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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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his Truth Psalme 146. 5. 6. 2. When men are in vproares and the World full of commotions and warres the consideration of Gods power ouer the raging of the sea is an incouragement and comfort vnto men that waite vpon God that hee can also still the Tumult of the people as the Prophet gathers Psal 65. 7. 3. Such men as haue callings to doe their businesse in the Sea may hence gather comfort for their safetie there for God is the confidence of them that are a farre off in the Sea as the same Prophet shewes Psal 65. 5. We may trust God for our preseruation on the sea aswell as on the drie land seeing his command is as great in the one as in the other Lastly hence the Apostle Peter gathers an vnanswerable confutation of Atheists that thinke all things will continue alike and that there will be no breaking vp of the world for the last iudgement and that things are carried meerely by a naturall course for that the Earth stands out of the waters and in the waters if there were no higher cause then nature the world would presently bee ouerflowed if God let goe his hold of the waters as manifestly appeared in the destruction of the old world 2. Pet. 3. 5. Thus of the Waters The Earth is considered of in the Scriptures either in it selfe or in the fruits of it or in the Inhabitants of it The glory of the Lord is exceeding great in respect of the Earth considered in it selfe 1. That he could make the Earth Gen. 1. 1. Psal 121. 2. 2. That he could make it so that is 1. So great and vast a creature Iob 11. 9. 2. That he could make it be only by his word 2. Pet. 3. 5. Psal 33. 9. 3. That he could make it hang in such a miraculous manner vpon nothing that is able to beare it vp founding it vpon the waters and Ayre Iob 26. ● 38. 4. 5. 6. Psalme 136. 6. 4. That he hath diuided it and set borders throughout the whole Earth diuiding it for the vse of the seuerall Nations that should inhabit it Psal 74. 17. 5. That he hath made it so vnmoueable there being nothing to fasten it Psalme 104. 5. 33. 9. 119. 90. being of such weight and hauing so many Citties and buildings vppon it and being a creature so round and therefore by nature moueable 6. That he hath made it a creature that lasts for euer and outlasts a world of other creatures Eccles 1. 4. Psalme 78. 69. The Vses are diuers for 1. Hence we may gather the maruellous glory of the Lord in his power greatnesse wisedome prouidence soueraignty and eternity Iob 12. 8. His power in being able to make so mighty a creature hee must needs haue a mighty Arme Psal 89. 11. 13. His greatnesse in that he is bigger then the Heauens and the Earth seeing they are the worke of his hands Iob 11. 9. His wisedome that hee could finde out such a secret way of founding so vast a creature Pro. 3. 19. 8. His prouidence is most manifest in that so mighty a creature can abide which it could neuer doe if it were not vpheld by the Word of his power 2. Pet. 3. 5. and his soueraignty is matchlesse he is a great King aboue all Kings for he alone is the Lord of the whole earth Neuer any King was King of the whole Earth but hee so as all the Earth and the fulnesse thereof belongs to him and he hath the highest and absolutest right ouer all things in the Earth Psalme 47. 7. Mich. 4. 13. Zach. 4. vlt. finally hence is proued the Eternity of God he made the Earth and therefore was before the foundations of it and if he could make a creature that lasts so long how euerlasting is he himselfe Psal 102. 25. 26. 2. It is not inough to know these things but wee must giue God the glory of them our hearts should alwaies say with the Psalmist Blessed bee the Lord God which onely doth wondrous things and blessed be his glorious name for euer and let the whole earth bee filled with his glory Amen Amen Psal 72. 19. 18. Psal 47. 7. and the rather because our vowes and thankesgiuing are as it were all the Rent we pay vnto the Lord of the whole Earth of whom we hold in chiefe Psal 50. 12. 3. I● should teach godly men contentation in all estates if God be the King of the whole Earth then all his children are the great Princes of the world Psal 47. 9. and can want nothing that is needfull for them because the Earth is the Lords and all the fulnesse thereof Psal 24. 1. Zach. 4. 14. which if it be seriously considered all men haue cause to say verely there is a reward for the righteous Psal 58. 12. and if wicked men breake their bonds and breake in vpon their possessions they haue a comfortable recourse to that God that set the borders of the Earth and gaue the lot to his people Psal 74. 17. 18. and if the earth can last so long then the children of his seruants shall much more endure for euer Psalme 102. 25. 26. 28. and if the Word of the Lord bee so vnmoueable that by it the earth is vpheld then wil the word of his promise to his seruants be sure to all generations Psal 119. 90. and therfore of all men Oh ye Righteous ye are blessed of the Lord which made Heauen Earth Psal 115. 13 14 15 16. and therefore also in all the occasions of our liues we should remember that our helpe commeth from the Lord which made Heauen and Earth Psal 121. 2. 134. 3. 4. It should teach vs to giue God the glory of disposing of the Kingdomes of the Earth He is the supreame Lord of the whole Earth and therefore hee may set vp and pull downe what Kings and Princes he will and if he set Sion to thresh the Nations and to take away their substance yet it is done by right seeing God is the Lord of the Earth Mich. 4. 13. Psal 47. 9. 5. The Kings of the Earth should remember to do their Homage to God and to sing of his praises and of the surpassing excellencie of his glory Psal 138. 4. Psal 72. 11. 6. Woe to wicked men for if the Earth be his and they his Subiects he hath more power to subdue and punish them as rebells then any of the Princes of the Earth and therefore can easily consume them out of the earth Psal 104. vlt. 58. 12. and if hee can make the very earth tremble if he but look vpon it Psal 104. 32. then where shall they appeare and how shall they stand before his Indignation Nahum 1. 5. 6. and if they be borne with for a time and get great estates on Earth yet must they be brought to iudgement as vsurpers because the Earth is the Lords and they neuer had a Title from him for what they hold and
shouldest know the path to the house thereof or by what way is the light parted and scattered through the world Iob 38. 19. 20. 24. fifthly that hee hath established them with such vnderstanding and power as they continue notwithstanding their maruellous motions and yet haue nothing to hold them vp no mighty Beames from North to South to beare them vp no rafters to fasten them to or the like but are vpheld meerely by the Word of his power Pro. 3. 19. Heb. 13. 2. In Scripture we shall finde obserued concerning the Heauens their strange constitution and Nature and that for diuers things as first for their vast greatnesse Esay 40. 12. secondly their shining brightnesse being like a molten looking-glasse Iob 37. 18. thirdly their singular durablenesse and lastingnesse Deut. 11. 21. to which I might adde their vnconceauable swiftnesse in Motion the Sunne running his Race swifter then any Gyant on earth or Foule in the Ayre or ought that can bee found here below Psalme 19. 3. The end why those mighty heauens were made which is chiefly to preach the glory of the Lord to all the ends of the Earth Psal 19. 1. which glory of God in making them is so great that the glory of the Lord is said to couer the heauens Hab. 3. 3. 4. The ordinances of heauen or the Lawes which God hath giuen to these mighty creatures or the couenant hee hath made with them binding them to doe his will granting them dominion ouer the earth by their influences which cannot bee resisted or restrained Iob 38. 33. 31. And couenanting with them to preserue them in their course Ier. 33. 25. and binding them to keepe their seasons and to doe the worke appointed them as the Sunne to lighten the world by day and the Moone and Starres by night so as the Moone must know her seasons and the Sunne his going downe Psal 136. 9. 104. 19. 5. The Hostes or Armies of creatures that people the heauens and these are praised first for their comelinesse and hence it is said that the Spirit of the Lord garnished the heauens Iob 26. 13. secondly for their Number in respect of which it is accounted an infinite vnderstanding in God to number the Starres and call them all by their names Psal 147. 4. 5. thirdly for their subiection to God in that they all are his seruants and obey his wil Psal 103. 21. so as God doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen aswell as earth Daniel 4. 35. fourthly for their vses for besides the sweet influences of the Starres what comfort should we haue in this visible world if wee had not the light of the Sunne How would the glory of all Gods workes lie buried in the darke that now by the benefit of the light appeare to vs and serue for our vses The consideration of the making of these mighty heauens should serue for diuers vses as 1. Our soules should blesse God and giue him thankes because he is very great and hath shewed his great wisedome in making the heauens and his mighty power in stretching them out like a curtaine and all this through his great mercie to man which endureth for euer Psalme 104. 1. 2. 136. 5. 2. Woe to wicked men that by their sinnes prouoke God they cannot escape his wrath God hath compassed them in with the heauens and can make the very Starres of Heauen fig●t against them Iudg. 5. 20. and these Heauens will declare their wicke●nesse Iob 16. 27. Nor can any thing they doe be hid from him for the light and darkenesse are his creatures and therefore no darknesse can hide from him Iob 22. 12 13 14. 3. When I consider saith Dauid thy heauens the worke of thy fingers the Moone and the Starres which thou hast ordained what is man that thou art mindefull of him or the Sonne of Man that thou visitest him Psal 8. 3. 4. 4. Godly men may be much comforted with the knowledge of this that God made the Heauens the Sunne and Moone and Starres and that in diuers respects For first they need not feare the signes of Heauen nor the Constellations of the Starres nor the diuinations of Inchaunters for as God can restraine the Constellation of the Starres Esay 13 10. so there can be no diuination against God Esay 44. 25 47. 1● secondly because God hath hereby shewed that he is able to prouide for them and protect them yea hee pleadeth the greatnesse of his power in making the heauens thereby to ass●re them that there shall be nothing too hard for him to doe that may concerne their good Zach. 12. 1. 2. 3. Esay 42. 5. 6 45. 11. 13. 18. 19. thirdly because God hath professed to make so great account of the Church that hee can take no delight in the workes of his hands in planting the Heauens if Sion be not planted and her children as the Starres in Heauen Isay 51. 10. fourthly because God hath promised to them better Heauens when themselues shall shine as the Starres in the Firmament and they shall need no Sun nor Moone to light them but God himselfe will be their euerlasting Light Dan. 12. ● Reuel 21. 2● 22. 5. Thus of the Starry skie or the second part of Heauen The third part followes and that is the Ayre This is the lowest and worst roome of Heauen and yet excellent things are written of it for our profit in the Scriptures Of the Nature properties parts and naturall vses of the Ayre the Scripture takes little or no notice but leaues that to Philosophie the Furniture of this Roome is especially commended in Scripture and so the holy Ghost singles out diuers Considerations First about the Foules of the Ayre Secondly about the Meteors in the Ayre About the Foules of the Ayre we shall finde such things as these obserued in Scripture and so offered to our considerations 1. The Maker of them which was God Gen. 1. 2. The matter out of which they were made viz. out of the ground Gen. 2. 19. 3. The Originall of their names for it was Adam that gaue the names to the Foules Gen. 2. 19. 4. Their inferiority to man both in that wisedome is not in them Iob 28. 21. and in that God hath planted in the Foules a natural feare of man more then any other creature Gen. 9. 2. 5. The care that God hath for the very Foules for first hee knowes all the Foules in the Mountaine Psal 50. 11. secondly he prouides foode for them without their owne industry Mat. 6. Psal 147. 9. thirdly he hath taught them skill to build them Nests to dwell in Mat. 8. 20. fourthly he hath prouided euen for their delight for they haue their habitation by the springes and sing among the branches Psal 104. 12. fifthly God hath prouided for their passage in the Ayre and that so wonderfully that it is reckoned among the foure things too hard for vs to know to tell the way of an Eagle in the Ayre
39. The iudgements God will bring vpon them cannot be auoided Esay 14. 25. 27. Lastly the consideration of Gods Almightinesse is wonderfull comfortable first to the godly and that many waies for first they neede not feare any wants for they haue a father that is almighty and besides they neede not feare any aduersaries for the gates of Hell shall not preuaile against them Mat. 16. 18. and they shall ouercome all aduersarie power because he is great that is on their side 1 Iohn 5. 4. though they should walke through the valley of the shaddow of death they neede feare no euill Psal 23. 4. and for spirituall enemies they neede not feare because God is able to keepe their soules which they haue committed to him 2 Tim. 1. 12. and we shall be kept by his power to saluation 1 Pet 1. 5. Againe it may be a great comfort to them in prayer because God is able to doe aboue all that they can aske or thinke Ephes 3. 20. 21. and further Gods power may settle them and establish their Faith and Ioy in those great workes of God propounded and promised in his word such as are the forgiuenesse of all sinnes the resurrection of their bodies and eternall life 1 Cor. 6. 14. Moreouer that God their father is Almighty may comfort them in this respect because then by his power they also may doe all things What is it a Christian cannot doe that hath the vse of Gods power Paul can want and he can abound c. by the power of Christ in him Phil. 4. 13. But that these comforts may bee effectuall wee must often pray that GOD would open our eyes to see the exceeding greatnesse of his power to them that belieue Ephes 1. 19. Secondly euen grieuous sinners may conceiue comfortable hope from this doctrine also I meane such as haue liued a long time vnder the power of strong corruptions such as are swearing whoredome drunkennesse and the like and therefore now feare that they can neuer be fit for the Kingdome of God These must remember Pauls argument for the Iewes that had liued so long vnder the power of vnbeliefe viz. God is able to ingraft them in againe Rom. 11. 23. so should they hope that they also may be conuerted and saued because God is able to restore euen them also if they be weary of their sinnes and would be rid of them And therefore they should goe to God as the Leaper did to Christ and say Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me cleane Mat. 8. 4. Maker of Heauen and Earth Gen. 1. 1. HItherto of the nature and power of God and the Trinity of persons the workes of God follow The works of God are of two sorts some Internall some externall The Internall workes are either personall or essentiall The personall workes of God internall are such as flow from each person in the Trinity according to the Characteristicall propriety of the person such workes were generation of the Sonne and proceeding of the Holy Ghost The Internall essentiall workes were the decrees of God which hee made in himselfe from all eternity concerning all things in the world especially concerning men and Angels these workes are common to all three persons as flowing from the essence of God Now of these workes the Creed makes no expresse mention because they are strong meat and aboue the capacity of weake Christians The externall workes of God are of foure sorts for they are either the workes of Creation by which hee maketh all things to be or workes of conseruation by which he maintaines the things hee hath made in their being or workes of Reparation by which in Christ he restores what was ruinated by sinne or workes of perfection by which hee brings all things to their appointed end and especially makes the Church fully blessed in a better world The workes of Creation are onely mentioned in this Article The workes of Reparation by Christ and of perfection are handled in the Articles following The workes of Creation are expressed in these words Maker of Heauen and Earth By Heauen and Earth vnderstanding the whole world and all the hosts of creatures that are in it Now concerning the making of the world foure things are to be considered 1 Who made the world 2 How it was made 3 Why it was made 4 When it was made For the first the Creation was a worke of the whole Trinity It is attributed here in the Creed to the Father because the Action of the Father was more manifest and euident as Redemption is attributed to the Sonne and Sanctification to the Holy Ghost But yet it is euident by diuers Scriptures that each Person did worke about the Creation for of the Father there is no question and of the Sonne it is expresly affirmed Colos 1. 16. Iohn 1. 3. Heb. 1. 3. and of the Holy Ghost sitting and mouing vpon the first water we reade Gen. 1. 2. For the second God created all things 1 According to the Counsell of his owne will Ephes 1. 11. which hath diuers things in it for thereby is affirmed that he made all things 1 Most freely without compulsion or instigation from any other 2 According to the Idaea of all things in his owne minde for as the Carpenter first conceiues the frame in his head and then builds according to that Idaea in his minde so did God build the world according to the eternall patterne which was in Gods minde 3 According to his owne Decree there was nothing created which was not decreed and nothing decreed to bee which was not created according to the Decree 4 Most aduisedly hauing from all eternity consulted determined and foreseene all was to be made Secondly with a word only he had none to helpe him nor needed tooles or instruments as men doe to effect their workes Gen. 1. Psal 33. 9. Thirdly without labour or wearinesse Esay 40. 28. Fourthly of Nothing men cannot build without Materialls but God made the world of Nothing in respect of the first matter of all things Heb. 11. 3. for he made not the world of his owne essence nor of any other preexisting matter for though it be a saying that of nothing nothing can be made yet that is true in respect of vs not in respect of God and in respect of the order of Nature now not in respect of the beginning of Nature in the Creation And though it be true that some creatures were made of preexisting matter as mans body was made of the dust of the earth yet that preexisting matter was created of nothing Fifthly all good all things at first were made good not in appearance but in deed not in mans iudgement who might bee deceiued but in Gods he saw that all was good and so all creatures were good in respect of excellence distinction numbe● fashion and freedome from defects of faculties or power belonging to each creature in his kinde Sixtly not all on a sudden and at once but
worldlings or people giuen to vanitie It is enough for the seruant to be as his Lord is If we be set at nought and reproched and scorned by the world we should not thinke any great matter was befallen vs for thus was Christ himselfe vsed and that in the open Court of a great King publikely Againe we should know that Christ did therefore endure to be thus vilified by Herod and his men of warre that hee might make vs pretious before God and his heauenly Armie of Saints and Angels And whereas Herod sends him backe clothed in a white or gorgeous robe though Herod intended nothing but matter of scorne yet Diuines conceiue that God did thereby acknowledge him to be that lambe without spot that should take away the sinnes of the world and to be indeed the true King of Heauen That which men did in iest God did in earnest Herod clothes him with a robe like a King as one that foolishly had affected the kingdome But God by permitting the Royall robe doth acknowledge his iust claime to be King of Sion 4. The euent of this businesse was the reconciliation of Herod and Pilate who were made friends the same day Luk. 23. 12. which shews the temper of the men of this world who though they cannot agree among themselues yet rather than Christ shall not be persecuted they will become friends Wicked men are easily agreed when there is a common opposition to be made against religion Ephraim is against Manasses and Manasses against Ephraim and yet both will agree to be against Iudah Yet obserue here the vanity of all friendship amongst Politicians Herod is greatly pleased that Pilate will acknowledge so much right to him as to send his prisoner to him only because hee was a Galilaean Now Herod was mistaken for though that were Pilates pretence yet he intended another thing which was to deriue the hatred of so foule a businesse vpon Herod as Caiaphas had serued Annas before And thus of Pilates second Policie The third Policie which Pilate vsed to acquit Christ was to make a motion to the people to haue Christ giuen to them in honour of their great Feast About which obserue 1. The occasion of this practise and that was a custome which the Iewes had to haue a prisoner deliuered at the Feast of the Passeouer by the Gouernour which they would Now this custome was either an ancient custome of the Iewes who to signifie their deliuerance out of Egypt had deuised this custome at the Passeouer to let a prisoner goe free Or else it was some grant which the Romanes had made vnto the Iewes after they had reduced the Country into the forme of a Prouince 2. The manner of Pilates dealing to accomplish his will in this motion and so he matcheth Christ with one Barrabas that was a murtherer and a notorious malefactor and then giues them power to chuse their prisoner so as they chuse one of the two supposing that the horrible offence of Barrabas would for the very shew of it hinder them from chusing him 3. The choice the Iewes made and so by the perswasion of the Priests the multitude chuseth Barrabas and reiecteth Iesus The author of life is by the Iewes reiected and a murtherer chosen The innocent must die and the guilty liue He that thought it no robbery ●o be equall with God hath a Theefe and a Robber preferred before him Now doth he pay for our sinne that preferred the Deuill that murtherer before God the author of life In these Iewes we see the nature of carnall persons They make more account of grosse offenders than they doe of godly Christians They chuse the Barrabasses of the world Drunkards Papists Whoremongers Swearers Murtherers to be the companions of their liues but altogether shun and auoid the company of Gods seruants But the godly that are so vilified should comfort themselues by this example of our Sauiours suffering herein Christ was not so well accounted of as Barrabas and yet endured it but what cause haue those Christians to be so vnquiet when others are preferred before them that are indeed more wise learned godly humble than they 4. When none of these courses will serue turne then Pilate yet tries one more to see whether he can appease the cruell malice of the Iewes The way he vsed was this He tooke Iesus into the common Hall and caused him there to be extremely scourged and vilified by the souldiers Iohn 19. 1 2 3. thinking that when the Iewes saw him so hardly vsed and abased and that he being a Iew should be so dealt withall by Gentiles they would haue relented and so haue beene satisfied with that punishment was now inflicted vpon him Obserue the implacable malice of men that hate sinceritie and true religion nothing but bloud will satisfie their thirst of reuenge And withall obserue the foolish reasoning of Pilate I finde no fault in this man I will therefore chastise him and let him goe Most senslesly spoken Shall he be chastised and yet be innocent Luk. 23. 14 15 16. But wee must looke higher if we would finde out the true cause of the scourging of Iesus 1. He was scourged that he might redeeme vs from those spirituall and eternall scourges were due vnto vs for our sinnes Amongst the Romans fugitiue seruants were brought backe to their Masters and beaten with rods We haue all beene fugitiue seruants and run away from God our Masters workes Iesus now beares our stripes and giues his owne hands that giue liberty to be bound and his owne bodie to be beaten that he might deriue our stripes vpon himselfe 2. That he might sanctifie those bodily scourges which befall vs such as are diseases of any sort For diseases are called scourges Matth. 5. 29. 3. That by the vertue of his stripes our soules might bee healed of our sinnes 1 Pet. 2. 24. and the sores that arise from the buffets of Sathans temptations 4. That we might learne in patience from his example If we be scourged vniustly either with the scourge of the tongue or of the hand and in particular seruants that are beaten by froward Masters vniustly are exhorted to patience by the force of this ensample 1 Pet. 2. 20 21. Hitherto of the accusation of our Sauiour and the proceedings of the Iudge in his tryall his condemnation followes and there foure things may be noted 1. How our Sauiour was pronounced innocent before sentence 2. Why Pilate would not deliuer him knowing him to be innocent 3. The Sentence it selfe 4. The consequents of the Sentence For the first our Sauiour was declared to be innocent first by Pilates wife and then by Pilate himselfe Concerning Pilates wife it is obserued Matth. 27. 19. That when Pilate was now set on the Iudgement seat shee sent to him saying Haue thou nothing to doe with that iust man for I haue suffered many things this day in a dreame because of him Where we may note diuers things 1.