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A49329 Look unto Jesus, or, An ascent to the Holy Mount to see Jesus Christ in his glory whereby the active and contemplative believer may have the eyes of his understanding more inlightned to behold in some measure the eternity and immutability of the Lord Jesus Christ ... : at the end of the book is an appendix, shewing the certainty of the calling of the Jews / written by Edward Lane. Lane, Edward, 1605-1685. 1663 (1663) Wing L332; ESTC R25446 348,301 421

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and our Vision of him For when we shall see him as he is we shall be like him to the full extent of our susceptibility of his Likeness and the immediate irradiation of his Light and Power shall overshadow us and transform us into the same Image both in soul and body This this I say is the complement of our future happiness the perfection of our eternal glory And this the Apostle clearly testifies concerning our vile bodies that even they shall be made like unto his glorious body Phil. 3 21. Phil. 3.21 From whence we may safely collect that as the Image of Christs body shall possess our bodies so shall the Image of his soul possess our souls and the Image of his spirit our spirits Whereupon it will follow we shall be wholly possessed with his Glory when we shall see him as he is in the Glory of the Father He shall then be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same in himself respecting his Existence which as I have said will infinitely tend to the advancement of the Saints happiness and then also the Same to his Church respecting his Power though in the exercise and administration of it he be not the Same His Power I say both over us and in us Over us he is now as our Head to guide and govern us so he will be then for his Headship over his Church as his preheminence over the creatures he will not relinquish neither will the Father deprive him of it even when God shall be all in all And this I conceive to be undeniable though it may sound strangely unto some for the Humane nature of Christ being eternally united to the Divine it is not to be imagined that as Man he should be in an equality with the Saints but have a superiority over them and to be the Head of that Triumphant Church unto all Eternity without doing any office that belongs unto that Honour is inconsistent with the dignity and wisdome of the Sonne of God If any should now require an account of the particulars wherein Christ will hereafter do the office and exercise the authority of a head over the Church Triumphant in Heaven I must tell them They are to stay for an answer to their too curious question till in Heaven we come to see him as he is for then and not before shall we know even as we are known 1 Cor. 13.12 1 Cor. 13.12 Nevertheless in the generall this we know for the present Jesus Christ shall then be the head of his Church alone without any Power subordinate unto him as now For saith the Apostle All Rule and all Authority and Power both Celestial and Terrestrial shall then be taken away 1 Cor. 15.24 No humane Ordinance or Government of whatsoever Creation it be shall there be of any use no nor the Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though now as some conceive they have divers offices assign'd unto them according to the diversity of their names and titles for the discharge of their Ministery to which they are appointed of God 1 Pet 2.13 for those who shall be heirs of Salvation Hebr. 1.14 yet when all the heirs are settled in their Inheritance they shall then be devested of all their Rule Authority and Power Bruno their very Titles of distinction utterly cancelled and disannulled for to the Angels shall not be put in subjection the world to come and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day Furthermore As a Head he will preserve and uphold all the members of his mysticall Body in their glorious Being for as all things visible and invisible both in Heaven and in Earth were made by him and for him so by him must they consist Col. 1.16.17 Col. 1.16.17 Again As a Head he will keep them in a perfect unity together that they may be one according to the Divine Patterne before them As the Father is in him and he in the Father Joh. 17.21 Joh. 17.21 Lastly As a Head he will shew unto them those glorious Mysteries which for the present are beyond their reach and capacity so as they shall be plain and obvious unto them To which particular Saint Augustine whose judgment in the Interpretation of holy Scripture is worthy of all acceptation beareth his witness whom I find giving the sense of our Saviours words in his Prayer to his Father Joh. 17.26 in this manner Clarificavi illis nomen tuum c. I have Declared unto them thy name that is saith he In this World so far as they are able to receive it And I will Declare it that is saith he In the world to come more perfectly Yea give me leave to add one Meditation more touching this weighty matter which I confess I received long since from a Divine of eminent Note in his writing unto me In Glory saith he The Relation of Head and members between Christ and us shall not cease but shall be rather perfected by the enjoyment of that for which God did appoint it which is the shedding abroad of his love upon those that are made conformable to the Image of his Son Rom. 8.29 For the end and aime which God hath in the decree of Election is to make those whom he did fore-know and predestinate to be conformable to the Image of his Son that he might be the first-born among many Brethren Now when God shall have accomplished this aime and we shall be fully conformable to the Image of his Son then shall we be susceptible of the Love wherewith he loveth his Son as he is Man for the love wherewith he loveth him as God none can partake of but he alone and when by this conformity to his Image we shall be susceptible of this Love then the brother-hood between Christ and us shall not cease or be made void nor shall then his Prerogative of being the first-born among many Brethren be taken from him but it shall rather be most gloriously compleated when not onely the Fathers Love wherewith he loveth the first-born shall be extended to all those that are fully conformable unto his Image but also the Love of the first-born himself shall have its full and glorious Influence upon his younger Brethren By all which it is clear Jesus Christ will be over his Church Triumphant in Heaven as he is now over his Church Militant here on Earth Again As he will be then over us so likewise he will be in us In us he is now by Faith but Faith which gives him entertainment in our hearts and Hope which attends upon him there shall vanish with this Life and expire in their Service as being of no use in Heaven for Faith is of things not seen and therefore ceaseth when vision cometh Hope also if it be seen is not Hope onely Love remaineth to be the constant Bond of an eternal Union betwixt Christ and us and by love it is that he will take Possession of our hearts
and he made it his business to preach the Gospel not where Christ was named Rom. 15.20 24. lest he should build upon another mans foundation So that if one of these Itinerants could run over so great a part of the world we may well suppose that the other twelve might with ease divide the rest of the world among them And now what alas were we mad and desperate Idolaters that God should bring us hitherto That the Lord should say to us who were not his people You are my people and that we should say O Lord thou art our God O what a mercy is it that we the poor and the maimed and the halt and the blinde Mat. 22.9 Luk. 14.21 23. who abode in the streets and lanes of the City yea that we who wandred about in the high-wayes and amongst the hedges should be called to the Wedding-Feast of the King of heaven That unto us who sate in darkness and dwelt in the region and shadow of death Light should spring up Let therefore the name of the Lord be magnified by us poor sinners the Gentiles as the Prophet soretold it should from the rising of the Sun Mal. 1.11 unto the going down of the same And since we are through grace become children of Sion let us take the liberty here to sing one of the Songs of Sion so far as we may be concern'd therein O give Thanks unto the Lord for he is Good For his mercy endureth for ever O give Thanks unto the God of gods For his mercy endureth for ever O give Thanks unto the Lord of lords For his mercy endureth for ever To Him who alone doth great wonders For his mercy endureth for ever Who remembred us in our low estate For his mercy endureth for ever O give Thanks unto the God of heaven For his mercy endureth for ever Let the Redeemed of the Lord among the Gentiles say so whom he hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy and gathered them out of all lands from the East and from the West from the North and from the South not onely to dwell in the house of the Lord here and to see his goodness in the land of the Living but to sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the kingdome of God to all Eternity And let us of this Nation among the rest and above the rest as it is our duty give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name acknowledging his great mercy in that his unchangeable love hath had an extraordinary measure reaching even first unto us Oh how hath the Lord been pleased to send his Gospel upon the wing unto this Nation So wonderfully here prevailing that England hath had this honour in an eminent manner to be the first-born of grace among the Nations Here reigned the first Christian King that ever was in the world King Lucius who submitted to the Law of Christ confirming it by a civil sanction From hence went the first Christian Emperour that put an end to the bloudy persecutions of the primitive Christians Constantine yea and after the general defection from the purity of the faith made by the Romish Church which like the tail of the Dragon threw down to the earth a great part of the Stars of Heaven Here the Reformation of the Christian Religion began first to be established by a Law by the first King that ever cast off the yoke of that Anti-Christian Usurper King Henry the 8. Wherein whether his design was to promote any sinister interest of his own as some imagine or to advance the Kingdom of Christ is not much material for us to know The arme of the Almighty hath hitherto been stretched out for the preservation thereof counter-working all the Machinations of Hell which have been and still are upon the Devil's forge against it Rejoyce therefore in the Lord O England and again I say rejoyce But as it is our bounden duty to ascribe unto the Lord the glory of this mercy and to rejoyce that we are no more strangers and forreiners as the Apostle tells the Ephesians but fellow-citizens with the Saints Eph. 2.19 that is the Jews and of the house-hold of God So we cannot but abhor the treachery of those false brethren among us called Anabaptists who like a brood of Vipers would if it lay in their power but that Gods mercy towards us triumphs over their falsehood disfranchise us of our liberties in the house of our God and rob us of those priviledges wherein the Lord Jesus Christ hath made us free giving us therein equal right with his Israel that was before us because he is still the Same I might instance in sundry of their Anti-Christian tenents tending hereunto But for brevities sake will make mention onely of one that is their Antipaedobaptisme not allowing the Infants of Believers to be admitted into the house-hold of faith by the Sacrament of Baptisme It is not my purpose here to dispute this point at large being out of my way enough hath been written of it already And it hath been found by experience to be a toylsome task to run the wilde-goose chase as a learned divine now with God once phrased it after a well breathed Opinionist they delight in Vitilitigation Mr. Nath. Ward It is an itch as he said that loves a life to be scrubb'd they desire not satisfaction but satisdiction whereof themselves must be judges I shall not therefore say much to this quarelsome people Let them consider how they will answer the Apostle here who avoucheth Jesus Christ to be thee Same to day which he was yesterday Certainly if the infants of the Jews were by virtue of Christs mediatory office to be received into the bosome of the Church and distinguished from those that were without by a Solemn Sacrament of initiation but the infants of Christian parents to whom belongeth the Kingdom of God as as well as to the Jews before must not be allowed to partake of a like priviledge but be reckoned still as dogs as the Scripture calls all that are without Jesus Christ is not the Same according to the Apostles word Neither is his office now of so much use unto his Church as it hath been formerly Of such blasphemy as this not to be mentioned without horrour must this cursed errour be the foundation But let me ask of these deceivers How came it to pass that Christ hath not obtained this priviledge for our Infants as well as he did for the Jews seeing God is not now the God of the Jews onely but of the Gentiles also Surely it must be either because he would not or because he could not To say he would not doth plainly demonstrate his love of us to be less then it was of the Jews which agreeth not with that abundant grace that hath been now revealed in the time of the Gospel To say he could not contradicteth that universal power which the father had given
LOOK UNTO JESUS OR An Ascent to the HOLY MOUNT TO SEE JESUS CHRIST IN HIS GLORY WHEREBY The Active and contemplative Believer may have the Eyes of his Understanding more inlightned to behold in some measure the Eternity and Immutability of the Lord JESUS CHRIST I. In his Divine Generation II. In his Power over the World III. In his Power over his Church in her twofold estate I. MILITANT II. TRIUMPHANT As the List of CONTENTS which followeth next to the PREFACE doth more particularly declare At the end of the Book is an APPENDIX shewing the certainty of the Calling of the JEVVS Written by EDWARD LANE M. A. Vicar of Sparsholt c. in the County of South alias Hamshire London Printed by Thomas Roycroft for the Authour and are to be sold by Humphrey Tuckey at the Black spread-Eagle in Fleet-street and by William Taylor near the Checquer Gate in Winchester 1663. Imprimatur Liber ut eò magis imprimatur JESUS Decemb. 6. 1663. M. FRANCK S. T. P. Reverend in Christo Patr. Dom. Episc Lond. a Sacris Dom. OPTIMO MAXIMO 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DEO DOMINO DOMINI DEI Patris Omnipotentis Filio Unigenito omnisque Creaturae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est Primo-Parienti Primogenito Necnon Inter Deum Homines Mediatori Unissimo Fidelissimo Catholicae etiam Ecclesiae Militantis Triumphantis Capiti unice colendo Ad cujus Nomen supra omne Nomen flectendum est omne Genu Celestium Terrestium ac Subterraneorum Tractatum hunc de Aeternitate Immutabilitate Nominis sui Praestantissimi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 susceptum Protractum Peractum EDOVARDUS LANE in domo ejusdem Domini Servorum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inutilissimus Cum humili Indignationis ob multas Infirmitates Deprecatione ardenti Benedictionis Supplicatione Meritissimo Consecravit Voto Reverendo in Christo Patri ac Domino Domino GEORGIO Episcopo WINTONIENSI Vigilantissimo Aureae Periscelidis Praesuli Clarissimo Domino suo Dioecesano Summopere Observando Incrementum Gratiae apud JESUM CHRISTUM 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perinde ac Honoris apud Homines in Translatione sua ad hanc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Provinciam Bona Fide Toto Corde Precatur EDOVARDUS LANE Annos nunc plus minus 27. Ecclesiae Paroechianae in Villa SPARSHOLT in agro SOUTH Vicarius Quinetiam una cum ABRECH Congratulationis Librum hunc ad Celelebrandum JESU CHRISTI Nomen Honorandum in Saecula Praeparatum eidemque Supremo Nomini Perpetuae Gratitudinis ergo Consecratum Ad Gravem Religiosam ejusdem Reverendi Patris Inspectionem Disquisitionem lubente dicavit Studio JESVS SIT TIBI JESVS A PREFACE To the Pious and Judicious Reader GOOD READER HEre is a Treatise presented to thy view wherein through the guidance of Gods grace and the conduct of his word is attempted an assay to set forth the honour of the great Name of our Lord Jesus Christ and to make his praise glorious A Design doubtless very acceptable to all that are Christians indeed who cannot but rejoyce in any thing that may tend to the Exaltation of our dear Crucified and Glorified Redeemer who is the Rock of Ages the eternal excellency of his Church the joy of all Generations A work it is wherein all the company of Heaven is to be exercised unto all eternity And albeit whatsoever is undertaken by Men or Angels in this kinde will come infinitely short of his Merit yet it is but fit that what any one hath here seen of his glory either in his word or works he be free in the communication thereof Possibly there have been sundry attempts made already of the like nature and such that this may seem to some at first sight to be superfluous However Let not the day of small things be despised by us If some new materials which will endure the searching fire of Gods spirit be here added to the gold and silver which others have before built upon this foundation there can be no just offence taken thereat Sure I am they will not be disallowed by the Master of the house and therefore ought not to be rejected by those that are employed and salaryed by him to be Co-workers with me in the building It was not God knoweth any vain ambition or self-seeking that did first put me the meanest of the Lords Servants upon this work which is indeed Opus Dei the work of God neither is it any such sinister aim that makes me rush upon the censure of the judicious in the enlargement and compleating of it Onely if Jesus Christ may hereby be magnifyed and his Church edifyed I have my desire and it shall be the Crown of my rejoycing I confess notwithstanding there was an occasion offered that did first induce me to this Undertaking and it will not be amiss here to make a short mention of it Thus it was In the heat of the late Schisme it fell to my lot to preach a Sermon in the Cathedral Church at Winton upon the 26 day of December wherein because I said An Dom. 1654 I would not judge those people in the liberty of their Consciences who did observe the Feast of our Saviours Nativity to the Lord though withall I then * Which is here also inserted in its proper place spake severely against the prophane abuse of it I was accounted a superstitious person and a malignant such was the discriminating terme that was then used and reported far and near that I had done more hurt by that one Sermon then other Ministers that were employed in that Lecture could be able to repair again by many Which reproachful slander was so great a trouble unto me though I was then justifyed by Persons of very good quality that were both wise and godly that I was often minded being perswaded by those persons and sundry others that heard of it to publish in print the Sermon that I then preached to the end the World might see how causelesly I was traduced I did nevertheless forbear the said publication not out of fear of the persecutions of those evil dayes for I did my self observe that Anniversary Festivity in my own Parish preaching and administring the Sacrament of the Lords supper when very few durst adventure to do the like But having begun upon this occasion to prepare it for the Press and finding in the pursuance of it my Meditations enlarged to other matter then I at first delivered I slighted the Calumny wherewith I was asperst as not worthy to be so much heeded and breaking through many difficulties and hinderances have by degrees extended that very Sermon to this length which is now before you The greatest part whereof I have for some years kept by me without further additions but of late I must confess I was as the Apostle if I may so say pressed in spirit to finish what had begun and to publish the whole
time of the Old Testament with all the legal Ordinances attending upon it is a day that is set and expired being yesterday and therefore not to be brought into our account neither are we to walk in the light of it p. 118. Proved by sundry instances ibid. Whereupon followeth The conviction of those who in this day will grope after the obscure light of yesterday these are First the Jews p. 121. Secondly they that seek to be justified by the works of the law p. 126. Thirdly the Papists p. 128. Fourthly they that now-a-days pretend to Oracles and wait for Miracles p. 129. Where is to be seen What we are to judge of the pretended Visions and Revelations of these times ibid. And what Miracles are now to be regarded in the time of the Gospel p. 132. A second Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ was the Saviour of his Church in the time of the Old Testament even as n●w in the time of the New p. 134. Proved ibid. A Question resolved How Christ could be a Saviour before he was in a capacity to suffer death by taking our nature upon him for the expiation of sin p. 135. Jesus Christ was a Prophet from the beginning p. 136. Jesus Christ was a King from the beginning p. 138. Jesus Christ was a Priest from the beginning p. 149. A difference observed in respect of the dispensation and manifestation of Christ to the Fathers and us p. 155. Examples of sundry of the Fathers believing in Christ Adam Abraham Job Daniel c. p. 156. Moses's intercourse with Jesus Christ upon the Mount p. 159. Whereupon followeth 1. An exhortation to the Jews to look unto Jesus p. 164. 2. A warning to take heed of despising the ages before us p 166. 3. Our religion proved to be the onely true Religion p. 169. 4. The Limbus Patrum of the Church of Rome proved to be an absurd forgery p. 170. 5. To hold that the object of the faith of the Patriarchs of old was not Jesus Christ is a gross errour p. 175. 6. And as gross is it to maintain that we are not now justified by the Object but by the Act of Faith p. 176. Of the second course or computation of time viz. To day Wherein first this Doctrine is propounded viz. The time of the Gospel is a time of light p. 180. It is a true light p. 181. It is a great light ibid. It is a marvellous light ibid. It is an invincible light p. 182. Whereupon follow The duties of those who are the children of this day 1. To rejoyce and be glad in it p. 184. An Objection But this day is a day of trouble of rebuke and blasphemy p. 186. Answered ibid. 2. To let the light of this day shine in upon their souls p. 188. A Question put viz. What is this light p. 189. Answered 1. It is the light of Life ibid. 2. It is the light of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ p. 190. 3. It is the light of the knowledge of the glory of God ibid. 3. To walk in this light p. 191. A two-fold walk 1. Walk in the Commandments of the Lord ibid. Motives hereunto 1. It is the great design of Almighty God this day to save his people from their sins p. 192. 2. We are to walk worthy of our calling p. 194. 3. Consider the length of our way p. 195. 4. This day will have an end p. 196. 2. Walk in the Ordinances of the Lord p. 199. Let then the world be awakened that lyeth asleep in the darkness of sin and ignorance p. 202. Let the Ignorant be roused p. 202. Let the profance be alarum'd p. 203. A Question put viz. How cometh it to passe that wo and misery falls so inevitably upon profane people this day p. 207. Answered 1. The sin of such persons is found out by the light of this day ibid. 2. Their sin doth finde out them p. 208. Application p. 209. Another Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ is the Same to his Church now in the time of the Gospel which he was before under the Law p. 212. Proved by Scripture p. 213. An Objection But we see there is a change to day from what was yesterday in the form of Divine worship How then can Jesus Christ be the Same p. 215. Answered ibid. Inferences thereupon First the Imputations of Novelty upon those Churches which adhere to this foundation charged on them by the Church of Rome cannot be just p. 217. The said Imputations justly retoried upon the Romish Church ibid. Secondly an Exhortation to let the same minde be in us which was in Christ Jesus that is to be the Same in things pertaining to God p. 220. An Application hereof to us of this nation with a free and plain discovery of our late inconstancy p. 222. An Objection Shall we then be the Same which we have been in profaneness and superstition p. 227. Answer God forbid ibid. 1. The bad Old Cause did not preserve us from either p. 228. 2. The League and Covenant though contrived to strengthen the said Cause yet as it was illegal in it self so was it treacherously carried on p. 229. It is objected But is there not a return to Superstition when the Lyturgie Ceremonies and Episcopacy are restored p. 233. It is answered ibid. Where 1. The Lyturgie and Ceremonies are vindicated p. 234. Particularly 1. Our bowing at the name of Jesus p. 235. 2. Our bowing at our entrance into and departure from the Congregation p. 236. 3. Our Lyturgie and Ceremonies are acknowledged to be a will-worship which is plainly manifested to be in some respects lawful p. 238. But that they are extracted from Romish Missals is a slanderous untruth p. 242. 2. Episcopacy is clearly proved by the Scripture to be of Divine Right Sensu Primario p. 248. An Exhortation to the Jews p. 262. Matter of rejoycing to the Gentiles p. 268. An Application hereof to our own Nation p. 270. A serious Expostulation with Anabaptists ibid. Of the third course or computation of Time viz. For ever p. 273. A Doctrine propounded In the midst of the various changes and chances that may come upon the Church to the end of the world Jesus Christ will be unto it still the Same Ibid. Proved by Scripture p 274. Inferences from hence 1. Assurance may be had of the Churches perpetuity p. 275. 2. A remedy to cure the sad distempers of our Church about Order and Church-Government p. 276. 3. An Exhortation and Christian Advice given to those who pretend they cannot for conscience sake submit to Church-Government by Bishops p. 277. 4. Comfort to all who live goldy in Christ Jesus both in respect of themselves and their posterity p. 281. Another Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ will be the Same unto his Church in her Triumphant and Glorious estate in heaven unto all Eternity p. 282. Wherein first The full sense is given of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 283. Secondly how
the Same Yesterday to Day and for ever Fourthly We may upon the Consideration of this Doctrine see how absurd and foolish that Dream is of a certain Vbi a Place of confinement for the Souls of the Faithful who lived and died Yesterday in that long tract of time under the Law and before it which place is by the Papists called Limbus Patrum for in regard the work of Redemption was not fully accomplished by Jesus Christ till he had suffered Death upon the Cross therefore say they all those Patriarchs and Prophets and Holy men of old from the beginning of the World unto that time could not enter into Heaven but were shut up in some lower parts of the Earth bordering upon Purgatory which say they is next door to Hell For saith Bishop Mountague as if some of their Masters had been soon sent thither to take a survey thereof they do quarter out that infernal Clime into four Regions And this place amongst the rest which they have assigned unto the Fathers they determine to be the uppermost Fringe as the Word Limbus signifies or the verge of Hell It is not my purpose to descend so low as to examine the particulars of this their Subterraneous Chorography I believe the Vanity thereof is Visible enough to all that have not their Eyes put out with the smoke of Purgatory Rather let the strength of our present Doctrine be set in opposition to this fond dream of that false and Apostatical Church of Rome which hath obtruded many such like idle Fopperies upon those poor people that are bewitched with her Sorceries and then let all mankinde judge which is the Truth True it is Bishop Mountague of Nor. they make much boast of Antiquity in the upholding of this their fabulous Limbo though as learned an Antiquary as any possiby that ever was in their Conclave affirmeth that Antiquity will not own it Nevertheless if it should it shall be of no Value with us if it clash with the Divine Oracles of the Holy Scriptures They tell us that the Souls of the godly are in the bundle of Life with the Lord their God 1 Sam. 25.29 1 Sam. 25.29 Ec. 12.7 And that the spirit returns unto God that gave it Ec. 12.7 That the Soul of Lazarus was carried by the Angels who always behold the face of God in Heaven Mat. 18.11 into Abrahams Bosome Luk. 16. Luk. 16.22 And therefore it is well observed against the Rhemists upon that place that Limbo being supposed to be under the Earth and Lazarus's Soul from Earth was carried upwards If he went to Limbo the Angels were not well acquainted with the Way in that they carry him above the Earth when they ought to have carried him to a place underneath the Earth Add hereunto what a world of Absurd ities would follow if this Pepish devise should pass for currant Act. 15.11 How could Saint Peter say Act. 15. We believe that through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved even as they Luk. 20.38 How could the Patriarchs be said to live with God if they were banished out of his Sight Luk. 20. And if this Limbo be the Brim or Hem of the damned places how is it said that the Glutton in Hell saw Abraham afar off with Lazarus in his Bosome and that there was a great Gulfe and Distance between the Damned's place and that wherein Lazarus abode As for Abraham it may be collected clearly from Heb. 11.9.10 that he immediately after Death was received up into Heaven Heb. 11 9.10 according to his expectation Contented he was with his flitting Tabernacles while he continued as a Sojourner here in this Life because there was a City to come after this Life that would be firm and steddy wherein he looked to be admitted and which should make full amends for all his wearisome Peregrinations Where we may see that that City having Foundations which the Holy Patriarch by Faith expected is by an Antithesis set ad oppositum to those Tabernacles which he formerly lived in with Isaac and Jacob whereby is intimated that he was not received into any other building after his death then that which is permanent Into which City he being received it must necessarily follow that all the faithful people of God who were transported by Angels into his Bosome as Lazarus was were there received and entertained likewise Moreover because this Parable is much perverted by the Papists to their sinister sense when Abraham opposeth Lazarus's Comfort to the Glutton's Torment it is evident that he being in infinite Torment the other was in infinite Joy which because it cannot be but in Heaven A term appropriated by the Holy Ghost to the Ages of the Church before Christ But not fit to be used now in the time of the Gospel Gerard. Rom. 5.15 as in the Lord's Presence-Chamber it followeth that the † Bosome of Abraham is the Rest that his faithful and right begotten Children have in Heaven In fine That which chiefly I have to say against this absurd errour is this viz. That it derogateth from the Merits of Jesus Christ making him not to be of yesterday and his death to be effectual onely à parte post to those that come after him An Opinion therefore to be Anathematized by all the Churches of the Saint yea further the Sin of Adam is by this means contrary to the Doctrine of the Apostle Rom. 5.15 made more powerful to Condemnation then Christ's Righteousness can be unto Salvation for the Sin of Adam casteth his Wicked and Unbelieving Posterity into Hell immediately after Death whereas by their Doctrine the Communication of Christ's Righteousness with them that believed in him could not immediately after Death lift them up into the Kingdom of Heaven How this can stand with Christ's honour or how it agreeth with the aforesaid Scripture let the Jesuites themselves tell us if they can Objection Well but yet the Scripture notwithstanding they affirm will bear them out in this their opinion for saith the Apostle Heb. 9.8 The way into the Holiest of all was not made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Heb. 9.8 Upon which place these Limbonians do much harpe for the maintenance of their foolish errour collecting as they think very strenuously that the way to Heaven was not open before Christ's Passion and therefore the Patriarchs and good men of old must needs have some other place of rest assigned unto them for their abode until that time Solution A short Answer to a vain Cavil may suffice briefly then let it be observed The Apostle saith not the way to Heaven was shut up while the first Tabernacle was standing but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was not yet clearly manifested Whereby he gives us to understand that the people of God under the Old Testament knew the way to Heaven but darkly viz. through the vail of Types But withall that they knew there was
compleating of his most glorious design in this day of his power he will most certainly get himself a name in casting it down and having commanded his Light to shine out of Darkness Joh. 1.5 though the darkness of mens hearts will not receive it yet his Commandment still continueth in force and his word runneth very swiftly In a word true and great and marvellous and invincible is the light of this day concerning which much might be spoken from the predictions of the Prophets who prophecyed of this day and much might be added from the triumphant exultations of the Apostles whose eyes were first opened to see the light of this day but there is no need to undertake any further the clearing of the truth of this point for the day it self doth declare it the Sun which is the light and life of this day being not onely risen but ascended and not onely risen and ascended but fixed in his Meridian never more to descend till time be no more Nescit occasum Let us therefore now come to improve it by some close Applications unto us all whose lot it is to live under this Light First Seeing that this time of the Gospel is such a Lightsome day we then that are the Children of the day are to take notice of those Duties which the day requireth of us First whereof is that we rejoyce and be glad in it Truely Light is sweet saith Solomon and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the Sun Eccles 11.7 1. Duty Ec. 11.7 How sweet then and pleasant a thing is it to behold the light of this day wherein the Glory of the Lord is risen upon the Church Es 60.1 as the Prophet foretold it should Es 60.1 That glory which since the beginning of the world was out of the reach and apprehension of any Creature which yet notwithstanding was earnestly longed for by the Holy and faithful Servants of God of old How happy would Abraham Isaac Jacob Moses David Hezekiah Josiah Esaiah Jeremiah Ezekiel Daniel c. have accounted themselves to have seen that Glory which is now revealed How full of joy would they have been in the light of this day wherein with open face we behold as in a Mirroir the Glory of the Lord saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. 2 Cor. 3.18 Nay wherein all flesh seeth the Salvation of God wherein the Word of God comes with power and evidence and Demonstration wherein the Spirit is shed forth abundantly in the hearts of Believers wherein knowledg covereth the earth even as the waters covers the seas so that God's people now need teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother the sense and meaning of the Shadows and Ceremonies of old saying Jer. 31.34 Know the Lord the Lord whom these things do typifie and so far as such carnal Ordinances are able make known unto you for now is fulfilled that which then the Lord promised saying they shall all know me from the least of them to the Greatest of them The whole Mystery of Godliness is now clearly revealed in so much that they who are endued with the Spirit of God know all things yea 1 Job 2.20 Act. 2.17 even Children and Handmaidens people of all sorts and Sexes understand more fully the Doctrine of Salvation then the Prophets and great Rabbies of old could be able to reach into And therefore it is worth our considering how emphatically the Spirit of God in scripture doth found out this word now in reference to the great glory of this day of the Gospel to that very end that all who are I say Children of the Day may see the Light and rejoyce in it Observe some instances Behold now is the accepted time now is the day of Salvation 2 Cor. 6.2 Now is manifested the Righteousness of God Rom. 3.22 2 Cor. 6 2. Rom. 3.22 Eph 3.10 Eph. 3.5 Col. 1.26 1 Joh. 2.8 Now is made known the manifold Wisdom of God Eph. 3.10 The Mystery which was hidden from Ages and Generations is now revealed Eph. 3.5 Col. 1.26 The Darkness is past the true Light now shineth 1 Joh. 2.8 Now Now Now implying that now and never before the dawning of this day there was a light in the world to be reckoned of the highest value O blessed and happy Day And for ever and ever blessed be that good Providence of Heaven that hath brought us to see the Light of this Day making it unto us a good Day A Day of good tidings A day of Reconciliation with the God of Heaven A Day of joy and gladness Let us therefore I say again and again rejoyce and be glad in it Let the Children of the World glory some in their carnal wisdom some in their strength some in their riches But let us glory in this that we underl and and know the Lord. Now in this serene and joyful day of his gracious visitation did Abraham with great pleasure and rapture of spirit rejoyce to see this day afar off and shall not we now rejoyce when it is at hand yea when it comes upon us and the Light of it shineth round about us Surely we are not Abrahams Children unless we do the works of Abraham and if herein we do not rejoyce we are not of the Faith of Abraham and consequently shall not be blessed with him Objection But alas you 'll say this day is a day of trouble of rebuke and blasphemy of trouble to the Churches of Christ throughout the world of rebuke for God is angry with the world for sin of Blasphemy the Provocations wherewith God is provoked every day being very great reaching up into Heaven And should we now rejoyce Answer I Answer It is indeed a day of trouble to the people of God and possibly if they had rejoyced more for the consolation which their eyes have seen they had not seen so much trouble upon them as they do this day But nevertheless albeit there be so great and sore afflictions lying upon the Churches which all the Children of the Day must be sensible of yet in the midst of all this sorrow there is cause of rejoycing for why it is not a Night of trouble wherein no succour or comfort can be found but the Light of the Lord so shineth out before his people that they may plainly see his good works which with an out-stretched arme he hath wrought and still doth for their deliverance Ps 112.4 Vnto the Righteous saith the Psalmist Ps 112.4 Ariseth Light in Darkness that is in the darkest times of trouble then hath their light of comfort been wont to arise most And therefore though in some respect the day be somewhat cloudy yet it is not a Dismal Day though the Affliction be great yet the consolations of God are not so small with us but we may glorifie God in this day and rejoyce before him True you 'll say But alas we remember
God and are troubled for his Anger we see is enkindled it smoketh against the sheep of his Pasture By terrible things in Righteousness doth God answer his People now in this day when they call upon him chiding and chastning them very sore should we then make mirth I Answer far be it from us when the Lord God of Hostes calls to Weeping and Mourning c. that we should be of that cross grain'd disposition as to thwart the sad Dispensations of his Providence by giving up our selves to any vain and carnall Delights and when his hand is lifted up to correct and punish that then we should wilfully shut our eyes refusing to see that I say be far from us But I beseech you though this be a day of rebuke Is it not a time also of Love Nay when with rebukes the Lord doth correct his people is there not both love and faithfulness to be found in the bottom of those rebukes which makes them very sweet unto the soul of a Believer Besides can we not distinguish between the sorrowful dispensations of Providence whensoever they come upon us and the glorious dispensations of grace If the former be matter of sorrow the latter are of joy Rejoyce therefore in the Lord alwayes and again I say rejoyce Oh but it is a day of blasphemy And who that hath a tender regard to God's glory and the Churches Welfare can chuse but sigh and mourn to see and hear the Abominations that are so frequent this day How alas doth errour and heresie justle with divine truth Yea trample it under their feet And that which encreaseth the sorrow people that profess godliness love to have it so Some make a mock at Sin That which should be the terrour and amazement of the soul as being most of all contrary to God and a worse enemie to the whole creation then all the devils in Hell Fooles at this day do play and dally with it Others make a mock at Holiness Pro. 14.9 either by a profane Diabolical derision of it or els by a false Pharisaical Profession of it thereby to palliate their abominable wickedness Here are some jesting pleasantly with their Maker as he did who would needs drink a Health to his Patron blasphemously calling him his Maker There others sporting themselves with the Holy Scriptures exercising their scurrilous Wits upon those sacred Oracles whereat they should rather tremble and which the glorious Angels do stoope down to adore Alas alas is not the Air polluted with most execrable Hell-invented oaths and that Vnmanly vice of Drunkenness as our late King of never-dying Memory according to the excellent Wisdom given unto him in a Speech of his at Oxford most properly termed it grown Impudent notwithstanding all the good laws in force against it And such Brothelry commonly belched out by a Brutish Generation who yet live under the light of this day that the very Heathens would abhor it And is this a time then thinke you to Rejoyce I Answer For these things indeed let us be humbled and walk mournfully before the Lord let horrour feise upon us as it was with the Holy Prophet Ps 119.53 Ps 119.136 because of the wicked that forsake the law of the Lord Yea let us as he did for these things even swim in tears Ps 119 136. But we must know that this kinde of sorrow and humiliation is to be manifested in denying our selves that natural and lawful joy and liberty we may take sometimes in the free use of the Creatures not at all in quenching our spiritual joy We rejoyce not in iniquity but we rejoyce in the truth this joy no man nor no Devil should take from us because God hath called us to it and calleth upon us for it All this therefore hindereth not but that we may and ought to rejoyce in the Light of this day though there be much affliction upon the Church rebuke from God iniquity and blasphemy among men to be seen in it Secondly 2 Duty suffer the Light of this day to shine in upon your soules that the beams thereof may have their free and clear penetration into every corner of your inner man If ye be Children of light and Children of the day sprung from the womb of the morning you will be still craving after light ambitious of a Conformity to the nobleness of your extraction yea light is your proper element and the more you are swallowed up in it the more comfortable shall your life be unto you Mis-mean me not I exhort you not now to stand gazing after a Light that is too high for your reach or to break through God's pavilion to that light that is inaccessible There is a knowledge too wonderful for poor man which while he is cloathed with mortality yea and in some respect when his mortality hath put on immortality He shall never be able to attain unto Neither do I call upon you to look after those new lights which the varity and darkness of these times do so much cry up and extol for sure I am that which is new in point of Salvation cannot be true A position though much disliked by some giddy heads may well be maintained against Men and Angels Yea whatsoever may be obtruded upon you as a fundamental Light that shall appear in this Noontide of the Gospel to be of so narrow an extent that it hath not or cannot overspread the whole Hemisphere of the Church is most certainly counterfeit a prodigious comet portending some strong delusions rather then a true fixed light derived from the fountain of light For saith Christ himself Luk. 17.24 As the lightning that lightneth from one part under Heaven shineth to the other part under heaven so also is the Son of man in his day Not onely in the great day of his glorious appearance but even in this his day He is not concluded within the narrow confines of Africa as the Donatists of old would have him Nor in the conclave at Rome as the Papists at this day foolishly imagine Nor in the Desart that is in the separation amongst those that now-a-days forsake the Assemblies Nor in their secret Chambers that is in the Conventicles of Schismaticks But his going forth is from the end of Heaven and his circuit unto the ends of it his Church hath infallibly universally been inlightned by him with that knowledge that is necessary to Salvation unto which whosoever shall add is a Deceiver and to be anathematized by all the Churches of Christ Putting away therefore these vanities Let your soules give entertainment to that Light which this Day presenteth unto you And so much the rather because the Prince of darkness hath raised up many foggie noisome palpable mists to obscure this light with which mists the eyes of a multitude of people pretending to Holiness are miserably blinded And now if it be demanded what this light is I Answer First It is the light of Life not a
inventions worthy of no value We deny not but where Antiquity is found in a way of Righteousness it is indeed a Crown of Glory among the Churches of Christ But being found in a way of Errour wandring from the righteous rule of the written word and laying inconstancy upon Jesus Christ who is this way of Righteousness as if he were not the same still in his Doctrine which he hath delivered to his Church it is fit to be despised We must here now look to be told that the written word is not the onely rule but that there are many other unwritten verities to which we are likewise bound to give heed as well as to that which is written Sess 4. Decreto de Can. Script Yea and the Council of Trent hath thundred out their Anathema against those who refuse Traditions for the rule of faith as well as against those that refuse the written word But may it not then be demanded if it be so where can faith finde a sure foundation to fix upon that which is unwritten being very uncertain whether it be from Heaven or of men If the written word be but a part of Gods revealed will and these unwritten verities as they are called the other part never can there be assurance given to any of the whole Mystery of Salvation neither can the Church know it aright in the whole series of it was God hath revealed it For when some affirm a Tradition to be Apostolical which others of as great account disdainfully reject for a spurious super-inducement and forgery thrust upon the Churches in after-times which dissenting in this case hath frequently come to pass even in the Primitive Dayes of the Gospel what a miserable maze is the faith of a believer brought into Will not our confidences be much weakned in our spiritual conflicts and our hopes of gaining Converts to our Christian Profession from among those that are without if they should make this objection unto us be utterly choaked and our endeavours in that kinde frustrated and come to nothing To let pass the great multitude of these Traditions the number of them being never yet determined whereby they must needs become a great yoke and burthen to the Church of Christ 1 Tim. 3.15 If that which is written be sufficient to make a man wise unto salvation surely that which is unwritten is not absolutely necessary to be heeded by us It is not to be denied but that the Church hath Power to appoint some certain Canons and Rules for the observation of Publick order and decency unto which so long as they are inoffensive in their own nature they that are true Children of the Church will give a ready and a chearful obedience yea we do confess that in things indifferent a respect ought to be yielded to Antiquity and to their Traditions But if an Angel from Heaven should come and tell us that all those things which are simply necessary to Salvation are not to be found in the Holy Scriptures we must hold him accursed Yet Bellarmine saith Nos asserimus in Scripturis non contineri expresse totam Doctrinam necessariam sive de fide sive de moribus Lib. 4. de verbo non scripto Ca. 3. Sect. 1. We further do willingly grant that the Lord Jesus Christ and his Apostles preached many things that were never written And what they so preached ought to be of equal Authority with us as that which is written Pari veneratione pari pietatis affictu the very words of the Council of Trent not to be disliked with as much Piety and Veneration to be received by us as the Books of Holy Scriptures if they were as certainly known But it is a strange and strong delusion which we hope shall never seise upon us to believe that they preached doctrines which are a directly contrary to what is written in the said Books as light is unto darkness Holy and Faithful Master Deering in his Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews expostulates this case sadly in these words Is it the word of Christ written that we should not worship Angels And is it his Word unwritten that we should pray unto them Is it his Word written that we should not be bound to our Fore-Fathers Traditions And is it his Word unwritten that our Fathers Traditions should be to us as his Gospel Is it his word written that to forbid marriage which is honourable in all estates is the Doctrine of Devils And is it his Word unwritten that Ministers should be forbidden to marry Is it his Word written that five words in a known Tongue are better in the Congregation then five thousand in a strange Language And is it his Word unwritten that in our Congregations we should pray in a Language which the people understand not Is it his Word written that the dead are blessed which die in the Lord and they rest from their labours And is it his Word unwritten that they are tormented in the fire of Purgatory In short Is it his Word written that his Ministers should be subject to Kings should attend upon their flock and not meddle more then needs must with the affairs of this World And is it his Word unwritten that the Pope shall exercise Authority over Temporal powers depose Kings at his pleasure and that his Inferiours of the Conclave should be secular Princes Hath God written it that Christ sacrificed himself once for all and made a perfect Redemption And hath he left it unwritten that a shaven Priest must sacrifice him every day and say a Mass Propitiatory for the quick and dead What perversness is this of men of Corrupt minds thus to dream of Traditions contrary to the written Word of God And what an intolerable indignity do they put upon Christ to make him thus palpably contradict himself as if he had forgotten to be still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Same But full well did Esaias prophecy of these men Es 29.13 saying This people draweth neare unto me with their mouth and honour me with their lips but their heart is far from me But in vain do they worship me teaching for Doctrines the Commandments of men Mat. 15.8 But leaving these to their uncertain Traditions and their most certain innovations Let us look home to our selves and hearken to the Apostles advice which he giveth Phil. 2.5 viz. Phil. 2.5 To let the same minde be in us which was in Christ Jesus for he hath set us an example that we should herein also follow his steps even to be constantly the same in those things that belong to the Kingdom of God Not that we should stand at a stay and make no further progress in Knowledge Holiness Zeal for God's glory Brotherly-love self-denial Contempt of the world c. then we have already attained Rather let yesterdayes work in that sence be forgotten by us Phil. 3.13 and let us reach forth as Saint Paul said he himself
we have been such strangers unto it by giving entertainment to Errour in the most ugly appearances thereof that we might well have asked as he did what is Truth True it is there was a certain Covenant made whether according to truth and righteousness somewhat may be said hereafter but made I say for the extirpation of Heresie and Errour c. But it is as true which was once freely spoken at a Monethly-fast in Saint Margarets Westminster If we had sworn to the utmost of our power to have advanced Errour and Heresy Feb. 24. 1646. they could not well have grown and encreased more then they did when we swore against them There was a time also when we took sweet Counsel together under the peaceful Government of a Religious King and the vigilant inspection of Grave and Orthodox Bishops walking to the house of God in company where we had full Congregations the office of the Ministery Honoured the Word faithfully preached Sacraments duely administred c. And have not Sacraments of late been laid aside as useless and unnecessary The Ministery cryed down as AntiChristian Congregations scattered Churches put to profane and sordid uses to the shame of Religion and the scorn of our Adversaries round about us The Word indeed was preached and we do with all due thankfulness acknowledge it to God's glory for though some did preach Christ of envy and contention not sincerely yet some did it of good will and therefore seeing Christ was preached whether in pretence or in Truth Phil. 1.18 therein with St. Paul we did rejoyce yea and will rejoyce Notwithstanding it was both our sin and our shame that that Holy and Divine Ordinance was I say not with impunity but with publick approbation so much profaned when the pulpit was too often made a Tub for Mechanick praters to pour out their Blasphemies or turned into a Theatre by others to promote carnal interests and to strengthen the Schisme that was the set up And if any honest Orthodox Ministers durst be so bold according to their commission given them of Christ to manifest their zeal in preaching against these impostours and their abettours as some there were who could not forbear It was not their Gravity Learning Piety Fidelity to their Countrey nor ability to promote the glory of the Gospel that could be a sufficient safeguard unto them But they must be branded with the odious mark of Malignancy and even in the very execution of their office affronted interrupted contradicted yea sometimes laughed to scorn I instance not in particular persons His Majesties gracious Act of indulgence forbidding it But hence it was that many faithful Ministers were so much despised throughout the Nation sometimes called Legalists otherwhiles Formalists yea reviled with the most opprobrious terms that Malice it self could invent To some they were too plain to others they were too eloquent one while tax'd for not preaching Christ another while for not holding forth the Doctrine of Free-grace But if in their Sermons they happened to make mention of those Holy Antients whom the Church hath honoured with the Name of Fathers they were presently by some temerarious Head or other censured for Bablers or at the best but low-spirited Men that would be padling in the shallows of Antiquity not fit forsooth to be named with the profound knowledge of these dayes So imperious were people grown in their superintendency over their Teachers yea though they were illiterate Mechanicks yet being the Darlings of the Schisme they would presume as being allowed to be Dictatours to the most grave and learned Ministers that were not of their Faction not considering what the Apostle saith that The spirits of the prophets are subject to the Prophets implying doubtless that it is the Ecclesiastical Senate that should take cognisance of Preachers Doctrines so as to regulate whatsoever may be found amiss in them not the Company of spear-men or calves of the people as the Prophet calleth the rude malitude But such was the impiety of those times that the poor Ministers of Christ though by the Holy Ghost accounted the Prime Masters of the Assemblies did commonly stand in their Pulpits like Prisoners at the Bar when their Hearers Ec. 12.11 how ignorant soever sat like so many Judges round about them Again As preaching was prophaned so in like manner was prayer too much perverted and depraved Whereas in our approaches to God we were wont to fall down upon our knees adoring the Divine Majesty with the humbling of our bodies to the very dust according to the religious example of the devout servants of God in Scripture Luk. 22.41 Mar. 14.35 Mat. 26.39 yea of the Son of God himself of whom Saint Luke saith that He kneeled and prayed Saint Mark that he fell to the ground and prayed Saint Matthew that he fell upon his face and prayed What an Unreverend insolency hath the late times produced when this humble gesture was in many places wholly neglected as being forsooth below the Saintship of our Upstart Reformers who possibly might pretend to have more familiaritie with the God of Heaven then those could be allowed to have that had been before them And therefore they might now serve him without fear though the truth is they did it not in righteousness nor true holiness Was not the spiritualness of prayer confined to the suddenness of conception and volubility of utterance qualities not incompossible with a spirit of opposition to all that is good and holy which also were accompanied too frequently it is to be feared with a vain ostentation of mens abilities for invention and with such expressions many times that no honest heart God knoweth could say Amen unto them When a Set-form though compiled according to the warrant and pattern that Christ hath given us and used with a pious and sincere devotion was contrary to the rules of Christian Charity contrary to the judgement of the best Divines both Antient and Modern forein and domestick yea contrary to the general practice of the Reformed Churches condemned and rejected as unsutable to the spirit of Adoption and unacceptable to the God of Heaven as if the Almighty were more to be taken with the variety of words then with the groans of the spirit which may assoon ascend up into his ears in the Religious use of a form as in the uttering of the best conceived prayer in the World But it is no marvel that set-forms of prayer were so much decryed when the Lords prayer it self was sleighted yea so despised that if according to the good antient Custome among us prayers were concluded with a rehearsal of it Such was the horrible profaness of some who yet pretended to a Seraphical strain of Holiness above others that they would thereupon most unreverendly in the face of the Congregation put their hats on their heads that they might thereby throw contempt upon that prayer and those that used it Which disdainful posture if they did
unto him in heaven and in Earth The exercise of which power he would first have to be manifested in discipling whole Nations of the Gentiles Matt. 28.18 19. receiving them into Covenant by the Sacrament of Baptisme as the Jews were by the Sacrament of Circumcision Where the word Nation in order to the Gentiles must without controversie be taken in the same sense as it was with a reference unto the Jews for as the Nation of the Jews was made up of all sorts and sexes old and young so in like manner are the Nations of the Gentiles And because his commission which he then gave unto his Apostles was not formed according to the erroneous fancy of these deluded people who in effect render it thus Go and Disciple all men But thus Go and Disciple all Nations baptising them in the name c. And Children being a part of the Nations we may conclude without any hesitancy that the intent and purpose of the Lord in this commission to his Apostles was that they should wheresoever they came baptise the Children as well as the Parents And seeing he came to break down the wall of partition that was between Jews and Gentiles which was actually done in the execution of this Commission It is not to be imagined that he would by it set up a partition-wall between Parents and their Children so as that they should be at as great a distance the one from the other in point of eternal Salvation as Heaven is from Hell A thing he never did in all the Ages before and undoubtedly whatsoever these Dreamers may blasphemously prate against him He hath not done it now because he is still the Same I will not dwell any longer upon the Conviction of these obstinate people least the more reason be shewed unto them out of the Scripture to lead them into the way of truth they be thereby according to their usual wont the more hardened in their errour The Lord open their eyes that they may see betimes what dishonour they bring unto Jesus Christ in the diminution of his power by their frantick Opinions What disturbance they create unto his Church and consequently what hazard they run notwithstanding their conceited assurance of their own everlasting Salvation We have now done with this second particular viz. Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Same to day which he was yesterday that is The Same to his Church in the time of the gospel which he was in the time both before and under the Law CHAP. III. Sheweth how JESUS CHRIST shall continue to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same for ever Vnto his Church WE should now according to our prescribed method come to speak of the third course or computation of time here mentioned in the Text and of that which is predicated of it viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesus Christ the Same or the onely He for ever But to avoid Prolixity which hath already spun out the former parts into a greater length then was intended we shall not distinguish this into several propositions as hath been done with those before Neither indeed can we be able to speak of what shall come upon the Church in the continuation of this day of the Gospel to the end of the world Onely this we can say because the Holy Ghost witnesseth it That persecutions and Afflictions do abide it but withall that Jesus Christ will be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto it which he ever hath been Hereupon therefore shall we fix the short remainder of our discourse deriving some inferences from it for the further edification of those that take pleasure in beholding the immutability of the Lord Jesus Observe then In the midst of all the various changes and chances that may come upon the Church to the end of the world Jesus Christ will be unto it still The Same No variableness nor shadow of turning shall ever be found in him either in his Mediation with the Father or in the dispensation of his power among his people But he will be Semper idem Alwayes the Same Now herein we can but speak of the exercise of Christs Mediatory office as we have already done and therefore it will be needless to spend many words about it As he began so he will continue to be the Prophet Priest and King of his Church The same word of truth which he hath revealed he will still continue no addition unto it or diminution from it will he ever suffer his Gospel is an everlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 1 Pet. 1.25 His word abideth for ever And if an Angel from Heaven should come and preach any other we must therefore much more will he ho'd him accursed Gal. 1.8 He is a Priest for ever according to the oath of God not to be retracted saith the Prophet Hath an unchangeable Priest-hood saith the Apostle Ps 110.4 Heb. 7.24 A Priest established in his Dignity as master and Lord by virtue of his Son-ship not like unto the servants the Priests of Aaron's order Who when they entred into the most Holy place were not there to sit but otherwise to execute their office according to the order prescribed unto them by Moses Heb. 10 11 They stood as became servants saith the Apostle ministring before the Lord. But Jesus Christ when he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever and according to the Law entred into the holy place to finish the Atonement Sat down on the right hand of God noting the perpetuity of his office according to the dignity of his person and that he ever liveth which was not possible for any other to do to make intercession Dan. 7.14 Mach. 4.7 His Throne in like manner is for ever and ever His Kingdom an everlasting Kingdom and his Dominion endureth throughout all Generations No Salvation then to be expected for ever Act 4.12 but onely by him No other Name under Heaven given among men from the beginning of the world to the end of it whereby we must be saved For before him as he saith of himself there was no God formed Es 43 10 or rather as it may be rendred nothing formed of God for any such purpose as to be a Saviour Ec. 2.12 Ps 145.11 12. neither shall there be after him What alas can the man do that cometh after the King What He may speak of the glory of his Kingdom and talk of his power to make known to the Sons of men his mighty acts and the glorious Majesty of his Kingdom But to imitate him in his power and his mighty Acts or to compare with him in the Majesty of his Kingdom would not onely be a contempt cast upon his Crown and Dignity but an utter impossibility and a meere vanity for men or angels to attempt it They poor Creatures being infinitely unfit and unworthy must let that alone for ever and they that will expect it of them will finde it to be folly
again rather then to joyn with your Brethren in things that are indifferent It was a sweet and Christian resolution of devour Saint Bernard when he saw differences arise that might cause a breach between him and others with whom he had formerly held a brotherly correspondency He wrote unto them in these Words Adharebo vobis etsi nolitis adharebo vobis et si nolim ipse Epi. 252. I will be of you though you be unwilling I will be of you though I be unwilling my self O if there were in you brethren but this meekness of wisdom to bear and forbear and such a zeal for the publick peace which you are bound in Conscience to promote it would surely more adorn your Christian Profession then all your cariering with Spear in Rest against the established Orders of the Church in Polemical argutations If it be so that you have any peculiar priviledge granted unto you from heaven above others to go in untrodden paths by your selves to disavow that order and government under which the Church hath flourished in former times and to dissolve all ancient bonds of unity and Christian society in the publick worshipping of our God as some by their violent Impulses of spirit others by their Enthusiasms have pretended to have let it be produced that we may believe you But as the Apostle puts the question so may we Is Christ divided How is he then the Same 1 Cor. 1.13 Hath he been with his Church ever from the beginning exercising his Power in the establishment of order and government in it without which I say again it could not well have been so long preserved promising also that he will be with it for that end and purpose to the end of the world And hath he given a countermand or a connivence unto some to separate themselves from the said order and government yea to do what lyeth in them utterly to disanul it Verily it must not it cannot be imagined that he who is the Same yesterd●y to day and for ever should at all prevaricate or swerve so diametrally from his purpose and practice wherein he hath always manifested himself to be the Same If the consideration of these things will not bring on a composure of our differences and allay the sha●pness of contradicting spirits I know not what will And if when men see what the Lord hath done and hear what God the Lord that is God which is the Lord Psal 85.8 viz. Jesus Christ doth speak who doth use to speak peace unto his people and to his Saints to speak it as a Comforter and to speak it as a Counsellour for it hath always been the earnest desire of his soul to see his people live peaceably one with another they will neither acquiesce in his doing nor follow his counsel What shall we judge of them but that they are willing not onely to turn but to run after folly and that they delight in vain janglings which do minister endless debates rather then godly edifying Lastly this will afford strong consolation for all that do live godly in Christ Jesus both in respect of themselves and their posterity First for themselves When we sinde much uncertainty in Creature-Comforts about us This may be our rejoycing and our refuge that Christ will be the Same unto us for ever Though friends may fail though means may fail though health may fail though heart may sail yet Christ will never fail Look what Peter spake but did not perform Christ hath spoken and will surely make good Though all forsake thee yet will not I. Let therefore that sweet and precious Promise be laid up in the heart of every true believer as a cordial to comfort it in all changes and troubles whatsoever that may arise written not onely by the Apostle Heb. 13.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13.5 but in sundry other places of Scripture for our greater confirmation I will never never never never never leave thee or forsake thee Secondly for posterity We may rejoyce in this that the Lord Jesus Christ will have as tender a care of them as he hath had of us before them because he is the Same for ever He will be the Same to instruct and teach them the Same to defend and protect them the Same to save them from their sins and to bring them to glory Thus argueth the Prophet Psal 102.27 28. Heb. 1.10 Psal 102.27 which the Apostle applieth unto Christ Hebr. 1.10 c Thou art the Same and thy years shall have no end The children of thy servants shall continue under thy protection and provision and their seed shall be established before thee Shortly then Is not this exceeding great comfort to godly parents in all ages That Christ will be a guardian to their children after their decease They shall not be left as we say to the wide world neither shall such parents be like unto him of whom the Psalmist speaketh who should have none to favour his fatherless children But because Christ is the Same for ever he will as he hath done ever take care of his people that are in Covenant with him not onely making his Work appear unto his Servants but his Glory also unto their Children For he remembreth his Covenant for ever the Word which he commanded viz. his Angels to observe in the preservation of his people Ps 105 8. or the blessing which he hath decreed and issued out with such Authority that it shall prevail against all opposition to a thousand generations Leave therefore your fatherless children unto him he will preserve them alive for with him the fatherless shall ever finde mercy CHAP. IV. Sheweth how JESUS CHRIST is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Same unto his Church in her Triumphant estate unto all Eternity HItherto have we seen Jesus Christ the Same unto his Church yesterday to day and for ever in all the Generations that have been are or shall be in this world while she abideth in her Militant estate which hath given occasion of sundry Instructions that may through the good blessing of God be profitable and seasonable for these last times But what then may some say Will Christ forsake his Church when she is in her triumph and cease to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same unto her when he hath finished his whole work and presented all her children before his Father in glory I answer still Jesus Christ will be the Same for ever unto his Church that is to say Not onely in this world but in that also which is to come To this purpose let us briefly consider two things First the full sense and utmost extent of the Apostles words here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Ever Secondly how Christ will be the Same unto his Church in the world to come As touching the First We must know that the Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is as much as to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Always
Being literally signifies an Age which English word is observed to have some affinity with that Greek termination and an Age of what extent soever it be hath an uninterrupted being Now this word being here put in the plural number may probably intend the several ages of both worlds First of this present world together with the sundry revolutions that are in it one generation passing another succeeding And secondly of the world to come This sense I conceive with submission may be allowed for where the word is put in the singular number there is often intended the one world or the other Sometimes it is put for this world as Luke 20.34 Matth. 28.20 Sometimes again it is written for the world to come as Joh. 6.51.58 But being here rendred in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may well be said to comprehend the several ages of both worlds Joh. 6.51.58 I confess the world to come is often in Scripture per se rendred in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and with an amplification too in sundry places of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but where the sense will bear a further latitude as it doth here too narrow a confinement is not to be set unto it v. g. Consider we the place of the Apostle 1 Tim. 1.17 1 Tim. 1.17 the Lord is there called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The King of Ages or Worlds that is of all Ages in this world and of that everlasting Age in the world to come because indeed as the Psalmist speaketh His Dominion endureth throughout all Ages both here and hereafter So in the Doxologie affixed to the Lords Prayer as Dr. Hammond observeth The same words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must intend both Ages or Worlds the present and the future For the Kingdome the Power and the Glory is the Lords not onely in this world but in the world that is to come And therefore we do well in that to ingeminate the words in our English Translation proverbially For ever and ever that is for this world which is one for ever and for the next which is another for ever The same sense and meaning very probably do the words of our Text likewise carry for the Mediatorship of the Lord Jesus Christ to which they do referre hath and shall have its virtual operation between God and his Saints for ever in this world and as we shall presently shew for ever in the world that is to come Let the words then have their utmost extent and full latitude comprehending both worlds viz. This world till time hath spun out it self to the very last m●nute And that which follows with all those years of Eternity that shall never cease The second thing to be considered is How Jesus Christ will be the Same to his Church for ever in the world to come For seeing as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.24.28 He must reign till all enemies are put under his feet and That when all things are subdued unto him he shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father that so God may be all in all we may inferre that there shall be a change in him and conclude that therefore he cannot be the Same But let us not be too forward to conclude before we have understood the premises aright as we ought to do First therefore to allude unto what I said before As Jesus Christ is the Same to day under the Gospel which he was yesterday under the Law but in a different way of the dispensation of the mysterie of Godliness so he will be the Same to his Church for ever in heaven but not after the same manner As Moses delivered up his dispensation unto Christ when the mystery of God was translated from the shadow to the Substance from the letter to the Spirit so will Christ deliver up the kingdome to the Father when by his Spirit he hath done all that the Father appointed him to do Yet as he was under Moses the Same in effect to his Church which he is now so will he be under the Father Not indeed so darkly with such glimpses of his appearance and secret illapses of his Light and Love into the hearts of his people as now but with a more free and full manifestation of his own and his Fathers glory without the least interposition of any let or hinderance whatsoever For now saith the Apostle we see through a glass darkly but then face to face c. Which Beatifical Vision as Christ hath here obtained for us by his Merit so will he for ever hereafter be the efficient cause of the uninterruptible continuance thereof unto us by his being in us But that I may not seem to deliver any thing in so important a matter without my warrant let us search the Scriptures and see what Testimony they give of Jesus herein It is not expedient to enquire after or to speak of those things which we have not seen It doth not yet appear saith the Evangelist what we shall be much less can we be able fully to discern what the Lord Jesus Christ shall be either in his Subjection to his Father or in his Relation to us when God shall be all in all Good therefore is it for us to be wise unto sobriety and to content our selves with what is revealed First then this we may assert for a most infallible truth that Jesus Christ will for ever be the Same in the Hypostatical union of his Humane nature with the Divine even then when he hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father And in this respect shall he then be subject to God For otherwise 1 Cor. 15.28 according to the word of the Apostle seeing he subsisteth ever in the real essential Form of God so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2.6 is to be understood as it is taken in the same place Phil. 2 6. where the Apostle speaks of the Form of a servant he shall as he hath ever been according to his proper right without any injurious encroachment upon the Father be equal with him Though I confess his subjection to the Father is not limited to this sense as we shall see hereafter From which Hypostatical Union of his two Natures so inseparably to be continued unto all Eternity Joy unspeakable and full of Glory will undoubtedly arise to all those who are of the same Humane nature with him that shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world O what a happiness will it be to behold this our Lord and Redeeming Kinsman sitting at the right hand of the Throne of God exalted sarre above all Principalities and Power and Might and Dominion and every Name that is named Yea and from hence it will come to pass that the Divine nature whereof by Christ we have been made partakers in the state of Regeneration shall never cease to have a being in us but shall be perfected rather by his Presence
in Heaven as he doth by faith here upon Earth 1 Cor. 13.8 Love saith the Apostle never faileth Not the Love of Christ to his Church nor the Churches Love unto Christ even in respect of their relation to each other begun here in this life shal ever suffer the least diminution First I say the love of Christ to his Church as it is his mystical Body shall never be out-dated For amongst us saith the Prophet Malachy Mal. 2.16 He hateth putting away therefore much less will he himself give his Church in Heaven when he hath presented it a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing c. a Bill of Divorce but will ever own her and delight in her as his beloved Spouse having loved her he loveth her unto the end yea and beyond the end to all Eternity And for the Churches love unto Christ in Heaven How can it chose but be more enlarged Partly because she will ever look upon Christ as one that had been when time was her faithful Mediator and with eternal acclamations will applaud him as her Saviour who hath brought her to life and immortality when she was near unto death and everlasting ruine But chiefly because the love of the Father wherewith he loved Christ shall Job 17.26 according to Christs own prayer be in her that is take full possession of her and consequently as it is added in the same place will Christ himself be in us likewise as the blessed result of that infinite love of the Father towards his Elect people For a further opening of this extraordinary point and because it hath not had that regard given unto it as it deserveth it being seldom thought upon I shall here crave leave to write the more freely of it And first let me once more insert the judgement of the aforesaid Divine in his writing unto me concerning this matter whose words I do offer to the consideration of the wise and godly The Saints saith he speaking of their estate in Glory after the resurrection are sealed up to God by his name formerly written in their forehead as it is Rev. 14.1 Rev. 14.1 Nor is the name of the Father onely said to be written upon them but the new name of Christ is also written upon them and the name of the new Jerusalem which cometh down from Heaven as it is Rev. 3.12 And their names once written upon them shall never be blotted out again therefore Christ shall be for ever in them by his name written upon them Rev. 3.12 For by the impression of their names upon them they are fitted to receive eternally the influence of the Fathers and the Sons love And I conceive that when the work of Christs Mediation shall be at an end and that Christ shall give up all those whom he hath brought to glory unto the Father that the Father may be all in all in them That then Christ also as to them shall receive a new name by which he shall be in and over them for ever For Christ as he is the head of the new creature to purchase life eternal to all that are to be brought unto the Father so now since he hath purchased that life he hath gotten a name above every name And when he shall have brought all the redeemed unto the possession of the life prepared for them then shall they become his fulness and by their conjunction to him he shall have a new state of glory as the fruit and effect of his Mediatorial administration shining upon him which I take to be his new name which then also shall be written upon his redeemed for ever And they shall be exalted to sit with him in his Throne as he was exalted and sat with his Father upon his Throne Rev. 3.21 Rev. 3.21 By all which saith the said writer I conceive it is evident that in the state of eternal glory Christ shall be in us as the fountain and head-spring of life eternal unto all mankinde over whom by and in the Fathers love and name which he hath declared unto them and put upon them to remain for ever and to be all in all with them He shall shine in his own everlasting love and new name Thus he Whether or no according to truth judge ye I might in the pursuance of this subject alledge sundry other places of Scriptures that have a tendency hereunto Luk. 1.33 viz. that of Luk. 1.33 Where the Angel Gabriel tells the blessed Virgin that that holy thing that should be born of her should reign over the house of Jacob for ever and of his Kingdome there should be no end Which was also foretold by Daniel the Prophet Dan. 7.14 Where speaking of the Messiah Dan. 7.14 he saith his Dominion is an everlasting Dominion which shall not pass away and his Kingdome that which shall not be destroyed Both which places St. Austin with much vehemency referreth to Christs Kingdome over his Saints in Heaven In securda parte quaestionum ex Nov. Test Tom. 4 Rom. 8.17 Et qui horum testimonium retractandum putat saith he perfidiâ plenus est that is whosoever he be that shall judge their witness viz. of the Angel and Prophet to be of no force is himself full of falshood I might also add what the Apostle saith Rom. 8.17 That the Saints shall be heirs of God and joynt heirs with Christ which clearly implieth that his relation to his Church as the first-born among many brethren and chief heir shall continue for ever And that of Eph. 5.26.27 Where it is said that Jesus Christ gave himself for his Church Eph 5.26.27 c. That he might present it to himself a glorious Church c. Yea and that also of Rev. 19.9 might very well be insisted upon to this purpose where mention is made of the Marriage Supper of the Lamb Rev. 19.9 Coe●a eo quod est ultima refectio Rev. 21.23 which signifieth that ultimate rejoycing which the Church shall have with her Lord and Husband in Heaven where the light not onely of God but also of the Lamb shall shine and gloriously encompass about the Bride the Lambs Wise which is the new Jerusalem that is the Church Triumphant for ever But I forbear to prosecute this Point any further let us now summe up the Premises together and when we have answered an Objection that is considerable we shall put a period to this whole matter I say therefore if the Personal Union of both Natures Divine and Humane in Jesus Christ shall never be dissolved which will heighten marvellously the Glory of the Saints in Heaven And the Mystical Union between Christ and his Church shall also uncessantly continue in Heaven to all eternity who is there that is not destitute even of the light of Reason but will infer that Jesus Christ will be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same to his Church for ever in Glory which
he is now and ever hath been unto her in her militant estate during her abode here upon earth Objection It will be objected if it be so how shall we understand the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.24 28. in the before-mentioned place when he saith That Christ shall deliver up the Kingdome to God even the Father And that when all things are subdued unto him then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him that God may be All in All Now I confess it will be very requisite to be clear and plain in resolving this doubt that we may understand aright the sense of the Spirit of God in this Scripture For it seems to be directly contrary to our present Doctrine which we have propounded and confirmed I shall therefore endeavour briefly the explanation thereof Solution First whereas it is said Christ shall deliver up the Kingdome to God the Father it is not to be understood as if Christ should not reign any more or as if the Father did not now reign but that then it should come to his turn when he received the Kingdome from the Son For the Father and the Son are not at so great a distance but that both may reign together Regnat Pater in Filio regnabit Filius in Patre said Musculus well upon the Place The Father reigneth now in the Son the Son shall hereafter reign in the Father The Scepter indeed shall be changed and the form of Government altered but of his Kingdome there shall be no end rather it shall be more glorious then it is now when all enemies being subdued Jesus Christ shall without the Ministery of Angels or men by his own Light Love Life and Power immediately with the Father and the Holy Ghost fill and govern all his Saints for ever Saint Augustine hath above others written very freely and copiously of this matter enough to give satisfaction to any that shall object this scruple It will not be amiss therefore here to render his very words as he hath written them without any alteration In loco supradicto In Evangelio legimus Angelum dicere ad Mariam Matrem Domini quod regni ejus id est Christi non erit finis Et Daniel eadem dicit Tunc exurget regnum in aternum quod nunquam corrumpetur contra Apostolus de Domino cum tradiderit regnum Deo Patri Quomodo regnum habebit quod traditurus Deo Patri In causa Patris Filii id est Dei Christi traditio non abolitio intelligitur Considera enim quomodo Pater tradiderit Filio regnum Ipso haec Domino protestante Mat. 11.27 Omnia mihi tradita sunt à Patre meo Si Pater ergo des●it habere seil Regnum cum tradidit potest de Salvatore dici quia cum tradidit amisit Nam Filius postquam traditum sibi à Patre regnum dixit Patrem adhuc praeferens ait Haec est autem vita aeterna ut cognoscant te solum verum Deum quem misisti Jesum Christum Joh. 17.3 That is In the Gospel we finde the Angel telling Mary the Mother of the Lord that of his Kingdom that is Christs there should be no end Daniel also said the same Then shall a Kingdom be set up for ever that shall never be destroyed The Apostle on the contrary speaking of the Lord saith He shall deliver up the Kingdom to God and the Father But how shall be have a Kingdom which he must deliver up to God even the Father In a case agitated between the Father and the Son that is between God and Christ a Resignation is not to be taken for an Abolition For consider how the Father delivered the Kingdom to the Son which thing the Lord himself witnesseth in these words All things are delivered unto me of my Father If the Father did devest himself of power when he made this deed of delivery to the Son then may it also be said of the Son that when he delivereth up the Kingdom again to the Father He himself shall be wholly deprived of it But Absit For the Son after he had said the Kingdom was delivered unto him of the Father he gives the Father notwithstanding the preheminence in these words Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal that they might know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Secundum hunc igitur sensum filius non amittit regnum cum tradidit Accordingly neither shall the Son lose his Kingdom when he maketh a delivery of it to the Father And now consider Is not the judgement of this Holy Antient and light of the Church very clear in this point That though the oeconomy of Christs office in interceding for the Saints shall indeed finally cease yet of his Kingdom there shall be no end If any should yet enquire what it is for the Son to deliver up the Kingdom to the Father I shall again borrow Saint Austin's words to which there need no addition being so pithy and pertinent for herein also he satisfieth the scrupulous inquirer Sed nunc videamus quid sit Filium tradere Patri reguum Hoc est quod dicit Apostolus tunc ipse subjectus erit ei qui subjecit ei omnia ut sit Dens omnia in omnibus Subjectio igitur haec est ipsa traditio regni Itaque hoc loeo interpretatio videbitur necessaria ut subjectus Patri Filius non negetur nihilominns aeternum regnum habere dicatur Hoc est regnum filii quia in Nomine Jesu omnia genua flectentur ☞ tum coelestia terrestria inferna Post quam omnia Christum fuerint confessa sive vi sive voluntate mysterium unius Dei cunctis manifestabitur omnis gratiarum actio referetur à Patre ex quo sunt omnia ut cessante praedicatione unus Deus sciatur in mysterio Trinitatis Cum enim omnes potestates omnes principatus dominationes Christo genu-flexerint tunc Fi'ius manifestabit non se esse à quo sunt omnia sed filium ejus illum in se videri Sed per quem sunt omnia Ambr. haec est subjectio regni traditio Ostendens enim patrem esse à quo sunt omnia subjecit se illi cum de eo se dicit esse Tanta enim majestas claritas in adventu filii videbitur ut omnes potentiae chori Angelorum hunc singularem putent Deum Salvator autem cum se non illum esse dixerit qui dicitur Pater sed Filium ejus regnans traedit regnum Patri in hac re manifestata est subjectio regni traditio quia cum à Patre se profitetur esse quicquid habet Patris confitetur esse omnem summam referens ad eum Thus he sweetly and sufficiently Whose words may be thus translated into our own Idiome Let us now consider
that That day should not come before such and such things which he there mentions were first come to pass He feared not it seems lest he should give occasion of a carnal security to presumptuous sinners as it is here objected to us by his writing of the protraction of the great day but leaves that to their peril who will pervert his words and turn them to such a sinister sense declaring the minde of God clearly without casting such scruples as these Objectors have causlesly devised to stop the current of this Doctrine And this may be a sufficient warrant unto us to speak freely of that which the Scripture holds out unto us in this particular not regarding what wicked persons deluded by the devil may suggest unto themselves thereby And yet as Calvin well observeth upon the place Neither doth this word of the Apostle about the deferring of the great day contradict other Scriptures which speak of it as being at hand Instat enim saith he Dei respectu apud quem mille anni sunt tanquam dies unus It is at hand in Gods account with whom a thousand years are but as one day though to us it may seem long being lengthened out for many generations unto the time appointed of the Father that so the great work of God in this world decreed from Eternity might be fully finished In fine Whatsoever is or can be objected against this doctrine we may safely conclude it to be of no force But for it self it shall stand and prove infallibly a victorious truth in the Church because Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same yesterday to day and for ever Let all therefore that wish well unto Sion lay it close to their hearts that they may now more then ever seeing the time approacheth lay out their utmost strength and zeal in the promoting thereof praying earnestly constantly unto God that this ancient beloved people may once again finde grace in his sight casting away those sins which may probably be a hinderance to the bringing on of this glorious work And amongst them all let us abandon the Idolatries and Superstitions of the Romish Synagogue which will certainly be a very great obstacle to the Jews conversion though God will also in his own time make this great mountain of opposition to become a plain Thus I say should this doctrine be promoted by us and whatsoever else Divine Providence may put into our hands to do in order to such an excellent end O let us do it with all our might It is doubtless a most Catholike doctrine as tending to an universal Union under Christ our Head it is the most noble and Divine doctrine next unto that of the great work of eternal Salvation wrought by Christ that is revealed unto us in the Gospel and it is most advantageous to us Gentiles of all other Doctrines therefore we should promote it It is that which openeth to the Church the bottomless and inexhaustible treasures of the Wisdome and Knowledge of God to look with admiration as the Apostle did into the depth thereof And though neither men nor Angels can be able of themselves in this or any else of the Arcana Coeli the counsels of the most High to know the minde of God yet since as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2.16 We have the minde of Christ 1 Cor. 2.16 who is in the bosome of the Father and hath declared him unto us we may with confidence make our boast and speak of that which he hath revealed And because God hath an absolute Sovereignty over all his creatures not bound unto them with any Popish or Pelagian thongs of Necessity Congruity or Condignity but is free to do what he please by the liberty of his own will to cast off the Jews and receive the Gentiles in their stead and restore the Jews again to his grace and favour that both Jews and Gentiles may together rejoyce in his Salvation For of him and through him and to him are all things Let us therefore with the Apostle applaud and magnifie him saying To him be glory for ever Amen FINIS An ALPHABETICAL TABLE A. ADam's standing in the state of Innocency was longer then it is commonly conceived to be Page 105 Adeption or progressive agitation of the Creatures not the original or primary efficient cause of their continuance p 53 Abuses of the late Times detected p 223 Afflictions are ordained and ordered by God p 80 Ages before us not to be despised p. 166 Ambitious persons enemies to Christ's Sovereignty p. 76 A Story of Amphilochius p. 22 Of Alphonsus the Atheistical King of Spain p. 74 Anabaptists great enemies to the Church p. 270 How and wherein the Angels shall be employed in the great day p. 90 What Antiquity in print of Religion is to be regarded p. 169 Arianism an abominable Heresie p. 12 Arius his death by the just hand of God p. 35 Consulting with Astrolegers about future events unlawful p. 72 A notable saying of Augustus Caesar p. 81 B. Of the nature of Bees in having a Government p 58 The Believers Ro●k p. 81 Blaspemy of Socinus p. 26 Blaspemy of Paul Beast p. 38 Blaspheming Hereticks must not go unpunished ibid. Of bowing at the Name of Jesus See the word Jesus Of bowing at the entrance into and departure from the Congregation p. 235 C. How Cain was cast out of the Church p. 147 Of Ceremonies p. 234 Cerinthus an enemy to Jesus Christ p. 34 Though Christ be the first begotten of every Creature it followeth not that he is therefore a Creature p. 16 Christ hath raised up our nature to the highest elevation p. 32 Jesus Christ is the first begotten intellect in reference to the Angelical Nature p. 17 Jesus Christ is the first-begotten reason in order to the rational ibid Christ is to be honoured in the hearing of his Word p. 28 Christ is the bringer forth of every Creature p. 18 Christ giveth the earth to whom soever he will p. 50 In what sense Jesus Christ is Creatour p. 42 Christ is the Preserver of all p. 52 Christ will restore all things p. 82 The form of a servant in Christ did not obliterate the form of God p. 20 Christ is to be worshipped with divine adoration p. 21 Christ a Prophet from the beginning p. 136 Christ a King from the beginning p. 138 Christ a Priest from the beginning p. 149 Christ the Same to his Church in this day of the Gospel which he was yesterday to the Fathers of old p. 212 Christ will be the Same to his Church for ever p. 273 What manner of change there shall be of the Heavens c. at the last day p. 98 The Church shall be continued to the end of the World p. 275 The folly of ignorant people in imputing all extraordinary tempests to conjuring p. 73 Contemplation of God through the Creatures p. 48 Covetous persons enemies to Jesus Christ p. 76 Of the late
Schismatical Covenant p. 229 The Creation the Worke of Christ p 42 The Creatures willing subjection unto Christ p. 53 Of the observation of Christmas p. 198 The Creatures misery under Man p. 65 The excellency of our Creation p. 105 None but the New Creature shall be the Inhabitant of the New Creation p. 107 Against curiosity in searching into those things of God that are beyond our reach p. 19 D. Daniel's seventy weekes interpreted p. 305 The day of the Gospel is a terrible day to all impenitent sinners p. 203 A description of Christs encountring with death p. 78 The Divine Service of the Church of England free from Superstition p. 234 E. The consideration of the Earth may lead us to an admiration of the Glory of God p 49 The great Engagement that lieth upon England above other Churches of the Gentiles to give praise unto God p. 270 Episcopacy proved to be of Divine Right p. 248 Eternity expressed by termes appropriated unto Time p. 6 The force of Example is great to induce likeness of manners p. 2 Examples of Gods Judgements which have fallen upon the enemies of the eternal Deity of Christ p 34 F. Fanatick people make themselves equal with Jesus Christ p. 24 A conviction of those that hold that the object of the faith of the Fathers of old was not Jesus Christ p. 175 To hold that not the object but the act of faith justifieth is a gross errour p. 176 Faith of believers how fixed before the comming of Ch●ist p. 156 A faithful saying uttered in a Sermon at his Majesties Coronation p. 256 How the Father is said to work by the Son p. 43 Of that fire which the Scripture speakes of whereby the Earth shall be burnt up at the last p. 96 To ascribe unto fortune good or ill success is a great sin p. 71 G. The divine generation of the Son of God is a permanent and everlasting generation p. 10 Gentiles instructed p. 268 Gentiles obliged to give praise unto God p. 269 Of the fulness of the Gentiles p. 338 The glory of the life to come described p. 107 How God ruled over man before the floud p. 64 Civil Government is no encroachment upon Christs natural or donative power p 55 Authoritative power or government over men shall be continued to the end of the World p. 66 Government is an ordinance of divine appointment proved both by the written and unwritten Word of God that is by Scripture and nature p 57 The good that ariseth by Government unto mankinde p. 65 H. The several forms of the Heathens enquiring after future events p. 72 That the Heathen did without Christ by the light of nature attain to such a knowledge of God as was enough for their everlasting salvation is a great errour p. 175 The impudent connivence that was given to Hereticks in the time of the late Schism p 37 To consider the Heavens a mean● to work in the hearts of men an awful reverence towards the Lord Jesus Christ p 48 The Hypostatical Vnion of two Natures in Christ Divine and humane shall never be dissolved nor the Mystical Vnion between Christ and his Church p. 285 I. Look unto Jesus from the beginning to the end p. 295 Of bowing at the name of Jesus p. 235 The errour of the Jews in following the light of yesterday p. 121 An exhortation to the Jews p. 164 Another exhortation to the Jews p. 262 The calling of the Jews proved p. 299 Of the Jews insurrection under Aelius Adrianus p. 321 The Jews w●ful blindness and hardness of heart described p. 335 The Jews continuan●e in the World when other great and mighty Nations are utterly extinct p. Ignorance in this day-light of the G●spel condemned p. 202 Of the joy that Christians ought to take in their enjoyment of the G●spel p 184 Julian the Apostate his blasphemy and death p. 34 No justification by the workes of the Law p. 126 K. Government by Kings proved to be the best Government p. 60 King Charles the First commended by those that were his Adversaries p. 248 A saying of his against drunkenness in a Speech at Oxford p. 187 King Charles the Second his zealous forwardness in establishing Religion p. 231 L. The woful effects of pretended liberty of conscience p. 38 New lights not to be regarded p. 188 Of the invincible nature of light p. 182 Of Limbus Patrum p. 170 The Liturgy of the Church of England not taken out of the Romish Missal p 242 The agreement of our Liturgy with the Forms of Primitive Devotion clearly demonstrated p. 244 M. Millenaries and Fift Monarchists refuted p. 103. Miracles not to be expected under the Gospel p. 132 Fift Monarchists may see their errour p. 70 No murmuring ought to be at Divine Providence in disposing the Earth and all that is therein p. 50 Murmurers reproved p. 74 How mutable the children of men are in their workes p. 45 The Mystical Vnion between Christ and his Church shall never cease p. 286 N. The humane nature exalted above the nature of Angels p 32 Gods remarkable judgment on Nestorius p 35 O. The Oracles of the Heathen ceased at the birth of our Saviour p. 266 Oracles from Heaven not to be now under the Gospel p. 129 Order among the Creatures p. 58 P. The errour of the Papists in following the light of yesterday p. 128 The vanity of the Papists in looking unto Jesus in a Picture p. 296 Christian Parents comforted concerning their Posterity p. 281 Prophane Politicians enemies to Christs Sovereignty p. 77 The prophane alarum'd p. 203 Proud persons enemies to Christs Sovereignty p. 77 Poland polluted with Socinianism p. 39 Q. Quakers enemies to Jesus Christ p. 39 Quarrelling against the restoring of lawful Government in this Nation condemned p. 74 R. Our Religion maintained to be the onely true Religion p. 169 An approved remedy to heal the woful distempers and divisions of this Church and Kingdome p. 276 The Creatures future restauration p. 93 Christs Righteousness imputed to us for Justification p. 177 Of the first Resurrection p. 106 The Romish Church guilty of Novelty p. 217 S. Samosatenian Hereticks confuted p. 12 Satan hath no power in the Aire but by permission p. 73 Sectarists justly charged with Superstition p. 231 Consider the wonders of God in the Sea p. 49 Sin of the ungodly is found out by the light of this day p. 207 Sin by the light of this day findeth out the sinner p. 208 Smectymnuus detected p. 253 The cursed blaspemy of Socinians abhorred p. 26 That the Souls of the Patriarchs did not before Christs Ascension ascend into that place of bliss whither the souls of the Saints now ascend is proved an errour p. 174 Of the Suns Eclipse at our Saviours Death p. 266 Of Superstition p. 233 T. The time of the Gospel is a time of light p. 180 A Story of Theodosius p. 30 The godly preserved in the time of trouble p. 80 Of