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A69028 The rule of faith, or, An exposition of the Apostles Creed so handled as it affordeth both milke for babes, and strong meat for such as are at full age / by ... Nicholas Bifield ; ... now published ... by his sonne, Adoniram Bifield. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Byfield, Adoniram, d. 1660. 1626 (1626) STC 4233.3; ESTC S113882 419,023 572

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religion and were circumcised and withall religious or deuoute men that were Gentiles conuerted to the Iewish religion but were not circumcised such as were Cornelius and diuers others The speciall nature of the Church in which it differs from all other companies of men is exprest in the other wordes of the definition and so they shew vs three things 1. The efficient cause of the Church viz. her calling by the voice of Gods Cryer 2. The tearmes from which and to which she is called in the middle words of the definition 3. The fo●me of the Church which consists in her vnion with Christ and communion with her selfe among the members of that company For the first when I say she is called ordinarily by the voice of Gods Cryers I intimate diuers things thereby 1. That the Preachers of the Gospell are as publike Criers to call men to heare what God hath to say to them like those Cryers in Athens of whom I spake before Matth. 3. Esay 48. 1. 2. That I consider not of the Church as she is elect of God till shee be called because many of the Elect for a great part of their liues may lie scattered about and hidden in the heapes of the men of this world 3. That the preaching of the Gospell is the meanes to make men actually of the Church and members of Christ and so to haue right to saluation The Gospell is the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. 16. and 10. 14. 4. I adde effectually called to exclude Hypocrites and carnall men that enioy the meanes but obey it not and to include the worke of the Holy Ghost making the hearts of the Elect to answer to Gods call and obey his voice for by the Spirit God speakes also internally to their hearts 5. I adde the Word ordinarily to shew that though God is pleased to binde men to the vse of the meanes yet he himselfe is not tied but can worke without the meanes and so it may giue vs occasion to informe our selues in diuers cases as first in the case of such as liue in places where the meanes is not nor can be had It is possible that God extraordinarily may worke conuersion in some men in such places which was the case of Cornelius liuing in Caesarea Act. 10. Secondly in the case of Infants who do belong to the Church by vertue of Gods Couenant though they liue not to receiue conuersion by the preaching of the Gospell for Christ saith of Infants Theirs is the kingdome of God Thirdly in the case of such as liue in Paganish and idolatrous places as in the times of the darknesse of Popery or in the case where men are by violence carried away and brought vp in idolatrous places God may haue a remnant amongst them that belong to his election and are in time truly called as in the daies of Elias in the kingdome of the ten Tribes vnder the reigne of Ahab Fourthly in the case of such as are borne deafe or become so before they are capable of receiuing the Gospell they being borne of godly parents may belong to the Church as Infants do I say God that knowes his owne from eternitie may euen amongst them by the supply of the Spirit make members of the Church Besides seeing the Holy Ghost doth not need speciall instruments to worke withall sometimes he may worke that by the eyes of the deafe which he doth by the eares of others for by their eyes he may powre in an eternall light into their mindes Lastly the case of such as are destitute of vnderstanding by nature or disease is very hard because they want reason and so are incapable of faith and if we say that the Holy Ghost may infuse an inward light then it is cleare they cease to be fooles or mad-men In this case therefore we must religiously and charitably suspend and leaue Gods worke to himselfe The termes from which and to which the Church is called follow in these words from the prophanenesse of the world to enioy the supernaturall dignitie of the children of God The terme from which Terminus à quo is from the prophanenesse of the world in which words three things may be noted First that the true members of the Church were in their estate of Nature as prophane as the people of the world liuing in sin and being the children of wrath as well as others which shew the exceeding riches of Gods grace and Christs loue to them that could respect them being so vile and sinfull Secondly that our first parents before the fall could not properly be said to be the Church because they neither were called from an estate of corruption nor did they then need Christ nor had that faith in Christ being perfect by creation and so not wanting a Sauiour whereas the Church is properly the Spouse of Christ Thirdly by these words all men in visible Churches may trie themselues for only they that are conuerted from prophanenesse are true members of the Church and so Hypocrites are excluded and open prophane persons and such as are only changed in their opinions and not in their practise 2 Pet. 1. 4. Terminus ad quem or the terme to which they are called is to the supernaturall dignity of the sons of God which words expresse the grace of Adoption which comprehends the substance of all that felicity we haue from God in Christ after calling Eph. 1. 4. but of the priuiledges of the Church afterwards The last words of the definition describes the forme of the Church the essentiall inward forme which is that vnion with Christ by faith they are really members of the Church that are vnited to Christ as their head by faith without this faith it is impossible to please God and faith comprehends all that which essentially God requires of vs to iustification and adoption Ioh. 3. 16. I adde their vnion one with another by loue because brotherly loue is an inseparable fruit of faith for faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. and is such a Characteristicall signe of a true member of the Church that the Apostle saith thereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1 Ioh. 3. 14. and the same Apostle seemes to make Loue a kinde of forme of the true Christian Eph. 1. 4. Thus of the definition of the Church The originall of the Church followes next to be considered and so I consider of the Church as she is the Church not as these men were in their estate of Nature for so her father was an Amorite and her mother an Hittite in as much as she was sinfully borne she was basely borne but that company that I call the Church were not the Church when they were in that estate of Nature The Church then as shee is the Spouse of Christ hath many things in her originall that are very glorious and much to be admired And that if we consider her originall in respect of decree
he beleeued the man answered as the Church beleeued and the diuell asking him how the Church beleeued he answered as I doe and hereupon the diuell ranne away and was vanquished And it m●y well bee the diuell durst aske him no more questions for feare least he should get out of his Snare now that by these answers he had made it manifest he was fast in for hee that takes not in the doctrine of faith par●icularly takes it not in at all for as the Childe may starue though you set before it a whole loafe of bread or other prouision if you cut it not for him bit by bit so is it with vs in beleeuing To set the body of faith before vs and not teach vs how after it is diuided to take any part is to starue our soules To bee short then we must looke to it that we vnderstand and beleeue these Articles not in the whole lumpe onely but in the partes not by trusting to other mens iudgements but distinctly taking notice of each doctrine of faith our selues 4. We must beleeue all the Articles of the faith totally not in some parts onely faith is copulatiue heere we must beleeue all or none He cannot be sound in the faith that is corrupted in his iudgement about any these Articles faith that is a sound faith beleeues all that is written 5. We must beleeue with application It is not inough to beleeue that these doctrines are true or good but wee must beleeue that they belong to each of vs in particular or else we shall haue little profit or comfort by them What can it comfort vs to beleeue that these things are or that others shall haue the benefit of them if they belong not to vs Thus I must beleeue that I haue the benefit of Gods power or prouidence and of Christs Incarnation and Passion and exaltation and that I am a member of the Church and haue my parte in his priuiledges This is a maine thing to be attained for a reprobate may goe so farre to beleeue that these doctrines are true 6. We must beleeue with all Christian simplicity which should haue two things in it first wee must cast away all trust in our owne merits It is a compounded and corrupted faith that beleeues any of these things vpon the perswasion of his owne merits or deserts To beleeue aright and merit cannot stand together true faith casteth out merit For if they which are of the law inherit any of these treasures then faith is void and the promise and gift of Gods grace of none effect Rom. 4. 14. secondly we must beleeue so as we will giue glory to God though the things to bee beleeued bee neuer so vnlikely to carnall reason or be things absent and not yet giuen or things aboue our vnderstanding in the full glory of them our faith must not bee curious or vnquiet to binde God to giue vs a reason of his promises or actions Herein we must take heede that the Serpent beguile vs not nor seduce vs from the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus 2. Cor. 11. 3. Yea this is the glory and triumph of faith in these things without doubting to giue glory to God Our faith must bee the substance of things hoped for and the demonstration of things not seene Wee must beleeue eternall life though we must die and a blessed resurrection though we shall be rotten in the graue and that we are Iustified though sinne yet dwell in vs and that we are blessed though yet exposed to much miseries c. 7. We must beleeue with full assurance wee must not wauer or doubt but bee fully resolued and established in the perswasion of these things and our right in them Colos 2. 2. 1. Thes 1. 4. this we ought to labour for and this may bee had and therefore we should giue all diligence to get this full assurance of faith I grant that a lesse degree of faith may be true faith as shall bee shewed afterwards but yet this is that which we should striue for that we may effectually glorifie God by beleeuing 8. We must beleeue with perseuerance we must so giue entertainement to these sacred truthes now as that wee also meane to liue and die in this faith The faith that is temporarie will little auaile vs we must so prouide that our faith may last to the end And therefore the word is I do beleeue in the present time not I haue beleeued or I will beleeue to note that there must be no time wherein a Christian may truely say now I beleeue not Now that we may not be deceiued herein we must looke to three things First that we cast off all carnall ends in our profession of faith and looke to it that wee take not vp the profession of religion for sinister respects as many haue done for such ends as these to wit to get credit and the fauour of men or to make themselues capable of the preferment of this world or to shew their gifts or which is worse to couer secret wicked practises or open faults Secondly that we build not our Faith vpon wrong Causes or grounds such as are the respect of any mans person or opinion or the intising words of mens wisedome or the meere colours and probabilities of mens arguments but be sure we place our Faith vpon the Word of God Thirdly that we be not deceiued with the seeming effects of Faith but learne to distinguish betweene the force of the Word vpon our hearts when we are meerely as it were patients and the force of the Word working a habit or action in vs. I expresse my meaning thus Many a man liues in a place where the word is taught in the power and glory of it comes to heare without any care or purpose to regard or profit by it yet the truth in the deliuerie of it so shines in his heart that he is not only conuinced but for the time delighted and heares with great gladnesse as feeling his heart to be warmed with the doctrine he heares yet cares not for it when he is gone away nor makes any vse of it at all as being destitute of any gift by which he should receiue or apply the doctrine so that this heat in his heart did not arise from any habit in him receiuing the Word and making vse of it but onely from the forcible penetration of the doctrine As a stone that is heated by the beames of the Sunne that neither had heat in it selfe before nor keepes heat when the Sunne hath done shining but is a meere patient Now this hearer hath not so much as a temporarie Faith for he that hath the temporarie Faith hath a kinde of habit be gotten in him so as he doth receiue the doctrine and keepe it after a sort and from the force of it so kept doth bring forth some fruit and so the seede receiued into his heart is like grasse vpon the house top or seede sowen
nor Herod his lust nor Iehu his Idols c. 3. That they are apt to fall away from the liking they haue of Religion which they may finde in themselues when they are at the best if they examine themselues in these questions Whether for these things they would loose the fauour of their carnall friends and their credit in the world whether they would suffer for these things if times of persecution should come whether if they might haue their hearts desire in worldly or sinfull things they would not aband on the care of these things And they may finde it by this that if they fall out with any that are the chiefe for Religion in the places where they liue they meditate not onely a forsaking of such as they are fallen out withall but euen a relin quishing of their forwardnesse or care for profession of religion it selfe those that finde such corruption in their hearts had neede to take heede to their standing least they fall for though a timely reconciliation with men restore them to their former course of profession againe yet this tryall of their hearts may tell them that at length for such or the like occasions they will fall cleane away if they get not better footing in the Kingdome of God 4. That all this profession is vndertaken for carnall and corrupt ends as either to get credit with religious persons or to auoid the penall Lawes of Princes or to couer some vices they are prone to or guilty of or to aduantage their estates in worldly things or out of desire to excell others in gifts or the like 5. That the ioy which they feele is but a false ioy and vnsound which appeares both by the causes of it and by the effects By the causes for they ioy in hearing the Word for these or the like reasons because the doctrine is new or because it is handled with vnexpected learning or wit or because it fits their humors or affections or because it is doctrine that is generally comfortable and sets out the happinesse of such as are of their Religion or because the things spoken of are admirable in themselues or because the doctrine makes against such and such as he likes not And such as are the causes such are the effects For this ioy makes them more proude and carelesse and conceited and contemptuous many times of others Whereas the true ioy ariseth from the solid application of the things heard to himselfe and from the perswasion of his right vnto these comforts by and through Iesus Christ. And withall this ioy doth soften the heart as the dew from Heauen doth the ground and makes the true Christian more humble and mortified and more desirous to be rid of sinne and more to loue God and goodnes and godly men Now if all these sorts bee cast out it is easie to coniecture that few will remaine to bee reckoned for true beleeuers Secondly this doctrine of beleeuing should moue all sorts of men in the Visible Church to try and examine themselues whether they be in the faith or no 2. Cor. 13. 5. And to this end euery Christian may profitably imploy himselfe if in his examination he looke to foure things 1. He must be sure that he be not guilty of any of the things that be repugnant to faith There are some things so contrary to faith that where they are faith is not Such as are 1. Naturall infidelity whereby the heart is not onely void of the knowledge and beliefe of God and true Religion but also when the meanes of knowledge is offered hath habituall struglings and desires that there were neither God nor any bond of Religion 2. Carnall security when the soule is at rest and securely contemnes Gods Iustice in the threatnings against his sins 3. Resisting of the truth when men that daily heare the Word doe with hatred of the truth either oppose it outwardly or reiect it inwardly 4. Presumption and confidence in our owne strength works merits righteousnesse or worthinesse 5. A professed resolution against the assurance of faith when men bring in an Academicall doubting and perswade themselues that no man ordinarily can know or be assured of his Saluation 6. Notorious wickednes and prophanesse when men drowne themselues in lewd courses and follow their lusts without care or remorse 7. Apostacie when men fall away from the Religion they haue professed with a Totall disregarde of the knowne truth 8. A generall kinde of wauering in the doctrine of faith and continuall vnsetlednesse both of iudgement and affection 9. Desperation when a man rageth and is tormented with the horror of Gods Iustice without respect of Gods Glory or any hope or desire or prayer for Gods Mercie in Christ He therefore that would try whether hee haue a true beliefe or no must in the first place try whether none of these contraries of faith possesse not his soule for if they doe it is certaine he hath not faith 2. He must carefully separate and distinguish faith from such things as haue some kinde of likenesse or agreement with it and yet are not faith In his Tryall hee must take heede that he take not some other thing for faith such as are rash Credulity Hypocriticall profession Presumption opinion humane Knowledge experience or Hope For the first there is a light kinde of assent which men giue vnto doctrines in Religion without any knowledge of the warrant and proofe of them from Scripture whatsoeuer effects this Credulity haue yet is it not faith because that is euer grounded vpon the Word of God Nor may hee mistake an outward hypocriticall profession of the true Religion for faith Profession of Religion when it is destitute of the loue of God hatred of sinne trust in Christs merits charity to men and patience in afflictions doe no way commend a man to God much lesse is it true faith Thirdly many Christians entertaine Presumption insteede of faith They are resolued vpon it that God is their Father and Christ died for them and they are the children of God and true Christians and all this without any word of God rightly applyed Fourthly Opinion in matters of Religion may bee taken by some for faith but yet it is not for Opinion is naturall faith supernaturall and giuen of God Opinion is founded vpon humane testimonie faith vpon diuine Opinion is doubtfull and wauering faith is firme and certaine Fifthly nor may humane Knowledge be taken for faith for though they agree in this that they are both imployed about things true and such things as sense cannot reach to yet they differ manifestly faith is Gods gift and a light supernaturall but knowledge is a habit gotten by vs through the helpe of the sparkles of the light of nature and exercise and teaching for the comprehending of the things of faith there is daily neede of the inspiration and illumination and quickning of Gods spirit But the
things of knowledge may be attained by the force of mans owne wit and industry faith is grounded vpon the truth and power of God besides and aboue the strength of nature and the iudgement of the whole world Knowledge is grounded vpon naturall causes and principles to omit other differences Sixtly nor must that perswasion which ariseth from experience and the fulfilling of things be taken for true faith because faith laies hold vpon things before the euent also Heb. 11. 1. Nor lastly is faith and hope all one for faith sees Christ exhibited and present in the Word and Sacrament Hope lookes for him to be reuealed from Heauen Faith beleeues what God hath promised and Hope waites for performance faith is assured of eternall life and Hope expects it to be reuealed Faith is the foundation of Hope and Hope is the nurse of faith Thus he must cast out things that are onely like vnto faith but are not faith 3. When he hath thus cast out the contraries of faith and findes himselfe free from them and withall hath prouided that he is not deceiued with the things that haue a likenesse vnto faith and are not he must then in the third place looke to it that he take not a wrong faith for the right faith for there be many kindes of faith and one onely that is the faith that will iustifie vs before God and so the right faith is not 1. That politicall faith which is a vertue imployed about humane contracts and societies to beleeue aright is more then to bee faithfull in promises or to bee trustie in imployments or to bee iust in our dealings or to keepe our words to men 2. Among the faithes that are found onely in the Church it is not the Symbolicall faith that hath nothing in it but an outward auouching or professing of the true Religion 3. Nor is it contained in that faith called Historicall which hath nothing but the vnderstanding and assent vnto the word that it is true but wants application and life 4. Nor is it that temporary faith of which was intreated before but is such a beliefe as containes in it all the six things before mentioned 5. Nor is it that faith they call a Morall faith by which a man beleeues out of charity that other men are Gods Elect and true Christians Lastly when he hath freed his heart from the mistakings may arise from any of the former hee must then trie himselfe by the direct signes of a compleate and effectuall faith and these things which essentially belong to the true beleeuer and so a man may haue comfort that hee is a true beleeuer 1. If he can shew the warrant of his faith from the Testimonie of Gods Word in the Scriptures A man may then comfort himselfe that he is not deceiued in his faith when hee is able to proue these doctrines of faith by the euidence of Gods Word Acts 17. 10. 11. 2. If hee beleeue these Truthes also with Application to himselfe 3. If hee finde his heart so established that hee can resolue to suffer for his faith and can abide the Tryall of reproaches losses or any Persecution from the world and this hee can indure simply for the loue of God and the truth and not for carnall or corrupt ends Phil. 1. 2● 4. If he finde in his heart and life the liuely fruites and effects of faith such as are 1. Solid and true ioy and comfort The true beleeuer carrieth his heauen about him when hee carrieth his Creed in his heart These doctrines are as a daily spring of reioycing vpon all occasions and these ioyes are glorious and vnspeakeable 1 Pet. 1. ● Phil. 1. 25. It is otherwise with the hypocrite and vnbeleeuer for he through vnbeliefe carrieth his hell about him And for want of this Sun-shine of comfort is daily and secretly afrighted and disquieted in himselfe Yea these very doctrines of faith many times torment his soule 2. A combat with the vnregenerate parte If these doctrines be rightly beleeued a man shall finde in himselfe that these truthes doe resist and fight against the corruptions of our owne nature euen the most secret euills of our hearts and will not rest till they haue mastered the flesh wi●h the lusts thereof or else they cause vnspeakeable sighes and groanes and sorrow after God for the presence and power of rebellious corruptions The true faith will by no meanes brook the polluted and euill disposition of the heart Acts 15. 9. 3. The liberty of the heart from that banishment and imprisonment in which it liued before without God so as now by the light and incouragement of these truthes the heart discernes Gods free grace in calling vs to his presence and is well perswaded of God and therefore daily with an holy boldnesse goeth vnto God in the vse of his ordinances by the direction and assistance of his spirit Ephes 3. 12. Rom. 5. 2. 8. 38. 2. Cor. 3. 4. Gal. 4. 6. 4. The life of the soule for true faith is the eye hand mouth tongue teeth stomack and heate of the soule by which Christ is receiued and digested and that daily by which food the soule liues for euer Romanes 1. 17. Hebrewes 10. 37. 5. Victorie ouer the world and worldly Relations and respects for he that truely belieues these things knowes no man after the flesh and can deny himselfe in his profits pleasures credit hopes or the like It ouercommeth both the trust in these things and the lusts after them and the temptations that arise from them 1. Ioh. 5. 4 6. Peace of conscience The right knowledge and beliefe of these doctrines breeds such an inward tranquility as passeth all vnderstanding of all men that haue not this beliefe Rom. 5. ● 7. Good workes euen all sorts of faire fruites Euen the fruites of loue towards God in the duties of Piety to God and loue towards men in the duties of Mercy and Righteousnesse This beliefe is the roote the workes of loue are the fruites of it And these workes it sets a man about with a desire and resolution to obey God in all things and that though it bee opposed by diuells or men Gal. 5. 6. The light of this faith giues a daily heate vnto Charity Iam. 3. 17. 8. Hope and expectation of the singular glory of God in the treasures of a better life Which hope hath such a power in the heart that the beleeuer is not ashamed of any thing can befall him for the profession of his faith Gal. 5. 5. Rom. 5. 3. Heb. 11. 13. 25 26 35. 36 37. 9. Confession of the glory of Gods Mercy and Power The beliefe of these things makes the dumbe man speake in the celebration of Gods praises The mercie of God is neuer seene nor magnified with any life till faith come into the heart because we haue belieued therefore we speake 2. Cor. 4. 13. 10. Contentation in all estates Phil.
4. 11. and thus Faith is tryed by the effects Finally men that haue faith may know it by the Testimonie of the holy Ghost in them He that beleeueth hath a witnesse in himselfe euen Gods spirit that daily incourageth him in the knowledge of his right in these Truthes 1. Ioh. 5. 10. Thus of the second vse Thirdly the doctrine of Faith to such as can by these signes finde it to be in them is exceeding comfortable such as haue a true faith should wonderfully reioyce in it and the rather if they consider 1. That Faith is a speciall gift of God bestowed of his free grace Iohn 6. 29. Rom. 12. 3. Ephes 2. 8. 2. That it is a gift that God bestowes onely vpon his Elect and therefore the right Faith is called the Faith of Gods Elect Tit. 1. 1. 3. That it is giuen to all the Elect at one time or other It is not giuen onely to Abraham or Dauid or the like Eminent men but is common to all sorts of true Christians Tit. 1. 4. 4. That it is a most precious gift A gift which doth wonderfully enrich a Christian and exalt him aboue all other men that haue not Faith as Reason makes vs to excell beasts so doth Faith make vs excell men And this will the more manifestly appeare if wee consider the singular effects of Faith The effects wrought by Faith haue bin either extraordinary in some men or ordinary in euery true beleeuer It hath done extraordinary things in some men as it hath carried some men to Heauen aliue without dying as Henoch Elias Heb. 11. 5. Some men that had it could haue remoued mountaines and did miraculously heale diseases and raise dead men but because these effects are ceased I passe from them and consider onely of the ordinary effects such as are wrought by it in euery beleeuer and these I call ordinary effects not to abase their singular glory but to distinguish them from the former effects Great are the things which Faith worketh either to the Christian himselfe or to others To himselfe it bringeth and procureth admirable things for 1. It Iustifies him Rom. 3. It makes him as righteous as euer Adam was It is accepted in stead of the righteousnesse of the Law Rom. 10. It cloathes a man with the righteousnesse of Iesus Christ 2. It ingraffs the Beleeuer into Iesus Christ It is the bond that tyes vs to Christ and in Christ to God by faith we are made members of his body 3. It procureth our adoption to be the sonnes of God and so makes vs greater persons then if we were borne of the greatest blouds amongst men Iohn 1. 12. 4. It brings Christ to dwell in our hearts by his spirit Eph. 3. 17. 5. It makes vs capable and assured to obtaine whatsoeuer we aske of God It obtaines many and matchlesse suits in Gods Court Mark 11. 24. Eph. 3. 12. Heb. 10. 22. 6. It makes our workes acceptable to God whereas without it our best workes were vnpleasing to God Heb. 11. 6. 7. It obtaineth the greatest and best reputation It breeds a good report Heb. 11. 39. 8. It is our life we liue by the faith of the sonne of God Gal. 2. 20. and it is our life partly as it establisheth vpon vs the assurance of a better life by applying and laying hold on the promises of God that concerne eternall life Iohn 3. 16. and partly as it feedeth vpon Iesus Christ the most soueraigne nourishment for our soules for by faith we eate his flesh and drinke his bloud Iohn 6. and partly as it maketh the meanes of naturall life to become blessed to vs for man liueth not by bread alone but by euery word that proceeds out of the mouth of God and besides it giueth vs interest to Gods promises that concerne the blessings of this life for in outward blessings it is to vs according to our faith And partly as by it wee are kept to Saluation 1 Pet. 1. 5. so as our faith will neuer leaue vs till we receiue the saluation of our soules 1 Pet. 1. 9. 9. It obtaineth many and great victories and triumphs in this world and this will the more euidently appeare if wee consider seriously how many things are opposed against the faith of euery Christian as the temptations of Sathan which sometimes are like fiery darts doubts and feares sense of daily sinnes the threatnings of the Law the many chastisements of God false doctrine of all sorts the dissentions of Teachers in the Christian Churches the perfidiousnesse of false brethren impuritie in sinne the prosperitie of the wicked the fewnesse of true beleeuers the contemptiblenesse of the Church in the world the falling away of many professors the scornes of the world the delay of the performance of Gods promises and such like and yet faith makes vs daily against all these more then Conquerors What shall I say All things are possible to him that beleeueth and Faith procureth more for vs then Reason can reach to Eph. 3. 19. 20. Besides these effects which it worketh for the happinesse of the beleeuer himselfe it worketh strange and great things for others for it bringeth his seede and posterity into couenant with God the beleeuing parents make their seede holy 1 Cor. 7. Gen. 17. and the prayers of the beleeuer procureth great and wonderfull things many times for others and besides many times it keepes of greeuous Iudgements which else would fall vpon wicked men in the places where the beleeuer liueth Lastly vnto all the former Consolations this may be added that the faith of the true beleeuer shall not faile but continue to the end The seede of faith will abide in him 1 Iohn 3. 9. Christ hath prayed that faith may not faile Luke 22. 23. Ephes 1. 13. 14. 2 Thes 1. 11. Phil. 1. 6. Rom. 11. 29. Thus of the Consolations As the doctrine of faith is exceeding comfortable vnto the true beleeuer so it imports extreame terror and miserie vnto all such as are destitute of true faith for the vnbeleeuer is no Christian for the Christians were called beleeuers to shew that then a man was a true Christian when he was a true beleeuer By the right beliefe of these Articles men hold their Christendome Besides till faith come into a mans heart hee is shut vp vnder the arrests of the Lawe and lyeth in a spirituall prison charged with all the breaches of Gods Law which are debts impossible for him to pay Gal. 3. 22. And further without Faith it is impossible he should please God and all he doth is sinne Heb. 11. 6. but which is most grieuous this vnbeliefe will be his eternall destruction for this is the condemnation of worlds of men that they beleeue not in the light but loue darknesse rather then light Iohn 3. 16. 17. 18. Marke 16. Yea there is matter also of humiliation vnto many true beleeuers for not looking better to their faith and so godly
of himselfe without any dependance The manner of subsisting is the furnishing of a thing with peculiar Relation including a Person Now then the Persons in the Trinity differ from the Essence onely in the manner of subsisting because the Essence subsists in one manner in the Father and in another in the Sonne c. They doe not differ in Essence for all of them haue the same but onely in the manner of the subsisting of the Essence in each Person In the Trinity there is another and another but not another thing there is another that is another Person there is not another thing that is not another Essence In Christ now there is another and another thing for his diuine Nature is one thing and his humane Nature is another thing and yet there is not alius that is another Person But it is otherwise in the Trinity The being of the Father is the being of the Sonne and the being of the holy Ghost but to be the Father is not to be the Sonne or the holy Ghost Thus the Persons differ from the Essence They differ one from another foure waies In order in personall proprieties in number and in operation First in order they differ for the Father is the first Person the Sonne the Second and the holy Ghost the Third This Priority must not not be mistaken for one Person is not before another in time or in dignity but onely in Nature or in order of Nature so as one Person depends vpon another As the Sun is before the beames of the Sun not in time but in order of Nature because the beames are from the Sun so in the Trinity the Son and holy Ghost are after the Father not in time but because they receiue the originall of their Persons from the Father Relatiues are together in time onely note that Nature heere signifies the manner of subsisting not of essence for in respect of Essence there is no priority in the Trinity Secondly they differ in personall Proprieties As the personall Proprietie of the Father is to be of himselfe in respect of his Person vnbegotten The personall Proprietie of the Son is Generation or to bee of the Father by begetting The personall Propriety of the holy Ghost is to bee of the Father and the Son by Spiration or proceeding and thus each Person differs from other by incommunicable Characters Thirdly they differ in number they are the same in number in respect of the Essence because one God is Father Son and holy Ghost and yet in respect of those Characters in the manner of subsisting each Person hath a subsisting by himselfe which in number is not the same with the other Persons The Father hath one manner of subsisting in number the Son another and the holy Ghost another Note that I say each Person hath his subsisting by himselfe not of himselfe Fourthly they differ in operation and so both in externall and internall operations In externall workes though in respect of the things wrought they are common to all three persons yet in respect of the manner of working there is distinction of the persons for the Father workes by the Son in the holy Ghost The Father worketh from none the Son from the Father and the holy Ghost from them both Gen. 19. 24. Iohn 5. 19. 30. 8. 28. 16. 13. There are two principles to be marked for the vnderstanding of this point The one is that the workes of the Deity that are outward are common to all three Persons The other is that looke what order there is of existing in the Trinity the same order there is in working as was said before the Father worketh by the Son in the holy Ghost Thus Creation Adoption Sanctification are the workes of the whole Trinity as the Scriptures proue that attribute Creation to the Father and to the Son and to the Spirit and so of the other workes all three Persons worke the same Apotelesma or worke but not all after the same manner as for instance in the worke of our Redemption the Father workes by sending the Son the Son by assuming our Nature the holy Ghost by sanctifying and forming the bodie of Christ out of the flesh of the Virgin c. so in the Creation the Father wils it the Son by the holy Ghost effects it But this is withal to be noted that as any outward worke hath more resemblance in any part of it to any person in the Trinity so it is more specially attributed to that Person so in the Creed and in the Scriptures too Creation is attributed to the Father who being of himselfe fitly giues being to the creatures Redemption is attributed to the Son who as he resembles his Fathers Image is fittest to represent vnto mankinde his mercy and being an eternall Word in the Fathers minde doth fitly by his Word tell vs his Fathers meaning Sanctification is attributed to the holy Ghost who as he is breathed as it were from the Father and the Son per modum voluntatis amoris so doth hee fitly by breathing or inspiration inlighten and sanctifie our wills and affections And as they differ in externall workes so doe they in internall for the Father onely begets a Sonne the Father and Son as it were breathes forth the holy Ghost And thus of the matter of the Doctrine of the Trinity the Termes follow to bee considered of These words Persons and Trinity Essence c. were taken vp in the Primitiue Church as the fittest words to expresse what they conceiued of these glorious Mysteries The speech of man in many things extreamely doth want words Wee say three Persons not as if thereby the mystery were vttered but that it may not be vtterly concealed for that which is of such ineffable eminencie cannot be expressed in such a word wee speake therefore of these things as the Father said not as wee ought but as wee can And againe the same Father saith It hath bin lawfull for vs for discourse and disputation sake to say three persons not because the Scripture saith so but because it doth not contradict it and a kinde of necessity brought the Ancient Church to inuent the words for when Heretikes would yeeld to the termes of Scripture and varied vpon the corrupt senses they put vpon the words the Ancients were driuen to inuent words which did expresse the true sense that thereby the Heretikes might be tryed whether they hold the right Faith or no which termes that before were promiscuously vsed in other learning being in the daies of the first Christian Churches made free in the Cittie of God haue euer since enioned their freedome and may not now be turned out without suspition of contentiousnesse selfe conceit and Schisme The sense is in Scriptures though the words be not there As the Scripture saith there be three in Heauen which are one which the Church adds the three are Persons and the one is essence It adds not to
many respects as first that God should bee pleased to deale so wonderfull gratioufly with them as to vouchsafe to put his Spirit into them Secondly they may thence gather that God that hath giuen them his Spirit will blesse them in many other things besides If Obed Edoms house was blessed because the Arke was there how much more reason haue wee to hope that God will blesse vs now his Spirit abides with vs. Thirdly it should be a great comfort to a Christian against all his feares and doubts arising from his ignorance or insufficiency or infirmities for by the holy Ghost that is giuen to him he may hence gather he may doe all things in time which God would haue him to doe Lastly this Article must needs be comfortable when God hath promised to giue the Christian the holy Ghost to bee his comforter and to abide with him for euer The ninth Article The holy Catholike Church HItherto of the Articles of the Creed that concerne God euen all the three persons in the Trinity Now followes the second part of the Creed which comprehends the Articles that concerne the Church of God Amongst all things that are in the world faith admires onely God and the Church The Church I say as next to God in glory and true honour Now the Articles concerning the Church concerne either the properties or the priuiledges of the Church The properties of the Church are two viz. that shee is holy and Catholike the priuiledges of the Church are such ●s shee enioyes in this life or such as she shall haue in another world The priuiledges of the Church in this life are two Communion of Saints and Forgiuenesse of sinnes And in the world to come two more viz. Resurrection of the flesh and Euerlasting life First of the properties of the Church But before I come to consider of the particulars mentioned I must first explicate the Doctrine to bee beleeued concerning the Church in generall and so I would shew 1. What the Church is 2. The originall of the Church 3. The estate of the Church 4. The markes and notes by which the true Church may be discerned And then the generall vses of all When I enquire what the Church is I meane the true Church for the false Church is no Church properly as an ill Gramarian is no Gramarian properly Now to finde out what the Church is we must first consider of the acceptation of the word and then of the definition of the thing it selfe The word Ecclesia was a word in vse among the Athenians and came of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signified an assembly of Citizens that were called out from the multitude a● it were by name or in their rankes by the voice of the publike Crier to heare some speech or sentence of the Senate and was thence borrowed by the Apostles for their purposes by way of similitude The Church or assembly of Gods people being a company that came together not by chance or without order but by the voice of Gods Ministers as it were Criers called out of the Kingdome of Sathan to heare the doctrine of the Gospell reuealed from heauen The common people in common speech call the places set apart for the exercises of Religion Churches But so it is not taken here In Scripture the word hath diuers acceptations for sometimes it signified the assembly of the men of the world for their owne businesses and so that tumultuous Assembly of the Ephesians was called a Church Act. 20. 17. Sometime it signified the Assembly of the enemies of Gods people Psal 26. 5. this was the malignant Church Sometimes it signified the meeting of a few Christians in a family for religious priuate duties so there were Churches in godly mens houses Rom. 16. 5. Sometimes it signified a company of men in one Citie or Prouince that did outwardly professe the true religion 1 Cor. 11. 18. 22. and so vsually in the writings of Diuines the company throughout the world so professing is called the visible Church and in this sense there may bee hypocrits and scandalous Christians in the Church as well as godly men as the Parable of the Tares and the Draw-net shew But so it is not taken in the Creed for besides that this Church is holy as these wicked are not and enioyeth remission of sins which they doe not besides this I say we are said in the Creed to beleeue this Church to be which argues that in it selfe it is inuisible and knowne to God and cannot bee discerned by outward senses in the essentiall things of it Sometimes by the Church is meant the publike Officers in the Church that haue power of gouernment and censure as Matth. 18. 17. but in the strictest sense by the Church in the new Testament is signified the number of Gods Elect onely considered as they are effectually called by the Gospell and doe cleaue vnto Christ their head by a true and liuely faith Thus of the Etimologie of the word The definition of the Church followeth The Church here meant in the Creed is a company of men dwelling euery where effectually called ordinarily by the voice of Gods Criers from the misery and prophanesse of the world to the supernaturall dignitie of Gods children being vnited vnto Christ as their head by Faith and among then selues by loue as fellow-members In these words the generall nature of the Church is to bee considered and then the speciall difference of the Church from all other companies or professions or assemblies of men The generall nature is expressed in these words A company of men dwelling euery where where diuers things are to be noted 1. That it is a company not one man 2. That it is of men as the materiall cause not of other creatures for none but reasonable creatures are capable of Gods Image and so none but they can make a Church and among reasonable creatures I exclude Angels though they had a kinde of calling to that excellent estate they are in yet the Scripture speakes so sparingly of it that we cannot tell how to define it and therefore I meddle not with it and besides the Church is here considered as it is purchased by the blood of Christ which Angels were not neither are they tyed to the ministery of the Word as the Church in her calling is 3. I adde dwelling euery where to note that I define the Church that is Catholicke as the Creed calls it which tearms in the most euident sense agree to the Church now vnder the Gospell since the partition wall between Iewes and Gentiles was broken downe and yet in some sense it may agree to the Church from the beginining for euen in the time of the Iewish Church the Nations were not simply barred from fellowship with the Iewes and therefore we read of three sorts of people that belonged to the Iewish Church to wit the Iewes themselues and Proselites that is Gentiles that professed the Iewish
THE RVLE OF FAITH OR AN EXPOSITION OF the Apostles CREED so handled as it affordeth both Milke for Babes and strong meat for such as are at full age By that worthy seruant of Gods Church Master NICHOLAS BIFIELD late Minister of Gods Word at ISLEVVORTH and by him in his life time fully perfected and transcribed so much as is now published for the benefit of Gods Church by his Sonne ADONIRAM BIFIELD 1 PET. 2. 2. As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word that ye may grow thereby LONDON Printed by G.M. for Philemon Stephens and Christopher Meredith and are to be sold at their shop at the golden Lion in Pauls Church-yard 1626. TO THE RIGHT VVORSHIPFVLL AND Religious Knight Sir THOMAS POSTHVMVS HOBY and to the honourable and vertuous Lady the Lady MARGARET his wife A. B. wisheth the increase of grace heere and the fruition of glory hereafter RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL THere are many waies to attaine to seeming honour heere vpon earth there is no way to attaine to true honour besides this of Piety and Vertue Godlinesse brings the best gaine the greatest honour vnto a Christian others may be more rich none are more honorable then they others may bee more esteemed of by the men of the world none haue more honour both with God and good men then they as Salomon saith The wise shall inherit glory but fooles dishonor though they be exalted this is the inheritance of the godly who is the onely Wise man So that I may now say with our Sauiour your Worships haue both chosen the better part which shall neuer be taken from you I hauing euer obserued it to haue been your greatest ambitions to be true Christians which alone makes you more excellent then your neighbours neither haue you made choise of Religion as many Hypocrites and Time-seruers doe making it a stalking horse a footstoole to the seat of preferment making choice of Religion for nothing else but onely for the aduancing of themselues and compassing of their owne priuate ends no your end and aime hath euer beene in all your seruices and imployments both to aduance the glory of God as also to further the peace and welfare of this Church and Common-Wealth wherin we liue and whereof God hath made your Worship a worthy member This indouldens me humbly to present this ensuing Treatise vnto you both which may be called the Rule of Faith the Symbole or Badge whereby a true Christian may be distinguished and knowne from all Iewes Turkes Atheists Papists Hereticks counterfeting Temporizers and false Professors the Doctrine of the Creed containing in it the substance of Christian Religion Taught by the Apostles Imbraced by the ancient Fathers and Sealed by the bloud of the Martyrs The exposition of which Creed so far as it was perfected by the Author I heere present vnto you both desiring that it may shelter it selfe vnder your protection many reasons inforcing me thereto first that honour and Singular Loue which you both haue shewed vnto those that Labour in the Word and Doctrine as you are patternes of Piety so are you Patrons of pious and godly men and of their labours secondly that loue and respect which you were pleased in particular to expresse vnto the Author of this Treatise my deare Father now with God which since his death you haue been pleased to continue both vnto the fruit of his Braine as also to the fruit of his body this imboldens me to commit this Posthumus to your protection thirdly that good esteeme which you haue euer had of this work manifested both when you were pleased to bee diligent hearers of it when it was preached so long as you were both resident in those parts as also by your earnest desire of the publishing of it for the benefit of Gods Church and I doubt not but that you will now fauorably receiue that which formerly you haue so highly esteemed so much desired lastly that speciall duty which I my selfe owe vnto you both for your extraordinary Loue and by me vndeserued fauours which you haue beene both pleased to shew vnto me since it pleased God to depriue me of the benefit of such a Father this my duty bindeth me with all humility and thankfulnesse to acknowledge them therefore doe I willingly take this oportunity humbly to present this ensuing Treatise vnto you both not doubting but that you will receiue it into your Patronage so that whilst you beleeue and countenance and defend the Truth The Truth shall make you free These things do and the God of Truth and Peace shall be with you now the God of all grace make you perfect confirme strengthen and establish you and blesse you with all spiritual blessings in heauenly things through Christ with temporal blessings here and with eternal blessings in his Kingdome Such shall be the dayly Prayers of Your Worships humbly deuoted ADONIRAM BIFIELD To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader it was the Authors purpose if God had spared him life so long to haue finished this Exposition vpon the Creed but man purposeth and God disposeth It pleased God to ●aish his course before he had finished this work yet God in his diuine prouidence hath so disposed of it as that you may finde the substance of those Articles which are not here perfected to be handled in some of his other labours vnto which briefly I referre you For the ninth Article concerning the holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints I referre you to his Treatise called The Principles or the patterne of wholsome words Chap. 23. And whereas The Communion of Saints consists of two parts First The communion of the members with the head Secondly The communion of the members among themselues for the former read his Exposition vpon the Colossians Chap. 1. vers 18. pag. 121 122 123. for the latter reade his Exposition vpon the third of Peter ver 7. pag. 169. for this title Saints read his Exposition vpon the Colossians Chap. 1. ver 1. pag. 7 8 9. If you would be directed how to carry your selues in this communion amongst the Saints and towards the godly read his little Treatise called The Rules of a holy life Chap. 25. For the tenth Article The forgiuenesse of sinnes I referre you to his Booke of the Principles Chap. 24. as also to his Exposition vpon the Colossians Chap. 1. vers 14. pag. 108 109. Would you know what course to take to bee deliuered from your sins then I refer you to his little Treatise called The Doctrine of the beginning of Christ or The Catalogue of sinnes Chap. 2. pag. 14. For the eleuenth Article The resurrection of the body I referre you to his Booke of the Principles Chap. 26. For the last Article Euerlasting life I referre you to his Exposition vpon the third Chapter of Peter ver 7. where this is largely handled from pag. 141. to 163. The Author hath handled most of these things in diuers parts of this
as when out of the liking of the writings of olde Philosophers they brought in Angell worship into the Churches Colos 2. 8. 19. and such stuffe also was that which the Apostle condemnes vnder the name of traditions of men that is superstitious obseruations when the inuentions of men are vrged with opinion of holinesse or necessity Col. 2. 8. 20. of this nature were prophane and olde Wiues fables 1. Tim. 4. 7. and such is all that stuffe men haunt after that will not bee wise to Saluation but curiously search after things not reueiled Secondly true Doctrine may be vnwholsome and so wee finde diuerse instances in Scripture as first when the truth is so varnished by the inticing words of mans wisedome that the power of God is not obserued or regarded and the conscience is not intended to be informed When men in deliuering the truth studie to shew their owne wits more then the glory of Gods Truth this is not wholesome for the hearers and therefore exclaimed against and protested against by the Apostle in diuerse places 1. Cor. 1. 2. Colos 2. 4. Secondly the time is spent in knottie and obscure places that are neither easie nor necessary to be vnderstood and in handling whereof scandalous or dangerous conceits may bee raised in mens mindes Thus the hard places of the Apostle Paules writings were peruerted as the Apostle Peter complaines 2. Pet. 3. 17. Thirdly when disputations about things indifferent are brought in when the questions are doubtfull and the weake may be intangled Rom. 14. 1. Fourthly when the Word of God is diuided vnskilfully and ignorantly as when strong meate is giuen to Babes and strong men can get nothing but milke Thus as they are wholesome words Secondly they are said to be Patternes the Collection of the choisest truthes into one frame or body is called heere a Patterne and so the Creed may be said to be a Patterne of wholsome words because in the Creed there is as it were a short but liuely resemblance of all those truthes in a little roome which are at large and dispersedly handled throughout all the Bible and therefore fitly was the Creed called the little Bible Yea it may be called a patterne because we may compare with it all the truthes we reade of in Scripture and marke how they agree with or suite to the Articles of our Creed and because we may trie all Doctrine we heare and free our selues from the Intanglement of such controuersies about opinions that agree not with or belong not to our Creed As the Decalogue is a patterne of all duties to be done and the Lords Prayer a patterne of all requests to God so the Creed is a patterne of all Doctrine to be belieued Thus of the discription of the Creed as the words of the Apostle fitly serue for it The more manifest description of it will appeare afterwards The keeping of this patterne followes When the Apostle exhorts Timothie to the keeping of this patterne he may be vnderstood to speake to him as a Minister or as to a Christian in general As a Minister he is inioyned with all care to endeuour to preserue the purity of Doctrine and with great respect to teach often and powerfully those points of Doctrine which were exprest in the patterne as the principall truthes hee should aime at in the course of his Ministerie He should not through desire of vaine glory affect Curiosities or Nouelties but build vp his Hearers in all the knowledge he could infuse into them by continual teaching of those doctrines If hee speake to him as a Christian in generall then this is the point of Doctrine the Apostle aimes at that all Christians bee exceeding carefull to get the distinct knowledge of the maine Articles of the Christian faith and aboue all Doctrines keepe those as a great treasure And so in particular since we haue in the Creed such an excellent frame of the Doctrines of faith we must hence learne that it is our duties to regarde these Doctrines with all respect There be twelue Reasons why wee should bee in a speciall manner desirous to heare learne and make vse of the doctrine of these Articles of our faith 1. Because wee see heere it is the commandement of the Apostle that wee should keepe this patterne of wholesome words The Apostle saw it was a Doctrine of excellent vse for the Churches and therefore to be learned and kept as a great treasure and the Commandement to keepe them imports that whatsoeuer we are ignorant of yet we should not be ignorant of these points and whatsoeuer we forget yet these things we should bee sure to remember and whatsoeuer wee wanted affection in yet in these things wee should striue to be greatly affected It is therefore a sinne of great vnfaithfulnesse to neglect these points and shewes wee are too wise in our selues if we haue no minde to learne and keepe such things as God in his wisedome hath in some speciall manner charged vs to regarde 2. Because God himselfe is the immediate Author of these Doctrines it is God onely that opens this Schoole of Faith These are lessons that are to be learned not from wise men as many other things but from God himselfe to whom alone the glory of reuealing these high Misteries belonges 3. Because the matter heere contained is Doctrine of the highest nature that was euer taught or learned in the world what higher Doctrine can there be then of God the Church of God no Science hath such a Subiect The Phisickes intreats but of the naturall bodie Astronomie but of the heauens all the Mathematicks but of some particular and inferior subiects and so all Artes onely Theologie and in Theologie the Creed intreates of a number of most choise Mysteries in diuine things All the Doctrines heere are such as naturall reason or sense can say little or nothing to for except it be in the first Article nature is altogether silent in the rest And for this Reason wee should bee wonderfully desirous to bee imployed in these knowledges for to bee taken vp with easie things belonges vnto the Vulgar but to bee informed in things remoued from the senses belonges to the wise onely 4. Because the Doctrine of the Creed hath bin receiued in all Ages of the Church it is Catholicke Doctrine it hath bin entertained with great Honour in all Christian Churches that Doctrine which all Christians in all Ages of the world haue learned and admired should bee much attended to by vs and such is the Doctrine of the Creed The Creed is the confession of the whole Church of God since Christ and if wee reade and respect the confessions of particular Churches yea of particular men then how much more ought we to studie the confession of the Church vniuersall it containing the faith in which all the Martyrs and Saints of God liued and dyed 5. Because it is matter that is
infallible for besides that we beleeue nothing heere but what hath bin in all Ages receiued except it bee in that point of Christ descending into Hell so all those Articles are grounded vpon expresse Scripture except before excepted that there can bee no doubt of the truth of them if we will beleeue the Scripture and therefore we should with the more willingnesse attend to these Doctrines seeing they are not in the number of those truthes that seeme to bee opposed not onely by the iudgements of learned men but by the Word of God the meaning of Gods Word appearing not so clearely to vs in those things 6. From the sufficiencie of the Doctrine of the Creed It containes all things necessary to be belieued to saluation All things I say necessary for babes in the proposition and for strong men in the exposition 7. From the necessitie of knowing and beleeuing these things these Articles must be beleeued or we cannot be saued Yea all these Articles must be beleeued of necessity to faile in any is desperately dangerous 8. From the Permanencie of these truthes Heere is that said that will abide in a Christian and is indelible 9. From the consideration of the condition of many hearers some are but new beginners and others though for the time they might haue bin teachers yet neede to bee taught these principles Yea neede to be taught them againe being such as those Heb. 5. 12 13. It is in these things also that the better sort of hearers complaine of their ignorance 10. We were tyed in our Baptisme vnto the doctrine contained in this Creed and so we stand bound before God and the Angels to learne it and keepe it as a great Treasure 11. From the consideration of the manner of propounding these Articles they are set dnwne in the Creed plainely and so they cleare our iudgements and withall briefely so as wee neede not feare our memories it is short in words but great in mysteries 12. Lastly because of the singular vse may be made of these doctrines there is great vse of the whole and great vse of euery part of it other Sciences for the most part add nothing to vs but to our knowledge onely or little to our practise especially so as to aduance our happines now there are many commodities arise from the knowledge keeping of these truthes as 1. Contemplatiue delight Men are delighted with the smell of flowers and the sight of colours how much more may and ought our mindes to be delighted in the obseruation meditation of such glorious truthes as these for these Articles doe exhibit to the beleeuing soule the glory of God to be veiwed in the things of greatest excellencie euen the choisest things wherein God hath made knowne the wonder of his goodnes vnto man And therefore these things are good for meditation all the daies of our liues if we had once but the skill to open the glories are heere contained Many Christians are much distressed about meditation They complaine they cannot tell what to thinke of profitablie In the Creed is cōtained the abridgement of these shining doctrines vpon which we may and ought alwaies to look wonder 2. The restoring of the Image of God in our mindes for by bringing in these knowledges wee set vp againe the frame of the Image of God in our mindes which lieth vtterly defaced in vs till the light of these doctrines begin to shine in our vnderstanding wee are purblinde yea wee are starke blinde so long as we are ignorant in these groundes 3. The nourishment of the whole soule The soule of man takes not foode further then it layes hold vpon these and such like truthes and when these are thought on and applied soundly al things in the soule wil thriue and prosper and the more is this to bee regarded because in these Articles is contained foode for all sorts of Christians for heere is milke for little ones in the proposition of these Articles and meate for strong men in the exposition of these all wholsome foode 4. The Creed containes the substance of those Articles of agreement made betweene God and vs so as we may easily and daily thence take notice of the maine points that are treated of betweene God and vs The condition of the couenant on our parte concerning either faith or practice all that is required of vs in effect in respect of faith is heere set downe 5. By the dexterous vse of these doctrines we may try all Religions in the world for heere is the roote of faith the touchstone to try things that are to bee belieued the square by which they are to be measured 't is that little Iudge in matters of quarrell about Religion for whatsoeuer doctrine is contrary to the Analogie of faith in these things may bee safely reiected and must be 6. It is the very Charecter of the Church and serues to distinguish vs from all other professions of men in the world as first from meere naturalists that beleeue no more cōcerning God religion then they can see by the light of nature as it is now corrupted and so it distinguisheth vs from the Philosophers and therfore much more from the common sort of Gentiles that entertained opinions monstrous and against the very light of Nature secondly from the Turkes who though they receiue some truthes from the light of Scripture yet reiecting most of these fundamental truthes entertaining a multitude of blasphemies of their owne against the Christian faith are worthily condemned as men without the pale of the Church thirdly from the Iewes because they denie all the Articles concerning Christ fourthly from all sorts of Heretickes that haue erred from this faith in some of the Articles concerning Christ such as are the Arrians and Papists at this day fifthly from such as haue but a wandering opinion concerning God in any of these Articles so as they onely know them by coniecture or hearesay and haue not entertained them with distinct assurance into their hearts and such are multitudes of people of all sorts euen in the Visible Church To conclude euery word almost of the Creed doth pierce the sides of some or other hereticall or blasphemous men As we beleeue one God against the Gentiles the Father Sonne and holy Ghost against the Antitrinitans Creator of Heauen and Earth against Carpocrates Cerinthus and the Ebionits we beleeue that Christ is the Lord against Valentinus who acknowledged him to bee a Sauiour not a Lord and that he is our Lord against those in Origens time that said hee was the Lord of God and that hee is the onely begotten Son against the Arrians conceiued by the holy Ghost against Apollinaris Valentinus and Eutiches that he was dead against Basilides rose againe against Cerinthus and sitteth at the right hand of God against Praxeus and we beleeue one Catholique Church
against the Donatists and Nouatian and the Communion of Saints against Sectaries and the Resurrection against the Sadduces and Cerinthians and the like 7. Lastly there is scarce any word in the Creed but it containes some vses of Consolation and therefore wee should attend vnto it and keepe it as a great treasure because there are so many springes of ioy that will euer flowe abundantly into our hearts if the fault be not in our owne carelesnesse ignorance or vnbeliefe The Vse should bee therefore to inflame our hearts to a desire after the vnderstanding and power of these Doctrines and hauing learned them to keepe them in the closet of our hearts as our greatest treasure on earth I know there is naturally in the hearts of the most hearers a kinde of desire to heare new doctrines and to be taught in things aboue the consideration of these principles but we must be altogether displeased with our selues ●f we find this intemperance in our desires It would argue a great loathing of Manna and a secret despising of the greatest part of the Word of God which is imployed about the propounding and vrging of these doctrines if wee should suffer our hearts to slight these grounds and first Truthes It is a signe of a narrow and base heart if there bee not roome to receiue with gladnesse this precious seede Men are loath to be accounted Babes and therefore affect not the doctrine is fit for them but looke too high and reach after things that are not so vsefull for them And thus in generall The Title of the Creed Ephes 2. 20. THe Creed hath two things in it to bee considered of The Title and the Articles of faith comprehended in it the Title vsuall and antient is the Apostles Creed Where is noted the Authors of these doctrines and the kinde of doctrine The Authors were the Apostles the kinde of doctrine is a Creed first of the Authors All men grant the Creed to bee the Apostles but yet all agree not about the sense How the Creed may bee said to be the Apostles for some thinke it is the Apostles Creed because the Apostles made it and compiled it in the forme as it now is Others thinke it is the Apostles Creed because it containes the substance of their Doctrine though it were not made by them The first sort conceiue thus That the Apostles after Pentecost when they had receiued the holy Ghost met together in Ierusalem and considering that they were to depart one from the other into diuers parts of the world they agreed vpon the substance of all that doctrine which they would teach all abroad the world and accordingly digested it into this forme that thereby it might appeare that their doctrine euery where did agree and that so false Teachers might bee discouered when they should in any place vnder pretence of preaching Christ oppose or conceale any parte of the necessarie Christian faith Of this opinion were some of the Fathers Some of the Schoolemen afterwards went so farre as to name which part of the Creed was made by each of the Apostles as That Peter should say I beleeue in God the Fa●her Almighty and Iohn should say Creator of Heauen and Earth and Iames should say I beleeue in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord and so the rest of the Apostles cast in each one a parte till by them all the whole Creed was finished But this opinion cannot be true as may appeare by diuers reasons some probable some infallible It is not probable the Apostles digested it in the order it is for why needed it to be made by all the Apostles peice meale and not rather by one Apostle alone Secondly there are tearmes vsed in the Creed are no where vsed in the writings of the Apostles as the words of descending into Hell and the Catholique Church Thirdly the Apostles Catechisme intreated of faith and loue 2. Tim. 1. 1● but this Creed intreates onely of faith But there is one Reason which is infallible for if this Creed had bin written by the Apostles it had bin Canonicall Scripture and must haue bin re●d in our Bibles which no man euer affirmed which I read of 2. The second sort of Diuines therefore are in the right opinion who conceiue that the Creed is the Apostles in respect of the matter not in respect of the forme It is the Apostles because the doctrine contained in it is that which all the Apostles with one consent did teach vnto the world and haue left confirmed in the Apostolicall writings in the New Testament And for this Reason we ought to attend to the doctrines heere to be intreated of as being such truthes as are not founded on the testimony of any ordinary man but euen of the Apostles themselues Quest But may some one say Is it not the Prophets Creed aswell as the Apostles or are not these Articles to bee found in the writings of the Prophets aswell as the Apostles or are there some truthes necessary now to Saluation that were not necessarie in the Olde Testament Answ I answer that the maine substance of the doctrine of the Creed was knowne and taught by the Prophets in the Old Testament as in generall concerning one God and the Messias and eternall life c. but there are some things peculiar in the Creed vnto the Christian Church and of necessity to Saluation as the more open and cleare doctrine of the Trinity the particulars about the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ and the estate of the Catholique Church these being cleerely reueiled are now necessary to Saluation Quest Some one will say but how came the Creed then into the Church who made it or when was it made Answ I answer that it seemes cleare that it came not in all at once but that in the Apostles daies it was much shorter It is manifest that our Lord and Sauiour commanded to baptize men in the Name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost Whence came the custome of examining those that were baptized about their faith Who in the first times answered briefly and for the most part but concerning the Trinity or concerning Christ which was chiefly then in question We may obserue that Philip would not baptize the Eunuch till he had confessed his faith Acts the 8. which imports that it was the manner then to admit none of yeeres to baptisme till they had professed their faith and that some kinde of short forme was then in vse What the precise forme was cannot bee certainely knowne but it is likely their confession went not further then the Trinity Now these Articles concerning the Trinity were inlarged for the preuention and repressing of sundrie Heresies as they did or were likely to spring vp in the Church But that the whole Creed as it is now was not verbatim in the first Ages may appeare in that the confession of faith in the daies of
Martialis Ignatius Irena Tertullian Origen and those of their times did not proceede further then the Trinity In the first book of Socrates his Eccless Hist. Chap. 19. we finde The Creed thus recited We beleeue in one God the Father Almighty and in the Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne begotten of him before all worldes true God by whom all things were made which are in heauen and which are in earth Who descended and was incarnate and suffered and rose againe and ascended into Heauen and from thence shall come againe to iudge the quicke and dead and in the holy Ghost in the Resurrection of the flesh in the life of the world to come in the Kingdome of Heauen and one Catholique Church reaching from one end of the earth to the other In Saint Ambrose his time the baptised was asked three questions as first dost thou beleeue in God the Father Almighty and the baptized answered I beleeue and then hee was dipped vnder the water secondly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and his Crosse and hee answered I beleeue and then was dipped againe thirdly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the holy Ghost and he answered I doe beleeue and was the third time dipped Ambrose lib. 2. de Sacram. cap. 7. so that 't is probable that the Creed was not fully finished in this forme it now is till about the fourth age after Christ And thus of the Authors of the Creed To conclude therefore this point concerning the Authors of these Articles the Creed is called the Apostles Creed in two respects first to distinguish it from all other Creeds There haue bin diuers Creeds made in the seuerall ages since Christ some by particular writers some by Councells of particular writers Athanasius Creed doth most excell which is the Creed set downe in the booke of Common Prayer next before the Letany and of Councells these are the chiefe Creeds the Nicen Creed which you may finde in the booke of Common Prayer also set downe in the order of the Communion as also the Creed of the Ephesian Synod and the Creed of the Calcedonian Synod reade Am. Pol. synt Theol. lib. 2. cap. 2. Now this Creed is called the Apostles Creed to shew that the Churches did hold it to bee of greater authority then any other Creed and that other Creeds are but as it were expositions of this Creed Secondly it is called the Apostles Creed to giue it authority aboue all humane writings euen those that haue much or most excelled The confession of Nationall Churches haue been worthily had in great request so haue the Creeds of the Councells and so haue the Apocripha Scriptures but yet none of these haue attained to the honour of this Creed The translation of the Canonicall Scriptures in respect of the words are humane though in respect of the matter and order they are diuine and these of all humane writings are the best yet not without the defects of the Translators whereas the originall in both Testaments is diuine both for matter order and words also Thus of the Authors The kinde of writing followes Creede Symbolum is the word vsed in the most Christian Churches and is plainely agreeable to the originall word the Creed being first penned in the Greeke tongue If the word bee deriued of Syn and bolus then it may signifie two things first a morsell or as much as a man may well swallow at once and so the whole Scriptures containing but the diuine furnishing of Gods Table as it were the Creed containes each particular Christians morsell so much as hee may and must swallow and receiue downe into his heart without leauing any of these Articles out secondly a draught euen as much as a net can take at once The sea is the Word the fisherman is the Christian man the Net is faith the Creed is as much as the faith of the Christian can take at a draught out of the Sea of doctrine contained in the Scriptures But it is more likely the word should be deriued of Syn and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it may signifie all or any of these fiue things 1. A Shot it containing the reckoning which the Apostles made for the Churches being deducted or cast in out of the seuerall writings of each of the Apostles 2. A Watchword or any signe in the time of warre by which the Souldier might be distinguished from spies or strangers and so might shew to what captaine or colours hee belonged so the Creed is the Military signe by which the true Christian is distinguished from all spirituall spies and forreiners 't is Gods Watchword 3. The Motto or Poesie or word giuen in mens Armes so the Creed is the Christians Motto his word which is set in his Armes being made noble in bloud by Christ and so able to giue the Armes of his spirituall house and kindred 4. A token or Bill of Exchange by which a man is enabled to trade or receiue commodities By the Creed the Christian may trade for any spirituall commodities 5. A Passeport Christians are strangers and Pilgrims a great way from home and the gouernment of the Christian world will not let a man passe without his authenticke Passeport Now by his Creed the Christian man may passe and finde entertainement in any part of the Christian world As for the name Creed it is not easie to tell when it first came vp in our Language but it is certaine it comes of the first word which is in Latine Credo rendered I beleeue But by the way if these Articles be a Creed then they are not a Prayer nor to be said as a Prayer as the ignorant multitude doth abuse it Thus of the Title I Beleeue Marke 9. 24. IN the Creed it selfe we must consider first matter of dutie which is in the word Beleeue which is the hand or claspe that takes hold of all and euery of the Articles secondly matter of doctrine which may be cast into two Heads as it concernes God or the Church for the Lord doth not vouchsafe to comber Religion with the whole doctrine that might concerne the estate of all men out of the Church concerning God the Articles looke vpon all three persons and in the doctrine of the Father amongst his attributes singles out his Almightinesse and amongst his workes lookes vpon his making of Heauen and Earth In Christ faith lookes vpon his Person and his Office In his Person it acknowledgeth his diuine Nature as Gods onely Sonne and his humane Nature in these two words viz. conception by the holy Ghost and birth of a Virgin His Office is considered according to his estate both of Humiliation and Exaltation In his Humiliation is considered his sufferings first in body in that he suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was dead and buried and then in soule in that he descended into Hell In his Exaltation faith viewes his Resurrection Ascension and Session at the right hand of God
and his comming to Iudgement Concerning the holy Ghost the Church hath retained and maintained that truth in all ages without any great opposition and therefore that Article is very barely set downe the greatest quarrells were raised either by Gentiles against the doctrine of God the Father or by Hereticks against the doctrine of Christ the Sonne which made faith speake out more distinctly in the doctrine of these two persons Thus of God Concerning the Church two things are to be noted Properties or Priuiledges Her properties are two holy and Catholique The goods or Priuiledges of the Church are either in this world or in the world to come In this world there is Communion of Saints and forgiuenesse of sinnes In another world faith sees and wonders at the Resurrection of the body and the life Euerlasting I Beleeue This word I beleeue is not a word onely of a Christian addressing himselfe to lay hold vpon these treasures contained in the Articles following but it is the word of a man making answer The question is suppressed but the Answer is expressed for as it is true that a true beleeuer is oft questioned so 't is as true that by his Creed he answers all that can be said to him for heere is contained that Answer of a good conscience spoken of 1. Pet. 3. 2● This forme of answering came first in at Baptisme in the Primitiue Church for before the partie to be baptized was admitted vnto Baptisme hee was examined as the Eunuch was by Philip and did answer by making confession of his faith in this or the like forme Neither is this the answer of the Christian at the time of his Baptisme onely but all the daies of his life for if God aske him what he hath to doe to take his words into his mouth or what he makes among his seruants or if the diuell aske him why he liues not in his sinnes or contrariwise why he dispaires not or why he entertaines doctrines of which their can bee no Reason giuen or if the Lawe aske him what shift he can make with all his sins hauing broken euery Lawe and with all the curses due to him for his sinnes or if the world aske him why he liues so retiredly and keepes not companie with the men of the world and seekes not or admires not the pleasures of life or the honors and fauours of great men or the Riches of this world and why hee suffers so much disgrace and affliction which hee might auoid if hee would doe as other men doe to all or any of these or the like questions he still answers I beleeue in God c. Beliefe or Faith is diuersly accepted sometimes it is taken for fidelity or faithfulnesse or assent and this sense it hath among the Philosophers aswellas among the Diuines that are Christians but all the other senses following it hath onely among Christian Diuines And so it is taken sometimes for the doctrine of faith 1. Cor. 13. 13. Phil. 1. 27. sometimes for the profession of faith and so Simon Magus beleeued sometimes for the things beleeued 1. Tim. 1. 19. Iude 3. But most vsually for the gift by which we beleeue and so it is taken heere But what is it to beleeue these Articles 't is not to gesse at them that they are true or to conceiue some probable hope that they may be iustified nor is it to say them ouer nor is it onely to liue in such places where such doctrines are taught and defended but to beleeue must haue these six things distinctly in it for to beleeue is 1. To vnderstand the meaning and sense of these Articles this is so necessary as it is impossible wee should beleeue when wee know not what it is we beleeue yet this is the least thing in faith 2. It is to assent to all this doctrine that it is the Truth 3. 'T is to esteeme and like this doctrine aboue all other kindes of doctrine in the world which is contrary or different from it and accordingly to ioy in it and bee much affected with it 4. 'T is to professe it and openly to declare my selfe resolued to liue and die in the beliefe of this doctrine and so this profession hath in it two thinges first a Separation from such societies of men as receiue not this faith secondly Apologie for it so as to defend it and contend for it Phil. 1. 27. Iude 3. 5. 'T is yet more and that is to rest in the happinesse contained in this doctrine of the Creed as it containes all that excellent treasure which is sufficient for our eternall saluation and our chi●fe good 6. 'T is lastly to ioyne our selues to true beleeuers as to the only excellent people in the world with sincere affection to them and desire of fellowship with them for this is such a faith as workes by loue So that this beleeuing heere hath in it all the three faithes spoken of by Diuines for to vnderstand and assent is the worke of Historicall faith To esteeme and professe is the worke of temporarie faith To rest vpon this happinesse by Christ and to ioyne in hearty fellowship with the godly is the worke of iustifying faith Now because some of these things in beleeuing may bee found in reprobates as well as the Elect and that the heart of man is exceeding deceitfull in the point of faith and the diuell applied his temptations with all subtilty and power to deceiue men in their beleeuing therefore vnto these things which are comprehended within the nature of the beleeuing heer mentioned I adde the distinct consideration of such things as must bee found in the manner of our beleeuing wee must looke to it how we beleeue these Articles for we may be many waies deceiued for 1. We must beleeue them with the heart and not confesse them with the mouth onely Rom. 10. 10. and to beleeue them with our hearts is to beleeue them in deede not in shew to beleeue them voluntarily not vpon compulsion to beleeue them affectionately not coldely or dully our faith must be a liuely faith not a dead faith 2. We must beleeue them personally each one must haue his owne faith 'T is not inough to ioyne our selues to such men as doe beleeue them but euery one must get him a faith of his owne The Iust must liue by his owne saith Hab. 2. 5. and therefore we say I beleeue not they beleeue or we beleeue We say our Father when we pray because we may pray one for another but we say not we beleeue because we cannot beleeue one for another 3. We must beleeue explicitely not implicitely It was one principle in the Kingdome of Antichrist to the intent that the people might be kept in blindnesse to teach them that it was inough for them to beleeue as the Church beleeued without inquiring into particulars and therefore they tell a tale to this end how the diuell tempting a man and vrging him to tell how
with flesh vnto a iust proportion So is it in the soule for first there is wrought a small degree of sauing knowledge and spirituall desire after God in Christ and then flowes from thence the veines and sinewes that take hold of the promises of grace and lastly by degrees as our knowledge and experience increaseth the whole body of Faith growes after a compleate manner formed in vs when our hearts are filled with increase of sound and solid knowledges but because this point toucheth the spirituall free-hold of many godly Christians I would therefore beate it out more distinctly And so foure things are to be considered 1. How it may be knowne that Faith is weake 2. How weake Faith may be knowne to be a right Faith 3. How the beleeuer may be comforted that findes hee hath but a weake Faith 4. Admonition to him that is weake in the Faith not to rest in that condition for diuers reasons For the first a weake Faith is easily discerned by these signes and the like to them 1. By daily doubts of Gods fauour and feares least their estate be not right 2. By ignorance not onely in many ordinary truthes but in many of the promises of the Gospel Matthew 8. 26. 16. 8. 3. By the hastie and violent vnquietnesse of the heart in aduersitie euen in the daily and lesser crosses of life and by those sudden feares in time of danger notwithstanding Gods promise and the experience of Gods assistance and deliuerance and by the vnrest of the heart if there be not present helpe Iames 1. 5. 6. Mat. 14. 30. 31. Luke 18. 8. 4. By the daily cares of life about foode and rayment Mat. 6. 31. 5. Aptnesse to stagger and be carried about with the winde of contrary doctrine Ephes 4. 13. 6. Feare of death For the second a weake Faith may be discerned to be a true Faith by these signes 1. By the constant and earnest desire of Gods fauour in Christ Psal 10. 17. Mat. 5. 6. Reuel 21. 6. 2. By their griefe for their vnbeliefe and frequent complaint of it Marke 9. 24. 3. By their constant desire after the sincere milke of the Word 1. Pet. 2. 2. 4. By their feare to offend God in the least euill they know to be a sinne For the third the beleeuer may be comforted many waies though his Faith be but weake for 1. Christ hath promised that he will not breake the b●uised reede nor quench the smoaking flaxe Mat. 12. 20. 2. Weake Faith doth apply the mercy of God and the benefits of Christs death aswell as a strong Faith as a weake or paraliticke hand will receiue a gift aswell as a sound and sted die hand he that hath a weake sight though he see not so well as he that hath a persect sight yet he sees so much of the light of the Sunne as may serue his turne to walke safely Though an Infant cannot eate so much as a strong man yet he eates so much as preserues life and makes him grow 3. God hath receiued him that is weake in Faith Rom. 14. 13 4. The power of God is manifested in their weakenesse 2. Cor. 12. 9. Lastly the weake in Faith must be admonished to looke to their Faith and to labour for growth Though God accepts their weake Faith in the beginning of their conuersion yet he likes not the neglecting of Faith and continuing in ignorance and vnbeliefe Heb. 5. 12. Besides so long as they continue in weakenesse of Faith they keepe themselues without many and singular comforts Though weake Faith bee sufficient to Saluation yet it is not sufficient to consolation Hitherto of the Nature of Faith The ground of Faith were worthy to be considered for it is not inough to know that we must beleeue or what things are to be beleeued but vpon what ground or warrant wee doe beleeue it And so heere I might consider of the Word of God as the ground of Faith or originall of Faith for he that will euer prosper in beleeuing these Articles must be resolued of these things 1. That the things he beleeueth are warranted to him by the testimonie of God himselfe for no humane testimony of particular men or of the whole Church can be the ground of a mans Faith 2. That the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles are the very word of himselfe and so infallible 3. That the writings of the Prophets and Apostles are euery way perfect and doe containe all things necessary to be beleeued in the matter of his Religion 4. That he can see how each Article of his Faith is grounded vpon the Word of God 5. That he will cleaue vnto this Word of God all the daies of his life as the principall meanes of his direction and comfort and of his further increase in Faith and knowledge for his knowledge and Faith comes in but by degrees and in part and the truth is opposed by his owne reason corrupted and by the suggestions of the diuell and by almost infinite varieties of opinions against all which he resolues to cleaue to the Word of God as his perpetuall warrant But because this principle concerning the Word of God is not expressed in the Creed I will therefore forbeare the proofe and explication and illustration of these things which concerne the Word of God And I conceiue that this Head of the Word of God was left out in the Creed in the first Age of the Church for two reasons The one was because as then it was not questioned so much as the rest of the Articles But the other Reason is the most important and that is that these doctrines of the Creed though they be principles yet are of another sort then these doctrines that concerne the Original perfection or authority of the Scriptures for these principles are conclusions framed out of those principles concerning the Word and so containe a frame of doctrins which are built vpon the granting of the former or thus they are distinguished from them These are parts of Theologie whereas the Word of God is not a part but principiū cognoscendi the foundation of Theologie The doctrines concerning the Scriptures are not properly Articles of Faith but grounds or the foundation of Faith Not things to bee beleeued so much as things by which we beleeue I Beleeue in God Psal 11. 1. HItherto of our duty in the first word I beleeue The doctrine to be beleeued followes and it concernes either God or the Church The doctrine that concernes God lookes vpon him either as Father or Sonne or holy Ghost In the first Person of the Trinity Faith sees and wonders at his Nature his Relation his Power and his Workes His Nature in the Word God his Relation in the word Father his Power in the word Almighty and his Workes in the words Creator of heauen and earth The first thing we are to studie to know and beleeue is God This is the first doctrine of the Creed
Saints in heauen know him by vision they see God face to face that is they haue a perfect knowledge of Gods Nature according to their condition in heauen and doe behold him in some most glorious representation of his presence fourthly to men on earth hee is knowne by reuelation and so after a different manner to diuers men As to some holy men by Inspiration to all godly men by Christ to all men in the Church by the Scriptures and to all men in the world by the creatures and Reason The fourth point it remaines to consider how farre forth God may be knowne by these all or any of them I answer first more generally and then more particularly In generall if we thinke of the full knowledge of God the Trinity is then onely knowne to God himselfe and Christ man God hath a Name that is secret and wonderfull this can bee knowne by no creature by his Name reuealed he may be knowne so as we remember that in this world he appeares to whom he will and as he will and not as he is The most men conceiue wonderfull little of Gods Nature The diuers formes of things in the world are beames as it were of the diuinity but yet they shew rather that he is then what he is or whence they are rather then what he is Distinctly to consider of it we must note that God is knowne in this life 1. But in his backe parts 2. But according to our modell or capacity God hath extracted so much out of the Ocean of the infinite knowledge which concernes his nature as may bee taken in by our vnderstandings 3. This that may be attained to for that part which is set out by words is exprest not by words that tell what God is directly but by such words as being in vse amongst men might leade vs to some happie manner of discerning concerning God 4. The neerest knowledge wee haue is by effect as it is either described in Scripture or wrought in prouidence and so what God is in himselfe himselfe onely knowes but what hee is to vs that in some measure hee makes vs know his glorious Nature is onely knowne to himselfe Wee see the Sunne not as it is in it selfe but as it inlightneth we look not vp vpon the body of the Sunne but vpon the beames of it that shine vpon the hill or vpon the wall or the like so is it in the knowledge of God our natures cannot looke vpon his nature but we discerne him by the shining of his working and by the beames of his presence The difference also of the descriptions that haue bin of God are to be thought on for there hath bin a Philosophicall consideration of God and a Theologicall The Philosophicall was had among the Gentiles by the wisest of them The Theologicall hath onely bin had in the Church The one looked vpon God onely by the light of Nature and experience and the other lookes vpon God by the light of Scripture and Faith But that Philosophicall Light was extreamely deficient and farre short of the Ecclesiasticall Light for besides that the wisest of the Philosophers had much adoe to seperate the true GOD from the many Gods worshipped by the Nations they were altogether blinde in the Mysterie of the Trinity and ignorant altogether of the highest praises of God viz. his mercies vnto man in Iesus Christ yea there was scarce any Attribute of God that was rightly knowne with any life without the Pale of the Church Now that knowledge that is to be had of God may be gathered three waies by Negation Eminencie or Causation By Negation when wee denie vnto God whatsoeuer is of imperfection in the Creature and so wee denie death measure Mutation c. and say that God is Immortall immense immutable c. By eminencie when we giue vnto God in the highest degree what we finde to bee good in the creature and so wee say he is most holy most wise most iust c. By Causation we may finde out God by reasoning from the things hee hath done The last thing to be considered of is the Rules to be obserued by vs for the attaining of the knowledge of God for All meanes will be ineffectuall to vs if we be not rightly prepared and disposed we neede a Religious minde in all knowledges that concerne our happinesse but especially when any thing is spoken or thought concerning God because all words are insufficient to tell vs easily and fully what God is Commandement 3. Hee therfore that would reach to the comprehending of the knowledge of God must bee sure to keepe these Rules 1. Hee must cleanse and purge and scoure his heart from the filth and drosse of false opinions and strange and Atheisticall conceits concerning God yea hee must wholly empty himselfe of all opinion concerning his owne sufficiencie to conceiue of God of himselfe for if it bee true of other knowledges in Religion that a man must become a foole that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3. 18. it is much more true in this doctrine concerning God 2. He must then addresse himselfe to Gods Word and resolue to learne from thence how to conceiue of God God is not to be accounted of by others assertions but to be measured by his owne words We shall neuer learne what hee is by asking what others say of him but must heere what hee saith of himselfe for God is not knowne without God as one saith Of God wee must learne whatsoeuer of God wee would vnderstand 3. He must resolue to spare no paines that is requisite for this studie hee must imploy himselfe with great diligence to drinke in his knowledge for God will appeare onely to studious mindes 4. A heart full of desires is requisite to these conceptions The desire of the soule must be after God Esay 26. 8 9. He must be sought with a mans whole heart Psal 119. 10. else the minde will wander extreamely And because wee want that admiration and delight wee should haue in this doctrine therefore wee must iudge our selues for our deserts and labour by prayer to forme these desires in vs Especially when in hearing or reading any thing concerning God we finde our hearts begin to be affected we must striue to nourish and inflame these desires or delights or Rauishments for then God is neere for vsually a fire goeth before him as the Psalmist speaketh aswell when hee comes into our hearts as when he comes into the world 5. He must be a godly man for the pure in heart onely see God Mat. 5. 7. and without Holinesse it is impossible to see God Heb. 12. 14. This knowledge requires holinesse else of all doctrines it proues the dullest discourse and disputation doth not comprehend God but holinesse as one saith and the Reason is because there must bee some assimilation or likenesse betweene our mindes and the knowledge of God for as no parte of the bodie receiues the light but
2. What are the offices of Angels or what vses did God make them for Answ Angels serue for many vses They are Apparitors or seruants about God ready to receiue Commandements from him and they worship God by lauding and praising him in Heauen Psal 104. 4. 148. 2. Esay 6. 3. Luke 2. 14. Reuel 4. 8 9. 5. 13. and they are appointed as speciall attendants about CHRIST as the MESSIAH Mat. 4. 11. and they serue also as ministring spirits to keepe and attend vpon the Elect men Heb. 1. 14. and manifold are the seruices which Angels doe for men both in life and death In life they defend and keepe them as a strong guard about them Psal 34. 91. and plague their enemies 2 King 19. 35. besides the vnknowne seruice they doe about the soules of the godly by counselling or comforting them And in death they are about them and carry their soules to Heauen as they did Lazarus his soule and in the end of the world they will gather all the Elect from the foure winds of Heauen and bring them to Christ Quest 3. But why doe you not intreat of Deuills here also Answ There were no Deuills by creation GOD made them not as Deuills and therefore it belongs not to the Doctrine of Creation to speake of the euill angels because that belongs to the Doctrine of the fall of the reasonable Creatures Quest 4. But hath euery particular man a good Angell and a bad Answ It is probable that euery Elect man hath a good Angell as may be gathered Mat. 18. 10. Acts 12. 15. but yet God is not so tyed but that he sends them extraordinarily more Angels many times to helpe or attend vpon it may be one man Psal 34. 8. As for euill angels we reade that sometimes one Angell hath vexed one man Iob. 1. 12. sometimes one Angell hath haunted diuers men 2 Chron. 18. 21. sometimes many Angels haue haunted one man Luke 8. 30. But that euery man should haue a bad angell assigned him of God is no where to be found in Scripture The consideration of this Doctrine of the making of the Angels in such a nature and for such ends as before should serue for diuers vses 1 It should informe vs concerning the wonderfull loue of God to vs that hath made such excellent creatures to do vs such admirable seruice as to attend vpon vs and keepe vs Heb. 1. 14. 2 It should breed in vs a great longing after the world to come where wee shall not onely enioy the knowledge of and fellowship with such glorious Creatures but shall be made our selues in glory as the Angels in Heauen 3 It should teach vs diuers things as first not to worship Angels for they were all created by God God made the Angels and therefore worship is due to him and not to them that are but our fellow seruants Colos 1. 16. Reuel 19. Secondly we should therfore carry our selues orderly in all places especially in the Church because of the Angels who are about vs and marke what we doe 1 Cor. 11. 10. Thirdly we should therefore be patient and of good hope and full of faith in all afflictions arising from the oppositions of men or temptations of Satan as being satisfied with this comfort that they are more that are with vs then can be against vs and if our eyes were opened wee might see so much as was shewed to the seruant of Elisha 2 Kings 6. 16. Hitherto of the Heauen of the blessed and the Hoste thereof the Angels and so of the world that is now inuisible to vs we next come downe to consider of this visible world this world I say which is in our view or may bee seene and before I come to speake of the other two Heauens I would briefly consider of Gods glory in the generall in the making of this visible world not so much for the matter of the creatures or their naturall formes or properties or their next causes which belongs properly to the Philosophers but for such things as concerne their first cause which is God or their end which is Gods glory or their vse which is rather spirituall then corporall in demonstrating vnto the soule of man the praises of God The maker of this visible world was GOD as well as of that inuisible world as is manifestly proued Genesis 1. at large The end of making a world of bodies as well as of spirits was not the punishment of spirituall substances for their sinning against God as Origen dreamed but the setting out of Gods glory in shewing his wisdome goodnesse and power Psal 19. Rom. 1. and the furnishing of man for his happy being That our hearts may be affected with wondering at this great world which God hath made we may profitably consider of it either by thinking what it is like or by serious pondering what it is indeed This great world is like a great Garden throughly furnished euery creature being as a pleasant flower exquisitely ranked in most comely order the onely weedes that grow in this Garden are wicked men as it may be likened to a great Booke in which God hath written glorious things that concerne the praise of his goodnesse wisdome and power Euery creature is as it were a distinct lease of that Booke and the properties and vses of these creatures are as it were the seuerall lines and letters of that leafe and the more admirable because it is a Booke the writing whereof is indelible and the vses whereof are vniuersall the Booke so opened that all men in all parts of the world may see and read Againe this visible world may be likened to a great and faire house most exquisitely buil and contriued into seuerall roomes and euery roome richly furnished the Heauens are the Roofe the Earth the floore and the Elements the seuerall roomes and the hosts of creatures in each of them the rich furniture and this house is the more admirable for vs because it is a house that euery man dwels in out of this house no man can be put it is kept at the charge of the Land-lord and the Tenants pay no rent But to leaue similitudes there are in the generall consideration of this visible world diuers things may bee briefly touched which we ought to wonder at and to glorifie God for his making of things so as 1 The apt disposition of euery creature in his owne place which place is so fit as a fitter cannot bee inuented if the Starres were fixed in the Earth or the Trees in Heauen how disproportionable and vncomely would it be 2 The exactnesse of the Cteatures in their working in keeping their times and seasons how punctually doth the Sunne dispatch his race in 24. houres and so the Moone in her seasons the Plants keepe their seasons of the yeere for bearing fruit and the Starres for shining as they haue receiued commandement and order from their great Commander
aswell as the Son of Man It was requisite he should be the Son of God for diuers reasons first because there must be a proportion betweene the sinne of man and the punishment due to his sinne and the satisfaction made to God for the sinne and punishment due Now mans sinne being infinite as in other respects so because it was committed against God who is infinite his punishment must be infinite also Now no finite creature can performe an infinite satisfaction in a finite time and therefore it was requisite hee should be infinite in person that suffered which as man he was not secondly the benefits necessarie for vs require that the Mediator should be God for to deliuer man from spirituall enemies sinne and Sathan and to restore to man the Image of God lost to performe by one a Righteousnesse able to iustifie many could not bee done by any one meere man Nor can any one mans righteousnesse deserue the opening of the Kingdome of Heauen for many men thirdly he that must mediate betweene God and man had need to be God to treat with God in things that concerne him and man to treat with man in the things that concerne man And as it was a way most necessary so was it most comely who fitter to make vs sonnes of God by Adoption then he that was the Sonne of God by Nature and who fitter to restore the Image of God in vs then hee that was the substantiall Image of his Father The Vses follow and so First we should make conscience of it to receiue this doctrine with our whole hearts with all life of affections for hereby wee shall improue wee are Christians and not Iewes They could beleeue Iesus was a man but could not indure it that he should call himselfe the Sonne of God Iohn 10. and the diuell hath mightily also laboured to make the Diuinity of Christ suspected As when he came into the world by making men think of a worldly kingdome then stirring vp the Priests and Pharisees to seeke to kill him as a blasphemer in saying he was the Sonne of God And in the beginning of the Christian Churches he raised vp pernitious Heretickes to denie his Diuinity and at this day hath raised many in other countries that write and teach most dangerously in this point And therefore we must hold fast this Truth against all the power of hell This confession is the Rocke vpon which the Christian Church is built Mat. 16. 16. 17. If we acknowledge the Son we haue the Father 1. Ioh. 2. 23. Secondly it should wonderfully quicken and establish our Faith in relying vpon him for Saluation and all happinesse vpon him I say that hath vndertaken for vs and is so full of merit and power his Satisfaction and Righteousnesse must needs be perfect and sufficient that is the Sonne of God Ier. 23. 6. God cannot but bee infinitely well pleased in his satisfaction and hath signified so much Mat. 3. 17. and therefore wee should settle our consciences in all peace and ioy in beleeuing in him Yea in all passages of our liues wee should make vse of our Faith in the Sonne of God whatsoeuer we want for soule or body or the preseruation of our liues we may with much confidence goe to him for out of his fulnesse wee may receiue grace for grace Ioh. 1. 14. 18. And seeing God hath giuen vs his Sonne how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Rom. 8. 32. Yea it should much establish our Faith against the feare of our falling away before wee come to possesse eternall life for he is stronger then all and no man nor diuell can take vs out of his hand and therefore we shall not perish Iohn 10. 29. 30. Thirdly it should much inflame vs to the Loue of God that hath had such mercy to such miserable creatures as wee were as to send his owne Son to redeeme vs Ioh. 3. 16. Oh it should make vs to loue God aboue all things and to esteeme of his loue as better then any thing else in our liues Fourthly God the Father himselfe from Heauen taught vs a maine vse of this point when hee proclaimed him to bee his Sonne for then he charged vs to heare him None abler to instruct vs for the Son hath his knowledge out of the bosome of the Father Mat. 11. 27. and none hath better right to rule vs because he is the first-borne and therefore ought to rule ouer his brethren It should therefore bee our conscionable care all our daies to attend to his voice and to do whatsoeuer he commands vs Mat. 17. 5. Fifthly we must hence also learne to ioyne Christ with the Father in all religious seruice for when God brought forth his first-begotten Sonne into the world he said let all the Angels of Heauen worship him and therfore much more we must doe it Heb. 1. 6. Ioh. 5. 23. Againe from hence we may gather the wofull estate of all vnbeleeuers that weare out their time and do not lay hold vpon the way of Saluation by Iesus Christ for this increaseth their condemnation because they doe not beleeue now that GOD hath sent his owne Sonne to bee the Sauiour Iohn 3. 36. Finally two things about the Diuinity of our Sauiour are here implyed first that he is God for if he be the Sonne of God then he hath the Nature of his Father and so is God which though the Creed doe not expressely mention yet the Scripture doth acknowledging him for God equall with the Father Rom. 9. 5. 1. Iohn 5. 20. Phil. 2. 6. but because the Creed doth not expresse this I forbeare the explication of it resting satisfied to haue treated of that which the Creed mentions Another thing implyed is that hee is a person distinct from the Father for if he be the Son of God then he differs in person from the Father ACTS 2. 36. Let all the House of Israel know assuredly that God hath made Iesus both Christ and Lord. Our Lord. HItherto of the three former Titles the Last Title of our Sauiour is that which is here exprest viz. Our Lord and concerning this Title diuers things are to be considered 1. That it is a thing that God chargeth vpon our Faith to beleeue distinctly that Iesus is our Lord. Thus Dauid in spirit called him Lord and this all the House of Israel must know Act. 2. 35. 36. and Luke 2. 11. he is stiled Christ the Lord and Act. 10. 36. he is proclaimed Lord of all yea it is a Title so proper to Christ as sometimes hee hath no other name giuen him but the Lord as 1 Cor. 6. 14. GOD hath raised vp the Lord meaning Christ And 1 Cor. 12. 3. It is accounted a worke of the Holy Ghost in any man to professe this point That he beleeueth that Iesus is the Lord. 2 How Iesus comes to be our Lord by what right and title and so he is our Lord by a fiuefold
make men more proud and carelesse of holy duties But how is it to be vnderstood that some doubted Interpreters are diuided in opinion Some say that they that doubted were other Disciples that had neuer seene Christ not the Eleuen that had so often seene him Some answer that this doubting is to be referred to some other time not to this Apprition S. Matthew for breuitie sake giuing a touch of what fell out in all the Apparitions And so some doubted must be expounded Some had doubted as Thomas for one But I thinke their opinion is the most probable that hold that none of the Disciples here doubted whether Christ were risen but that at the first they did not know whether he that appeared were Christ or not which was no new weaknesse in them for when he stood on the shoare at the sea of Tiberias it was a good while before any of them knew him 4. The words our Sauiour spake to them and those if the Euangelists be compared are 1. Words of vpbraiding or reprehension Hee vpbraided them for their vnbeleefe Mark 16. 14. and for their hardnesse of heart in not beleeuing them that had seene him after his Resurrection which hee doth most wisely and seasonably First it would doe them good to be humbled before they receiued so glorious a commission they might know it was not for any merit in them that they were so aduanced Secondly it might warne them to take heed of that sinne of vnbeleefe not only as that which was most hatefull to Christ but as that they would be often tempted to when they went about their worke by reason of the oppositions and troubles would befall them Thirdly most fitly doth he now tell them of their vnbeleefe that they might be the more compassionate and patient when they were to deale with the Nations about their vnbeleefe and not think it much if their report were at first reiected seeing they themselues had been so slow of heart to beleeue what was written In generall we may see here what comes of peruersenesse in any infirmitie We may perhaps heare Christ vpbraiding vs at such times when we looke for nothing but comfort and therefore let all men and women be warned to take heed of this sinne of way wardnesse and vnteachablenesse we may heare of it when we thinke Christ hath forgiuen and forgotten it 2. Words of declaration All power is giuen me both in heauen and earth About these words we may enquire both about the sense of them and about the end or vse of them For the sense had not he all power before and from eternitie as God Or if it be meant of a power communicated to the Humane Nature how is it that he had it not from his Incarnation The answer is that he speakes of a power he had both as God and man and such a power as he had not before because this is the power he obtaines as Redeemer of the world and the price was not laid downe actually till he had giuen himselfe as a Sacrifice for sinne and had humbled himselfe to the death euen the death of the Crosse Now he had purchased the inheritance of the Nations now he might lawfully send them to take possession for him and if he were resisted he might winne his owne by a spirituall conquest of this power is spoken Psal 2. 8. and 110. 1. Esay 49. 6 8 9. Dan. 7. 13 14. Phil. 2. 9 10. Now for the end or vse of this declaration of Christs patent or power it might serue for perpetuall vse both to the Apostles and all Teachers of the Gospell and to their hearers too To the Apostles this declaration was necessary because of the greatnesse of the things they were charged to proclaime to the world for he had need to haue a name aboue euery name that should in his name offer giue eternall life to the world and should challenge all the world to come vnder and doe homage to him and should send such a message in his doctrine as should subdue euery high thing and should lay all mankind as it were at his foot And though the conquest of the Nations might seeme an impossible worke yet they need not doubt to goe about it seeing they are sent from him that hath all power And the like comfort may all faithfull Ministers gather from hence against all the difficulties of their worke they serue him that hath all power And so in generall this is a doctrine of admirable comfort to all true Christians of any degree that will be perswaded to serue the Lord Iesus they cannot serue a better Master No master hath such power to preferre them He hath all power on earth but if he did it not here yet he hath all power in heauen they shall be sure of preferment in another world 3. Words of commandement and so his charge concernes either the doctrine they should teach or the signe by which they should confirme it viz. Baptisme As for their doctrine Saint Matthew saith Go teach all Nations Saint Marke saith Goe preach the Gospell to euery creature The obseruations are diuers that if many times God did not send the Gospell to vs we should perish before we would go and seeke it Secondly that preaching is the ordinary meanes to conquer the world to God Thirdly that all Nations need to be taught and euery creature of euery Nation They that thinke they can finde the way to heauen without teaching are certainly in the direct way to hell Fourthly that the principall worke for the highest Ministers in the Church to do is to preach the Gospell Fiftly that the doctrine of our Recōciliation with God in Iesus Christ is the principall doctrine to be taught or learned Sixtly that grace and mercy in Iesus Christ from God is offered to euery creature vpon condition of faith and repentance None is excepted Thus of their doctrine The signe by which they should confirme their doctrine was Baptisme which was added as Gods broad seale to assure vs the good things promised in the Gospell and in particular if they did beleeue as certainly as the water did wash away the filth of the body so should the bloud of Christ wash away the sins of their soules About the forme of Baptisme the Trinitie must be expresly mentioned it must be done in the name of the Trinitie both in respect of Authoritie to signifie that they were authorised to baptise by all the Trinitie and in respect of Confession that no saluation could be had without the beleefe of the Trinitie and especially in respect of fellowship with the Trinity as a fruit of faith and Baptisme for they had power to signifie to true Christians that in Baptisme they were married to the Trinitie and receiued into an euerlasting fellowship with the Father Son and holy Ghost As the wife at her mariage receiues the name of her husband so all Christian soules are transferred from the names of their owne