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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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mystery of godlinesse because godliness both riseth up to this Faith and floweth down from it This most practical doctrine is the generall use of all the rest that went before Reas. 1. Because in this mystery appears Gods greatest goodnesse grace mercy and love which if they be rightly taken up cannot but stir up our mindes unto care and zeale of honouring loving and adhearing to God and pleasing him in all things wherein he hath shown us that true godlinesse consists Reas. 2. In this mystery is contained both the merits and efficacy or power by vertue whereof men are regenerated that they may live acceptably to God and Christ that is godlily Reas. 3. Because in Christ we have the perfectest pattern of all godlinesse and with all the perfectest doctrine which is called the doctrine of godlinesse or according to godlinesse Use The use of Reproof against such as professe the faith of this great mystery but in the mean time most foully prophane it and make it to be blasphemed through their impiety The seventh Lords day Acts 16. vers 31. And they said believe on the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt be saved and thine house IN this Text is contain'd Paul and Silas their answer to the question proposed by the Jailor concerning the way how to be saved wherein these two things are proposed 1. An act absolutely necessary for attaining of salvation to wit that of Faith believe say they and this act is declared by its proper object our Lord Iesus Christ. 2. The effect that is certainly to follow upon this act is set down and that is the salvation of him that believeth Doct. 1. All are not saved by Christ but such onely as are united or grafted into Christ by Faith It is gathered from this Text in that one carefull how to be saved is sent to Christ to believe in him and so to have union with him by this belief that he may be saved Reas. 1. Because although there be sufficiency enough in Christ and in abundance to save all and any man yet this sufficiency is not reduced to efficiency or into act unlesse a due application be 〈◊〉 as neither meat nourisheth nor physick cureth nor cloth covereth nor silver maketh rich unlesse they be rightly applyed tothe party to be nourished cured clothed and made rich so it is in this businesse Reas. ●… As the first Adam neither received nor lost his righteousnesse and life but for such as were some way that is vertually in him and afterwards actually descended from him or were in union of the same blood with him so also the second Adam Christ restores not righteousnesse and life but unto such as are in him to wit ingrafted by Faith and adhear unto him by the union of one and the same spirit Hence it is that effectuall vocation whereby this application of Christ or this conjunction with him is brought to passe doth in order go before not onely our glorification and salvation but also justification and all sound consolation that we have concerning salvation Use Of Admonition that we may chiefly care for and go about this that we may both be and remain in Christ and live in him because without this union with him we cannot come to be saved The signe or mark whereby we know that is ordinarily or according to the order of means appointed that this or that man is in Christ is this if drawing vertue from Christ as a branch drawing spirituall ●…ap from the stock he hath care to bring forth fruits to him and in him Iohn 15. verse 〈◊〉 4. Doct. 2. Faith is the tye whereby we are first united to Christ and ingrafted into him This Doctrine is couched in the Text in the word believe for there are three tyes of Union whereof there is need in our conjunction with God and Christ the Spirit Faith and Love The Spirit is that tye whereby Christ layeth hold upon us and tyeth us to himself Faith is that tye whereby we lay hold upon Christ and apply him to our selves and is alway the effect of the spirit in some measure Love is the band of perfection whereby we wholly give over our selves to Christ and consecrate our selves to his will and is the effect of both the former Amongst these Faith is the first bond by which we lay hold on Christ. For though it follow the operation of the Spirit as its effect in that respect it is called the gift of God and the gift of the Spirit of God yet it goes before both Love and Hope that are saving Reas. 1. Because the proper nature of Faith is to be a spiritual hand whereby we lay hold on and receive that good that is needfull to us for salvation Iohn 1. 12. where to believe is meant to receive that the true office and nature of Faith may be se●… forth Reas. 2. Because a Faith receiving Christ doth also receive life in Christ and Faith is the principle of our spiritual life according to that of the Apostle The just shall live by Faith 3. Because Christ is not proposed unto us to salvation but in the promise of the Gospel and the proper and immediate end and fruit of this proposal is to make Faith or to gain belief and so the first receiving as well of the promise as of the thing where about the promise is is by Faith Use Of Direction and that such as upon another occasion the Apostle hath Eph. 6. 16. to wit that above all things we be carefull to acquire keep and increase true Faith Doct. 3. The adequate object of Faith as it justifies is Iesus Christ as offered in the Gospell for righteousness and life or the mercie of God in and through Iesus Christ thus offered It is evident in the Text. The explication is that although with our understanding we ought to assent to all things that are contain'd in the word of God and especially to those that are contained in the promises of the Gospel yet the power of justifying us doth proceed from no other object but from Christ alone And so Faith though it look at other objects also yet it justifies not nor absolves from guilt of sin and death but as it looks at Christ alone as offered us to that end Reason 1. Because Christ alone is our Righteousness and Redemption but our justification consists in the application of this Righteousnesse and Redemption Therefore Faith in that respect justifies as it lookes at Christ and applieth him Reas. 2. Because if all other things revealed in Scriptures and to be believed by us belonged to our justification as objects of justifying faith then not onely the belief of the creation would justify us but also the belief of mans falling into sin and of being dead therein And so Faith about sin and death should as well justifie us as Faith in Christ. Reas. 3. Unless Christ be looked upon by Faith Faith hath nothing in it why it should more justifie
us than any other vertue or grace and gift of God as charity temperance and the like Use 1. Is of Refutation against such as attribute justification to Faith as it is an act and part of our obedience as a condition required of God For thus the strength and life of justifying Faith is destroyed and Christ is robbed of his glory and the consciences of Christians of their solid comfort and tranquility of minde Use 2. Is of Direction that we may alwayes set the the eye of our faith directly upon Christ or on the grace and mercy of God in him that so we may from him draw Righteousness and Salvation Doct. 4. Iustifying saving faith consists not properly in any knowledge but in certain solid or sound affiance or trust Justifying Faith is an act and fruit of the experience of Faith and not the first affiance and trust that justifies Our Doctrine is hence gathered in that the object of Faith in this place is no intellectual or logical truth as such but some good as the object of the practical mind of preelection viz. the means of salvation which is a single or incomplex terme as Logicians call it in these words on the Lord Iesus Christ where not any thing of or about Christ but Christ himself is the object Next because Faith is said to be busied about this object as about a prop or stay so that the heart of a man otherwise destitute of all help and about to run into despair casts it self upon Christ as a stay that by him it may be sustained and upheld which is intimated by this phrase believe in our Lord Iesus Christ. By affiance we understand not any assent or act of the understanding about logical truth or affirmation or negation nor yet properly the confident expectation of the will which is assigned to our hope and confidence therein contained or from thence arising but that act of the will or heart which properly is called e●…ection or choyse whereby we rely upon Christ repose and rest on him and adhere to him as a fit and sufficient Mediator by whom we may be saved By this affiance we are said every where in the Old Testament to be united or joyned to God as Isa. 48. 2. 50. 10. And by this affiance properly we come unto Christ Ioh. 6. and are said to receive Christ Ioh. 1. 12. which things cannot be affirmed of any complex knowledge or assent of the understanding whether general or special It is true that such a knowledge on the behalf of such as belong to Christ is a necessary antecedent and the cause of this faith and affiance that justifies and so in that respect it hath the title of this faith as well in Scriptures as in commn discourse But yet when Faith is considered precisely as it justifies and saves then it is understood either as an act or as a disposition of the will or heart which followes the foresaid knowledge and for the begetting whereof that knowledge doth serve From this affiance if it be lively and vigorous and joyned with fitting knowledge there followes a certain perswasion of remission of our sins and therefore true Faith useth often to be described by this perswasion especially when the controversy is with Papists who oppose this perswasion as a vain presumption Yet this perswasion is not properly justifying faith but an act of hope and experience rather a fruit in him who already is justified It is also such an act that for some time may be wanting where yet true justifying faith is though insirm as experience in the godly teacheth and therefore it ought not to be proposed in the essence and definition of justifying Faith least so the weak consciences of some believers should thence be heavily troubled as if they had not tru faith when they feel themselves to have no such certain perswasion of the remission of their sins It will appear then to any rightly weighing all things that justifying Faith as such is properly the affiance of the hear not any complex knowledge or judgement of the understanding Reason 1. Because nothing in the whole Gospell is promised to any that hath yet no affiance or trust in Christ before this affiance therefore nothing can be known that hath the vertue to justify until it be trusted on and therefore no knowledge going before this faith of affiance can justify Reas. 2. We cannot conceive any knowledge before this affiance which is not found sometimes in such as are not justified As for example such as have a spirit of illumination and light but not of regeneration and therefore fall away afterwards from that glory which inseparably followes justification sinning against the Holy Ghost Reas. 3 Because in every part of Religion and so in Faith also these two things are distinguished to wit to know and to do To know what is to be believed and what all ought to believe and to give assent to truthes that are to be believed is not yet to do that which believing imports and is the proper obedience of Faith it self which is the root of all other obedience and therefore joyntly to be understood under this as both comes from Faith Rom. 1. 5. And in very truth such is the formal reason of obedience in true Faith that under this name and nature it ought to be referred unto the will properly because it is the part of the will and not of the understanding to obey Reas. 4 Because by this act of the will we have an inward union with God in Christ even as amongst men there is a greater conjunction by a constant inclination and affection of the will than by the judgement of the intellect Reas. 5. Because the act of faith is such that by it we cast our selves wholly upon Christ or upon the mercy of God in Christ. But the act of the understanding properly and immediately doth not transfer the whole man but the act of the will which alone therefore properly is called the act of the whole man Nor can it be heer answered that Faith is an aggregate thing consisting partly of knowledge and partly of affiance because unto such aggregate things single and distinct operations can not be attributed as are attributed unto Faith For example the health of the whole body hath no distinct operation but is conceived as a single thing extends it self alike to soundness of all and of every part and as holiness as it is in this or that virtue hath no distinct and single operation Moreover no more reason can be given why knowledge affiance should make up one aggregate thing than knowledge and hope or knowledge and love or than knowledge and justice or temperance Besides all this however knowledge be aggregated with true Faith yet because a great part of this knowledge which goes before affiance is found also in the Devills themselves neither yet can any knowledge be shewn that goes before affiance which is not
neither as to their worth nor as to their durance nor by any love-worthy quality Reas. 3. Because to this we are called that denying our selves and leaving the world we may seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and glory Reas. 4. Because while we believe and hope in Christ and have the eyes of our mind set upon him as our Captain and patterne of our salvation we must be changed into his likenesse and image 1 Ioh. 3. 3. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Use 1. Of Direction for discerning of our condition whether we have any such faith and hope or no. Use 2. Of Exhortation to stirre up and rouse our mindes to a more earnest and diligent study and care of all godlinesse The three and twentieth Lords day Rom. 3. 24 25. Verse 24 Bei●…g justified freely by his grace through the r●…demption that is in Iesus Christ. 25 Whom God ●…ath ●…et forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his right●…ousnesse for the r●…mission of sinnes that are past through the 〈◊〉 of God THe Apostle had before proved that all mankind was unde●… most grievous guilt of sin a●…d therefore had need of justification that they might be saved which justification also he had sh●…wn that it could not be had from any 〈◊〉 no●… from the Law which he had set down as the conclusion of his discourse●… in the 20 verse of this Chapter From then●…e he also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 further 〈◊〉 justification is of necessity to be 〈◊〉 in that way of the Gospell which is proposed in Christ Jesus The whole dispute may be summed up in this Syllogisme Men are either justified by Nature or by Law or by the Gospell But neither by Nature nor by the Law and therefore of necessity by the Gospell The Proposition is presupposed and tacitly understood as manifest in it self The Assumption is prov●…d in the first part of the Epistle unto the 21. verse of this Chapter The Conclusion is proposed and illustrated in that 21. verse to the end of that Chapter and afterwards The words in our Text set down contain a description of this Gospell-justification And it is described 1. From its principal and highest cause God Whom God appointed 2. From the manner of this cause which consists not in comm●…tative justice that gives like for like or so much for so much nor yet from distributive justice which looks at the worth of men and deales with them in a proportionable manner but in meer and pure grace or free favour in these words we are iustified freely of his free grace or free favour where a singular emphasis or force of speech is laid on this part of the description by this doubling or repetion freely and of his fr●…e favour 3. It is is described from its impulsive or meritorious cause which becomes also in some sort the formal cause of our ●…ustification to wit our redemption ma●…e by Iesus Christ. 4. From its instrumental cause which is faith by faith in his blood 5. From its final cause which is the manifestation of the justice and mercy of God for shewing of his justice c. Doct. 1. It is God that justifieth us He is said to justify us not in that he in●…useth righteousness unto us or makes us fit to do things that are just which is the errour of Papists placing justification first in the infusion of the habits of faith hope and charity and next in the good works that comes from those habits with which they mix a certain sort of remission of sinnes But therefore he is said to justify us because by his judicial sentence he absolves us from the guilt of all sin and accepts or accounts of us as fully just and righteous for eternal life by the righteousness of Christ which he giveth us This appears from hence that this justification is used in Scripture to be opposed unto a charging with crimes and unto condemnation Rom. 8. 33. And this is done of God as it were by these degrees 1. In his eternal counsell and decree because from eternity he intended to justify us 2. In our head Christ rising again from the dead we were virtually justified in some sort actually as in Adam sinning all his posterity were virtually condemned to death by the Law and in some sort actually because in some sort actual sinners 3. He justifies us fullier actually and formally in our selves and not onely in our head when by his Spirit and our faith the work of his Spirit he applies Christ unto us to our justification 4. And further yet he justifies us actually and formally to our sense and feeling when by our own reflex knowledge and examination of our estate he gives us to perceive this application of Christ made and so to have peace and ●…oy in him Reas. 1. Because ou●… sins from which we ought to be justified are done against the majesty of God 1 Sam 2. 25. And none can forgive an offence done against another or an injury done to another in a proper way of speaking Reas. 2. Because the guiit of sin depends on the obligation of the Law and of divine justice and truth And therefore cannot be taken away but by him that is above the Law and knowes what is agreeable to his own truth and meaning in the first making of it Reas. 3. Because by justification we are received into the favour of God and life eternal and God himself in some sort is given unto us all which can no otherwise be done but by God himself alone Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who set down manners and means of justification from humane tradition and their owne authority unto ●…retched men as if it were in their power to justi●…ie men after what way they please when it is God ●…lone that justifieth and that therefore prescribes ●…he manner and means of justification onely Use 2. Of Consolation as it is set down Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to our charge it is God that justifi●…th And verse 31. If God be for us who can be against ●…s Doct. 2. This justification is meer pure and infinite grace or favour So in the Text freely his free favour The grace of God in justification appears as it were by these degrees 1. In that God pursues not his right against us and our sins according to that rigour that his Law might have been taken in and his revenging justice might have extended its self to but left place for some reconciliation 2. In that being himself the party offended yet he himself of his own good-will both invented appointed or ordered and revealed both the manner and means of this reconciliation 3. In that he spared not his onely begotten Son for procuring of this reconciliation 4. That without any merits or worth of ours he ingrafts us into his Son and our Lord Jesus Christ and so makes us partakers of that reconciliation which is in him This was altogether necessary that
our justification might be of free favour Reas. 1. Because it was impossible for the laws and the righteousnes thereof to justifie sinners Rom. 8. vers 1 Reas. 2. Because in the justification of a sinner is remission or pardon of ●…in and all pardon is of free ●…avour Reas. 3. Because in justification is a free Donation of righteousness and of life eternal which to sinners cannot be done but with especial grace and favour The satisfaction made by Christ for us withstands not the freenesse of this favour of justification because it was of free favour and grace that Christ himself was given us and by calling appointed to this satisfaction for us and of his own free-grace also accepted of that calling Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists and many others who will have our justification to depend upon our Works which yet every where by the Apostle are opposed to this free grace in our justification Use 2. Is of Consolation to believers and repenters against all these shakings of minde which they feel or can feel from the unworthinesse of themselves that their own consciences tell them of because our whole justification hangs on the free favour or grace of God and not upon our worth or merits Use 3. Is of Exhortation 1. That we alwayes flee to the Free-grace of God as to the onely garrison of our souls 2. That from admiration of this grace of God we alwayes study to be thankfull to God Doct. 3. The obedience of Iesus Christ imputed unto us or given us and so accounted ours justifies or makes us righte●… and is the foundation of all our righteousnesse It is in the Text By the Redemption made by Iesus Christ. 1. For he that is justified by the Redemption 〈◊〉 other as by paying a ransom that price is conceived as it were to be paid for him who is redeemed ●… If Christ be the pacification in our justification when we please God as it is in the Text then we please him for something which Christ hath performed for our good 3. If Faith justifies as it hath relation to Christ and the shedding of his blood then there is something in his blood thus shed or in his obedience unto death by vertue whereof we are justified Now the obedience of Christ in respect of our justification hath 1. the place of a meriting cause which obtains it for us because it was the means that Gods justice required to be performed to him before his grace could justify us 2 It hath the place of the formal cause in as much as it is so accepted and taken for ours being given us by free-gift and so made ours indeed as that we are lookt on by God as truly clothed with it when he pronounces the sentence of our justification whence that phrase of the Apostle is Not having mine own righteousnesse but that which is Christs Phil. 3. 9. Reas. 1. Is because this is most agreeable both to the justice and mercy of God joyntly For if our justification had stood in the bare remission of sin without the imputation of a sufficient righteousness or obedience for satisfaction to justice then onely Gods mercy and favour had had place in this businesse no regard being had of the justice of God that satisfaction might be made Reas. 2. Because if we had been pronounced just without any imputation of a satisfying righteousness or obedience performed then there could have been no just ground of such a sentence to wit that he should be pronounced just which was no way just neither by his own inherent justice or righteousness nor yet by anothers justification freely given him Rea. 3. Because by this means we have in some manner a divine righteousnesse or the righteousnesse of God himself to wit that which Christ who is God performed for us not the essential righteousnes of God as Soliander dream'd as God-man in one person on which therefore we may rely and with the greater confidence appear before God and for it hope for all divine and good things at the hands of God Reas. 4. Because in this manner we the more own our salvation as wrought by Christ. Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists Anabaptists Remonstrants or Arminians and almost all Sects and Sectarians who all agree in this errour that our justification depends upon our works and is not to be sought by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse to us or accounting his obedience ours Use 2. Is of Exhortation unto due thankfulness towards Christ by whose Redemption or ransoming of us we are justified and set free from sin and death the wages of sin and adjudged unto life and glory above what any meer creatures righteousness could ever have deserved Doct. 4. The obedience of Iesus Christ is powerful for justifying of us by being accepted and laid hold on by our Faith It is in the Text. Through Faith in his Blood Reas 1. The very nature and duty of Faith is to rely on Christ or on the favour and mercy of God in Christ for pardon of sins Reas. 2. Because by Faith we are united unto Christ and ingrafted into him that so we may be partakers of all the blessings that in him are prepared for men Reas. 3. Because Faith receives layes hold on and embraces all the promises of God and the things in them contained offered or proposed amongst which pardon of sins and justification in Christ hath a chief place The Use is of Direction that it may be our onely care in the business of our justification to direct our Faith and confidence towards Christ and to stir up and confirm it more and more that we may thence have firm and aboundant comfort The twenty fourth Lords day James 2. 22. Seeft thou how faith wrought with his works and by works was faith made perfect IN these words is contain'd the conclusion of that disputation which Iames had against such as vant of Faith that is destitute of good-works For the Apostle concludes that such Faith is of no worth unto justification And this conclusion is often repeated as vers 14 17. and 20. 22. and 24. under sundry formes of words but to one and the same sense Now this Conclusion which the Apostle proves is not that good-works are any part or cause of our justification before God as Papists take it nor yet as many of our own think that our works justifie us before men however that contain a truth in it but this is the conclusion that justifying faith is such that it worketh and puts forth its operation by good-works And it is proved 1. from a comparison of likes from vers 15. to the 18. 2. By another comparison of likes to wit of such a fruitlesse faith in men and devils vers 19. 3. from the example and pattern of that faith that was in Abraham vers 21. of all which the conclusion is set down in this 22. vers In which two things are determined 1. That true and
justifying faith is fruitfull of good works 2. That good works are the end and perfection of faith for faith is said to co-operate with good works because together with the command of God it furnisheth its strength and force of working for producing of good works And that works are called the perfection of faith it is not so to be understood as if they were the internal and formal perfection of faith as the form is the formal and essential perfection of every thing But in that they contain and shew the external perfection of faith in as much as they flow from it and as every effect contains in it self some perfection of its course to wit as it partakes of the force and vertue that comes from the internal perfection of the cause Doct. 1. Our good workes are no wayes the cause of our justification but the effects and fruits of a man justified It is gathered from the Text for as much as workes are the effects of faith And faith and justification according to the nature of relatives are at once or together in nature A true believer and a justified man are the same thing If therefore good works are the effects of a believer then are they the effects of one justified also And that works justify us not is apparent from four reasons Reas. 1. Because believers are not now under the Covenant of workes and therefore cannot be justified by works but are all condemned by them if we stand to them in that point because none of them come up to what the Law requires and so are sinfull and imperfect Reas. 2. Because all our good workes are debts and therefore they can never properly merit or deserve pardon Reas. 3. Because the good works we do came not from our own strength but from the grace of God Reas. 4. Because our best good works are in themselves imperfect and defiled with many uncleannesses Object 1. Our good workes are perfect as they come from the Holy Spirit whose workes are all perfect Ans. 1. If in respect of us they be imperfect they cannot as ours be of force to our justification though in some other respect they may be perfect 2. That perfection which they have in reference to the Holy Spirit doth not redound properly unto our meriting or deserving by them because the holy Ghost is no wayes united unto us into one person which is the onely ground why the works of Christ had a divine merit and worth in them namely because they were divine workes as being his that was as man personally united unto the God-head and person of the Son so as they made but one person The Holy Spirit then though he be the principal cause of our good works yet this is in its own manner as an external efficient as having no personal union with the party working Object 2. Our reward is given according to our works Ans. That reward is not of our merit but of God's free grace and favour For there is a reward of servants and a reward of sons the reward of servants lookes not to the person but to the merit or desert of the work but the reward of sons look●… at the person chiefly and so is given of grace and good will to the person of the worker more than to the merit of the work For the Father in his Sonne crownes that with reward which in it self deserves no such thing for the most part Otherwayes he were unjust not to reward it so in servants likewise Use Of Admonition that we never glory in our selves or our own workes before God but alwayes acknowledge when we have done all that we can that we are but unprofitable servants as our Lord himself teacheth us to do and that we depend wholly on the grace of God putting no trust in our own works Doct 2. Good workes by a necessary coherence follow true faith It is gathered from this that faith is to work together in and with good works and by good works to be brought to its end Now good works are necessary to a believer 1. By necessity of precept because God from that right and power he had to do so was pleased to command us them 2. By necessity of means without which we cannot attain the end And that 1. In respect of God or his glory as the end because without them we cannot attain to the enjoyment of God nor to glorify him as we should and must for that attainment 2. In respect of the Church and others without the Church whose edification without good works we cannot attain and good men are edified by good workes as by examples more and more and to others a hoping light is as it were held out whereby they may discerne their right way Let your light so shine before men c. 3. In respect of our own salvation because good works are necessary to salvation though not as meritorious causes yet as dispositions qualifications and wayes that must be had and insisted in because our election and calling is to them and by them our salvation and these other are made surer to our consciences For in them consists that way of a new obedience and Gospell thankfulnesse which onely leads unto life also as holinesse not onely internal but also external is such an inseparable disposition or qualification from such as are to be saved as that without it none shall ever see God to his comfort or happiness 3. They are necessary by necessity of the end because election redemption vocation tend and look to this end that we may live to God and to Christ in all holinesse and righteousnesse And a necessity as well of thankfulnesse as of covenant lies upon us that with all our vigour and with all our strength we endeavour to attain unto this end 4. Good works are necessary by a certain sort of natural necessity For just as good fruits come of a good tree and sweet waters come from a sweet fountain by a like manner and necessity good works come from true faith Or as our vital operations and motions do alwayes accompany natural life so also spiritual life which is from faith whereby the just man liveth puts forth it self alwayes in good works as the proper operations and acts of a spiritual life It may sometimes happen that as in one in a swound scarce any matter or operation doth appear though yet the ●…fe it self remain so also by some extraordinary ●…entation for some time the seed of faith may remain in the heart of this or that man the fruits whereof can hardly be discovered But this is 1. As much against the nature of faith and of a faithfull man as sicknesse is against health and life 2. It is an extraordinary case by which we must not judge of the ordinary operations and fruits of faith nor of its nature or the necessity of good works 3. In such a case both the degree of faith it self is deminished and the comfort of
suffering was the perfecting of all his obedience Reas. 2. Because Christ by his suffering made satisfaction to divine justice and repayed God as much of his honour in our name as he had suffered in it by our sins Therefore Gods justice is now appeased the grace of God hath had its free course that it may derive all good upon us Reas. 3. Because that Christ now by virtue of his passion and consummate obedience as it were of his own right that he acquired makes intercession with the Father for us that we may be and live with him Ioh. 17. 24. Use 1. Of Consolation to the faithfull against the guilt of their sin and terrors of their conscience that arise from sin For in Christ and his sufferings we have a remedy against these wounds that are otherwayes deadly Use 2. Of Admonition that we would detest all sinnes as things that brought our Saviour to death and would wave brought a thousand deaths upon us unless he had turned them away from us The sixteenth Lords day Joh. 10. 17 18. Therefore the Father loveth me because I lay down my life that I may take it up again None taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again This commandment received I from my Father CHrist in these words expounds what he had said before of the duty effect and signe of a good Shepherd to wit that he layes down his life for his sheep This he had applied to himself verse 15. where two things were propounded 1. The Object to which this laying down of the life is referred or which be those sheep of Christ 2. The manner of this laying down the life This is explained in the 16 and these two following verses The death of Christ or laying down of his soul or life is explicated from the efficient cause which is Christ himself I lay down my life 2. From the manner of doing of it that Christ is a cause voluntary and doing it from a counsell and deliberation not of coaction None taketh it from me but I lay it down 3. From the adjunct of this efficiency that he did it not of weakness but from power I have authority to lay it down This is shewn from another effect that followes this to wit from his resuming it again or his resurrection I have authority to take it up again as if he would say he that so layes down his life that with power he takes it up again he layes it not down out of coaction with weakness but voluntarily of his own accord he doth it But I so lay downmy life ergo Which is illustrated here from the impulsive cause the Fathers commandment This commandment I received of my Father 4. From the end and effect to wit the Fathers love and delight or complacency in this Therefore my Father loveth me because c. Doct. 1. Christ so far humbled himself for us that he underwent death it self for us I lay down my life c. Now he underwent a double death for us a spiritual and a corporal death The spiritual is about Christ's descent into Hell This consisted in the separation of God's favour from the soul of Christ for a time not really but as to sense and feeling and that influence from which comfort useth to be felt as also in impressions of divine wrath which with horror did strike all the faculties of the soul so that for the time the soul was at so low an ebbe and concussion of all its happiness as any creature could be that was without sin formally inherent in it self The death of the body is that which consists in the separation of the soul from the body the confirmation and continuance was in the burial of Christ. Now such was the separation of the soul from the body in Christs death that the conjunction and union of both of them with the divine person remained the same that it was before as if one drawing a sword held the scabberd in the one hand and the sword in the other there would be there a separation between the scabberd and the sword but of neither of them from the man that so held them So also in this mystery there is a separation of the soul from the body but neither of them was separated from the divine nature nor person but the person still sustained both in the unity of it self as one person with him The reason is because if there had been any such separation from the di vine person then the second person had ceased to be God-man and so could not for that time have been our Priest or Mediator Also a new incarnation or assumption had been made again in the resurrection of Christ. It is most true therefore which is in the mouthes of many Divines and used proverbially almost That what the Son of God assumed he never laid aside again Reas. 1. Because the perfection and consummation of humiliation is in undergoing death Phil. 2 8. And this also was the first reason why he did not onely undergo death but the most vise contemptible and contumelious death that is the death of the Cross as in that place is more especially set down Reas. 2. Because his charge of redeeming us required this to wit that he should pay that price to divine justice which we did ow and so be subject to the same punishment that we were liable to And this was also the reason why he chose the death of the Cross that he might shew that he did not barely sustain death but that cursed death that was due to us and that in our place or for us Gal. 3. 12. Reas. 3. That by the most convenient way he might procure the death of sin in us by assimiliation and making us conform to himself Rom. 6. from verse 1. to the 8. Use 1. Is of Information for directing of our faith ●…o wit that while we seek remission of our sins and reconciliation and salvation in God we so have our faith in Christ that we may be specially united to him in his sufferings blood-shedding and death Rom. 3. 25. Use 2. Is of Consolation to all those as have such true faith because they are out of all hazard of death or condemnation according to that of the Apostle Rom 8. 34. Use 3. Is of Direction 1. In the study of Sanctification that with Christ we may dy to sin 2. In the study of all obedience love and humility according to the example of Christ in whom all the perfections of these vertues we have marvelously shining to us in a most eminent and excellent way Doct. 2. Christ ordained his own death from certain wise deliberation and power to dispose of it as he pleased I have power to lay down my li●…e From which words it appears first that the death of Christ was voluntary For though it was violent also as it came from external
in us Rom. 8. 11. Use 1. Of Admonition that we suffer not sin to reigne in our natural bodies that we offer not our members weapons of unrighteousnesse to sin but weapons of righteousnesse to God Rom. 6. 12 13. Use 2. Of Exhortation that we glorify God in our body as it followes in the Text verse 20. For we ought to have that care of our body in order to things spiritual that is due to the Temple of God as in the Text and to an offering to be offered up in the Temple of God Rom. 12. 1. Doct. 4. The indwelling of this Spirit is a flat enemy to the 〈◊〉 of sin in us This is the consequence of the argument in the Text to wit that the Temple of God cannot be prostituted to whoredome and other such sinnes without Sacriledge Reas. 1. Because there should be an agreement between the Temple and him whose temple it is or to whom it is dedicated as it is 2 Cor. 6. 16. what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idolls For by a like reason we may say What agreement hath the temple of God with reigning sin Reas. 2. Because therefore the Holy Spirit dwels in believers that he might impart holiness to them and as his nature and name so also his indwelling and operation is an enemy to all ungodliness Reas. 3. Because if the Kingdome of sin should prevail in the Temple and dwelling of the Holy Spirit this would turn to the disgrace and disho●… of the Holy Spirit himself And this is indeed the thing that is done when some prophane men blaspheme and mock at the name of God of the Holy Ghost because of the unworthy carriage of those that make profession to be led by this Holy Spirit Use 1. Of Reproof against such as turn the Temple of the Holy Ghost into 〈◊〉 Den of Thieves or into a Cage of unclean birds Use 2. Of Admonition that we give no place to sin either in our soules or bodies but as farre as is possible that we imitate Christ who as it is written Mat. 25. did cast out of the Temple of God even buyers and sellers and the tables of money changers and Iohn 2 15. with a wl●…ip drave out of the Temple sheep and beeves Doct. 5. All the faithfull ought to have both faith and experience about this indwelling of the Holy Spirit in them This is intimated in these words Do ye not know brethren that is ye ought not to be ignorant of this but to believe this and 〈◊〉 know it from your own proper experience or fe●…ling Reas. 1. Because this is amongst the greatest benefits that belong to our salvation Reas. 2. Because from this benefit depends the knowledge of all the rest that God hath freely given to us 1 Cor. 2. 12. So that the same may here ●…e said that is said of Christ 2 Cor. 13. 5. Know ye not that Christ is in you c. So here Know ye not what the Holy Ghost is in you c. Use 1. Of Direction that we try our selves in this point and never rest as if it were well with us untill unto our comfort we can perceive that the Holy Spirit dwelleth in us Use 2. Of Exhortation that we study to have this knowledge lively and powerfully according to the intent of the Apostle here who intimates to us that this knowledge if it be such as it should be cannot consist with whoredome or any such like impurity of life The one and twentieth Lords day Eph. 5. 25 26 27. Vers. 25 Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it 26 That he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word 27 That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing But that it should be holy and without blemish IT is the Apostle's purpose in this place to stir up men to the duty of love to their wives And he illustrates this duty and perswades it from the example of Christ's love to his Church and in the example the love of Christ towards his Church is declared from its effects whereof the first is that he laid down his life for her The second is the end and effect of the former to wit that by vertue of his death he sanctified and purified the Church unto himself The third is the effect and end of both the former that he namely makes her glorious The fourth is the conjunction and union that the Church hath with Christ to wit that she is his body and of his flesh and bones verse 30. The manner of which union and its nature is shewn to consist in a mystery and not in any carnal or bodily way but in a most spiritual and hidden way Doct. 1. The Church is the whole company and community of the elect This is hence gathered because she is here described and designed by Christ's spiritual love to her as ought the love of an husband to be to his wife Now this love includes alwayes in it self a differenceing of her beloved separating of her from all other and so it is nothing else but an election or choice made of her before others This is to be understood of a company chosen unto eternall life Now this company is considered of two manner of wayes First as election lies in the absolute and internal counsell of God Secondly as it is described and manifested by its effect of calling and the blessing that followes on it They that are chosen the first way they are members of the Church onely virtually and potentially to be such in time but such a power as is determinate and certainly to be brought forth into act in due time by the decrees of God Therefore the elect not yet called are not yet actually and in themselves formal members of the Church The second way as the act of vocation and effect of election is there it makes men actual and formal members of the Church Now that first effect of election internal which is proper to the elect is effectual calling which 〈◊〉 a kinde of external election as it were made in time Therefore the Church hath her name rather from this calling than from justification sanctification or glorification unto which this accrues moreover that by this meanes the company or community of actual believers is fitly designed seeing that none are ordinarily called effectually but such as by actual faith answer that call Use Is of Direction how we may obtaine to our selves the certainty of our election to wit if we can be certain of our effectual calling that is be sure by inward feeling and experience of our true faith and unfaigned repentance of their operations on and in our hearts and by the effects that thence follow Doct. 2. This Church is the body of Christ. Reas. 1. It is called his body by way of proportion or similitude not unto a body
it ceases for that time 4. Although in such a case such fruits of faith appears not as are required to our comfort●… yet it is hardly ever so overwhelmed but that it hath some operation at least in that fight which then the Spirit hath against the flesh Use 1. Of Reproof against such mens most vain presumption as bragge of a sort of faith of their own that is separated from all care of good works Use 2. Of Exhortation that with such considerations we stirre up our minds to greater zeal and chearfulness in every good work The five and twentieth Lords day Rom. 4. 11. And be received the sign of circumcision a seal of the righteousnes of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcis●…d That he might be th●… father of all them that believe though they be not circumcised that righteousnesse might be imputed unto them also THe Apostle in this place treats of the justificatification of Abraham which he so ascribes to him that in him he sets down a pattern of justification to life as well in respect of uncircumcised Gentiles as of Jewes themselves For this end the Apostle observes and proposeth to be observed that faith was reputed to Abraham unto righteousnesse while he was yet uncircumcised or in the fore-skin Against which Doctrine because it might be objected that then circumcision was of no use to him The Apostle answers by a probation in this verse and denies the consequence and gives a reason of this his denial thence because there was another end and use of that Sacrament For he was not therefore circumcised that by circumcision he might be justified but that by circumcision as by a seal and sign he might have his righteousness that was before imputed to him the better confirmed We have then in these words a description of a Sacrament of the Covenant of grace 1. From its general notion that it is a signe 2. From its differencing notion in which it is described by the use and end of this sign The end is designed 1. From its manner of signifying being not onely called a signe but a seal 2. From the object or thing signified which is the righteousness of faith the receiving thereof Doct. 1. The proper end and use of a Sacrament is that it may confirm our faith This is hence collected because Circumcision is here called a seal of faith or of the righteousnesse of faith For a seal when it is set to Deeds hath this proper use that it ratifies and confirmes them that is declares them solemnly to be sealed Reas. 1. Because since Sacraments are fitly and conveniently referred to faith and to grace they ought of necessity to tend either to the first begetting of grace or to the confirmation of it And the first is performed by the Holy Spirit in our first calling by the preaching of the Gospell and the Sacraments are not instruments of our first call therefore they tend not to the first breeding of faith in us but to the confirming and strengthening of it more and more in us after it is first begotten in us Reas. 2. Because often faith is begotten though Sacraments be wanting if they be not despised But in any ordinary way it is never so confirmed and strengthened as it is when Sacraments are joyned with the Word Reas. 3. Because Sacraments properly belong not but to such as have faith already and so can have no other use but to confirm such parties faith and to advance by it all other graces in them Use Of Direction what we ought to look to properly in the use of Sacraments to wit that by such holy Ordinances of God we may be more and more built up in our most holy faith Doct. 2. The Sacraments do no other way confirm our faith or advance our salvation then by way of signe and seal This is hence collected in that the Apostle gives unto them this onely way of operating in this place Which that we may better understand it is to be taken notice of that a sign is either natural or by institution or appointment and that Sacraments are signes by appointment Now in signes by appointment the author appointing is alwayes to be looked to and the end of his appointing For seeing any appointment is as a mean it hath an essential relation and dependance as well to the efficient by which it is directed as to the end whereunto it is directed The author and appointer of a Sacrament is God alone because no creature can appoint one seeing none can perform that which in a Sacrament is signed and sealed nor ●…ind God to perform it for them The end of a Sacrament in general is to help our infirmity and a Sacrament helps it in a three fold manner Reas. 1. In respect of our understanding whereunto they are notifying or knowledge-begetting signes or as it were clear mirrours wherein by the intermediate Ministry of our external senses we may behold the mysteries of God Reas. 2. In respect of our memory whereunto they are admonishing signes and as it were made perpetual remembrances or memorandums by their orderly reiteration and renovation Reas. 3. In respect of our will faith and affiance whereunto they are sealing signes or most certain seals and pledges Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who will have the Sacraments to work righteousnesse and grace in us as physicall instruments by the work done Use 2. Of Direction in the use of them that our chief care may be by these means to lay hold on and more and more to apply to our selves all these spiritual things which by the Sacraments are signed and sealed unto us Doct. 3. The things which in the Sacraments are signified and sealed unto us are in one word all the blessings of the New Covenant This is gathered from hence in that the righteousness of faith is said to be sealed by the Sacrament of Circumcision Now that righteousnesse by the trope Synecdoche signifies all the blessings of the New Covenant as appeares from verse 9. where the imputation of this righteousnesse is called the declaration of blessednesse Now the same that is signified in one Sacrament is also signified in another as to the substance of the matter though the manner be diverse and so some benefits are more expresly signified in one Sacrament than in another Reas. 1. Because a Sacrament is after the fall a seal of the New Covenant not as to this or that part of it but of the whole For no Covenant or Charter though sometimes it may have many seals uses to be confirmed as to one part of it by one seal and to another part of it by another seal but by all and every seal the whole is confirmed Reas. 2. Because Christ from whom every blessing floweth is exhibited to us in every Sacrament For as the Sacraments in the Old Testament looked at Christ as shadowes do at their bodies so also and that much more clearly in the New Testament