might be Faith and Hope in God Christ saith He that believeth
future consummation of it In the New Testament God hath promised unto us the inheritance of Heavenly Blessedness whereto by Faith we have a present right but because we have not a present possession of that inheritance Therefore God gives us his earnest to assure our future possession of that inheritance And the earnest which he gives us is his Holy Spirit 2 Cor. 5.5 whereby he worketh us for the possession thereof Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given us the earnest of the Spirit 2 Cor. 122. And that very Spirit which is a Seal to our Spirit is also an Earnest in our Hearts Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts And that possession for which the Holy Spirit is both a Seal and an Earnest is the Inheritance of Blessedness Eph. 1.13 In whom also after ye believed ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our Inheritance And of that Inheritance the Spirit is the Earnest until the possession be delivered unto us for unto the words last cited thus immediately followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. unto the delivery of the possession or as a Common Lawyer would read it until the livery of seizon Which being done the Spirit shall cease being an Earnest seeing the use of it shall be then extinguished Thus the Spirit is an Assurance for Blessedness because it is an ability to perform the condition of it a Seal for our present Right to it and an Earnest for our future possession of it The CONTENTS Names Species TITLE III. Of the Kinds of Assurances IN Scripture the Names importing the nature and kinds of Assurance Names are these 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith is the substance of things hoped for Hebr. 11.1 Hebr. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we hold fast the beginning of our confidence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in fundamento 2 Cor. 2.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this confident boasting 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Evidence Proof Judgment Conviction Heb. 11.1 The evidence of things not seen 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.12 1 Tim. 3.13 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the Faith of him We have great boldness by the Faith which is in Christ Jesus 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If we hold fast the confidence Hebr. 3.6 Heb. 4.16 1 Joh. 3.21 and the rejoicing of the Hope firm unto the end Let us come boldly to the Throne of Grace Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Seeing we have such hope we use great plainness of Speech 2 Cor 3.12 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In power and in the Holy Ghost and in much assurance 1 Thes 1.5 Shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end Heb. 6.11 Heb. 10.12 Bas Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith draws the heart to stricter communion with God than all other rational acts can do 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1.14 The Spirit is the Earnest of our Inheritance until the Redemption of the purchased possession 2 Cor. 1.22 He hath given us the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts Who hath also given unto us the earnest of the Spirit 2 Cor. 5.5 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 whereby ye are sealed unto the day of your Redemption Who hath sealed us 2 Cor. 1.22 and given us the earnest of his Holy Spirit In whom after ye believed Eph. 1.13 ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise SECTION I crave leave to rank together all the Species of Assurances that I can think of As Species 1. Natural in matter of Being the truth of Entity and Existence in rerum naturâ in the world for things present as that there is a state of Nature and a state of Grace A Temporal a Spiritual and an Eternal condition a Generation and a Regeneration an Old Man and a New an Old Creation and a New Creation 2. Historical in matter of Faith in story by relation of Authors worthy to be believed Tradition universal from Age to Age Records and Monuments the beginning of all certitude for things past 3. Prophetical in matter of Word by inspiration for things to come confirmed by Miracles creating thereby a good Assurance 4. Legal in matter of Right in Law by Statutes positive and Rules Divine or Humane to have and to hold things temporal or eternal to which we may safely lay claim and challenge as dues by Sacred Constitution from Supreme powers which cannot be denied 5. Donative in matter of Grace in Love Bounty and Equity to which also a just claim may be made because offered by Free Grace upon the meer good will and spontaneous motion of the Donor to the Donatary 6. Testimonial in matter of Witness in credit by the hand and seal of the Testator or other Donor and by the hands and seales of the Witnesses Free-Men and worthy to be believed 7. Real in matter of Pledg in pawn deposition sequestration caution or other security direct or collateral personal or real in full satisfaction and satisdation Thus God hath given us Christ and with him all things Thus all things are ours and we are Christ's and Christ is God's And God hath given us the Spirit of Christ to be our Comforter and Assurance 8. Logical in matter of Reason in proof by Discourse inference conclusion from necessary propositions which no Man in his wits can deny making Faith by demonstration 9. Fiducial in matter of Hope in trust confidence and relyance upon the Power Continuance Fidelity and Love of a Benefactor 10. Federal in matter of Covenant Promise Agreement Oath or Contract in claim challenge and demand to and with and from a private or publick person or persons aggregated in one communion which are accounted Quasi-immortal unchangeable and Omnipotent 11. Vital in matter of action in labour and working by such a conversation and practice as is a means proper and effectual to bring assuredly unto such correspondent ends as a direct way leading to such a City or Country which if follow'd must necessarily bring the traveller thereunto Every one of these kinds of assurances in one degree or other at one time or other joyntly or severally sensibly or insensibly have their several existences or operations in the heart of a Christian creating a certitude or evidence of a higher more certain and lasting Nature than any other evidence whatsoever that is attainable in this life and can be inferior to none but the fruition it self of the Beatifical vision Nemo negat salutem vitae Patriae mutuò se inferre ad se invicem
my poor wife and Children for I know my doom and accordingly am hastening as I am driven into Hell And I can expect no help from thee And this he expressed with a sedate mind as one that was earnestly going a journey The example of Francis Spira is fearful although there were not wanting some signs of hopes in him Alas the Church of Rome is a sad Mother leading her Children in a Maze affording them no assurance in Life or Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the most part her Teachers deny the certainty of Salvation unless it be to some choice and eminent Saints and that not without a special Revelation As for others they have but poor hopes Yet Ambrosius Catharinus and Martin Eisengenius incline to the orthodox judgment Catharinus and Sotus oppose one another and Vega both The sense of the Council of Trent is versatile like the Oracles of Apollo Some were for a revealed Assurance some for no Assurance at all Some confessed ingeniously their ignorance in the point SECT I. 1. Doctrines of Masses c. The subtilty of maintaining this Doctrine of the uncertainty of Faith is contrived to uphold the Doctrine of Masses Dirges Indulgences Purgatory visiting of Saints Shrines c. such filthy gains as they daily make by such delusions which otherwise would altogether come tumbling down headlong to the ruin of the Politick Church One of them saith I have many a time and often visited the sick M. Eisenc and them that have died and no Man can say of me but that after they had declared their repentance and Faith I exhorted them with all diligence to have an undanted and certain confidence He farther saith That all the chiefest Divines of the World taught the same Doctrine ever since the Apostles daies So say Fisher of Rochester Gropper the Divines of Colen Ruard Dean of Lovain Castalius Vega c. So forcible is the Truth that falls from the mouths and pens of those that unreasonably oppose it SECT II. Doctrine of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church 2. The subtilty of maintaining the Doctrine of the certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of eternal Justification is invented to uphold as the Doctrine of the Romish Church no hope of salvation without the Pale of that Church so to maintain the Doctrine of other Selected Churches of no hope of salvation without the narrow precincts of their several Conventicles So that as the Great Vicar holds the Keyes of Heaven and Hell at his girdle and hath all his Children at his beck even so the Petty-Vicars pin their Election or Reprobation on their sleeves And make their Subjects admire or fear their favours or frowns and dare not stir or budge from them upon pain of eternal damnation This Great and Lordly one over God's free People and Inheritance makes them 1. Slaves in their Judgments to believe all that their Grand Superintendents magisterially dictate unto them though it be never so absurd painful and costly 2. Slaves in their Persons to ride go or row dig or torl in the Gallies or Mines like Beasts or any other slavish and foolish actions even to Planting and watering of a dry stick to try their obedience To marry into what Families they please to enrich the Church or State 3. Slaves in their Estates to give all they have at or before their death from their Parents Children or Kinsmen Friends to Strangers of their own Sect. SECT III. Doctrine of lying still in Sin 3. The subtilty of this Doctrine of maintaining the Certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of Eternal Justification is invented by Satan as his greatest stratagem to make him who is his vassal and lives in sin to believe that he is the Child of God and in the state of Grace that he may commit sin and not be the servant of sin but have his share in Christ An Assurance without a Warrant from the Spirit subscribed with the hands of Flesh and Bloud Perfection we would learn and pretend to attain it without ever learning to attain it by working it out with fear and trembling and making our Calling and Election sure Freedom we like but not to be restrained by the Laws of Christ which makes perfect Freedom Assurance we build upon but never build up our Assurance SECT IV. Imputed Righteousness We dare to talk of the imputed Righteousness of Christ while we have no real Righteousness of our own Boast of God's Spirit and Grace while we grieve the one and turn the other into wantonness This we call appearing clothed in our Elder Brother's Robes or as Jacob did we may steal away his Blessing Thus the Adulterer may say I am chast with Christ's chastity the Drunkard I am sober with Christ's temperance the Covetous I am poor with Christ's poverty the Revenger I forgive with Christ's charity The irregenerate and voluptuous dead in trespasses and sins I am born again mortified crucified dead and buried in Christ and with Christ Sen. Calvisius Sabinus fancied that he did every good work which his Servants did If they were Poets Orators Artificers c. he was all this So we say what Christ did we do what he suffered we suffer though we never so much as do or suffer any thing like him Therefore as Seneca said of that Grand Opimator I never saw a Man whose happiness did less become him So may it well be said of these who like Men clothed in Lions Skins or Owls with the Feathers of other Birds Their borrow'd Graces and Vizards do full ill become them their gay apparel sits ill upon them We talk of applying the promises to our selves which they may do that as enemies to the Cross of Christ never perform any one of them The applying of the promises of Christ is not a speculative but a practical thing an act much rather of the Will than of the Understanding If we keep God's word the promises will apply themselves when the Will of Man is subject to the Will of God The Blessing of God will fall like dew from Heaven of it self If we walk according to God's Rule God's Grace Mercy and Peace shall be upon us and upon the Israel of God If we put on the Lord Jesus Christ by imitation of his Righteousness obedience and Love in this his likeness he will own us and approve of us SECT V. 1. We may not think uncharitably Collections Uncharitableness that every one that is not of our Sect though he be an honest Man and feareth God is a Reprobate by the same uncharitable Rule they may think the same of us who differ just as much from us as we do from them and are as confident of their being in the right as we are of our being in the right 2. We may not think that our judgment of our own Estate or our Enemies judgment of our Estate shall be the rule by which God will proceed to judg both
descends to an Heir by Nature and Law An inheritance of Feudum falls to an Heir as to his Ancestors by Grace and Faith SECT V. Church Militant 1. The state of the Church Militant is the state of a Feudal Kingdom Where Christ is the Liege Lord and the Faithful are his Subjects 1 Cor. 15.25 Christ must Rule till he hath put all his enemies under his feet and when all things shall be subdued unto him then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him and deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father that God may be all in all In the mean while the Faithful hold their Right by fighting against the World the Flesh and the Devil A Tenure devisable temporal on Earth The Kingdom of Grace is Feudum SECT VI. Church Triumphant 2. The state of the Church Triumphant is the state of an Allodial Kingdom where all are Kings A Tenure indefeasible eternal in heaven No longer faith but fruition Subjects all Kings Fear not little flock it is your Fathers pleasure to give you a Kingdom A kingdom of Saints O thou King of Saints A kingdom of Priests The kingdom of Glory is Allodium God hath made Christ both Lord and King over all his Church and all power is given unto him both in Heaven and Earth At his Name every knee must bow both of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth Let all the Angels of God worship him Let the Kings of the earth kiss the Son and fall down at his feet Christs Kingdom is in Fee from his Father The Church holds in Fee under Christ All things are theirs and they are Christs and Christ is Gods and God is all in all SECT VII Tenure of heaven Conditional The Tenures of the Church much resembles the Tenures of the World which are conditional 1. Upon Investiture of Homage by oath 2. Upon Tenure by faith and love 3. Upon payment of the Canon or Reserve of Rent for acknowledgment of the Lords propriety 4. Upon Melioration or Jure Emphyteuseos 5. Upon service in Peace or War as the Lord shall require 6 Upon Renovation or renewing the right of Succession All which exactly correspond with 1. Baptism an investiture of Homage vowed and promised 2. Faith or Covenant with God performed 3. Obedience or Rent of acknowledgment of our Selves and our Estates to Gods service and the Poors good 4. Improvement of our Talent by trade and employment in bettering our Spiritual estate 5. Constant service to our great Lord in all conditions whensoever he shall require 6. Renewing our Oath Homage Faith and Allegiance in the holy Eucharist There is a Knights Tenure when the Lord requires the presence of his Tenant to serve him in warfare and battel abroad There is a Soccage Tenure when the Lord commandeth the presence of his Tenant to attend at the plough and other husbandry at home There is a Rent of Mony and a rent of Works and a rent of Love SECT VIII The best Tenures are those that hold immediately of God Holding of God As 1. The Crown Lands that hold of God for the service of Rule 2. The Church Lands which hold of God for the service of Worship So both Crown and Altar hold of God So no man hath any direct Estate in and from himself but as Sons of God we have an Inheritance in Gavel kind after the custom of the old Germans that made all Children alike So we all inherit together only mans Children have but each a part of the inheritance but Gods have the whole to every one Res Domanii as they speak uniuntur Dominio alienari non possunt The Lords own proper Estate which he hath reserved to himself is united to the Lordship it self and cannot be alienated from it because none are absolute Lords but he So Gods properties of Omniscience Omnipotence Omnipresence Honour Worship c. cannot be given to another besides Christ who is not another but one with his Father and his Father with him The nature of Man aspires to be as God sole and absolute in their persons and estates as Kings Gods to themselves They that maintain their own Righteousness and Blessedness to be due to them by their own merits to depend upon none but their own worth would be such This was the old temptation Ye shall be as Gods knowing good and evil But the Tenure of Feuds teaches us humility to depend upon God for all to be nothing in our selves and to have nothing but what we have received of Grace altogether not of Debt therefore no Allodium no boasting in the case The littleness and nothingness of the Creature advances the greatness and allness of the Creatour It is our honour to honour God our righteousness to acknowledge Gods righteousness our riches to acknowledge Gods riches our wisdom to acknowledge Gods wisdom and so God and Christ are made unto us all our righteousness riches and wisdom a Tenure of Grace I judge it the greatest badge of Soveraignty and Principality for the supream Monarch to be the sole Lord and Proprietary of all the Land and People therein as well as the sole Commander of all And surely this Absolute Dominion is most like unto God Absolute Dominion and though those men which we call Barbarians brought this form of Rule and Right into the world yet we are not to despise it but look upon it as from God and the greatest resemblance of Gods Power and Love and the subjection of his Creatures that ever was SECT IX A middle Government it was between the tyranny of the East Feuds a middle Government and the popularity of the West and better than both In this the Prince is most like unto God and his Subjects to the Saints for if Subjects should have Land in Allodium and owe no service for it they should be no longer Subjects but quasi Princes But now they are Subjects and Beneficiaries and their service is freedom and honourable only let Kings look to their Power that they be no Tyrants as God is not but Fathers as God is and let Subjects look to their service that they be no Rebels as the Saints are not but Children as the Saints are This is the constitution of Christs Church and Kingdom 1. They are all Souldiers so they must not be idle nor fearful but all must watch and be ready upon all occasions to fight against the World the Flesh and the Devil 2. They must all love their Lord Captain and King and be at his call 3. They must all love one another and help one another as they fight together and are partakers of the same grace together and aim at the same glory SECT X. Christ sole Judge Of this Church and Kingdom Christ is the Head and Judge As all things so all power and all judgment are Christs Christ is the Judge of the faith and
shall have their Tenants to hold under them in like manner So all are knit together in the bands of Love and Peace And it is not so in the Church of God One Lord one Faith Eph. 4.5 6. one Baptism one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in all One Body one Spirit one hope of our Calling keeping the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace SECT XVII But I suppose much fault is found with those old Lombards Object for introducing this barbarous Constitution in making Kings the Absolute Lords of all Lands and Persons in their Kingdoms and call this Tyranny in the Prince and slavery in the Subject and so disliked by Christians as an unfitting Tenure for them who are the free People of God and therefore not to be slaves and Vassals to the will of any Besides they will say It is more honourable and agreeable to the Law of God Nature and Nations that every one should have an absolute propriety in his own Estate and be able to dispose of it at his own free will and pleasure I answer This kind of subjection in fee to earthly Kings Answ is no impeachment of true Liberty which is consistent with good Laws and very agreeable with the Laws of God which enjoin obedience for conscience sake Nor are the free People of God infringed of their Spiritual liberty though they were brought into thraldom amongst Men as the Israelites were Let every Man abide in the same calling wherein he was called 1 Cor. 7.10 c. Art thou called being a Servant care not for it but if thou mayest be made free use it rather for he that is called in the Lord being a Servant is the Lord's free-man likewise also he that is called being free is Christ's Servant Ye are bought with a price be not ye the Servants of Men Brethren let every Man wherein he is called therein abide with God 1 Cor. 9.29 Though I be free from all Men yet have I made my self Servant unto all that I might gain the more And for the honourable Tenure of Absolute propriety to be in every one it is so indeed as they say honourable But if so what then more honour could the King himself have but only that he hath or should have a greater Estate than the rest And if so many of his Subjects would come up very near him and all others care little for him being for what they enjoy as good every whit as himself and would not this puff up But as to this the Subjects of the World have brought it to that pass that they have in a manner their desires and will be as much Kings of their own Estates as the King himself is God bless him by the Grace of God For however it was from the Custom of the Lombards which was the Custom of the Goths and Vandals and however it ought to be where those Customs were made fundamental Laws yet it is manifest that the great Contesters for liberty have shaken off that yoke of Norman as we or Northern bondage as they call it and yet made themselves never the freer nor happier by it but rather more slavish and miserable which now they patiently and deservedly endure and are silent upon it because they have their wills and brought it upon themselves And much good may do them with it they knew not when they were well and God knows when they will be better It is rather feared that by farther departure from this antient Tenure they will make themselves worse and worse for thereby they are more and more rebellious and thereby make themselves and their Posterity more and more miserable running so long from seeming bondage till they unavoidably plunge themselves really into it The Name only of Fee is retained but the Nature of the thing is quite and clean lost And a Fee-simple as they call it though that be a contradiction in adjecto is an Allodium with them Yet for all this though the People had gotten Liberty to themselves indeed by shaking off the yoke of their Fore-Fathers yet still the constitution of the Lombards was good And supposing their Lords as they then prov'd and might have been so still to be no Tyrants and their Tenants no Rebels as they were not and had no cause to be The Lords had love from their Tenants and their Tenants love to them and they enjoy'd their Liberty and their Lands were sure to them and to their heirs if no Rebellion made a forfeit But now the World is grown prouder it should seem since they have grown more learned and those plain Rules of Honesty Love and Obedience are despised But even in this their wisedoms are befooled and they forsake their own mercy and lose the benefit of that peace and quietness they might enjoy for a humour of self-will and a shadow of that darling Liberty infinitely mistaken in the World and will not have it be otherwise grutching Kings their power to their own woe and the People delight to have it so For all this specious pretence of Liberty it will not out of my Mind but that as there is no less Freedom so there is much more love and safety in this Constitution and more obligation to unity than in any other Where the Common Lord is a common Father to his Tenants who are all fed and taught by him and brought up together to love and honour him Whereas other models he that is an Absolute Proprietary is not a Child at all to his Prince nor so much a Subject as he that is a Feudatary nor is the Prince so much Supreme as others are nor likely to have so much love and duty as others have whose Subjects have their whole dependency and wel-being from them SECT XVIII It is apparent that by this change of Fees into Absolute Estates though it be very good in it self and agreeable with the Natural Liberty and old Roman Laws yet it is not so safe for general preservation according to the Covenant for mutual peace And thereby the Prince hath not the power he had or should have nor the Subjects that love and duty they had or should have but daily encroachments rush one upon another and cut in sunder the antient Bands of Faith and True Allegiance make the Prince a Tyrant and the Subject a Rebel or at least the Prince though just must be forc'd to rule by the Sword because the Subjects by being wanton with peace plenty and priviledges do spurn against his power and rebel against his Person Surely if right Judgment would be taken a Liege Lord of a Fee is no Tyrant and a Vassal in Fee is no slave For a Slave is no person in Law and hath nothing nor can he do any thing in Law so is not a Feudatary or Liege Man Well however Supreme Lords fail of their Lordships and Vassals of their duty in Temporal Kingdoms in this Spiritual
unwritten unrevealed to private Souls The hearts of such great ones are in the hands of God and he teaches them Worldly Policy Self-pleasing Self-interest Pride Revenge c. must have no place here O that they that wear Crowns and Miters were wise that they would consider their vast Charge and remember their later end that they might not do amiss SECT XVI And what shall we poor Subjects do but stand aloof off and admire and obey Touch not mine anointed and do my Prophets no harm Violate not the Persons nor the Rights nor the Estates of Princes or Priests God is in them he feels the hurts and revenges them The Powers that be are ordained of God and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation Procul ô procul ite prophani Swell not O Rulers for God in Sacred or Civil matters Illustrious is your calling Mutuato splendetis lumine but your Glory borrow'd Ye are gods but ye must die like Men. Use both Swords as equally as gently as 't is possible O! how blessed shall ye be of God and Men for Justice Equity Mercy Piety to the Souls Bodies and Estates of the Dear Saints and Subjects of the King of Heaven and Earth And as on Earth so in Heaven your glory shall outshine all others SECT XVII 1. Thus Christ only as Mediator King Priest and Prophet Corollaries hath and holds his Office and Power of God immediately 2. The Church is a Corporation and Kingdom that hath and holds only of Christ their only Head and King and Prophet and High-Priest in Fee 3. The Keyes and Supreme Powers of the World have and hold immediately under Christ in Fee 4. The Priests and Ministers of Christ have and hold immediately from Christ in Fee 5. The Clergy and Laity owe subjection immediately to Kings and Supreme Powers under Christ 5. Ergo Kings only are Christ's Vicegerents and Vicars upon Earth to whom all Clergy and Laity are bound to be subject for Christ's sake and for Conscience sake and for the peace and welfare both of Church and State That we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty My Kingdom saith Christ is not of this World And there was a strife among them which of them should be accounted the greatest Luc. 22.25 c. and he said unto them The Kings of the Gentiles Exercise Lordship over them and they that exercise Authority upon them are called Benefactors But ye shall not be so but he that is the greatest among you let him be as the younger and he that is Chief as he that doth serve Jesus called them unto him and said Ye know that the Princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them and they that are great exercise Authority upon them But it shall not be so among you Matth. 20.25 c. but whosoever will be great among you let him be your minister And whosoever will be the chief among you let him be your servant Even as the Son of Man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his Life a Ransom for many Ergo The true right justifying to the Estate of Blessedness of God in Christ is Faith and the true Tenure to hold this Blessed Estate of God in Christ is Holiness Feudum is Grace Ergo Allodium is Glory Quod erat demonstrandum The CONTENTS Transition Catholick Church Scriptures Collections TITLE III. Of the Laws of Christ's Kingdom Transition CHRIST hath the sole power of Legislation and Jurisdiction in his Church and Kingdom the Ministers of Christ are Ambassadors under him to declare his will and pleasure not to exercise Lordship over God's Inheritance Est in universis servientibus non dominium sed ministerium He that is greatest amongst you sayes Christ let him be the least and servant unto all A Judicatory power is granted unto Regal Vassals as Lords in fee over their inferior Vassals to exercise not for themselves but for their Supreme Lords in peace or war For otherwise they are all Vassals and par in parem non habet imperium Still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Legislative power is reserved to Kings They may have a kind of delegated power to make By-Laws consonant to the High Law of Christ and some laudable Customs in the Church are Quasi-Laws or By-Laws as in other Societies but they must be significant charitable easie and few SECT I. Catholick Church The Catholick Church is a faithful witness of the Truth committed to her charge and a record of all those necessary Truths but properly makes no Laws that is a prerogative reserved to the King Besides the Spiritual Laws of Christ I know not what Laws of Faith can be added And besides the ordinances of Baptism and the Lord's Supper I know not what Rites can be added for Worship only for decency and order and those few ambulatory pro re nata tempore loco populo according to the occasion time place and People with great Wisedom Charity Moderation and Christian Liberty They talk highly of the Laws of the Church the Laws of Christ given to his Church I know other Laws I do not know properly so called Let me know what Church must be the Catholick and how can the Catholick Church meet and if they could what power to make Laws Hath not Christ made sufficient Laws already In a Feudal Kingdom there are Principum placita the Rescripts of Princes but not Senatusconsulta nor Plebiscita nor Responsa Prudentum All are Pragmatical Sanctions The Prince rules all neither hath Christ any Deputy or Vice-gerent Man or Men upon Earth to rule with him or for him in his Church whereof he is the only Head But Princes under him are bound to be nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers to his Church to defend the Faith they are to be wise and learn this knowledg to kiss the Son lest he be angry and so they perish if his wrath be kindled yea but a little And he hath sent his Ambassadors and Ministers under him to serve in his Gospel by the power of his own Spirit to be subject to Princes SECT II. The Scriptures only are God's Will and his Laws Scriptures in them are his Precepts and Promises and the rule of his Worship which are the true intrinsecal and acceptable Service of God If any thing else be commanded it is extrinsecal and only for decent order and so to be esteem'd and used cum favore The Laws of a Spiritual and Military Kingdom as Christs is are Spiritual The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but Spiritual and mighty for the casting down of the Spiritual and strong holds of Principalities and Powers and Spiritual wickedness in high places And all Christians or Souldiers take the Sacrament or Military Oath in Baptism to be true to their General to fight under the Banner of Christ against the World the Flesh and the Devil to their lives end This is the good
fight of Faith the whole Armor of God the Tenure and Service of a Vassal to his Lord and King according to the Feudal Laws of Faith and Homage in peace or war The Laws are Fundamental to which all must trust to be known and understood by all SECT III. COLLECTIONS Thus the Kingdom is God's Thus God hath given the Kingdom to Christ to fight for it Thus God hath given the Kingdom to Christians to fight for it Collections Thus Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father when he hath put all his enemies under his feet that God may be all in all because it is the nature of an Estate in trust to be delivered up Thus Christ is Lord over our Souls and Bodies over the World and the Devil Thus kingly power is given to Christ to rule over the Church and the World Thus Priestly power is given to Christ to Sacrifice and propitiate for the Church and the World Thus Prophetical power is given to Christ to teach and instruct the Church and the World Thus Christ fights in his Person by sufferings by preaching and Miracles Thus Christians fight in their Persons by sufferings Faith and obedience Thus Kings hold under Christ by waiting at the Altar of Justice under the Throne of his Power Thus Priests hold under Christ by waiting at the Altar of Mercy under the Throne of his Grace Thus Service and Tribute is due to Kings for their waiting and they must live by the Crown Thus Honour and Offerings are due to Priests for their waiting and they must live by the Altar Thus Christs kingdom is a kingdom of Grace and his Ambassadors invite all to accept and hold of his Grace Thus Christ intercedes in his own person and by his Ambassadors for Sinners that have broken their faith and forfeited their Fee that they may be restored again Thus earthly Vassals to Satan savour of Earthly things worship and serve the god of this World Thus heavenly Vassals to Christ savour of Heavenly things worship and serve the God of Heaven Thus the wicked are in Fee to the Devil faithful in wickedness inherit shame and destruction Thus the Righteous are in Fee to Christ faithful in Religion inherit glory and salvation Thus a man may forfeit his Fee to Satan and lose his Tenure to darkness and enter into Fee to God and become the child of Light And so è contra A man may forfeit his Fee to God and lose his Tenure to Light and enter into Fee to Satan and become the child of Darkness Thus he that is fighting against God may be overcome i. e. willingly not against his will as in other battels The good Spirit may perswade his Spirit and bring him back or translate him from the power of Darkness into the kingdom of the dear Son of God Thus he that is fighting for God may be overcome i. e. willingly not against his will as in other battels The evil Spirit may perswade his Spirit and bring him back Heb. 6. or translate him from the power of Light into the kingdom of the Devil Thus a Vassal that breaks his Faith may return to his Liege lord and submit and be restored for any man may lose his right or he may give it away or leave it to the wide World The Natural branches may be cut off and others engrafted and they may be grafted in their own stock again The Wheat may be chaff and the Chaff wheat The Devil may be cast out and enter in again The good Spirit may depart and return A Citizen may be disfranchised a free Head lessened an Heir disinherited And after all to all these there may be restitution in Integrum Thus Portae dignitatum non patent infamibus personis The gates of Honour are shut against Infamous persons Feuda non capiunt Infideles False men Felons and Rebels cannot hold a Fee There is no blemish in Christs kingdom every one that maketh and loveth a Lie must be gone from thence Christ knows not Hypocrites that have broken their faith and forsaken their first Love Without are Dogs and Murtherers and no unclean thing shall ever enter into the kingdom of Heaven Thus all Liege Lords are Patrons and Benefactors and all Liege Subjects are Clients and Beneficiaries The Devil rewards his Servants and God rewards his Servants No Schism or Heresie in Satans kingdom no Schism or Heresie in Christs kingdom because it is a breach of Fee Thus the Covenant of Works is not a Fee or Grace but a Debt but the Covenant of Grace is a Fee or of grace and a gift Adam was in Covenant of Works in his Innocency but after his Fall he was in the Covenant of Grace and entred into a Fee Moses was not a Liege Lord nor his Subjects in Fee with him but Christ is a Liege Lord and his Subjects in Fee with him All Feudataries are fellow-Souldiers and fellow-Subjects Though some are called Lords yet all are Servants to one Lord. The genius of a Feudist is Love and Obedience because he is a Beneficiary and hath nothing but what he hath received and can call nothing his own but is in continual dependency upon his Lords free Grace and bounty and cannot but serve him by all the tyes of Love and Honour as Children are tyed by the bonds of Nature to love and honour their Parents The CONTENTS Transition Foundation of Merit Supererogation Demerit Rewards and Punishments TITLE IV. Of Merit IN a Feudal kingdom there can be no place for Merit Transition because Beneficiaries and Usufructuaries receive all upon grace from their Lord and Benefactor and hold what they have from him for love honour and service which they owe him for all that they have neither can they recompense the Donor by all that they do or can do for him but must account themselves unprofitable Servants when all is done The foundation and source of Merit is Foundation of Merit the performance of a work which is not due to another or which no Right on our part could compel us nor the party for whose sake it is done had any right to enforce the doing of the same from us Therefore no mortal man can merit any thing at Gods hands though it were possible for him to fulfil the Law of God exactly and therefore God can be a Debtor to no man but as he is pleased to make himself so by his free and gracious Promise which gives him to whom the Promise was made a right by Grace which by works he could not have And if by Grace then it is no more of Works otherwise Grace is no more Grace Ro. 11.6 7. But if it be of Works then it is no more Grace otherwise Work is no more Work Therefore it is of Faith or Covenant that it might be by Grace to the end the Promise might be sure Ro. 4.16 Therefore no mortal man can merit any thing at the hands of his
when they have the Fee which their Fathers had and kept by their Allegiance to their death for them to succeed after them and they are punished when they have lost their Fee which their Fathers lost and did not keep by their felony to their death for them to lose after them what they might have had if their Fathers had performed the Condition So if Parents for their Vertue be made free their Children shall be free but this hath no true respect of reward but good fortune So if Parents for their Fine be reduced to slavery their Children shall be slaves but this hath no true respect of punishment but evil fortune Because no body before he is can have right that he should be born in such or such a condition but when he is born so or so it is his good or bad chance As an Infant in his Mothers womb is not properly acquitted when his Mother is acquitted and saved her life nor properly condemned when his Mother is condemned and loseth her life The CONTENTS Transition Demonstrations Traditions Scriptures Representative Church Some body must determine Pride Calumnies Scriptures Collections TITLE V. Of a Judge of Christs Laws Transition AFter all the discourse of Laws and the Law-maker there is a great cry that makes a great disturbance Who shall be the Judge and Interpreter of Christs Laws No hopes ever to convince such that take all upon trust and will be blinded for Policy and Interest but let Wisdom still speak and she will be justified of her Children and none but wilful Souls will stop their ears A Judge they lack and such as must be infallible but they cannot agree who this should be If some Moral Truths are as demonstrable as others which they call Mathematical then what need of a Judge When such moral Propositions are as Scientifical of themselves and create as full an assent to the understanding as Natural things which are perceptible of themselves and create a full apprehension to the sense The Laws of Nature are plain and as plain consequences may be made from them As that no man should steal or kill and from thence it is demonstrated That if Sejus or Titius do steal or kill they sin against the Law of Nature And such Ratiocinations as are rightly framed from necessary Principles create as undeniable Demonstrations As that a man is Risible Demonstrations because he is Rational That a Horse is one true and good because he is an Ens or that the Periphery of a Circle is Equidistant from the Centre Now if the Laws of Nature be so plain then they need no Judge And if the Positive Laws are so plain as they are or ought to be then they need no Judge also All Intellectual Entities have hitherto by the most of men been accounted probable only allowing by great favour infallibility to Revelations and therefore have been the more slighted and nothing thought worthy of credit but material Entities and objects of sense Now if Revelations come as they may do to the understanding as well as Natural notions and Sensual objects why may they not as plainly be apprehended supposing them as they must to be as plainly revealed as the rest are imprinted in the Soul or conveyed thither by the sense But still the Question is Who shall be the Judg and this Judge must be infallible too The old beaten way is to believe as the Church believes and the Churches Faith is resolved into the Pope or a general Council with or without him not yet agreed Surely there is a fallacy in the word Church as in the word People The Church is either taken for all the Church and the People for all the People which cannot meet to agree all or for the most part or best of the Church or People which can hardly meet to agree all So there is no certainty in either SECT I. Universal Traditions are doubtful Traditions The Eastern Church had one Tradition about Easter from St. John the Western another from St. Peter the Millenaries received their Tradition from Papias St. John's Disciple the rest denied it Councils were hardly ever universal or universally agreeing and mostly packt a few popular Orators and Politicians swayed all the rest So that we are at no certainty by these Certainty is either in Nature things actually existent to sense or in Morality from prime principles undoubted conclusions in the mind by Rational or Mathematical Demonstrations actually existent to Reason The Law of Nature is plain enough Consequences from thence are clear if rightly deducted by the help of Art Laws Positive are to flow from thence Subjects may know by these Laws what they are to have and what they are to do SECT II. Scriptures The Scriptures are God's Positive Laws commanded in his Will and Testament with Promises of Rewards so that by them all Subjects and Legatees understand what they are to have and what they are to do And as the Laws and Testaments of wise and good men are evident so much more the Laws and Testaments of God And therefore in all these Laws there is sufficient Certainty to every one who when all comes to all must judge as well as they can for themselves and the Laws fundamental and necessary are so plain that they may judge Else why should those Promises be made and those Duties be commanded if they to whom they were made and enjoyned could not possibly apprehend them and what other infallible Judge can be imagined especially when besides their own Judgments the Spirit is promised to all that will use what God hath already given them to lead them into all truth And so Christ the only Infallible Judge hath promised to be present by his Spirit unto the end of the World If in this state of Imperfection there remain doubts as there will we must be content to doubt as we do about such manners and circumstances of things as are not absolutely necessary to salvation the ignorance whereof may safely consist with our salvation If others be given over to believe lies it is a just Judgment of God upon them for their carelesness and sensuality As is the case of the Heathen Idolaters who though they knew God yet they glorified him not as God but became vain in their imaginations and their foolish hearts were darkened But still Wisdom is justified of all her Children and the true Faith hath been kept by them and will be kept unto the end of the World and Truth is Truth still In natural Principles all conceptions agree as to worship God to do as we would be done by c. and in supernatural Principles there is the same harmony of Faith in God and a good life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Thus the whole Church i. e. all Christians in all ages have received the Gospel and kept the Faith and so the Church is the pillar and ground of Truth The Church of God is guided
and Piety and ought to be tolerated till they may be amended 5. Who separate for corruptions not directly impious contrary to the express word of God but only by way of consequence which consequence the party defendant doth not acknowledg but if they could perceive it would be ready to forsake them 6. Who separate for matters in themselves indifferent and no waies determined by any word or Law of God either for the affirmative or negative but either are orders instituted by the Church or Customs insinuated by tacit consent 7. Who in a Synod super-determine Doctrines of Faith by a major part and expel the minor for dissenting for though matters of Manners Order and Policy may and ought to be determined by a major part yet matters of Doctrine seem to require an universal concurrence and joint-consent of the whole Synod or else with more safety are left undetermined Now if they seem hereticks or Sectaries who desert or expect those whose opinions and manners are but somewhat corrupt much more they are so who desert or expel those who in their Tenets and manners are the sounder party for these of all sorts of Hereticks are the most carnal and sinful It may appear therefore from what been said upon Heresy and the Name and Thing That no error in fundamentals is or can be meant thereby but only a separation for some Grand corruptions real or pretended in Doctrine or Manners The Name of Heretick is now become odious and a Nick-name to all that differ in opinions styl'd fundamentals which whether they be so or no is yet undetermined and God knows but that they shall ever so remain And those that hold these contrary opinions each party being alike confident of the Truth on their side do persecute one another not only to Excommunication but to confiscation imprisonment banishment and death But what course ought to be taken indeed with such Men SECT IV. Concerning those turbulent Persons that were amongst the Galatians How Hereticks are to be dealt with Gal. 5.12 who would subvert their state of Christian Liberty The wish of St. Paul was that they might be cut off i. e. not castrated for that is barbarous nor excommunicated for then he might have commanded it but destroy'd by the immediate hand of God Yet in this wish of the Apostle this must necessarily be supposed that he wished not positively the execution of it unless those persons continued incorrigible For who can possibly doubt but that S. Paul's velle went with a malle to have them rather reform'd than destroy'd And again if they would not be reform'd who sees not but that St. Paul might lawfully wish that some few turbulent deceivers should rather be cut off by the hand of God than that by them the whole Church of the Galatians should be seduced and their state of Christian Liberty subverted This fact of St. Paul in wishing the death of these impostors must not by us be drawn into example as if to us it were therefore lawful to wish a curse upon those whom we account Hereticks and troublers of the Church For 1. Christ hath given us a precept to the contrary That we should bless and not curse yea bless them that curse us and pray for them that persecute us Matth. 5.44 And our Rule is to practise by precept and not by any example from Men or an Angel from heaven Unless the precept admit exceptions and the cases of those exceptions be as manifest to us as to those Divine Persons who made use of them against the generality of the Precept 2. Where among us shall we find the Man in whom there resides that measure of wisdom which was in Paul who by help of the Spirit wherewith he abounded was a true discerner of Spirits and could exactly know who was a spreader of Error who a troubler of the Church who was refractory herein and whose repentance was either to be expected or to be despair'd 3. Where among us is the Man whose Soul is qualified with the affection of Paul to be led to the like wish with the like mind For without all doubt all the motive Paul had was a sincere zeal to God's glory and a true love to Man's Salvation But we in the like case what ever words we may pretend can hardly say We have purged our Souls from the leven of malice and hatred 4. Paul as we have seen wished not their death simply and absolutely but with a potiority of their repentance that they might rather be reclaimed and therefore he referres the issue wholly to the pleasure of God leaving his wish to depend on God's will If it be therefore unlawful it be to wish the death of one whom we call Heretick in that meaning we put upon it much less is it lawful to put him to death Nay this latter is unlawful though the former were supposed lawful For he that wisheth another Man's death doth commit the act ot the will of God as it shall stand with the pleasure of God that he live or die but he that attempts another's death by Mans hand hath already determined what is to be done without any farther discuss of the matter And it is lawful to wish many a thing were done which notwithstanding to do we have no lawful Power Although then to Paul it were lawful to wish the death of Hereticks yet it follows not therefore that it is lawful for the Magistrate to put them to death For hath God granted to the Magistrate power over the conscience or given him the Sword with such a large commission that thereby he must needs be armed not only against offending Hereticks but also against all true and innocent Christians which equally lye open to the stroke of his sword seeing the less Christian any Man is the more prone he is to condemn another for an heretick and the more carnal he is the more violent he grows to maintain an humane tradition against a Divine Verity because this latter suiteth less with his carnal waies and many Men in Authority do not embrace the sincerity of Religion but use it rather as an instrument for their worldly policy Or hath God given to the Magistrate the Judgment of the conscience or the discerning of Spirits to determine truly between the true and the false Seeing Men of Rule and power whose entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven is a thing of great difficulty and who are commonly imploy'd in other affairs than the care of Religion are not alwaies competent Judges in these cases especially seeing many such Persons are not studied in the cases of Heresy neither are their cases laid out by any Law either of God or Man How then can the Magistrate judge of that wherein by his calling he hath no judgment And for him to commit a matter of that moment to the arbitrement of another is hard adventure seeing he can with no safety execute the sentence but alwaies with danger of
Sisters husband Laevir 3. The Husbands brother Pro-frater 4. The Wives brother Glos. 5. The Husbands sister Pro-soror 6. The Wives sister In the degrees of Uncles and Aunts by the Fathers or Mothers side no Latin names of Affinity are extant therefore they are thus expressed Patrui vel Avunculi uxor Amitae vel Materterae Maritus The wife of the Fathers brother or of the Mothers brother The husband of the Fathers sister or of the Mothers sister Idem de Patruis Pro-avunculis Pro-amitis Pro-materteris coeterisque Superioribus intelligendum est SECT IV. The Church of England in case of Marriage forbids no more Degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity than are forbidden in the Civil Law Yet she numbers and computes the Degrees somewhat otherwise following therein the account of the Canon Law For she accounts Brothers and Sisters to be in the first degree of the side-line whereas the Civil Law accounts them in the second degree of the side-line and makes no first degree in that line at all But the matter comes all to one pass as some Players at Gleek reckon their games differently and yet accord well enough in the sum of the account For if we consider the Side-line alone by it self as there are several persons in it then some of those persons must needs make the First degree of the side-line in respect of the persons following therein But if we look upon the standard of the Pedigree or the person whose Consanguinity is required and from whom the degrees thereof are measured and numbred upward downward and sideward then the persons of the first degree in the side-line must needs make the second degree of Consanguinity in respect of the standard or person supposed whose Consanguinity is required and from whom the Degrees are to be measured according to the course whereby the blood is derived which doth constitute Consanguinity as before hath been intimated The Levitical Laws for Marriage do now bind us of the Church of England yet this truth is to be understood with some caution For albeit these Laws do bind us yet they bind us not by divine Authority because their obligation by divine Authority ceased expired and died at the death of Christ And thereupon all Christian Churches were left to their several liberties to follow such rules orders measures and degrees as by right Reason and Christian prudence should be established For the determination whereof the Church of England conceived it the most prudent course to make the Levitical Law her President and pattern and at last assumed them and adopted them into her own Canons and Statutes reviving unto them an obligation not of Divine authority as once they had from God but of Humane authority by the Secular and Ecclesiastical power of our Princes and Clergy after the Reformation Thus these very Levitical Laws for Marriage whose obligation by Divine authority was expired long since were afterwards revived unto a New obligation upon us by Humane authority In like manner divers of the Civil Laws do now oblige us here in England yet not by their original Constitution nor by the Imperial authority either of Justinian or any other Emperour but by the authority of our own State which hath assumed and confirmed them into Laws obligatory here in England as they were in the Roman Empire SECT V. Thus the Children of the Fee are to be lawful and pure Conclusion as genuine Sons of their heavenly Father and loving Brethren to each other to make up a holy Seed the true Church and kingdom of Christ Not to exclude Bastards from being the true Sons of God by Faith and Regeneration though they are not the true Sons of men by birth and lawful generation because God is no respecter of persons and they are innocent and shall not suffer for their Parents crimes Thus Whoremongers and Adulterers and all incestuous persons that defile the Marriage bed and all Fornicators Sodomites and unclean Persons cannot enter into the kingdom of God They never were admitted to the Fee and Homage of that kingdom or if they were admitted by Faith in Baptism they fell from it in not performing the Homage sworn to be performed by them As these men defile their own bodies and the bodies of others so they cannot be the Temples of the Holy Ghost As they pollute the World and the generations of Mankind so they pollute the Church and the generations of the Children of God As they confound and destroy the Successions and Inheritances of Temporal estates So they overthrew the estate of Heaven and cannot hold of Christ in God for the Heavenly Inheritance of eternal life They that will not be faithful in a little cannot be intrusted with much They that will not be faithful to their own wives and to their own house how shall they be faithful to their God and to the Church of God They that are unfaithful in the unrighteous Mammon who shall commit unto them the true Riches In a word without Faith it is impossible to please God and into the kingdom of heaven no unclean thing shall ever enter SECT VI. Tables of Consanguinity and Affinity The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bar to keep of from Parents are Uncles and Aunts by Gods Law The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bar to keep of from Brothers and Sisters are Nephews and Neeces or Cousin germans by Mans Law not General but Particular at some times to some Nations forbidden to restrain them from breaking in upon nearer Relations where they were more prone than other civil People were The Jews say Fac Legi Tuae Sepem Ascending Parents 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Great Grandfathers Great Grandmothers 3 Degree Grandfathers Grandmothers Fathers Mothers Quasi Parents Great Uncles Great Aunts Uncles Aunts Right Line 1 Degree Side-Line equal 2 Degree Brothers Sisters Side-Line unequal Descending Children Sons Daughters Grandson Grandaughters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4 Degree Great Grandson Great Grandaughters Quasi Children Nephews Neeces Grand Nephews Grand Neeces The first second and third Degrees 1. Parents and Children Brothers and Sisters Uncles and Aunts are propinquous or near and are forbidden to marry by Divine Law The fourth Degree and so forward Nephews and Neeces or Cousin Germans of the first Degree and so to the second third c. are all remote and are permitted to marry by Divine and Humane Law The Table of Consanguinity and Affinity A Man may not marry in the Right Line Upward in the First Degree Mothers Mother Cons Stepmother Aff. Wives Mother Aff. Second Deg. Grandmothers Grandmother Cons Grandfathers Wife Aff. Wives Grandmother Aff. Downward in the First Degree Daughters Daughters Cons Wives Daughter Aff. Sons Wife Aff. Second Deg. Grand-daughters Sons Daughter Cons Daughters Daugh. Cons Sons Sons Wife Aff. Daughters Sons Wife Aff. Wives Sons Daugh. Aff. Wives Daughters D. Aff. Side Line Forward in the Sisters Sister Cons Wives Sister Aff. Brothers Wife Aff. Upward Aunts
ipsi saepè nos monent ut iis potiùs stemus quae in sacrae Scripturae explicatione dicuntur quàm quae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Locutio illa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sumpta est ex libro Regum priore Hebraeis Tertio Graecis 21.25 ubi in Graeco 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de Achabo homine pessimo vultnè ergo D. Rivetus Gratiae efficaciam nobis praedicans tantillum ei tribuere ut qui eam accepit similis sit Achabo maneat ut quidam loquuntur pronus ad omne malum inutilis ad omne Bonum Hoccine est apud illos hominis Regeniti descriptio An usquam alibi Apostolus de se jam Apostolo ad eum modum loquitur Fuimus inquit tales at non sumus Non mirum est si qui tales sunt manere volunt omnia aliorum dicta in transversum rapiant Dixeram ego fidem obedientem id est cum obedientiâ qualis Deo debetur conjunctam homini quà talis dum talis est jus dare vitam aeternam Hîc D. Rivetus quaerit à me quid sit fides homini obediens Aliquantulum aut Prudentiae aut Dilectionis potuerat eum ab illo nodo expedire Quod volo hoc dicit non obscurè Divinus ad Hebraeos scriptor Nam illuminari gustare donum coeleste participare Spiritum Sanctum Heb. 6.45 Accepisse veritatis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 10.26 suntne haec Epistola hominis irregeniti Usquamve alibi in eo sensu reperiuntur Confer locum ejusdem Scriptoris 3.6 Et de voce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1.17.4.13 Phil. 1.9 Col. 1.9 10.2.2 3 10. Augustinus ut suprà ostendimus antè nos doctissimus Vossius planè credidit regenitos qui fidem spem charitatem habuere excidere alios ad tempus alios ita ut aeternùm pereant Praedestinatio enim apud illum in Deo aliquid ponit non in homine qui à Deo quoque tempore tractatur qualis post vocationem invenitur Francisco Junio multùm debeo sed dicam quod res est Multùm ille vir vidit de vero quò minùs verum omne aut agnosceret aut eloqueretur retinebat eum Calvini Auctoritas quam ei in quâ erat parti omninò tuendam censebat Quae sola Ratio etiam D. Tilenum diìs detinuit Quare abstinendum à talibus Idolis ut secundo Praecepto mysticè intellecto obtemperemus Idem ib. p. 155. Peccata illa qualia Davidis i. e. homicidium Adulteria Electis non imputari verbasunt Marlorati Dicit is quidem in Justificatis omnibus poenitentiam semper sequi Quod ego verum non arbitror Et deinde quae est illa Poenitentia vivere ut lubet deinde instante morte dicere Ministro Imputatio Nollem factum credo justitiam Christi mihi imputari idque verum esse quia id credo Cum hoc viatico statim ille in coelum evolat Deque eo dubitare Stygiae est Incredulitatis H. Grot. Annot. ad Consult Cassandri ad Art 2. p. 276. Homo cùm primùm est conditus promissa nulla habuit vitae coelestis sed terrestris tantùm Itaque vires ei datae sunt tali praemio respondentes Alia enim est Imago Dei ad quam Adamus est conditus alia ad quam per Christum renascimur Evae Adami peccatum non modò documentum fuit imbecillitatis humanae pollicitatione Praemii coelestis destitutae sed Labem quandam attulit quae spe impunitatis multùm crevit Labes originalis Ad vitam coelestem nobis dandam requirit Deus sanctitatem Animi eximiam quae illam Adami non modò ex quò lapsus est sed cùm primum est conditus statum longe excedat nos Angelis aequet manente tamen discrimine eò quòd corpora humana ab Angelicis distantia secum ferunt Est ergo in hominibus cùm nascuntur humanâ tantum institutione adolescunt aliquid non idoneum ad vitam coelestem adipiscendam Ideò ad eam adipiscendam renasci est opus id est per Dei praecepta Promissa coelestia attolli suprà vires humanae Naturae quae sibi magis quàm aliis consulere solet Vide si placet quae diximus de jure Belli Pacis 2.20.19 ad Lucam 2.22 Idem de Jure Belli Pacis l. 2. §. 19. Puniri ab hominibus nequeunt Actus inevitabiles sunt quaedam non humanae simpliciter Naturae sed hic nunc inevitabilia ob corporis concretionem in animum transeuntem aut adultam consuetudinem quae tamen puniri solent non tam in sese quàm ob culpam praecedentem quia aut neglecta sunt Remedia aut ultrò attracti in animum morbi Lord Verulam's Resuscitatio p. 129 and p. 180. The Controversies themselves I will not enter into ☜ Controversies as judging that the Disease requires rather Rest than any other Cure Neither are they concerning the great parts of the worship of God of which it is true Non servatur unitas in credendo nisi eadem sit in colendo Not as between the East and West Church about Images or between us and the Church of Rome about the adoration of the Sacrament c. Ceremonies But we contend about Ceremonies and things indifferent about the extern Policy and Government of the Church And as to these we ought to remember that the ancient and true bands of Unity are one Faith and one Baptism and not one Ceremony or Policy Differentiae Rituum commendant unitatem Doctrinae The diversities of Ceremonies do set forth the unity of Doctrine And Habet Religio quae sunt aeternitatis habet quae sunt temporis Religion hath parts which belong to Eternity and parts which pertain to Time If we did but know the vertue of Silence and slowness of Speech commended by St. James and would leave the overweening and turbulent humors of these times and revive the blessed proceedings of the Apostles and Primitive Fathers which was in the like cases not to enter into Assertions and Positions Definitions and Determinations but to deliver Counsels and Advices we should need no other remedy at all as ☞ Brother there is reverence due to your Counsel but Faith is not due to your Affirmation St. Paul was content to say I and not the Lord but now men lightly say Not I but the Lord and bind it with an heavy denunciation of his Judgment to terrifie the simple Whereas saith that wise man The Causeless Curse shall not come The Remedies are first that there were an end made of this immodest and deformed manner of Writing lately entertained whereby the matter of Religion is handled in the style of the Stage Scoffing and Railing But to leave all Reverence and Religious compassion towards evil or indignation towards faults and to turn Religion into a Comedy or Satyr to search and rip up wounds with
writ of Christ or not whether Judaism was to make way or give place to Christianity or not And seeing it can no more be questioned whether or no the Jews were to take upon them the Law of God as their King for the condition upon which they were to expect the land of Promise it is plain there wants nothing that can be required duely to infer that the condition the undertaking whereof entitles Christians to life everlasting is the profession of Christianity and the performance thereof that which is rewarded by the performance of all the promises which the Gospel tenders as the performance of the Law was that which secured the Israelites in the land of Promise against their enemies round about Now we know that when the Covenant of God with Abraham for the land of Promise came to be limited as to the condition required by God to the Law of Moses that Circumcision which God had required of all Abraham's seed became a condition limiting the same to the Israelites the want whereof at eight days old was a forfeiture of that promise For the waters of the Red Sea which saved them and drowned the Egyptians the Cloud that overshadowed them the Manna which they ate and the waters of the Rock which they drank though according to St. Paul Sacraments answerable to the Sacraments of the Church were so but for the time that they travelled through the Wilderness If therefore by virtue of these the Israelites were entituled to the land of Promise which of Circumcision is evident then must the Sacrament of Baptism be necessarily requisite to the right of a Christian in the heavenly Inheritance Mr. Thornd l. 2. c. 29. p 249. So that by publishing the Gospel the original Law of God is not abrogated continuing still the Rule of mens actions but rather strengthned and enlarged to all those Precepts which are positive under the Gospel and come not from the light of Nature as necessary conditions to salvation in all estates It may be called a new Law as proposing new terms of salvation which if any man challenge to be a derogation to Gods original Law I will not contend about words As for the Law of Moses if we consider it as containing the terms upon which the people held the land of Promise the publishing of the Gospel neither abrogates it nor derogates from it being only given to hold till the time of Reformation Heb. 9.10 But if we consider it as containing an intimation of that Spiritual obedience which God required of those that would be saved under that light by the outward and civil obedience of these positive Precepts whereby they were restrained from the worship of Idols and commerce with idolatrous Nations in proportion of the reward of the World to come signified by the happiness of the land of Promise then must we acknowledge another dispensation in the same original Law by the Law of Moses and for the time of it which was also in force under the Fathers from the beginning though not burthened with that multitude of positive Precepts which the Law of Moses brought in for the condition upon which they were to hold the land of Promise And in opposition to those it is called by the Fathers of the Church The Law of Nature not in opposition to Grace the very giving it by Gods voluntary appearing to the Fathers and instructing them by familiar conversation as it were being a work of meer Grace as also the effect of it in the works of their conversation which we find so truly Christian that the Fathers of the Church do truly argue from thence That Judaism is younger than Christianity And therefore I do here acknowledge this his dispensation by which the Fathers obtained salvation before the Gospel to have been granted also in consideration of that obedience which our Lord Jesus had taken upon him to perform in the Fulness of time Nothing hindring us to understand in Gods proceeding with them something like that which in the Civil Law is called Novatio or Delegatio renewing of Bonds or Assignation of payment God accepting the interposition of our Lord Christ to the reconcilement of them being as if he accepted a new bond for an old debt or of payment by Proxie to be made at a certain term This is a point as manifest in the Scriptures of the New Testament as was requisite that a point not concerning the salvation of those that live under the New Testament but the understanding of the reason thereof in the salvation of those that died under the Old for the maintenance of it against unbelievers should be manifest 1 Cor. 10.1 2 3 4. I would not have you ignorant Brethren that your Fathers were all under the Cloud and all passed through the Sea and all were baptized unto Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea and all ate of the same spiritual meat and all drank of the same spiritual drink for they all drank of the same spiritual Rock that followed him Now the Rock was Christ They that entred into a Covenant of works to obtain the land of Promise entred not expresly into a Covenant of Faith in Christ for obtaining the World to come no more than being baptized into Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea that is into his government into the observation of the Laws he should give in hope of the Promises he should give they can be said to have been baptized expresly into Christ and that Profession which his promises require Wherefore when he saith that the Rock was Christ his meaning is not immediately and to those that rested in this temporal Covenant of works But as the Manna was Christ and Moses was Christ by the means of that faith which God then received at their hands to wit the assurance of everlasting happiness for them who under this calling should tender God the spiritual obedience of the inward man upon those grounds which his temporal goodness the tradition of their Fathers and the instruction of their Prophets afforded at that time Now I appeal to the sense of all men how those can be said to have that interest in Christ which I have shewed that Christians have and therefore in the same ground if there were no consideration of Christ in the Blessings of Christ which they enjoyed Wherefore when St. Paul proceeds hereupon to exhort them Not to tempt Christ as some of them tempted we must not understand that he forbids us to tempt Christ as they tempted God but that they also tempted Christ who went along with them in that Angel in whom the name of God and his word was So when the Apostle saith That Moses counted the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt for he looked at the recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 when putting them in mind to follow their teachers considering the end which they had attained and Moses aimed at he addeth Jesus Christ is the same yesterday
must suppose remission and grace a favourable and gracious acceptation which because it is voluntary and arbitrary in God less than his due and more than our merit no natural reason can teach us to appease God with Sacrifices It is indeed agreeable unto reason that blood should be poured forth when the life is to be paid because the blood is the life But that one life should redeem another that the blood of a Beast should be taken in exchange for the life of a man That no reason naturally can teach us Lev. 27.29 The life of the flesh is in the Blood and I have given it to you upon the Altar to make an atonement for poor souls for it is the Blood that maketh an atonement for the Soul according to which are those words of St. Paul Without shedding of blood there is no remission meaning that in the Law all expiation of sins was by Sacrifices to which Christ by the sacrifice of himself put a period But all this was by Gods appointment but no part of a Law of Nature 1. Because God confined it amongst the Jews to the family of Aaron and that only in the land of their own Inheritance the Land of promise which could no more be done in a natural Religion than the Sun can be confin'd to a Village Chappel 2. Because God did express oftentimes that he took no delight in the sacrifices of Beasts Psal 40 Ps 50 Ps 51. Is 1. Jer. 7. Hos 6. Mich. 6. 3. Because he tells us in opposition to Sacrifices and external Rites what that is which is the natural and essential Religion in which he does delight The sacrifice of Prayer and Thanksgiving a broken and a contrite heart that we should walk in the way which he hath appointed that we should do justice and love mercy and walk humbly with our God He desires Mercy and not Sacrifice and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings 4. Because Gabriel the Arch-angel foretold that the Messias should make the daily sacrifice to cease 5. Because for above 1600 years God hath suffered that Nation to whom he gave the Law of Sacrifices to be without Temple or Priest or Altar and therefore without Sacrifice But then if we enquire why God gave the Law of Sacrifices and was so long pleased with it the Reasons are evident and confess 't 1. Sacrifices were types of that great oblation which was made upon the Altar of the Cross 2. It was an Expiation which was next in kind to the real forfeiture of our own lives it was blood for blood a life for a life a less for a greater it was that which might make us confess Gods severity against sin though not feel it It was enough to make us hate the sin but not to sink under it It was sufficient for a sine but so as to preserve the state It was a Manuduction to a great Sacrifice but suppletory of the great loss and forfeiture It was enough to glorifie God and by it to save our selves It was insufficient in it self but accepted in the great Sacrifice It was enough in shadow when the substance was so certainly to succeed 3. It was given the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Author of the Apostolical Constitutions affirms L. 6. c. 18. That being loaden with expence of sacrifices to one God they might not be greedy upon the same terms to run after many And therefore the same Author affirms Before their golden Calf and other Idolatries Sacrifices were not commanded to the Jews but perswaded only recommended and left unto their liberty By which we are at last brought to this Truth That it was taught by God to Adam and by him taught to his posterity that they should in their several manners worship God by giving to him something of all that he had given us And therefore something of our time and something of our goods And as that was to be spent in praises and celebration of his name so these were to be given in consumptive offerings but the manner and measure was left to choice and taught by superadded reasons and positive Laws c. Idem ib. l. 2. c. 2. p. 321. I know it is said very commonly and the Casuists do commonly use that method That the explication of the Decalogue is the sum of all their moral Theology but how insufficiently the foregoing Instances do sufficiently demonstrate I remember that Tertullian I suppose to try his wits finds all the Decalogue in the Commandment which God gave to Adam to abstain from the forbidden fruit In hâc enim lege Adae datâ omnia praecepta recondita recognoscimus L. adv Jud. quae posteà repullulaverunt data per Mosem And just so may all the Laws of Nature and of Christ be found in the Decalogue Decalogue as the Decalogue can be found in the Precept given to Adam But then also they might be found in the first Commandment of the Decalogue and then what need had their been of Ten It is therefore more than probable that this was intended as a digest of all those Moral Laws in which God would expect and exact their obedience leaving the perfection and consummation of all unto the time of the Gospel God intending by several portions of the eternal or natural Law to bring the world to that perfection from whence Mankind by sin did fall and by Christ to enlarge this Natural Law to a similitude and conformity to God himself as far as our Infirmities can bear Id. ib. l. 2. c. 3. p. 521. That which is true to day will be true to morrow and that which is in its own nature good or necessary is good or necessary every day and therefore there is no essential duty of the Religion but is to be the work of every day To confess Gods glory to be his subject to love God to be ready to do him service to live according to nature and to the Gospel to be chast to be temperate to be just these are the employments of all the periods of a Christians life For the moral law of Religion is nothing but the moral law of Nature Those who in the Primitive Church put off their Baptism to the time of their death knew that Baptism was a profession of holiness and an undertaking to keep the Faith and live according to the Commandments of Jesus Christ and that as soon as ever they were baptized that is as soon as ever they had made profession to be Christs Disciples they were bound to keep all the laws of Christ and therefore that they deferred their Baptism was so egregious a prevarication of their duty that as in all reason it might ruine their hopes so it proclaimed their folly to all the world For as soon as ever they were convinced in their understanding they were obliged in their Consciences And although Baptism does publish the Profession Baptism and is like the forms and solemnities of law yet
the abundance of light and grace which it affordeth Do we not count the last Adam stronger than the first Is not he able to cast down all the strong holds all the towring imaginations which flesh and blood though tainted in the womb can set up against him And therefore if we be truly what we profess our selves Christians this weakness cannot hurt us and if it hurt us it is because we are not Christians To conclude If in Adam we were all lost in Christ we are come home and brought nearer to heaven Et post Jesum Christum when we have given up our names unto Christ and profest our selves Members of that mystical Body whereof he is the Head all our complaints of weakness and disability to move in our several places are vain and unprofitable and injurious to the Gospel of Christ which is the power of God unto salvation Ro. 1 16. And a gross and dangerous errour it is when we run on and please our selves in our evil ways to complain of our hereditary infirmities and the weakness and imperfection of Nature for God may yet breath his Complaints and Expostulations against every Son of Adam that will not turn Though you are weak though you have received a bruise by the Fall of your first Parents yet in me is your strength and then Why will ye die O house of Israel Hos 13.5 Dr. Spencer of Prodigies Praef. Religion is easily concluded a great adversary to a true generousness and universal freedom of spirit and that its whole business is to subdue the Spirits of men to some cold and little observances Generousness pale and feminine fears Hence men quickly grow weary of it as of a yoak that continually galls them and conclude themselves gainers if they may but purchase manhood with Atheism Id. ib. Religion is not to be dallied with non patitur ludum fides Pious frauds as Strong-waters do the body may perhaps help religion in a fit but if used familiarly disable the native heat and strength thereof Hay and stubble laid upon a good foundation such I count well-meant forgeries in Religion will catch fire and consume at last and leave a great stain and soil upon the foundation As it reports Religion a system of some pitiful rites sneaking and beggarly Elements Elements there is nothing more effectually inclines subtil minds to Atheism as the evaporating religion into a multitude of touchy and critical modes and observations which cannot command reverence to themselves before discerning minds which soon see through them they are so thin and aery Id. ib. No two things do so usurp and waste the faculty of Reason as Enthusiasm and Superstition the one binding a faith the other a fear upon the Soul Pessimum est plane pestis tabes Intellectûs si vanis accedat veneratio Id. ib. p. 10. When our Saviour came into the world the Religion of the greatest part of it through the agency of the Devil ran out into a multitude of little rites weak observations bodily postures And he appoints a Religion directly opposite plain simple rational life and spirit whose main design was to employ and perfect the mind and spirit of a man And can it be thought that heaven and hell now touch each other so far that we must borrow the measures of our biggest fears and hopes and motives to Repentance from the Ethnick Divinity or from the Jewish Rites in which if there had been aliquid sani to be sure the Devil would have hindred its gaining so great a regard as it did among his Votaries must we look for such a Jewel as the intimations of the Counsels of Wisdom are in the dunghil of obscene and monstrous Births c. Id. ib. p. 11. God was pleased heretofore suitable to the Nonage of the Church to address himself very much to the lower faculties of the Soul Phancy and Imagination accordingly we find Prophesies delivered Nonage of the Church in vehement and unusual schemes of speech such as are greatly adapted to strike and affect imagination Christ was pro-raised as one speaks sub magnificis admirationem facientibus ideis the mysteries of the Gospel were held forth in most splendid types and symbols and the Law of God forc't upon the spirits of men heretofore by the terrours of a thundering heaven and a burning Mountain and speedy vengeance upon the despisers thereof The spirits of good men carried out to actions and tempers beyond their natural capacities by the pregnant and vigorous Impresses of the divine Spirit and the fears of the Church excited and her faith assisted by many signs and wonders the withdrawing whereof the Church bewails they all vanishing at the light of Divine Revelation prevailed as Stars do upon the approach of the day-light But they which talk of and look for any such vehement expressions of Divinity now mistake the temper and condition of that Oeconomy which the appearance of our Saviour hath now put us under Wherein all things are to be managed in a more sedate cool and silent manner in a way suited to and expressive of the temper our Saviour discovered in the World Who caused not his voice to be heard in the streets Is 42.2 and to the condition of a reasonable Being made to be managed by steady and calm Arguments and the words of Wisdom heard in quiet in a smooth and serene temper the mysteries of the Gospel come forth cloathed in sedate and intelligible forms of speech The minds of men are not now drawn into extasie Eccles 9.17 by any such vehement and great examples of Divine power as attended the lower and more servile state of the World The Miracles our Saviour wrought were of a calm and gentle nature curing the blind restoring the sick and lame not causing of thunder and storms as Samuel but appeasing them Matth. 16.1 None of them such as the Jews called for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signs from heaven such prodigious and affrighting thunders and fires which attended the delivery of the Law and the Spirit of Elijah Indeed the Veil of the Temple was rent the Sun dreadfully eclips't the Earth terribly shaken at his death but these astonishing wonders were made use of as his last reserve to conquer the prejudices of an obdurate people upon whom his more gentle and obliging instances of divine Majesty made no impression and perhaps these prodigious changes in Nature were intended as Prophetick Emblems of the great change shortly to ensue in heaven the way and worship of Religion and earth the powers and kingdoms of the World by the power and doctrine of the Person Heb. 12.26 27 who then died upon the Cross The mighty rushing wind at Pentecost which was issued in a soft and lambent fire upon the heads of the first preachers of the Gospel was possibly a figure of that more vehement and terrible state of the Law which usher'd the way for and was determined in the more sedate and gentle
dispensation of the Gospel God hath now in a great measure left frighting of men to heaven by visible terrors The Law of the Messias was delivered upon the Mount in the small and still voice and is set home upon the hearts of men by the terrour only of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 23.14 a more heavy vengeance in another world than what overtook the despisers of Moses Law God expects now that we should be judiciously religious and acted to his service by a spirit of love and of a sound mind to fear his threatning more than the burnings of Sinai to look upon a bad man since the appearance of Christ to take away sin as the greatest prodigy and to expect the signs of an approaching Judgment non in Erratis naturae sed Saeculi Id. ib. p. 18. Fanaticks Now we shall ever find that all Persons which take up Opinions from their own poetical genius and busie fancy are impregnable to all the assaults of reason The Rosicrucians acted so hugely by imagination in Philosophy Some kind of Chymists in Medicks The Cabalists in Scripture Expositions Enthusiasts in Religion Figure-casters in Astrology are so invincibly resolved upon their Hypotheses that like him in the story when their hands those little reasonings wherewith they hold them are cut off they will mordicùs defendere hold them with their teeth biting and reviling language thrown upon their opposers and neglecters They are entertained with pleasant and easie dreams and therefore angry with those that attempt to awaken them and discompose them Ib. p. 19. As the assistance of God the Spirit with our holy endeavours doth not take away the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the weaknesses attendant on Christian practises because he acts us ad modum nostrum so neither doth the Co-assistance of God the Father with all natural Agents quite remove the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Errours of Nature Ib. p. 23. Terrible Representations of God The opinion of Prodigies represents God before the Soul with a rod of Vengeance perpetually in his hand A Belief of a God is that Fort which the Devil could never storm force by any direct temptation and therefore he designs by such terrible and servile conceits wrought in the hearts of men to undermine it For perpetual jealousies and slavish fears of God like over-heated waters boyl over at last and extinguish that fire that faith and sense of God which first produc't them When the Notion of a Deity stands alway before the mind like a Gorgons head pregnant with nothing but horrours and dismaies it quickly works and turns it to a stony stupid neglect of him so to get rid of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that mighty Fear which was its continual Executioner Moreover the Devil no doubt loves to bring men off from a noble and generous temper And as it is the design of Religion to cast out fear and to introduce a spirit of true freedom and confidence toward God so it is the work of the Devil to call on a spirit of Bondage and Fear that so he see may in men the more lively and express images and pourtraictures of himself who believes and trembles He would have his Rites of Worship of old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 frightful and amazing mysteries the Idols wherein he was worshipped bear in their very Names and Titles a remembrance of that Baseness and Servility of spirit which attended his Votaries in the service of so absolute a Tyrant being styled sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 horrours Is 40 5. Jer. 50.38 Ps 106.36 as 't is rendred in the Margin 2 Chron. 15.16 sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying trouble and terrour and the Devils are styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coming from a word which signifies horrour because usually tendring themselves to view in the most frightful forms Now this Superstitious perswasion of Prodigies doth hugely minister to bondage of Spirit and tends to seal men with the mark of Cain according to the Jews a perpetual Trembling and Astonishment P. 24. That which possibly assisted this Tradition was the succeeding of Rome Christian as into the place so into very many of the Rites and usages of Rome Pagan as might be easily made appear at large were that our business and into as large a power over the Faiths and Consciences of men as Rome Pagan had over their Bodies and so was enabled to mold them into what Opinions or Practises they might best serve themselves upon Ib. p. 29. As in Heresie Populus sequitur Doctiores ☜ Popular Errors the People follow the Learned as being in a matter more abstract and subtil more apt to believe than to judge so in Superstition Doctiores sequuntur Populum the Learned are not seldom observed to follow the People because early surprized into an opinion that can enter so valuable a plea for its self as common Consent This Notion of presages by Prodigies being so popular and Catholick Wise men in their first and unwary years when they are Discipuli Plebis may entertain conceits thereof which shall plead prescription against the strongest reasons to dispossess them As Iron in a greater and more massie body sequitur Naturam communem follows the Law of common Nature in all heavy bodies and moves to the earth but in smaller pieces sequitur Naturam privatam it follows its own private Nature and directs it self to the Load-stone Thus Learned men where they are prest by the force and weight of Education and a Common prejudice generally follow common Nature in men which inclines to embrace Society and therefore more in Judgment Secundum viam Terrae but in matters out of vulgar ken and where they cannot be tempted by a common Agreement they move Secundum viam Consilii and pursue the dictates of their private light and understanding Even wise men in many instances held Aras Focos their Faith and their Estates by the same Tenure Tradition from Ancestours and therefore we may receive their Judgments tanquam ex Cathedrâ as engagements to consider not alwaies tanquam ex Tripode as obligations to believe Ib. p. 39. They look upon their Gods as a kind of Fairies which would throw Firebrands and Furies about the house for the omission of some petty Criticisms in their Rites and that therefore they gave forth frequent intimations of those impotencies and distastes They thought they were lost with a Trifle and won again to a good opinion of them by paying them the homage of a little crouching and circumstantial Devotion ☞ Fathers not all pure To the Testimony of Fathers I answer in general That 't were no wonder to find them living so near the times of Gentilism speaking in favour sometimes for some of the Doctrines thereof The main trunk and body of the Gentile Superstition was indeed hewen down in their minds but still there were some small roots and fibres remaining which are observed to spring up ever