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A16736 The doctrine of the Gospel By a plaine and familiar interpretation of the particular points or articles thereof: with the promises, comforts, and duties, seuerally belonging to the same. VVhereunto is added, a declaration of the danger of not knowing, not beleeuing, or not obeying any one of them. Likewise, a rehearsal of the manifold heresies, wherein many haue erred contrary to them all. Diuided into three bookes. The first whereof, is of beliefe in God the Father ... Allen, Robert, fl. 1596-1612. 1606 (1606) STC 364; ESTC S106811 1,499,180 1,052

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THE DOCTRINE OF THE GOSPEL BY A PLAINE AND FAMILIAR INTERPRETATION OF THE PARticular points or Articles thereof with the Promises Comforts and Duties seuerally belonging to the same Wherevnto is added a declaration of the danger of not knowing not beleeuing or not obeying any one of them LIKEWISE A REHEARSAL OF THE MAnifold heresies wherein many haue erred contrary to them all Diuided into three Bookes THE FIRST WHEREOF IS OF BELIEFE IN GOD THE Father the first Person of the most holy glorious and vndiuided Trinitie one onely true God to be blessed and praised for euer 1. Cor 8 6. 〈◊〉 but one God euen the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one ●ord Iesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him Matth 11 27. 〈◊〉 man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost 1. Iohn 5 7. 〈◊〉 three the Father the Word that is the Sonne and the holy Ghost are one Seene and allowed T C VERITAS 〈◊〉 VVLNERA LONDON Printed by Thomas Creede 1606. THE INSCRIPTION Dedicatorie FOR THE GLORY OF GOD AND edification of his Church TO the right worshipfull Sir Nicolas Bacon Knight my singular good Patron with the vertuous Lady Anne Bacon his wife And to the right worshipfull Sir Nathanael Bacon and Sir Francis Bacon and to Sir Edmund Bacon Knights and to the Right worshipfull Maister Edward Bacon one of his Maiesties worthie Iustices of the peace in Suffolke all louers of Pietie and Iustice and friendes to the Church of God through his rich grace blessed be his name for so great a mercy as a debt acknowledged most due vnto them and to the whole posteritie of their right honourable Father a most worthy and wise Patron of true Religion vpright Iustice and all good learning in his high place all his time a most worthy Paterne to bee imitated and followed of all that descend of him yea of all that succeed him in like Office of high dignitie For a token of gratulatorie-thankfulnes to God for so inestimable a blessing and with a holy desire to help forward their holy knowledge and the precious faith of their eternall saluation This second part of the Treasurie of Christian instruction containing a chiefe portion of the Doctrine of the Gospell is both from heart and hand willingly dedicated By their VVorships among other of the Ministers of the Gospel one most bounden in the Lord Robert Allen. TO THE REVEREND AND LEARNED MINISTERS OF THE holy word of God and to all true hearted Christians Grace and Peace in the Lord Iesus RIght well beloued worthy great loue and reuerence yea double honour in the Lord euen for the Lordes sake and for your diligent and painefull labour in his worke seeing I hold it my dutie to giue a reason to you of that which I haue done in the publishing of these writings which are nowe brought to your viewe and remaine subiect to your godly censures as you shall finde iust cause this I desire that you doe first of all fauourably consider on my behalfe that were it not besides my owne perswasion of Gods gracious assistance in his guiding and leading of me through this busines that I had beene incouraged by some of yourselues that is to say by Ministers of the word of very good learning and iudgement singularly zealous of Gods glorie and aboundant in loue toward his Church I would neuer haue presumed to haue offered these my labours to be examined of such as haue authoritie to licence the printing of Bookes much lesse would I haue presumed to haue published them as now they are And yet for all that that is though I was in such wife as is specified incouraged thus farre in hope of your good liking and of some good fruite to grow vnto the Church thereby how moderately and modestly I thinke of that which is done God he knoweth And therewithall how desirous I am that none vpon the sodaine shoulde bee offended at these superfluous labours as they may peraduenture seeme to some to be specially they being vndertaken by such an one as I am after the writings of so many excellent seruants of God in the ministerie of his Gospell I would gladly it might appeare to all by this my care to render you the reasons which preuailed with me herevnto First therefore this in all humblenes of minde I doe you to vnderstand that insomuch as by the mercies of God I haue beene a hearer of many of your owne selues who are yet liuing and also of some of those who haue died most blessedly in the Lord most worthy and excellent Preachers of the word and so haue beene a partaker of your manifold good gifts and graces to my singular instruction and comfort if I haue not beene failing to my selfe in so long a tract of time I thought with my selfe therefore that if through the rich mercy and goodnes of God I might be as the good Bee to draw honie out of so many sweete flowers as were before mee and bring the same together as it were into one hieue it might come to passe that through the blessing of God I might in processe of time performe some acceptable seruice to his Church So that this then is the first reason which I haue to alledge to shewe whence I haue beene imboldened to performe this seruice Secondly seeing it is so that in respect of my owne practise in the holy Ministerie I haue had more then ordinarie occasion in course of Catechising by the space of these 20. yeares past to goe oftentimes through the principles of Religion and that not onely in so briefe a manner as they might well be contracted for the better capacitie of the more simple in vnderstanding but also more largely for the benefite of such as were of better discretion and iudgement euen till this kind of exercise was thus farre forth augmented as you see therefore I thought I might not with any equitie conceale it either from such as hauing beene lesse exercised this way desire it for a helpfull supply vnto them or from those who hauing no neede of this helpe for any defect may neuertheles finde an occasion offered them of their owne more excellent thoughtes like as the knife is made sharpe by the rude and blunt wherstone when it is but a little whetted vpon it Thirdly I thought this dutie might the better beseeme me in the Church of God yea that God himselfe would the rather require it at my handes because it seemed good to his diuine Maiestie to imploy me from time to time in the course of my Ministerie toward the people of small villages by reason whereof I had the fewer auocations from my studies and so more leisure to write then many other Ministers of the word whom God had placed ouer greater townes and in popular cities Fourthly I haue beene the rather confirmed to thinke that it was the good will and pleasure of God that I should performe this
propagation of children And as touching her soule that also was properly created as was the soule of Adam and so are the soules of all men and women to this day Finally in respect of the most proper signification of creation euery newe and strange work or iudgement of God is diuers times expressed by the word Bara as Exod. 34 10. I will doe such miracles saith the Lord as haue not beene wrought in all the world Likewise Numbers 16.30 Likewise Isai 41.20 and ch ●8 6. and Ier 31.12 Thus much for the opening of the signification of the word to create whereby euery way may appeare the infinite excellencie of Gods making of things from all that making which is or may be attributed to man For although by the gift of God and in an artificiall imitation of his workes of nature man doth make many beautifull formes of things yet he cannot possibly make the least substance of any thing nor inspire any life or liuely and naturall motion in the least degree And euen his formes also are infinitely inferiour to the beautie of the things themselues which God formeth and beautifieth aboue all the most exquisite artificers skill NOw after the vnderstanding of the meaning of the word let vs goe forward to the matter it selfe When you say that the substance and frame and whole furniture of the heauens of the earth were created when they were nothing at all before You doe therein affirme that the world is not eternall and without beginning as God himselfe is but that in time it had a beginning Question Is not your meaning so Yea the holy Scriptures teach me to beleeue that the whole world both the heauens and the earth had their beginning with the beginning of time it selfe and that also within lesse then the space and terme of six thousand yeares It is very true as the certaine and vndoubted Chronologie of the holy Scriptures themselues Explicatiō proofe doe euidently declare to all such as doe make diligent and religious search thereinto The which verily is the dutie of euery true beleeuer to doe more or lesse either by his owne industrie or by the helpe of others for the confirmation of his faith therein And that from thence also our faith may be confirmed concerning the appearing of our Sauiour Christ in the fulnes of time according to all the holy Prophesies thereof But this were too long a busines and peraduenture too troublesome for the present exercise Neuertheles it shal be meet and profitable for you at your leisure to read that diligently which hath beene purposedly collected out of the holy Scriptures for your instruction in this point or else to read the labours of some other The which their labours may easily come to your hands if you shewe your selues to haue anie godlie desire after the same The summe of al we wil here set downe as it is comprised in certaine verses already gathered to your hand for some furtherance of your vnderstanding and for a familiar helpe of memorie herein SAcred Genesis first of all The Scripture storie doth containe Of yeares two thousands hundreds three And sixtie eight since world began The second Booke which Moses wrote Cald Exodus of going out One hundred fortie adding sixe This is the summe whereto t is brought The third of Levie bearing name Shewes many things but eeks the skore With neuer a yeare but Numery Hath thirtie eighte and neare one more Then Deutronomie doth supply All which that yeare to want we see So all fiue bookes to thousands two Adde hundreds fiue and fiftie three Next Iosua space of 17. yeares Iudges two hundreths ninetie nine The first of Samuell fourescore The next hath fortie Dauids reigne The first of Kings from Salomon Hath yeares one hundred and seuenteene Next hundreths three fortie and fiue As by due triall may be seene This storie reacheth to the time When captiue state to Iuda fell Yea to the yeare of fortie fiue That they were thrall in strange Babell The bookes of daies or Chronicles No longer storie doe set downe Saue fortie fiue to Cyrus reigne They make increase to seuentie one Then Ezra Nehem ' Esters booke Shewe captiue Iewes sent home againe Where they abode .4 hundred yeares Yea ninetie more till Christ was slaine For thus is Daniel rightly skand I meane the speech of Angell there Who thither from thrall seuenties end Defineth seuen times seuentie yeare So then since man was first create And likewise since his wofull fall Till Christ his death t is thousands three Hundreths nine and sixtie sixe in all Whence take wee thirtie three and then There doe remaine but thousands three And hundreths nine thirtie and three Till Christ tooke flesh to make vs free Now since that time how many yeares Haue passed iust by yearely count He knoweth but little that cannot tell The summe whereto they doe amount But vse hereof what should be made Most wise may liue and still may learne Christ taking life and dying death To life doth call from sinne doth warne For as he came in base estate And sta●ed no whit the time once come So will he hast a glorious Iudge Of life and death to giue last doome Repent therefore thy sinnes forsake Beleeue in him whom God hath sent Be sorie for all dayes and times Wherein thou hast thy life mispent Thus times and seasons if thou weigh The more exact the better stay But if thou doe this vse neglect The greater skill the worse defect Thy friend doth friendly wish thee well Let small default not much offend One yeare yea more may penne escape But Gods accounts can none amend The more full opening of these verses is to be examined from the Booke it selfe printed to that end Question But may we possibly conceiue in our minds that there should euer haue bin a nullitie or if we may so speake a nothingnes of all things Answere Because it cannot be conc●iued by reason or compassed by our vaine or curious and confused thought therefore doe the holy Scriptures teach vs to vnderstand and beleeue it by faith as we haue learned before Explicatiō and proofe It is Gods great mercy that he hath vouchsafed to reueale this to be so And it is our dutie in the humble obedience of faith withall thankfulnes to acknowledge the same and to restraine our thoughts from all wandrings any other way which cannot but be infinitly confused and very sinfull and perillous to our soules Onely therefore let it content vs to knowe that God himselfe was in himselfe the perfect fulnes of all in all things before there was any thing at all as well as now and euer since he hath giuen to all things their proper continuance and beeing And that we may the better helpe our selues to giue credit to the doctrine of the creation of the great world let vs consider our selues who are after a sort so many little worlds for the wonderfull manner of