Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n day_n lord_n sabbath_n 9,284 5 10.5348 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A66823 The abridgment of Christian divinitie so exactly and methodically compiled that it leads us as it were by the hand to the reading of the Holy Scriptures, ordering of common-places, understanding of controversies, clearing of some cases of conscience / by John Wollebius ; faithfully translated into English ... by Alexander Ross.; Christianae theologiae compendium. English. 1660 Wolleb, Johannes, 1586-1629. 1660 (1660) Wing W3256; ESTC R29273 215,518 472

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

2 King 25.3 c. i● Rudolphus Duke of Bavaria in Ladislaus King of Hu●garia and many others it was also detestable among the gentiles as Tibullus sheweth Ah miser etsi quis primò perjuria celet Sera tamen tacitis poena venit pedibus Though wretch thou hide thy Perjury Yet slow-pac'd Plagues come silently The Jesuitical and Sophistical interpretations of Perjuries are equivalent to perjuries themselves neither shall they escape the sin and pun●shment of Perjury A rash Oath is that which is taken when there is no necessity to swear Saul is an example of a rash and continual swea●er 1 Sam. 14. v. 40. and 45. An unjust Oath is when we swear of things neither lawful nor honest Such was David's oath when he threatned destruction to Nabal's house by revoking of which he hath taught us that unlawful oaths are rather to be broken than kept 1 Sam 25. such are the Monkish oath of fidelity obedience ● in Pop●ry An idolatrous Oath is when men swear by false gods or the creatures Such are these oaths that are made by Heaven Earth c. which a●e forbid Matt. 5 3● and oaths also made by the Saints for without idolatry we can neither give to them the honor of invocation nor of an oath neither do the Papists metonymically by the Saints understand God but they swear by the Saints themselves So much of swearing Adjuration is an obtestation in the name of God being made either by command or intreaty that according to conscience and as it were in stead of an Oath the truth might be spoken Example Ios. 7.19 Then said Ioshua to Achan my Son give glory to the Lord God of Israel and confesse to God The RULES We must yeild to an adjuration in such things as are neither contrary to Gods glory nor the love of our Neighbour We have an example in Christ who professed himself to be the S●n of God upon the adj●●●tion of the H●gh Priest though a wicked man Matth 26.64 If then a Tyrant should adjure us to reveal our brethren or their meetings we should refuse it To this are contrary rash adjurations magick adjuration of Devils wicked imprecations whereby God and the creatures are adjured to mans ruine The adjuration of Devils which they call exorcisme is magical and no wayes answering the Apostles casting out of Devils which they did not by adjuration but by commanding them in the name of Christ. Sortiledge or casting of lots is a tryal or finding out that which God hath appointed to each man in divisions and this is done by external signes to compose strife Lots are either divine or humane Examples of those are in Levit. 16. Ios. 7. 1 Sam. 10. Nehem. 11. Ioh. 1. Act 1 and these are not to be imitated because we have no command But these lots called also divisorie may be used but so that we assure our selves that they are guided by Gods hand Prov. 16.33 To this are opposed superstitious elections and consultations and deceiptful lots Hitherto of the taking of Gods Name the profession of it is when freely and openly in the sight of men we confess the truth as it is known by Gods Word to his glory when we are required Matth. 10.32 Who soever confesseth me before men him will I confess before my Father who is in Heaven Rom. 10. v. 10. With the heart we believe unto righteousness and with the mouth we confesse unto salvation 1 Pet. 3.15 Be ye alwayes ready to answer to every one that shall ask a reason of the hope that is in you To this is contrary 1. A dissembling of the truth 2. The open denial of it 3. An unseasonable confession thereof An example of dissembling is in the Jews that would not professe Christ for fear of being excommunicate Ioh. 12 v. 42 43 Peter is an example of an imperfect denyal proceeding of infirmities Matth. 26.69 c. Concerning unseasonable confession Christ warns us Matt. 7.6 Give not that which is holy unto Dogs neither cast ye your Pearls before Swine le●t they tread them with their feet and turn upon you and tear you Thus we have shewed how Gods name is sanctified in words it is sanctified in fact when our life and actions answer our holy profession Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven To this is opposite the omission of that action which agrees with our profession and impiety An example of the former is in Moses and Aaron who are said not to have sanctified God in the sight of the children of Israel when he gave them the water of strife out of the rock Num. 20.12 An example of the later is in the Jews of which Paul speaketh Rom. 2.24 For the Name of God through you is blasphemed among the Gentiles CHAP. VII Of Vertues or Works apperteining to the Fourth Commandment HItherto of the parts of Gods worship Now follows the time peculiarly appointed for Divine worship This is handled in the fourth Commandment the summe whereof is That we sanctifie the Sabbath There are two parts of this precept the Precept it self and the Confirmation thereof The Precept is that we sanctifie the Sabbath which is illustrated 1. By an Admonitory particle Remember c. By which it appears that the Israelites before this had been warned to sanctifie it but that it had been ●lighted and neglected by reason of Pharaoh's oppression 2. By declaring the Precept in opposing by an anti hesis the works which were to be done the six dayes to those that should not be done the seventh day 3. By a distribution of the subjects for they are either men or beasts The men are either Natives or Strangers and both are either superiours or inferiours Six dayes saith he sh●lt thou labour do all thy work but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lo●d thy God in it thou shalt do no manner of work thou nor thy son c. The Confirmation is grounded on Gods example For in six dayes the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that the●●in is and rested the seventh day Wherefore c. The Sanctification of the Sabbath is whereby man rests from his external works and labour that he with his family and cattel may be refreshed and that day spent in Gods service The RULES I. The Precept of sanctifying the Sabbath was not first given on Sinai but in Paradise shewing that the manner of divine worship was prescribed to Adam even in the state of innocency II. To sanctifie the Sabbath is not to make that day holy but to separate it from prophanenesse and to dedicate it to divine worship III. The impulsive causes of this Sanctification are 1. Gods command 2 The equity of the command 3. The promises made to them that obey This fourth Command is urged also in Lev. 19.3 and 23.3 Ier. 17.22 and elswhere The equity is seen in two things 1. In
oecumenical Kingdom 2 Sam 7.13 I will establish the throne of his Kingdom for ever Dan. 7.14 whose dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not pass a way Luk 1.33 of his Kingdom there shall be no end The words of the Father to Christ do not oppose these sayings vntill I make thine enemies c. For the meaning is not that Christ after his last coming shall reign no more but it sheweth this at least that it shall come to pass that he shall subdue all his Enemies For that clause until and the like exclude not the future time but they are affirmatively and negatively spoken of it and oftentimes they signifie the same that alwayes or never for example Gen. 28.15 I will not forsake thee until I have performed that which I spake to thee 2 Sam. 6.23 Michal had no child till the day of her death Matth. 1. 25. He knew her not untill she had brought forth her first begotten Son Matth. 28.20 Behold I am with you till the end of the World nor is this saying against us 1 Cor. 15.24 28. where it is affirmed That Christ will deliver up the Kingdome to his Father then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that God may be al in all For in that place the delivering up of the Kingdome is not a laying down of Christs Regal office but by the Kingdome there is meant as commonly in Scripture the Church he wil then deliver the Kingdom to his Father when he shal present the whol Church to him therefore that subjection shal not abolish Christs Kingdome whereas Christ even as Mediator is subordinate to his father in glory so Christ shal be and shall remain our King that notwithstanding he will with us subject himself to the Father But you will say that already he is subject to the Father That is true indeed but not simply for n●w the Head with the Church is subjected yet not all the Church but then together with all the members of the Church and consequently all mystical Christ shall be subjected to the Father That finally God is said to be all in all it is not so to be understood as if he were not at this day all in all or that then he were onely to reign but but this is spoken after the Scripture phrase in which things are oftentimes said to be done when they are declared to be The meaning then is whereas in this World the Kingdom of God is annoyed and obscured by the Enemies thereof these Enemies being at last subdued it will be most apparent that the Kingdome will be Gods and his Christs CHAP. XX. Of the common Vocation to the state of Grace HItherto of Christ the Redeemer who is the efficient cause of the state of Grace Now follows the Vocation to the same This is either common to the elect reprobate or proper only to the elect The common calling is whereby all men are invited to the state of Grace and participation of Christ the Mediator This is also called the election of the whole people wheresoever Deut. 7.6 Thou art a holy people to the Lord thy God he hath chosen thee The RULES I. As election so vocation is either to an office or to salvation the latter is that which is here to be considered There is an example in Saul of Election and Vocation to an office 1 Sam. 10.24 Do you not see wh●m the Lord hath chosen II. The efficient cause of this vocation is commonly the whole blessed Trinity but particularly Christ the Lord who as in the days of his ministration here on earth did immediately call sinners so he doth now by the means of his ministers Matth. 22.2 3. The kingdome of heaven is like unto a king who made a marriage for his son sent his servants who should call those that were invited to the wedding c. Mark 1.14 15. Iesus came to Galilee preaching the Gospel of God and saying the time is fulfilled and the kingdome of God is at hand Repent and believe the Gospel 2 Cor. 5.20 Therefore we are Ambassadours for Christ c. III. The matter of this vocation are not all men nor the elect onely but any of the race of mankinde That all are not called the whole History of the old Testament witnesseth for God at that time passing by other Nations called the people of Israel but in the time of the New Testament not all no● every one is called seeing that many never heard of Christ. And that the elect onely are not called the parable of Christ doth sufficiently witnes in which good and bad are invited many also are said to be called but few chosen Matt. 22 10 14 Now all sorts of men are called of what state condition age c. they be IV. The form of this vocation consisteth partly in the proffer of the benefit of Redemption and partly in the precept of accepting it 2. Cor 5.20 Therefore we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you through us we pray in Christ stead that ye be reconciled to God For he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him V. The end of this is Gods glory and the salvation of the Elect now the glory of Gods mercy is seen in the elect obeying the vocation and the glory of his Iustice in the reprobate disobeying VI. Common vocation is principally for the Elect secondarily for the Reprobate VII Yet both are called seriously and without hypocrisie Of the Elect there is no doubt as for the reprobate although they are not called with any purpose in God to save ●hem yet they are called seriously and salvation is seriously promised to them on condition they will believe neither are they mocked in that they are deprived of the grace of faith but because voluntarily they fell from their originall grace and with a malicious purpose they dispise the means of salvation God notwithstanding may justly claim Faith of them and this right of claim which he hath he doth as justly use as any other creditor that their mouthes may be stopp●d and they made inexcusable and Gods justice may be vindicated therefore he doth not call them that he might mock them but that he might declare and make manifest his justice upon them VIII Therefore out of the common vocation we must not presently infer an election both because it is common to the Elect and Reprobate as also because it includes the condition of Faith Although a whole nation is said to be elected yet all in that nat●on are not elected as the Jewish people are called an elect people and yet many of them were reprobates IX Neither are all therefore elected because they are commanded to believe that they are elected for they are not absolutely commanded to believe that but with trial of their Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 Try your selves whether yo● be in the Faith or
fall VII But the means of execution are so ordered that albeit God worketh most freely and according to his good pleasure yet neither have the Elect any just cause to brag nor the Reprobate to complain for to those undeserved grace was bestowed and on these deserved punishment is inflicted VIII These are different questions 1. By what right God reprobates man which is his Creature 2. Why did he not choose all but some and reprobate others 3. Why did he choose this man to wit Peter and reprobate that man to wit Judas To the first we answer from the material cause in that Adam as he was to fall was liable to reprobation To the second we answer from the end because God was willing to manifest the Glory of his mercy and justice But to the third from the cause impulsive because so it pleased him To use the Apostles simile If it be demanded why the Potter out of the same lump maks Vessels of such different conditions it is answered from the end because there be different uses of these Vessels in the house If again it be demanded why out of one piece of the lump a Vessel of honour is made and out of the other a Vessel to dishonour it is answered from the cause impulsive b●cause it so pleased the Potter IX Christ is to be considered either as God or as God and man the Mediator In the former respect he is with the Father and Holy Ghost the efficient cause of our election but in the latter respect he is the means of execution thereof We are then said to be elected in Christ Eph. 1.4 5. because by him we were to be saved The decree of saving us is called Predestination to the end but the decree of bestowing Christ upon us as our Head is named Predestination to the Means X. Although these words of Predestination Prescience Predetermination are sometime taken for the same yet for understandings sake they may be thus distinguished Predestination signifieth the very purpose of God to save us Prescience that free bounty by which he acknowledgeth us for his own but Predetermination imports Predestination as it hath reference to Christ and the other means of salvation Rom. 8.28 29. But we know that to those who love God all things work together for their good to those I say who are called of his purpose for whom he fore-knew those he predestinated that they might be confo●mable to the image of his Sonne c. XI They are altogether foolish who acknowledge Election and deny Reprobation Because the Scripture teacheth that there is Reprobation aswel a● Election Esa. 41.9 I have chosen thee and not cast thee away Mal. 1.2 Iacob have I loved and I have hated Esau. Rom. 9.18 He wil have mercy on whom he will whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 11.7 The election hath obtained it and the rest have been hardened 1 Thess. 5.9 God hath not appointed us to wrath but to salvation 2 Tim 2.20 Vessels to honour and to dishonour Jude v. 4. For there are certain men crept in which were before of old ordained to condemnation· XII As Christ is the cause n●t of Election but of Salvation so infidelity is the cause not of Reprobation but of Damnation Damnation differs from Reprobation as the means of Execution from the Decree XIII Damnation is not the end of Reprobation but the manifestation of the glory of Gods justice Therefore to say that man was created that he might be damned is to say amiss for damnation is not the end but the means of execution of which m●n by his voluntary disobed●ence hath made himselfe guilty XIV For und●rstandings sake two ●cts are made of Reprobation to wit The denial of undeserved grace which is called Preterition and the ordaining to d●serve punishment which is called predamnation XV. In the trial of our election we must proceed analytically or by the way of resolution from the means of Execution to the decree beginning from our Sanctification Thus syllogistically whosoever feels in himself the gift of sanctification by which we die to sin and live to righteousnesse he is justifi'd called or endowed with true faith is elected But by the grace of God I feel this therefore I am justified called and elected XVI But this is a diabolical argument If I am elected there is no need of good works if I be a Reprobate good works are needlesse For first it is not the part of a Christian to say Either I am elected or reprobated but rather to make trial of his faith as the means of election 2 Cor. 13.5.6 Prove your selves whether you are in the faith examine your selves know you not your own selves how that Iesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates But I trust that you shall know that we are not reprobates 2. This syllogism disjoyns things subordinate and conjoyns things in consistent For good works are subordinate and not to be separated from election for they are the means of its execution and of our assurance thereof But to be a reprobate and to do good works are things inconsistent CHAP. V. Of the Creation HItherto of God's internal works His external are these which are without the essence of God and these are two to wit the Creation the Government or Gods actual providence Creation is that by which God produced the world the things therein partly out of nothing and partly out of matter unapt naturally for that production for the manifestation of the glory of his power wisdom and goodness The History of the Creation is ●xtant in Genesis c. 1. 2 The RULES I. Creation is not onley a production of something out of nothing but also out of matter altogether unapt for such production naturally II. The work and honour of Creation belongs to God alone and not to Angels or any other creature III. Creation is a transition from the Possibility to the Act not of the Creator but of the Creature IV. That possibility is not private but negative Because the matter of creation is naturally unapt to that which is created out of it For example there was no aptitude or disposition in dust to mans body which was so artificially and miraculously produced thence V. There was no accession of perfection in God by creating the World neither did he create it that he might be bettered or perfected by it but that his goodnesse might be communicated to the creature VI· Creation is either of the Species with all the Individuals so the Angels Stars Elements were created together Or of the Species with some Individuals only having an innate power of propagation VII A more particular knowledge of the Creatures we leave to Natural Philosophers it shall suffice in this place to handle them according to each Days production VIII The first day of the Creation is famous for three works 1. For the production of Angels with highest Heaven called the Heavens of the
blessed 2. For the production of this visible world which was not altogether destitute of form but of perfection separation and beauty which by degrees then it received 3. For sending in of the primitive Light which was neither the Elementary fire nor a bright Cloud nor any other body but a Quality sent into the air by God who is that inaccessible light This created quality of Light was afterward the fourth day placed in the Stars IX The second day the Firmament was created or the Aerial heaven which by its lower part separates the waters above that is the ●louds from the waters beneath that is the Sea X. The third day God 1. separated the inferior waters which as yet covered the earth and gathered them into certain channels that the rest of the earth called dry land might afford a commodious habitation for man and beast 2. He gave to the earth a fructifying power to produce herbs and plants without the h●lp of seed or sun XI The fourth day the Stars and great Luminaries w●re placed in heaven whose motion proceedeth not from a soul or any assistant intelligence as the Philosophers affirm but from that power which God gave them in the beginning no otherways than the earth by its innate power stands immovable XII There is a threefold use of the Stars 1. To distinguish the day night 2. To note the times seasons of the year 3. To impart their vertue to inferior bodies XIII The fifth day were made the Birds Fishes and creeping things XIV The sixth day after the earthly Creatures were produced and this whole Vniverse as a large house was furnished with all kinde of furniture Man at last was created Of all these Creatures Men Angels are chiefly considered in Divinity because on them God bestowed his Image The RULES 1. Although the whole World be the Looking-glass of Gods power wisdom and bounty yet properly Gods Image is attributed to Angels and Men onely 2. Gods Image doth partly consist in natural gifts to wit in the invisible and simple substance of Angels and Mens souls in their life understanding will and immortality partly in supernatural gifts to wit in their primitive blessednesse in the uprightness of their intellect will in their majesty dominion over the other creatures Angels are intelligent Creatures void of bodies The RULES I Angels are not accidents nor qualities but true substances II Angels are void of bodies and are not subject to destruction III. The bodies in which the Angels appeared were not meer apparitions nor yet united to them hypostatically but were freely assumed to perform some service in IV. Angels are in a place not by way of circumscription but by way of definition V. Angels cannot be together in many places VI Angels truly move from place to place Man is a creature whose body originally was formed of earth but afterwards is propagated of seed by traduction consisting of a reasonable soul infused into him by God immediately Here we disallow not the Philosophers definition by which they call man a reasonable creature but we describe man in the Divinity-School more fitly for our purpose as we have now described him The RULES I. There 's a threefold miraculous production of mans body mentioned in Scripture the first was of the dust of the earth without Father and Mother the second production was out of Adam's rib without a Mother the third was of the blood of the Virgin without a Father II. The soul of man is not propagated of seed by traduction but is immediately created by God and infused into the body Of mans creation Moses writes thus Gen. 2. ver 7. The Lord breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul. In this place three things are mentioned 1. The immediate Creation of the soul for it is call'd the breath of God 2. His breathing for he saith He breathed into his nostrils 3. The personal union of body and soul in these words And he was made a living soul metonymically that is a living sensitive creature But that the souls now are immediately created by God infused into the body is proved by these subsequent Reasons 1. Because otherwayes our souls should have another original than Adam's had for ours must proceed of some pre-excistent matter where as Adam's proceeded of none Neither will that objection hold concerning the d●fferent way or reason of generation and creation for nothing is generated of matter but what in the beginning was created of matter 2. Because the soul of Christ was not formed of seed by traduction for he was conceived not by the the help of man but by the operation of the holy Ghost of the blessed Virgins blood 3. Because the Scripture when it speaks of the original of our souls it speaks as of a work of Creation not of nature Iob. 33.4 The spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Zac. 12.1 The Lord stretcheth out the heavens and layeth the foundation of the earth and formeth the spirit of man within him where it is plain that this is reckoned among the works of Creation 4. Such is mans generation as his dissolution is but mans dissolution is that his body returns to dust and his spirit to God that gave it Eccl. 127. VVhereas then in mans dissolution the spirit returns immediatly to God doubtless it was immediatly formed by him 5 Because the Scripture doth plainly distinguish between the parts of bodies spirits Heb. 12.9.6 Because the soul is indivisible into parts therefore cannot be produced but of nothing 7. Because if it were generated by traduction either it must be generated of a soul or of a body or of a soul and body together but it is not generated of a soul because of that which is incorruptible nothing can be generated not of a body because it is not corporeal not of a body and soul together because so it should be partly corporeal partly incorporeal seeing then it is produced of nothing it must be produced by God alone whose alone property it is to make things of nothing III. These physical Axiomes like begets like and Man begets man remaine true also in this case both because man begets man a person begets a person as also because by the work of the Parents the body is begot as it were the subject of the soul and so is united to the soul which is infused by God and thus the whole man is brought into this World by generation 'T is true that man is the efficient cause of man but not according to all his parts for as he is said to kill a man that kills only his body so man is said to beget man though he begets not the soul. Neither again is man in this respect nobler than other living creatures whereas rather for this very cause mans generation is more excellent in that Gods immediate operation concurs
poor and riding upon an Asse CHAP. XIX Of Christs Exaltation THus of the state of his Humiliation the state of his Exaltation is that wherein Christ being raised from the dead was exalted to heaven and being set down at his Fathers right hand was crowned with the highest degree of glory The RULES I. The efficient cause of this Exaltation wa● 〈◊〉 whole Trinity II. But Christ considered according to dispensation is the object thereof III. The exaltation of Christs person was according to both natures IV. According to his humane nature he was exalted by laying aside the infirmities which he assumed by obtaining those gifts which before he wanted For he attained as great a perfection both in his body and soul as the creature was capable of V. He was exalted according to his divine nature not by accession of any dignity to it being considered in it self but by the manifestation of that majesty which before was hid under the form of a Servant VI. Christ attained to this exaltation by his obedience not as it were by merit but as it were by the means or way VII The end hereof was to witnesse that he faithfully performed the office enjoyned him in his humiliation and to manifest his divine power by which he doth powerfully apply his merit to us The parts or degrees of this are three His Resurrection his Ascension to Heaven and his sitting at the Fathers right hand His Resurrection was the first degree of exaltation by which Christ having overcome the power of death was raised the third day in that very flesh which he had laid down that he might live to God for ever The RULES I. Christ was not onely the object but also the efficient cause of his resurrection Rom. 1.4 Being declared with power to be the Son of God according to the Spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead 1 Pe● 3.18 He died concerning the flesh but was quickned in the Spirit II. The matter of the Resurrection is ●he same body that was crucified but ●ndowed and glorified with new qua●ities III. Neither was it so changed as to lose its quantity and three dimensions For otherwise it had been no body not had Christ remained man in his Resurrection IV. The Form consisteth in a new and indivisible union of soul and body V. Although Christs Resurrection was altogether miraculous yet it is false that his body passed through the stone which covered the grave or that it passed through the doore after his Resurrection Matt. 28 2 The Angel of the Lord rolled a way the stone Joh. 20.19 The doors being shut not through the doors that were shut VI The end of his Resurrection besides that general end which was mentioned before is the assurance of our Resurrection both from the death of sin as also from death corporall Rom 6.1 2. c. and 1 Cor. 15.12 c. His ascension into Heaven was the second degree of his Exaltation in which Christ after he had conversed forty days with his Disciples upon Earth ascended into Heaven The RULES I. Christ ascended both according to his divine and humane nature according to his humane as the object according to his divine as the efficient cause II. The form consisteth in Christs real and local translation from this World to the highest Heaven III. Here we need not trouble our selves about penetrat●on of bodies both because Heaven is not a solid thick or iron body as the Philosophers would have it as also because one body can easily yield to another and the creature to the Creator IV. The doctrine of Christs corporal presence here on Earth doth utterly overthrow that of his ascension V The special end of Christs ascension is to assure us of our threefold ascension the first is of faith and godlinesse in this life the second of our souls in death the third of body and soul in the last day The sitting of Christ at his Fathers right hand is the highest degree of his Exaltation by which being placed in Heaven he is exalted above all power Eph. 1.20.21.22 He hath set him at his right hand in the heavenly places far above all principa●ities and powers and might and dominion and every name that is named no● in this world onely but in that also which is to come and hath made all things subject under his feet and hath appointed him over a●l things to be the head to his Church which is his body and the fulness of him that filleth all in all things The RULES I. To sit at Gods right hand is to have the next power after God After the manner of Kings who use to set them on their right hand to whom they will give the chief honor next to themselves Psal. 45.10 The Queen is at thy right hand 1 King 2.19 When Ba●●sheba came to Solomon to speak unto him for Adoniiah the king rose to meet her and bowed himself to her and sat down on his Throne and he caused a seat to be ●et for the kings mother and she sat at his right hand Matt. 20.21 Command that my two Sons may sit the one at thy right hand the other at thy left in thy kingdom II. Christ according to both Natures sits at Gods right hand III. The Humanity was so exalted that yet it was not made equall to the divinity he received glory above all creatures yet not equall to that essential glory which he hath in common with the Father and the Holy Ghost In this highest degree of Exaltation Christ hath not left to do his office He performs his Prophetical office by furnishing his Ministers with gifts of old extraordinarily but now by ordinary meanes propagating his Gospel through all the World with most happy successe Ephes 4.11 Some he gave to be Apostles c. His Priestly Office he exerciseth not in offering himself again or in casting himself with cries and sighs at his Fathers knees but in appearing before his Father for us with the merits of his most full satisfaction and in applying the same effectually to us Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek Heb. 9.24 He hath not entred into the Sanctuary made with hands which are similitudes of the true Sanctuary but is en●red into the very Heaven to appear now in the sight of God for us Lastly He useth Kingly office not onely by ruling the Triumphant Church but also by gathering together the Militant Church by preserving protecting and delivering it as also by overthrowing the Enemies thereof Psal. 110 1. The Lord said to my Lord sit thou at my right hand until I make thine Enemies thy foot stool The RULES I. This Kingdom of Christ is not that essential which from eternity he obtained with the Father and Holy Ghost but a personal donative and oecumenical which as our Head and Mediator he had of the Father II. Yet he hath for ever administred this
withal our mortification so the rising out of the water is a shadow of his resurrecti●n our spiritual vivification 2. Water is a cheap and common element therefore obvious and easily obtained 3. In the beginning the spirit moved on the waters and was the cause of generation so in the baptism of water and the spirit is effected our regeneration 4. Water washeth away the filth of the body so doth baptism the spots of the soul. I will pour upon you clear water and you shall be cleansed from all your iniquities Ezek. 36. by this water Eph. 5. Christ cleanseth his Church 5. Water quencheth the thirst of the body so doth Baptism the thirst of the soul. 6. water cooles the heat of the body so doth baptism the beat of Gods wrath the fire of our lusts 7. Baptism is the Sacrament of illumination H●b 6 4 10.32 Therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to illuminate is used for baptising and bap●● sm is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illumination and the dayes of baptisme we●e ca●led the dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of light Now water is a diaphar●nt ●ody by which light is transmitted to us so ●s mental illumination by the water of bapti●m in which now we are not dipped but besprinkled which is all one for the g●fts of the Spirit are expressed by the sprinkling of clear water in Ezekiel and by the sprinkli●g of water in the old purifications and by the sprinkling of the Lambs blood in the Passeover to which the Apostle alludes Heb. 10. having our hearts besprinkled from an evill con●cience a Mat. 18.15 16 17. If thy brother should trespass against thee go tell him his fault between thee and him alone if he shall hear thee thou hast gained thy brother but if he will not hear thee then take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of one or two witnesses every word may be established and if he shall neglect to hear them tell it unto the Church but if he shall neglect to hear the Church c. b Mat. 7.6 Give not that which is holy unto dogs nor cast your pearls before swine c 1 Cor. 5.5 Let such a man he delivered over to Satan to the destruction of the fl●sh that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Iesus d 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Iesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha 1 Joh. 5.16 There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it a Ezech. 36.26 I will give you a new heart and I will put a new spirit in the midst of you and I will take away the heart of stone and will put in you a heart of fl●sh 2 Cor. 4.6 God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. b Joh. 3.3 If a man be not born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God c Joh. 6.44 None can come to me except the Father draw him d Joh. 6.45 It is written in the Prophets they shall be all taught of God whosoever the●fore ha●h heard of the Father and hath learned cometh unto me e ●oh 5.25 Verily verily I say unto you the time cometh and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear it shall live * A. R. The Pelagians absurdly teach that by grace is meant our natural abilities This is true if we take grace in that strict sence as it is used in Scripture for the grace of vocation justification or salvation by Christ which is no part effect or property of nature but altogether different from nature for by nature we are the fons of wrath saith the Apostle But by grace we are saved sai●h the same Apostle by grace I am what I am saith he not I but the grace of God with me 1 Cor. 15.10 without me saith Christ you can do nothing What have we which we have not received Of our selves we cannot think a good thought saith Saint Paul Here nature and grace a●e distinct yet in a large extent grace may be called natural and nature may be called grace The fi●st is plain because whatsoever perfects nature may be called natural and such is grace 2. Whatsoever is in nature as in its subject is natural but so is grace for nature is the subj●ct of grace 3. Whatsoever we bring into the world with our nature is called natural Thus sin is natural and hereditary diseases are natural because we bring them with us So Adams original justice is called natural and so are all Angelical perfections because they were created with them So the sannctification of those in Scripture who were sanctified from the womb may be called natural Again nature may he called grace for whatsoever is not of due debt is of grace such is nature and all natural powers and actions for it is of grace that we live move and have our being in God who is the prime and universal cause without Whose influence the second subordinate causes cannot work and therefore ●ven for the actions and faculties of nature as eating drinking sleep life health c. we are bound to give thanks and to beg their continuance and preservation to which duty we are not tied if these be of debt and not of grace But saving grace is distinguished from nature as the garment from the body the one may be lost without the other And so when the Fathers speak of Adam's original justice they say he lost his garment and was stripp'd naked a 1 Tim. 1.19 Holding faith and a good conscience which some having put away co●cerning faith have made ship-wrack b Jam. 2.19 Thou believest there is one God thou doest well the Devils also believe tremble This faith then wh●ch consisteth in a bare assent i● common to the Elect and Reprobate c Matth. 13.20 He that reciveth the seed into stony places the same is he that heareth the word and ●●on with joy receiveth it yet hath he not root c. d Mat. 17.20 if you had faith but as a grain of mustard seed● you would say to this mountain remove hence to yonder place and it would remove This hath been given for a certain time even to Reprobates as we see by Iudas who had this gift of miracles with the rest of the Apostles Matth. 10.8 e Saving faith which is proper to the Elect is that which we defined a Psal. 34.14 Isa. 55.7 b Eph. 2.1 Col. 3 9 10. c Rom 6.2 c. Gal. 2.20 a Of that day and hour knoweth no man not ●he Angels of heaven excep● my Father only Mat. 13. 32. Nor the Son himself but the Father alone 1 Thess. 5. 1. 2 c. concerning the times and seasons brethren it is not needfull that I write unto you for you your selves know well that