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A15824 A modell of divinitie, catechistically composed Wherein is delivered the matter and method of religion, according to the creed, ten Commandements, Lords Prayer, and the Sacraments. By Iohn Yates, Bachelour in Diuinitie, and minister of Gods word in St Andrewes in Norvvich. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660.; Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. Short and briefe summe of saving knowledge. aut; Richardson, Alexander, of Queen's College, Cambridge. 1622 (1622) STC 26085; ESTC S103644 253,897 373

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his first inhabitants In the resurrection of the dead they neither marry nor are giuen in mariage but are as the Angels of God in beauen Q. When were these things created A. In the first moment of time for as they had no succession of time for the receiuing of their essentiall parts so God tooke the very first beginning for their creation The succession of time being left to other creatures of a cleane contrary nature Angels are not simply eternall because they haue a beginning yet they are immortall because nature can never sever their parts or divide them asunder Gen. 1.1 In the beginning he made the heauen c. Perfect for forme and that it might not be voyd like the earth filled it with most excellent inhabitants Q. What are the things so made A. The third heaven and the Angels Colos 1.16 Heaven and all things therein as thrones dominions principalities powers c. were created of the Father by his Sonne Angels no sooner opened the eyes of their reason then they saw themselues in skie and highest sphere of happinesse Q. What is the creation of the third heaven A. Whereby it was made perfect immediately of nothing to be a most excellent place replenished with all pleasures that belong to eternall happinesse where his Maiestie is seene face to face and therefore aboue all other places is called the Habitacle of holinesse 2 Chron. 30.27.1 King 8.30 Deut. 26.15 Gods house full of excellent Mansions Ioh. 14.2 Abrahams bosome Luk. 16.22 The third and highest heaven 2. Cor. 12.2 Psal 113.5 The habitation of Iehovah where are fulnesse of ioy and pleasures for euermore Psal 16.11 and 33.14 This onely hath the immoueable foundation Heb. 11.10 And is as folide as stone but cleare as Cristall Rev. 21.11 Iob sayes it is strong and firme as being stretched and spread out to the vtmost extension and as transparent in brightnesse as a molten looking glasse Iob 37.18 This onely is to be called Firmament as not penetrable by any creature whereas the other two heavens vnder it are to be passed through by the grossest bodies This heaven is without all pores and cannot possibly extend or contract it selfe into a larger or straiter compasse it opens to the very Angels Gen. 28.12 Ioh. 1.51 who though they be able to penetrate all things vnder it yet are they no more able to enter that body then they are to passe into one anothers natures Hence it comes to passe that the third heaven giues way to Angels the soules and bodies of men to enter by miracle God making way by his power where nature yeelds no passage This heaven is more firme and solide then the earth more bright and glorious then the Sunne in his strength c. Q. What is the Creation of the Angels A. Whereby he created them at once and together in the third heaven immediately of nothing with the greatest perfections of nature to the end they might praise him together and become his ministring Spirits and Messengers as he should haue occasion to send them Heb. 1.7 He made them for perfection of nature Spirits and for office his most immediate Ministers and for execution more ready then any flame of fire ver 14. Yea and so prompt to minister to the heires of saluation that they are all ready to be commanded Iob 38.7 They are called morning Starres by reason of their admirable brightnesse of nature such as the eye of flesh cannot behold Colos 1.16 Q. With what properties hath he enriched them A. With the greatest perspicuitie of reason and acutenesse of wit libertie of will strength and speed of motion that is possible or incident to created nature Mat. 18.10 They are sayd alwayes to behold the face of God so cleare vnderstandings that they quickly perceiue what God would haue done yet of some things are they ignorant Mar 13.32 And whatsoever they know is by reflection either of Gods face vpon the glasse of their mindes or the beames of it as they shine in the creatures the one is by immediate revelation the other by inquisition and discourse Eph. 3.10 1. Pet. 1.12 It is true that Angels see both the face of God and the face of things and then the face of themselues and hence it is that they know nothing in themselues but either God reveales it or themselues doe finde it in the creatures and by meanes hereof they learne much in beholding God and his workes and hauing so neere a presence with his Maiesty must needs out-strip others that are further off I meane in respect of divine Revelation As for freedome of will it was most excellent by nature and is now growne better by grace and hath confirmed them for ever in glory as for strength and a gilitie of motion read these Texts Gen. 32.2 2 Sam. 24.16 2 King 19.35 Act. 1.10 and 5.19 and 12.7.8.9.10 Q. What are their offices A. To celebrate the praises of God and to execute his commands Dan. 7.10 Thousand thousands ministred vnto him and ten thousand thousands stood before him Luk. 1.19 I am Gabriel that stand in the presence of God and am sent to speake vnto thee c. Psal 103.20 and 148. 2. Ready are the Angels both in their attendance vpon God and performance of his will to his creatures Psal 91.11 Isa 6.3 Rev. 7.11.12 They are as a gard to the Church Q. Where is their speciall abode A. In the third heauen Math. 18 10. Their Angels in heaven Mar. 12.25 When wee arisefrom the dead wee shall be as the Angels in heaven Psal 68.17 The Chariots of the Lord are twentie thousand thousand Angels and the Lord is among them as in the Sanctuary of Sinai They are the proper inhabitants of heaven and there is of them an innumerable company Heb. 12.22 Yet their number is not infinite though to vs it be indefinite Q. Are there any degrees of Angels A. Yes but to determine what and how many is without warrant from Gods word for ought I can finde Q. Doth not Scripture favour their opinion that make nine severall orders of Angels A. Col. 1.16 Ephe. ● 21. and 3.10 S. Paul here giueth distinct titles to the inhabitants of heauenly places But whether hereby are signified distinct orders offices or gifts it doth not appeare And whenas it is supposed that those nine orders are set downe by a disciple of S. Paul it is well proued that the alledged Dionysius is of a far newer stamp and baser mettall Nor can I see how it can agree with Scripture that the Seraphim Cherubim and th●ones haue never any other employment then immediate attending vpon the presence of God whereas Heb. 1.14 the Angels are said to be all ministring Spirits for the good of the elect Isa 6.6 CHAPTER XIII Of the first matter and foure Elements Question HItherto of things immediately perfected what is the creation of those things that were perfected by degrees An. It is whereby he made them of a
the beleife of that which hath beene spoken A. I beleeue in God who is one essence most simple pure and absolute and being essentially indivisible is personally distinguished into the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and is therefore called Vnitie in Trinitie and Trinitie in Vnitie or Vnitrinitie and Trinunitie How to conceiue of this in our prayers and meditations is both the deepest point of all Christianitie and the most necessary so deepe that if wee wade into it wee may easily drowne never finde the bottome so necessary that without it our selues our seruices are prophane irreligious wee are all borne Idolaters naturally prone to fashion God to some forme of our owne Away then with all wicked thoughts and grosse devotions and with Iacob bury all strange gods vnder the oake of Shechem ere we offer to set vp Gods Altar at Bethel without all mentall reservations conceiue of our God purely simply spiritually as of an absolute being without forme without matter without composition yea an infinite without all limits of thoughts Thinke of him as not to be thought of as one whose wisedome is his iustice whose iustice is his power whose power is his mercy and all himselfe Good without qualitie great without quantitie everlasting without time present euery where without place containing all things without extent If this shall giue our devotions any light it is well the least glimpse of this knowledge is worth all the full gleames of humane and earthly skill After this weake direction let vs still study to conceiue aright that we may pray aright and still pray that we may conceiue and meditate more and more that we may doe both And the father sonne and holy Ghost direct vs inable vs that wee may doe all Amen CHAPTER XI Of the workes of Iehovah-Elohim in generall Question HItherto we haue heard of Gods sufficiencie what is his efficiencie Answere That whereby he worketh all things and all in all things 1. Cor. 12.6 It is the same God that worketh all in all Rom. 11.36 Of him for him and through him are all things Deut. 34.4 Act. 14.17 Q. What is here generally to be considered of vs A. Something concerning the essence and something the subsistence Gen. Chap. 1. to the end the word Elohim is vsed aboue 30. times and no other word for God Chap. 2. is vsed Elohim alone to verse 4. and from thence to the end Iehovah Elohim constantly a course I take it not to be paralleled or exemplified in any other portion of Scripture and the reason is good for as long as the workes were in creating the persons obserued each their distinct manner of working and so the holy Ghost vseth a phrase to expresse it as likewise after the worke was done and a seventh day sanctified for rest all the three persons reioyced in the workes of their hands From the 4. verse of Chap. 2. to the end the whole worke being done and repeated againe for the better observation of it and most especially of the true cause Iehovah-Elohim are ever coupled together that we might take notice that creation did manifest one God three persons one God most plainely three persons more obscurely yet not so darkely but if Adam had stood he might haue gathered the same by GODS workemanship both in himselfe and the creatures and that wee that are fallen being not able to read any such matter in the great Booke of the world might obserue it by the little Booke of his word which drawes the Vniverse into two Chapters as into a small map giuing much good counsell in a narrow roome teaching that briefely which Phylosophers haue scarce touched in great Volumes Q. What then concerning the essence A. Has omnipotencie which in nature is before all efficiency yet because we see first by resolution of Gods works which is to goe from the effects to the cause we see Gods omnipotencie by his efficiencie And therefore in the Creed wee beleeue in the Almightie as the maker of heauen and earth From efficiencie and omnipotencie appeares God decree by that his counsell and thence his will or good-pleasure Now his Good-pleasure is the first counsell next and from the one as the cause the other as his manner of working proceeds his decree which is executed by his omnipotencie and efficiencie Eph. 1.11 Will by counsell purposeth or decreeth by omnipotencie to worke all things as he hath set them downe in himselfe Iob 9.4 and 12.13 Prov. 8.14 Where wee read how Gods almightie power is ordered by wisedome Ier. 10.12 He hath made the earth by his power he hath established the world by his wisedome and hath stretched out the heauens by his discretion Ier. 51.15 Q. What is Gods omnipotencie A. Whereby he is able to effect all that he doth yea and whatsoeuer he doth not which is absolutely possible Mat. 19.26 With God all things are possible Math. 3.9 Of very stones to raise vp children to Abraham Phil. 3.21 He is able to subdue all things vnto himselfe Psal 135.6 Whatsoeuer the Lord pleased that did hee both in heauen and in earth in the Seas and all deepe places Mal. 2.15 Did not he make one and yet had he the residue of the spirit to wit to haue created Adam more wiues And here may well appeare the names El and Helion Deut. 9.10.17 Psal 9.2 Dan. 4.17 Christ in the old Testament and also in the new is called The Almightie Isa 9.6 Rev. 1.8 And so the Spirit is called the power of the Highest Luk. 1.35 Q. Why say you absolutely possible is there any thing impossible to God A. Yes All such things as contradict either his owne essence or the nature of things As God cannot lie because he is truth it selfe neither can hee make a body to be in two places at once as the body of Christ to be in heauen and vpon a Popish Altar at once For that implies a contradiction and therefore a lie whereof the Papists and not God are Authors Rom. 3.4 Let God be true and euery man a liar Act. 3.21 Heauen is said to receiue the body of Christ now if it be wholly circumscribed for length breadth and thicknesse in the third heauen it cannot at the same time be circumscribed within the limits of the earth for that which is finite in one place cannot be infinite in two It is onely Gods propertie to be in two places at once neither included nor excluded and therefore if the body of Christ were in heauen and earth at the same instant of time neither included nor excluded it were no more a bodie but a God if they say the omnipotency of God may extend the dimensions of Christs body that it may at the same time fill heauen and earth then is it not in two places at once but in one by continuation if the dimensions of Christs body answere the dimensions of the place it shall be the greatest monster that ever the world dreamed of no not
of time so some others that they might not haue their principles together were to haue something goe before them hence the constancie and inconstancie of Gods creatures The third heauen and the Angels were of necessitie to be created in the first instant that they might haue their perfection of matter and forme together otherwise they should be corruptible for whatsoeuer is of a preexistent matter is resoluble and subiect to corruption But that which is immediately of nothing is perfectly composed hath no other change but by the same hand to returne into nothing againe It was therefore impossible for the world to want a beginning and improbable for the creatures to be all at once and yet some to remaine incorruptible and others corruptible That the worke was of sixe dayes continuance is plaine by Gen. 2.1 Exod 20.11 Q. How is the worke distributed A. Either into the adiuncts of time as a worke of sixe dayes or into the essentiall and integrall parts as into nature constant or inconstant or respecting the agent that gaue all as well matter as forme into Creation immediately perfect or perfect by degrees Gen. 1.1 In the beginning or very first moment of time God created heauen and earth Now by the opposite member in the distribution largely discribed in the whole Chapter we shall be able to vnderstand that which is in silence passed over Earth vpon which wee now tread was made the third day and therefore cannot be this which was made in the very beginning of the first day neither can this heauen be that which was made the second day ver 8. It then remaines by iust consequent to be the highest heauen which at the very first was made most absolute and perfect Secondly the earth that was made at the very same instant as a matter of all that was afterwards to be created being all things in power nothing in act did from his owne center touch the third heauen in euery point and part of his outside that of necessitie least any vacuitie or emptinesse should haue interposed it selfe within the compasse of so great a continent nature abhorring to yeeld nothing a place within the circle of some-thing Therefore were these two as companions and friends immediately made of God in the very beginning of the first day Further it is said of the earth ver 2. that it was without forme and voyd that is as yet it had neither any essentiall or accidentall perfection The Lord afterwards did forme it into the light the expanse improperly called the firmament the water and the earth These foure were mediately created of the earth and yet for their formes immediately from God of nothing Thus was the earth first formed the highest part of it most apt to receiue light the next ayre the third the forme of water and the lowest the forme of earth After the earth had receiued this perfection it was filled in euery part of it with inhabitants as aboue with starres foules below with trees beasts and fishes c. But of these anone I insist here to proue by reason that which is a truth not as yet clearely deliuered and by many contradicted I leaue all to censure according to the evidence I shall giue My meaning is not to binde any man vnto my opinion I onely present things and lay them out as it were vpon a stall neither is it meet I grow into choler with any man that giues me no credit or dis-likes my ware that were to play the Pedant Passion witnesseth that it is not reason so to doe and he that doth any thing out of passion cannot well doe it out of reason Why should any bee angry with mee that I am not altogether of his opinion seeing I am not angry with him because he is not of mine I haue propounded for my example S. Ierome and S. Augustine in their disputations to whom it was no matter who gained the day they would both winne by vnderstanding their errors But why doe I thus draw my selfe from my taske Let truth vphold her selfe by mildnesse and be promoted by patience You haue heard that heaven and earth were made in the very instant and beginning of the first day That they are two opposite members in the worke of God and therefore what is properly giuen to the one must not bee giuen to the other The earth sayth the Text was without forme and voyd Heaven then had at the very first his forme and inhabitant and therefore had the glorious Angels at the same instant created with it other places were in time before their in-dwellers onely the third heaven and the Angels were concreated and the reason is for that their perfections were equally of nothing It could not stand with order after the finishing of the third heauen and entrance made to create of matter afterward to fall off againe and beginne to create substances of no matter I meane integrally for their whole essence otherwise the foure formes of the elements and soule of man were of nothing Q. What is the creation of things immediately made perfect A. Whereby he made them of nothing with their principles together that is their matter and forme were put together of Almightie God not suffering the one to enter the composition before the other Gen. 1.1 In the beginning he made not giuing the one a beginning before the other The same individuall time was the measure of both Our bodies and soules may part asunder because in creation time did separate them c. Q. What followes from hence A. That they are obnoxious and subiect to the motion of their owne nature onely by the power of God No other force is able to worke vpon them or destroy their beings Luk. 12.31 Math. 6.19.20 1. Tim. 6.19 The place and the life therein are both incorruptible subiect to no alteration change or mutation Angels are too quicke and ready in their motion to suffer of any but God he onely is nimble enough to meet them and master them Q. What else A. That they are onely subiect in regard of their essence to creation and annihilation that is by the same hand they may be made nothing as they were of nothing made something Isa 40.15 God can takeaway his creature as easily as the winde doth a little dust Q. What yet further may be obserued A. That they are in themselues no wayes liable to generation or corruption They can neither receiue new formes or loose their old for that matter cannot admit of diverse formes which it selfe was never depriued of his owne So complete is the vnion that the matter hath not so much as the least inclination to any other perfection then it receiues at the first instant by the hand of the Creator and excellencie of his forme Math. 22.30 The idle question of the Sadduces concerning mariage in heauen and procreation of children is fully answered by our Sauiour both in regard of the nature of the place and
the third day then by his ascending into heauen and sitting at the right hand of God his coming to Judge quicke dead holy Ghost of the Church which is holy Catholicke whose benefits are in this life Communion of Saints foriuenesse of sinnes in the life to come Resurrection of the body Life euerlasting The workes of faith The Law the rule of holinesse which is the worship of God Table 1. who is to be worshipped alone Commandment 1. with his owne worship 2. which must be handled with all reuerence 3. leanred with all diligence 4. Iustice which is our dutie to man Table 2. In speciall our Parents Commandement 5. general when we must preserue life Commandment 6. then his chastitie 7. and goods 8. good name 9. with the whole man 10. and prayer where there is a reuerend place whose parts are eyther petition where we craue graces Spiritiall The Hallowing of his name 1. or the enlargemēt of his kīgdome 2. doing of his will as in heauen so in earth 3. Temporall the giuing of vs our daily bread this day 4. deprecation Forgiuenesse of sinnes as we orgiue others 5. Not to be deliuered into temptation but deliuered from euill 6 thankesgiuving wherein we acknowledge that to God belongeth for ever The gouernment of all things for thine is the kingdome as also power glory the shutting vp thereof Amen Sacraments Baptisme The Lords Supper ❧ The Catechisme defined and distributed CHAPTER I. Of Faith in God Question WHat inducements to Religion are prefixed before your Catechisme Answere Foure first the giuing vp of my name to God in Baptisme and that in the dreadfull name of Father Sonne and holy Ghost Secondly that being not able to giue it vp my selfe it was done by others according to the auncient custome of the Church ever conioyning Baptisme and confession together Math. 3.6 Aug. epist 24. Papists would haue it to contract spirituall kindred but surely it maketh honest loue amongst neighbours Thirdly they that gaue it vp for me did promise in my name that I should liue according to Religion Fourthly I beleeue in conscience that I am bound to performe what they haue promised Thus because I am Gods and bound to him by sureties vowes promises and Conscience it selfe It is my dutie being now come to yeares of discretion to learne to beleeue in him and obey him Q. What then is Religion A. It is the acknowledgement of the truth which is after godlinesse Tit. 1.1 Q. What are the parts A. Faith and workes the summe of the one is contained in the Creed of the other in the ten Commandements Lords Prayer and the Sacraments Tit. 3.8 Q. What is Faith A. A confidence in God grounded vpon knowledge Ioh. 16.30 We know and by this beleeue Q. How is faith grounded vpon knowledge A. In regard of God and his Church the maker of the Covenant and the people with whom it is made Ier. 31.33 Q. How in respect of God A. As we beleeue in one God and three persons for our happinesse Ioh. 14.1 Q. How in one God A. In respect of nature essence and being Deut. 4.35 Q. How in three persons A. Three in regard of divine relation or reall respects in that one most pure essence Math. 28.19 Q. What is the essence A. That whereby God is of himselfe the most absolute and first being Isa 41.4 Q. What is a person A. That one pure God with the relation of a Father Sonne and holy Ghost 1 Ioh. 5.7 Q. Doth the relation adde any thing to the essence A. Nothing but respect or relation as Abraham the Father of the faithful hath the same nature as he is a Father and as he is a man Q. What is the Relation A. It is either to send or be sent and both these are done either by nature or counsell Ioh. 15.26 the spirit proceedeth from the Father and Sonne by nature and is sent to vs by counsell Q. Is there no other Relation A. Yes either to beget or be begotten and the Father begets his onely Sonne by nature and the rest of his children by Counsell Heb. 1.3 Iam. 1.18 A man hauing the relation of a Father is said to beget Children by nature or counsell as adopted children are freely begotten not of the bodie but the will Iam. 1.18 Of his owne will beget he vs not so his onely Sonne who is as naturall to his Father as burning to the fire and as Isaac to Abraham Q. What then is the first person A. God the Father who by nature begets his Sonne and by his counsell creats the world Heb. 1.2.5 Q. What is the propertie of the Father A. To beget and not to be begotten Ioh. 3.16 Q. What is his manner of subsisting A. To be the first person for the begetter is before the begotten and yet being Relatiues they are together in nature for no man is a Father before he haue a sonne though in order the Father be first Q. What is the Fathers worke A. Creation for I beleeue in him as maker of heauen and earth and the reason is because he is the first person to whom the first worke belongs Q. What is Creation A. A worke of the Father who of himselfe by his sonne and spirit makes the world of nothing exceeding Good Gen. 1.31 Heb. 1.3 Q. What is giuen to the Father in respect of Creation A. Almightie power for the Father in himselfe is pure act which act is power as it may be felt of his creatures which are in power to be Q. What is omnipotencie A. It is that whereby the Father is able to doe all that he doth and more then he doth if it contradict not his owne nature or the nature of things Q. How is Creation divided A. Into heauen and earth Gen. 1.1 Q. What meane you by heauen A. The third heauen with the Angels both which were made perfect in the very first beginning of time Gen. 1.1 Q. What meane you by earth A. All that matter which was closed and compassed about with the third heauen and was made at the same instant with it to prohibite keepe out vacuitie or emptinesse and fill vp the whole compasse of it otherwise the parts of themselues would haue fallen together to haue kept out that enemy of nature Gen. 1.1 Q. Are we to vnderstand no more by earth then that first matter A. Yes wee are to vnderstand the forming of it into the foure elements fire ayre water and earth as likewise the filling of it and them with inhabitants both aboue and below as also the providence of the Father in preseruing and governing of them all to their ends and vses for the Father carries the worke according to his proper manner of working vntill we come to Redemption and there the Sonne takes it vpon him in a peculiar manner Q. What is the second person A. The Sonne who is begotten of the Father by nature and by counsell redeemes mankind Q. What is the Relatiue
the true God and him alone and that with the whole man in the best of all his powers Q. What is the second Commandement A. Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image Exod. 20.4.5.6 Psal 44.21 and 106.35.39 Deut. 4.12 Isa 42.2 Hos 14.8 Hab. 2.18 Math. 15.9 1 Ioh. 5.21 Q. What is the summe hereof A. That we worship God with his owne worship and not our owne deuises Q. What is the third Commandement A. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. Deut. 28.58 Psal 5.16.17 Dan. 4.34 Math. 6.9 Rom. 11.33 1 Tim. 6.1 Q. What is the summe thereof A. Due reuerence to be shewed in the worship of God Q. What is the fourth Commandement A. Remember thou keepe holy the Sabboth day c. Neh. 13.15 to 22. Exod. 20.8.9.10.11 Isa 58.13 Ier. 17.27 Reu. 1.10 Q. What is the summe of this law A. All diligence in publique Prayer to God and in learning the will of God especially vpon his owne day CHAPTER IIII. Of Charitie Hitherto of holinesse in the first Table Question WHat is that Iustice that we owe to our neighbour Answere That we doe to him as we would he should do to vs. Mark. 12.31 Q. What is the first Commandement of this Table A. Honour thy father and mother c. Exod. 20.12 Q. What is the summe thereof A. Due respect to our superiours inferiours and equalls to honour all according to their place and degree Q. What is the second precept A. Thou shalt not kill Exod. 20.13 Q. What is the summe of it A. Preseruation of life as farre as may stand with the good of the Church and Common wealth Q. What is the third Commandement A. Thou shalt not commit adulterie Exod. 20.14 Q. What is the summe of it A. Chastitie both inward and outward in affection and action Q. What is the fourth Commandement A. Thou shalt not steale Exod. 20.15 Q. VVhat is the summe of it A. Iustice and equitie a vertue that readily giues euery man his owne Q. VVhat is the fift Commandement A. Thou shalt not beare false witnesse c. Exod. 20.16 Q. VVhat is the summe thereof A. Truth and our testimony thereunto as often as it shall lawfully be required Q. VVhat is the sixt Commandement A. Thou shalt not couet Exod. 20.17 Q. VVhat is the summe thereof A. Contentment and resistance against all concupiscence CHAPTER V. Of Prayer Hitherto of the Law Question VVHat is Prayer Answere It is a mouing of God the Father in the name of his Son by the power of his Spirit with things agreeable to his will Rom. 8.27 Ioh. 16.23 Q. Where is the summe of this contained A. In the Lords Prayer Q. How is that divided A. Into a Preface the Petitions and the conclusion Q. What is the Preface A. It is the preparation of the heart in comming to God for as we are to come with boldnesse so must wee also come with reuerence of his Maiestie that filleth the heauens Psal 26.6 and 115.3 Eccl. 5.1 Isa 66.1 Luk. 15.18 Q. VVhat are the words A. Our father which art in heauen Q. How are the petitions devided A. They either concerne God or our selues Q. How many concerne God A. Three Q. How are they devided A. They either concerne his Glory or the meanes of it Q. Which is the petition concerning his Glory A. Hallowed be thy name Where we desire that God in his nature attributes word and workes may be sanctified by vs Leu. 10.3 Ezek. 38.23 Act. 12.23 Q. What are the petitions concerning the meanes of his Glory A. Two The comming of his kingdome and the doing of his will Q. What is meant by thy Kingdome come A. That the kingdome of our Lord Iesus Christ both by the inward working of his spirit and also by the outward meanes may be enlarged daily vntill it be perfected at the comming of Christ to Iudgement Psal 122.6 Isa 62.7 Rom. 14.17 2 Thes 3.1 2 Tim. 4.8 Reu. 22.20 Q. What is meant by the doing of Gods will vpon earth as it is done in heauen A. That all obedience be giuen to God in the most holy and heauenly manner Psal 86.11 and. 119.36 Mal. 1.6 Act. 24.16 Rom. 8.29 1 Thes 4.3 And for want of exact performance daily prayer for pardon with a complaining of our wants Psal 143.2 Rom. 7.18 CHAPTER VI. Of requests for our selues Hitherto of blessings concerning our sanctification of Gods name comming of his kingdome and performance of his will Question VVHat blessings concerne our selues Answer Either such as concerne this life or a better the bodie or the soule Q. What is the petition for this life A. The giuing of vs our daily bread that is that God would prouide for vs all things conuenient for this life walking faithfully in our vocations and in all things submitting to his heauenly will and good pleasure Psal 37.5 Prou. 10.22 and 16.3 and 30.8 Hag. 1.6 1 Tim. 6.8 Q. What are the petitions for a better life A. I regard of the present forgiuenesse of sinne and for future deliuerance out of all temptations that may any wayes draw vs to sinne Q. What meane you by the first A. That all our sinnes may be forgiuen and neuer laid to our charge either to condemne vs here or to confound vs hereafter and that most freely in Iesus Christ and as we heartily forgiue them that haue offended vs wherewith goeth an humble confession of them to God Psal 40.12 Luke 11.4 1 Ioh. 1.9 Confession and deprecation must goe together Q. What meane you by the second A. The not leading or leauing of vs in temptation but his most gracious and mercifull deliuerance of vs out of them all and in this request we either lament our estate to God or complaine of the wicked who molest vs. Deut. 8.2 and 13.3 2 Chron. 32.31 Psal 13.2 and 55.2.3 Hitherto of Petition Q. What is thankesgiuing A. A gratefull acknowledgement of all the benefits of God and ascribing vnto him dominion power and glory for euer and euer Amen And this is the sweet concluding of all our Prayers 1 Chron. 29.11 Psal 29.2.9 2 Cor. 1.20 Phil. 4.6 CHAPTER VII Of Sacraments Question NOw we come to the celebrating of a Sacrament what then is it Answere It is a seale of righteousnesse by faith Rom. 4.11 Q. What are the kinds A. Two Baptisme and the Lords Supper Mat. 26.26 and 28.19 Gen. 17.11.12 Rom. 4.11.1 Cor. 10.1.2.3.4 Q. What is Baptisme A. A Sacrament of our entrance into Christianitie or of our ingrafting into Christ Act 8.12.38 Q. What is the outward signe A. Water with the sprinkling of it in the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost Q. What is signified by it A. The washing away of our sinnes and presenting of vs holy to God the Father Q. What is the Lords Supper A. A Sacrament of our continuance in Christianitie or our daily growing vp with Christ 1. Cor. 11.23 This memorable Banquet
to the fruits qualitie to the seeds temper to the seasons God therefore that can doe all is the best husbandman Man therefore that hath expired his first life must haue God to inspire him againe or else hee cannot liue And this will appeare in the very name wee giue our rule Religion is to tie againe Our loue to God like the new cords of Sampson was quickly snapt asunder God therfore that he might bind vs to himselfe by a stronger cord hath chosen the grace of faith to revnite vs againe to himselfe And so Religion hath his notation from the first part of our rule which is faith in God Or else may it take his denomination from the second part which is obedience towards God The law that was to be read by creation was obliterated and in a manner scraped our by corruption but now againe by religion is written in our hearts Ier. 31.33 and so is to be read againe Life consists in vnion and action now by faith wee haue the one and by the law we performe the other The rule of life is called Diuinitie in regard of God the end of it Theologie in regard of the subiect matter 1. Pet. 4.11 logia Theou words of God but of all names this comes neerest the forme of our Art which signifies either our tying againe to God or reading againe the things of God This bond is the surest Isa 54.10 Ier. 32.40 And this booke is the plainest Deut. 30.14 Rom. 10.8 For as faith binds vs to God so it giues and gaines such power from him as wee may walke acceptably before him Luke 1.74 And here we see how pittifull and plentiful a God we haue in raising of vs from corruption to greater perfection then ever we enioyed by creation This second bond is invincible for so it becomes the Almightie to proceed in his workes He that hath shewed man what he can doe for himselfe shall now see what God can doe for him And God were not faithfull if there were either finall or fatall Apostasie from a iustifying faith It is folly to imagine that God should goe from one imperfection to another Loue was for try-all faith is for trust God hath tried the weaknesse and wickednesse of our loue It is now for vs to trust him vpon the faith of our saluation Water cannot suddenly be cleared but with leisure and by degrees and some time must necessarily be required to beare and beate backe those abuses wherunto we haue a long time beene envred Time and industry will eate euen thorow Marbles Giue God credence and he will in his due time giue thee riddance of all the rubbish of thy sinnes But to this our owne safety our owne sedulitie is required for as it is in vaine Psal 127.1 for men to watch except God keepe the citie so will it be in vaine for God to keepe except wee watch The husbandman must not burne his Plough or the Marchant neglect his Trade because God hath said I will not forsake thee Father keepe them in thy name Ioh. 17.11 doth not intimate that wee should be carelesse to keepe our selues Indeed till the Lord inspire wee but lamely and blindly re-aspire to any good We liue groaping as the Sodomites after lifes doore and hauing wearied our selues goe away wanting the thing we both wished and waited for Take away the Sunne from the world and the soule from the body and earth becomes earth as it was at the first Gen. 1.2 So sever God from the soule and what is man but a dead carrion All the elements and elementaries lighten and darken coole and warme die and reviue as the Sunne presents or absents it selfe from them so wee liue or die feele or faint as the Sunne of righteousnesse parts or revnites himselfe vnto vs. Whereby we are taught that primarily and principally we liue by God as the soule of our soules and secondarily by faith as the Spirits The bond of soule and body here is that heat or heauenly breath that knitts God and man together in an indivisible and insoluble knott If the Lyons Dan. 6.16 ravenous beasts by nature and made keene with hunger adore the flesh of a faithfull man shall any worldly thing change his heart alter his affection or Gods to him Rom. 8. the earth shall sooner shake the pillars of the world tremble the countenance of heauen apale the Sunne loose his light the Moone her beautie the Starres their glory c. then a man knit to God by Religion be once seperated from him againe The fire hath proclaimed it selfe vnable so much as to singe an haire of the head of the godly Dan. 3.27 Thus then you see how Religion may put vs in minde of the wonderfull mercy of God Now heare how it remembers vs of our wofull misery we are found of God as rotten roots without any life or vertue as barren ground bringing forth no fruit but sinne shame and damnation As a dead body or decaying bough cut off from the tree perishing and withering to nothing yea wee are so much more miserable by how much wee were once more excellent and eminent The more vnnaturall any qualitie is the more extreame will it be a cold win de from the South is intollerable and the purest wine becomes the sharpest vineger The few sparkes of good that lie couered vnder heapes of cold ashes are no wayes able t kindle the fire of a godly life no not so much as to giue a glimmering light to lead to heauen The wisest Philosophers never so much as ghessed at this Art the doctrine of it never came within the fadome of their reason If they few any thing it was a farre off even as heauen it selfe vpon which they looked with desire and admiration knowing not the right way thither Natures skill is something in the end nothing in the meanes It hath taught without controlement that there is a blessednesse for man to seeke after but what or where was remoued from their Academie assuring vs that not Athens but Ierusalem must reach vs this lesson The wisest Ethnick doth but as S. Peter speaketh Mnoopazein see glimmeringly and vncertainly in this Theame 2. Pet. 1.9 And like Zebul in holy Story either take men for mountaines or mountaines for men Iudg. 9.36 and for inconstancy like Absolon and the Elders of Israel come off and on in their opinions and alwayes beleeues the worst Sometimes the counsell of Achitophell is approued and then presently the aduice of Hushai the Archite is a great deale better 2. Sam. 17.4.14 The Barbarians almost with one breath curse and blesse the Apostle Act. 28.6 Shall we therefore praise nature or trust it in this No wee prayse it not With what presumption hath it vndertaken to write bookes of the soules tranquilitie but that must needs be performed with much imperfection which is practised without a rule Sundry capricious fancies and fables are handsomly framed glued together by morall Philosophie
As likewise most absurde to hold one and the selfe same nature begotten vnbegotten for so there should be a first second and third nature as there is a first second and third person and so three Gods as well as three persons But this will better appeare by the sequele Oh the necessitie of this high knowledge which who attaines not may babble when he prayeth and bee superstitious when he worshippeth Onely here is our greater helpe that we haue the manhood of Christ as a Iacobs ladder to climbe vp to the God-head Ioh. 1.18 No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten sonne of the Father as out of his bosome hath revealed him vnto vs. So that in this intricate way to the throne of grace it will not availe vs as we now stand except we take with vs the second person as a Mediator whose presence and merits must giue passage acceptance and vigour to our prayers Christians must therefore learne to ascend from earth to heauen and from one heaven to another CHAPTER IIII. Of Gods Essence Question VVHat is Gods Essence Answere It is that whereby be is the first and most absolute being Being is that whereby a thing is truely and really in essence or existence And it is either the first being or that which is from the first Now God is the first Isa 41.4 and 48.12 and therefore essentially one Isa 46.9 Deut. 6.4 Eth. 4.6 Furthermore God is absolute as being independent from any other There was a first man and a first in euery kinde of creature but no absolute first saue God Exed 3.14 Ioh. 8.58 If any aske me why wee define the essence of God seeing wee formerly sayd it was not knowne of vs our answere is wee define it relatiuely not simply to wit as it is a first and that absolute first being is knowne best in it selfe and so is God for there is nothing more intelligible then he yet of vs nothing is lesse knowne we come to him by seconds and the begins of other things Which proue necessarily a first and that absolutely for two will proue one to goe before and dependent beings will proue an independent The Sunne beames are more visible to our eyes when they are cast obliquely vpon their obiects then when they fall directly so wee must shew you God rather in the blessings we receiue from him then those excellencies which are in him It is the best and the longest lesson even thus to learne him and of surest vse which alone if wee take not out it were better not to haue liued Oh that we would often exercise to acquaint our nature and draw it into some familiaricie with God the very soule and being of it And though at first wee make but our fire of greene wood yet not to bee tyred with blowing vntill our devotions be set on flame If we endeuour God will helpe by enlightning our vnderstandings till we be wholly enflamed with a loue of him And as Moses by often talking with God had a glorious glistering set vpon his countenance so wee by our often frequenting conference with God in prayers and meditations shall finde in our selues though not suddenly yet in time a most heavenly change Q. What followes from hence A. The observation of the essentiall name of God as Lehovah Iah Eheie The first word delivers vnto vs such an essence as ever was is and shall be Rev. 3.14 Ie is a note of the Future tense Ho of the Present and Vah of the Preterperfect tense and so is well expounded Rev. 1.8 But ill expounded by those which by them would vnderstand the Trinitie giuing the present to the Father past to the sonne and to come to the Spirit Yet it is true the Father workes of himselfe and as the present begins time so he the action it is also true that the Sonne works from him and therefore passeth on the action as that which is past doth time Neyther can this be denyed but that the Spirit worketh from them both and so finisheth te action as the future doth the poynts and periods of time But this word is essentiall and not personall and therefore is giuen of God to expresse the essence not the persons Iah is contracted of Iehovah not to signifie a diminute God as if it were the diminutiue thereof but still for essence and present being Neither is it applyed to Christ humbled in the flesh as if that were the diminution of it but it is the denomination of one and thee selfe same glorious essence in all the persons Eheie is as much as I will be which no creature can peremptorily affirme Time changeth all things and there is none that hath the command of it but he alone that gaue it beginning and continuance and to whom the account of our very houres are due and best knowne But I must not lead you from Elins into the wildernesse and leauing the wells of water trouble you with the barrennesse of mans braine Take these Texts of Scripture for confirmation and further illustration Exod. 3.14 and 15.2.3 Psal 68.4 Isa 42.8 Happy are we that wee rest vpon such a being and may enioy all things in him and him in all things nothing in it selfe so shall our ioyes neyther change nor perish for how ever the things themselues may alter and fade yet he in whom they are ours is ever like himselfe constant and everlasting Q. What followes in the second place A. That God is free and voyd of all power either to be or be otherwise then he is And therefore faith rests vpon a most substantiall and immutable being Hee hath neither causes to over power him or accidents to change him and so he is aboue all substantiall and accidentall power Causes prevaile in euery creature but the Creator is voyde of them And hereupon God is from himselfe of himselfe through himselfe and or himselfe He that is An●●tios without causes is Autoon God of himselfe yea in vertue and power more then all causes to himselfe Goe then yee wise Idolatrous Parasites and erect Shrines and offer sacrifices to your God the world and seeke to please him with your base servile devotions it shall be long enough ere such religion shall make you happie you shall at last for sake those Altars emptie and sorrowfull for both you your God are beholding to a better being then your selues How ridiculous is it to plead for an Idollgod that hath all the causes put vpon him What fooles will be perswaded to resigne vp their owne eye-sight and to looke thorow such spectacles as very sottishnesse doth temper for them I will her presume to presse in with an easie determination although it seeme to me to be no other then a plaine quarrell betweene stomacke and discretion a small deale of wisedome might decide it especially considering that all things are from God and God alone from himselfe Blush ye Gentiles that vse a Smith and Carpenter so
weake efficients that they faint in drinking the strongest liquor That make choyce of iron brasse gold silver wood c. as matter to matte the making of a God But aboue all let them consider whom neither the fumes of siery passion do mist nor sinister respects or preiudices sway downe on either side from the pitch of iust integritie how silly and idle a thing it is to forme a God after the image of man bird or best and that without the meanest life farre from any Deitie or Divinitie except it be by the late Masters of the Mint in the multitude of their moderne miracles but the Lord knowes that these coines and stampes are farre off the purest pathes of veritie Alas how doe they ray and robbe God of his excellencie whiles they robe him in these raggs of rotten relickes But this is the very hate of heauen and in effect the very gate or hie way to hell to giue our selues vnto it as our Summum Bomum or chiefe good Whiles Dagon stands the Philistimes fall downe but when Dagon was fallen before the Arke the Philistimes stood to lift him vp It is iust with God that those which want grace should want wit too it is the power of superstision to turne men into those stockes and stones which they worship Methinkes their vnderstandings and wits should haue waded further if Dagon fall how shall we stand by him If he cannot helpe himselfe what shall he profit vs Yet Idolatry and Superstition are not easily put out of countenance Dagon is vp againe and the next morning the fittest time for devotion the Philistimes hasten their speed and flocke to their Temple to see how Dagon had rested that night vnder his owne Roofe and now behold in kindnesse their God is come to meeto them in the way some peeces parted from the rest salute them vpon the threshold his head and his hands are over-runne their fellowes to tell them that neither his wit nor his power could stand before the true God And now whereas the threshold should haue beene hollowed to the Victor it is consecrated to their beaten God As if it had beene made more holy by his ruine then Gods revenge Therefore God strikes them in their bodies which could not feele themselues stricken in their Idoll Paine must humble them whom shame cannot And now they begin to confesse that Gods hand was sore vpon them and their God Yet they make account of confession as drunkards doe of vomiting the Arke of the God of Israel shall not abide with them Thus wicked men vpon all occasions are glad to bee rid of God but with no patience can part with their siunes And thus the Prophet by running through all the causes Isa 40.18 with 44.12 derides the Heathen by making their gods And then as if they were besotted askes them Haue yee not knowne Haue yee not heard Hath it not beene told you from the beginning Haue yee not vnderstood it from the foundations of the earth It is be that is God which is able to sit vpon he circle of the earth stretch the heavens as a Curtains and spread them as a Tert to dwell in Q. What followes from hence that God is without all causes A. First He is without an efficient or beginning Rev. 1.8 and 3.14 And from hence he is not subiect or obnoxious to the creation or annihilation of any other as are ll creatures yea the very Angels and therefore God is absolutely independent and supreame And here nature and good nature may bring vs to God Reason hath no where either bound or banke to restraine it but at this cause hither will it bring vs and here will it leaue vs. I am the beginning of the creatures sayth Christ therefore God goe by the creatures as workes and they will lead vs to their first efficient and beginning Secondly God is without all matter and therefore most spirituall the lesse matter and the more forme the creatures inioy the more spirituall it makes them By God therefore so pure a spirit are all things nourished with the onely dew of divine benediction but this high way is so plaine that a guide were needlesse Furthermore God being most spirituall is likewise most invisible and impalpable Too subtile for sinew or sight to sease vpon him Luk. 24.39.1 Tim. 1.17 It would present him for a furious and raving Bedlam that should once formalize God to his owne fancies Againe where matter is wanting there common nature is wanting for things communicate as they rise from some common stocke and stemme And because all specialls are contained vnder generalls God wants that too and therefore is properly neither essence or being but an Huperousios or super substantiall being by himselfe one onely in number neither dividing nor devided multiplying or multiplyed The wife is the husband devided and the childe is the father multiplied But God is neither so devided into three neither are three so multiplied from one He is if I may so speake with reverence without all stocke or kine Therefore when we say essence is common and person proper it must be receiued with a graine of salt For the common nature is not distributed into parts as into persons but as common to all so it is one individuall and singular essence in them all and that receiued of each person without parts or passions for matter is the ground of both and where that is wanting they are not to bee found I stay the longer vpon these Negatiues because we re not loosely lightly to slide over the things of God as if they were vulgar and triviall like our owne Thus farre you haue seene God out of the rode and reach of the efficient and matter see him now voyd of forme and end for in them likewise consists power to be The forme in going and comming is the cause of all generation and corruption God therefore being without it is incorruptible and therefore a God immortall and everlasting Psal 102.26.27 Iam. 1.17.1 Tim. 1.17 A choice and refined peece of high Quintessence of wit is that of Papists in their breaden god which yet never Church could distill out of her braines or aspire vnto besides their owne What generation and corruption doe they make of the everlasting bread of heauen Here perhaps might wee finde stuffe enough I will not say to lade an Argosie but to over lade any mans wit in the world to reply vnto It shall suffice vs to thinke of God as God and man as man Christ in heaven and Christ in the Sacrament Now if wee adde further without both matter and forme together then is God neither the whole nor the member of any thing or any wayes to be distributed or defined I meane with perfect definition because he hath no essence diverse from himselfe and therefore the definition and that which it defines are all one so that in God Thees and Theiotees God and the God-head are all one
wee are his off-spring Act. 17.28 The head of nature is God who of his owne will of nothing begate all things I say of his will not of himselfe for so should he and all his creatures be simply one And so wee should need no other reckoning the number would be soone told But he must be sedulous that will learne this secret and by telling a multitude or an heape of vnities finde out one simply first But why say I so seeing two will proue one let him then finde any number in being and it will proue a God Q. What is Gods infinitenesse A. Whereby he is without all limits of essence As Gods eternitie riseth from this that hee hath neither beginning nor ending so his infinitenesse from this that he hath neither matter nor forme which are the proper limites of essence as being most essentiall to euery finite being Indeed the limitation of any cause makes the effect finite Gen. 1.2 the earth is said to be voyd and without forme It was of nothing for matter and it was all things for forme yet wanting both these it was finite as hauing his beginning and ending from God who alone sits vpon the circle of it Isa 40.22 and aboue it stretcheth the heavens inclosing both being inclosed by neither Psal 147.5 The Lord is of great power his vnderstanding is infinite And here may we ever be striuing to perfection and as the kine of the Philistimes which drew the Arke of God though they were milch and had calues at home the one to weaken them the other to withdraw them yet without turning to the right hand or the left they kept on their way till they came to Bethshemesh so hauing once ioyned our selues to the yoake of Christ and drawing forward towards this infinite essence and the fruition of our blisse in him let vs chearefully beare the Arke of his Law vpon our shoulders in the way of holinesse and in spite of all hinderances keepe on in our tract till wee bee gotten where our everlasting house and mansion is provided for vs and that by the hands of this vnlimited God Q. What followes from hence A. First The Immensitie of God whereby he is without all dimensions that is of length breadth or thicknesse Hee is higher then heaven deeper then hell longer then the earth broader then the Sea c. Iob 11.8.9 Isa 40.12 Ier. 23.23 A God at hand and a God a farre off He that is freed from dimensions may pierce and penetrate enter and passe whither he pleaseth without probabilitie or possibilitie of resistence A sonne feeling the loue of his father creepes neerer vnder his wings or elbow how easie is it for God to enter our stony and steely hearts and draw them after him They that resist the holy Ghost doe it by gain-saying his word not by frustrating his worke for hee shall conuince the world Io. 16.8 either to conversion or confusion The altitude of pride longitude of power and profunditie of policie are trampled vpon by God Proud Belshazzar Dan. 5.27 was weighed and found too light Gods wand soone found him wanting and alas how easily did God penetrate the hard walls of his heart to the horrour of his whole soule and hastning of his death Now as a Ship in the midst of a storme tossed with tempests and beaten on every side with windes and waues and dangerously driuen not by direction of the Master but by the fury of vnbridled violence so in this extraordinary agitation Reason which is the Pilote could beare no Rule but affection and affliction as a storme tosse and driue him to vtter despaire Thus all the wicked whose hearts the Lord doth not pearse and boare by his word he enters by force to stirre vp that raging Sea whose waters foame nothing but mire and gravell Isa 57.20 Q. What in the second place may be obserued A. His incomprehensiblenesse whereby hee is without all limits of place and from this flowes his omnipresence or vbiquitie whereby he is wholly without and within all and euery place no where included no where excluded and that without all locall motion or mutation of place Hee fils al places without compression or straitning of another or the contraction extension condensation or rarefaction of himselfe A Candle may bee contracted for his light within the hand or hatte extended to a whole roome A spunge may be thrust into a narrow compasse and yet by swelling fill a larger space But God neither moues to come into any place as doe the Angels or standing still fills it by thrusting out another as liquor into a vessell or else in larging and contracting himselfe like light or by any thickning or thinning of pores and parts as Ice and water c. but purely and simply by his essence and presence is euery where 1. Ksng. 8.27 Psal 139.7 Isa 66.1 Ier. 23.23.24 Act. 17.27 By this it appeares that no place can hinder God from doing vs good Distance or difficultie may be impediments to all the creatures to stay their helpe but God at a blush fills all places to comfort or confound as it pleaseth him He moueth or changeth all things without eyther motion or change in himselfe who is in euery place present in euery place intire within all things and contained in nothing without all things and sustained by nothing but containeth sustaineth and maintaineth all things O infinite goodnesse passing all humane both search and sight thou both fillest and includest all things thou art in euery place present without either seat or motion Giue me therefore grace that in all places I may both feare and feele thy power Q. What is Gods eternitie A. That whereby he is before and after all not beings that is not onely the world but the very nothing of it Reason will teach me that nothing was before the world and that nothing may be after it but it cannot teach mee any such apprehension before or after God For I cannot so much as conceiue a nothing before an absolute being the reason is because nothing is apprehended by way of contrarietie to something Psal 90.2 Before the mountaines were made c. God is not onely before the creature but the making of it and that from an everlasting before it to an everlasting after it Psal 139.16 God sees the creature in his non entitie or nothing Isa 57.15 He inhabiteth eternitie 1. Tim. 1.17 The King of ages Heb. 1.2 The maker of times The Hebrew word comes of a roote to he hid because there is no knowledge where to beginne or end Alas how doe wee affect a thousand things that cannot be effected miserably afflicting the soule because they are wanting And of all things wee doe obtaine the pleasure doth forth with eyther vanish or cloy they doe no more satisfie the appetite then salt water quencheth thirst Onely this eternall God giues it all contentment Eternitie is eyther an admirable blessing or a miserable curse If
Mahomet himselfe did dreame hee saw God in a vision so bigge as the Papists haue made Christ Let them neuer flee to Gods omnipotencie to maintaine their I doll vpon the Altar for it contradicts the very nature of a created bodie to be in two or many places at once or extended further then the nature of the creature will beare if Christ had in his body all the 4 elements wholly it could not be extended to fill the third heauen and the earth at once for they are all formally extended to their perfection by God and can fill no greater a place then is vnder the highest heauen Christ therefore hauing but a little part of all these in his body it were beyond a miracle to extend that little further then the whole Againe Christ hauing a glorified body it must not loose proportion now the extension of any one member more then is fit makes a deformitie Theresore the bodie of Christ loosing none of the perfections of nature and receiuing greater perfections of glory must be contained in the third heaven in such a length breadth and thicknesse as is fit for a body So that it neither stands with the power or the wisedome of God to worke such a miracle as the Papists obtrude vpon the world Q. But how can we attribute power to God who is pure act A. It cannot be giuen to God in respect of himselfe but onely of the creatures which may feele his worke which they never felt before The fire alwayes burneth in it selfe yet in regard of this or that combustible matter it is in power to burne that is the matter is in power to feele the act of the fire So God ever acteth or worketh in himselfe Ioh. 5.17 But the creature doth not ever feele it Psal 139.16 All things are said to be done of God long before the creature feeles his worke Hence creation as an action is eternall as a passion in time Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the heauen and the earth In regard of heauen and earth creation hath a beginning but in regard of God it hath none Time is the companion of creatures not of the Creator Q. What further appeareth from his omnipotencie and efficiencie together A. His decree which is a definitiue sentence concerning the effecting of all things by his mightie power according to the counsell of his will Whatsoeuer God doth in his efficiency and can doe by his omnipotencie that he decreeth I doe not simply say what he can doe he decreeth for the decree is onely of things to be done his omnipotencie of things to be done or not to be done but thus I reason What he doth that he can doe and what he can doe and doth that he decreeth to be done Ephe. 1.11 According to the purpose of him that worketh all things after the counsell of his will Efficiencie and omnipotencie manifest the decree but it is before them both and a cause of them So that there is nothing either in creation or providence whereof the decree of God is not some wayes a cause yet must we not so much stand poring vpon the decree of God as runne presently to that place in Gods providence which will cleare manifest vnto vs that Gods decree is without all fault The decree of Adams fall went before that part of Gods providence which did gouerne his fall and as providence workes it so God decreed to haue it wrought Q. What attributes appeare by the manifestation of his decree A. Constancie truth and fidelitie for the decree must bee most constant true and faithfull Isa 14.24 As I haue purposed it shall come to passe and what I haue consulted shall stand Vers 27. The Lord hath determined who shall disanull it his hand is stretched out and who shall turne it away Rom. 9.19 Q. What is his constancie in decreeing A. Whereby his decree remaineth constant and vnchangeable Mal. 3.6 I am the Lord which change not and yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed Isa 46.10 My counsell shall stand and I will doe all my pleasure Rom. 11.29 Heb. 6.17.18 Q. What is his truth A. Whereby he deliuereth nothing but that which he decreeth Truth is properly to pronounce as the thing is but the thing is ever as God pronounceth it to be You stand before me therefore I see you is a good consequence with man but the cleane contrary is true with God God seeth you therefore you stand there For truth is in God before it be in the things and in the things before it can be in me The truth therefore of Gods definitiue sentence is before the existence of any creature or action It is not true that the prescience of God follows the thing done or to be done for then the truth of a thing should be before God decreed it to be As for example God decreed this truth that Adam should fall this thing followes the foreknowledge of God in decreeing it to be so that it followes more directly thus God foresaw that Adam would fall therefore hee fell then on the contrary Adam fell therefore God foresaw it If truth should not more immediately followe the will and counsell of God then the nature of things then should decreed truths be mutable and some-times false but comming immediately from God they are ever delivered as he decreeth them Num. 23.19 Ier. 10.10 Deut. 32.4 Psal 145.17 Dan. 4.34 Rom. 3.4 Tit. 1.2 All which places free God from all possibilitie of lying and make him the Author of all truth Q. What is his fidelitie A. Whereby he effecteth most faithfully whatsoeuer hee hath decreed 1. Ioh. 1.9 He is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes Confession is no cause of the remission of sinnes as being after it in nature Yet God hath so decreed to linke things together that he will faithfully as though iustice required it performe remission of sinne to true confession 2. Tim. 2.13 He abideth faithfull and cannot deny himselfe Q. What appeareth by his decree beside these three Attributes A. His counsell for no decree is made without counsell and when Divines say that Gods decree is his eternall counsell they speake improperly for it is a thing wrought by counsell and as the effect shewes the cause so doth the decree of God his counsell For now we goe backward way to bring our selues to the highest cause of all things in which we are to rest without any further inquiry Ephes 1.11 Gods purpose for the effecting of any thing is framed according to the counsell of his will Q. What is his counsell A. It is his deliberation as it were for the best effecting of euery thing that seemeth good in his wisedome and will Act. 4.24 Christ died by the determinate counsell foreknowledge of God but that is the same with the decree for counsell more properly determines then is determined and therefore the new Translation speakes more aptly to doe whatsoeuer thy hand and thy counsell
preexistent matter or forgoing principles They are not immediately composed but first they haue a matter and then a forme and then their owne being or existing And as time dis-ioynes these things so they are subiect to change with time Gen. 1.2 Out of the voyde and vnformed earth came all inconstant and mutable creatures 2. Pet. 3.5 The earth that now is is sayd to stand out of that Chaos which Gen. 1.2 is called earth water c. This by conversion is as well the ground of confusion as of composition Out of a confusion are they compounded and may by conversion be confounded againe into it Q. What followeth hereupon A. That they are by nature returnable into their former principles and so of a corruptible nature 2 Pet. 3.6 The world that then was perished being over-flowed with the waters that is all that breathed Gen. 7.22 Euery thing vnder the Sunne passeth away Eccl. 1.4 And at the last day the elements with all their inhabitants shall be destroyed 2. Pet. 3.10 As it were a resolution being made into the first Chaos againe as may seeme what a hell were it for a man to be an inhabitant of that first earth The holy Ghost testifieth 2. Pet. 3.7 that the heavens and the earth which are now are kept in store and reserved for fire and perdition of vngodly men at the last day Good reason they should be punished where they sinned and with those creatures they haue abused A fearefull hell to haue all turned into the first Chaos with an addition of the fire of Gods vengeance As if that first matter were then to be formed and filled with nothing but the extremities of Gods curses At the first it was formed and adorned as a Palace and Paradise for man then shall it be left as a dungeon and noysome prison for the torture and torment of all wretched and wicked persons Onely the third heauen with the inhabitants thereof shall then be in blisse and blessed felicitie Q. How manifold is this creation A. It is eyther of the elements or the elementaries Gen. 2.1 Heauen and earth were finished with the host of them All that are placed aboue in the fire and the ayre or below in the waters and the earth are elementaries being composed out of those foure elements and are as the host of this inferiour world Q. What is the creation of the elements A. Whereby he made them of a precedent matter with their formes immediately of nothing That is the matter or earth without forme receiued into euery part and portion of it a simple formation without all mixture yet so that it was formed into foure bodies essentially distinguished which are most simple as hauing nothing in them but one common matter with foure distinct formes immediately created of nothing hence they are in themselues the greatest opposits as fire to water and ayre to earth The maine opposites are fire and water which stickle and striue together and are moderated and compounded by the two other When water would quench the fire earth steps in and helpes to abate his moysture And when fire would dry vp his moysture ayre secondeth the water and prepares a radicall moysture to feed the fire a little longer When the coldnesse of water takes off the edge of heat then ayre with his mild heat helpeth his fellow And when fire over-masters the coldnesse of water then earth checks him and abates his fury whence ariseth all elementaries receiuing the common matter and formes of the elements much abated and moderated after their striuing and strugling together and therefore are not so vehemently opposite and contrary in themselues Gen. 1.3 Let there bee light which was the first simple forme that was put into the common matter ver 6. Let there be an expanse or spreading which was next added to light as his fittest neighbour ver 9. Let there be gatherings or waters which contained the third simple forme came as next fellow to the ayre for so God had appointed that by placing it betweene two great adversaries it might be a friend to both ver 9. Let the dry appeare which comes lowest in ranke and gaue the matter the fourth simple forme Thus heat and cold moysture and drinesse did runne through the first common matter which intertaines them all and giues them leaue to diffuse themselues one into another for further mixture and composition Q. But may these things be handled in Divinitie A. Yes because wee so farre speake of them as they concerne creation which is proper to this Art And our rule is this that where Creation endeth nature beginneth and generation succeeds it as in imitation of Gods first composition God by his omnipotent hand giues to euery thing his being and then sets it a worke by his owne nature and vertue Aristotle knew a first matter but he confesseth he had it from Plato and he from the Aegyptians and they from Moses Yet he erred in many things for want of Divinitie beginning onely with nature where creation had ended his worke First he was ignorant that the first matter was of nothing Secondly that it stood certaine houres without a forme Thirdly that all the formes it receiued were immediately of nothing Fourthly that all this was done in time and that there was nothing in the world eternall but the maker of it Gen. 1.1.2 The earth was a subiect of contrary formes and therefore preexistent Q. What is that first matter of all inconstant things A. It was a thing which God made of nothing in the beginning of the first day without forme and voyd and so by his spirit miraculously sustained it for a certaine space Gen. 1.1.2 Q. What followes from hence A. That of it selfe it is permanent for being immediately of nothing it hath no power to worke vpon it but the same that made it therefore God alone can turne it into nothing from whence he brought it and this is the reason why the first matter and foure first formes are not resolved though all things may be resolved into them For in generation and corruption as they begin here to take new formes so here they leaue them againe And death though a privation of life yet it hath no power to annihilate his contrary and therefore as nature begins where creation ends so creation at the last day will begin againe where nature hath ended I meane in our resurrection euery man receiuing againe those very peeces of the elements whereof he was made Iob. 19.27 2. Cor. 15.35.36.37.38 c. the very seed that is sowne dieth and riseth againe out of those very elements into which nature resolueth it springeth it againe Q. When was it made A. In the first beginning of time or the evening of the first day hence it is co-etaneall and of the same time and age with the third heaven and the Angels Gen. 1.1 And the reason was to hinder a vacuitie in the large space and compasse of that highest heaven
104.23 When the Sunne riseth man goeth forth to his worke Gen. 1.5 He called the light day by a Trope putting it for the time wherein it is the cause of the day Q. What is night A. If we giue way to evident reason and experience we must needs acknowledge the night to be nothing else but the shadow of the earth that is the privation of light made by the earths thicke body intercepting and cutting off the Sunnes beames They that are of the foresaid opinion define night to be the time wherein the light returneth vpward ascending backe againe to the place where God first created it which is as a paradoxe so an vndefensible Tenent both for the reasons abouesaid as also for that in this description there is no efficient or materiall cause implyed which should make the light returne vpward ascend backe againe Lastly there is no respectiue difference made of the diverse parts of the Globe of the earth Whereupon it may be supposed that he that made this definition did not consider the earth heauens to be sphericall and so to make vicissitude of day and night in the moiety of the earth How called God the Night A. He called it Lailah which signifieth resting because he made the night for man to rest in Q. How did God order these things A. He appointed them to keepe their course making a separation betweene them setting them as it were their limites which they might not passe Gen. 1.4 Q. What is this separation A. The separation betweene the day and the night is the euening betweene the night and the day the morning Gen. 1.5 Euening separates by darkenesse morning by light So that the one dis-ioynes the day from the night and the other the night from the day Onely the first euening separated not because the light was then vncreated yet was it of God appointed even then as apt to stand betwixt light and darkenesse And thus from the euening and the morning was the first day finished consisting of 24. houres In the first evening were heaven and earth created and in the first morning the light or element of fire The observation of time will keepe vs from that foule confusion about heaven and earth which are so frequently expounded of the workes that followed vpon other dayes Q. What is the Creation of the ayre A. Whereby God made it in the next part of the first matter most moyst and of a diffusiue or diffluent nature spreading abroad both for impletion and separation Psal 104.2 He spreadeth the heavens like a curtaine that is the ayre for he had spoken of the light before which is further called a superior chamber very spatious and containes as it were a beame for the hanging of the clouds For water is naturally cold and therefore gathereth it selfe together in the middle region and by helpe of the ayre is held vp which maketh a partition betwixt those waters that are congeled aboue and that are fluide and floating below Gen. 1.7 for the cloudes hang by vertue of cold both in the place and of that which is in vapours being watery and ascending by the violence of the Sunne beames redoubled which when they returne single leaue their vapours behind them which are held by the place till the fire light returning dissolue the bands and send them downe againe in raine or some such like moyst Meteor Iob 38.31 Canst thou bind the sweete influences of Pleiades or loose the bands of Orion This is nothing but the neat and cold that rules in the ayre and earth when these brumall or aestivall starres are most to be seene in our haemisphere Orion is seene all night in the moneth of December and so on till the Spring lesse or more The Pleiades begin with the Spring and last till Autumne when Acturus takes place Iob. 9.9 So then as cold bindes vp all in Winter because of the Sunnes absence so heat looseth againe when the Sunne returneth in the Spring And as below so aboue cold knits the clouds and heat breakes their knots Q. How called he it being made A. By the name in Hebrew Shamaijm which signifies there be waters sealing thereby the office in deviding betwixt the two waters Gen. 1.7.8 Hence it comes to passe that raine water is farre more fruitful to the earth then any other because it is not dissolved by the light but it brings downe with it much ayery moysture which is fatter then leane water and we see by experience that one shower is better then much watering Q. When was it made A. In the second 24. houres God taking as it were a whole day for that which was equally capable of light and darkenesse Gen. 1.8 So the euening and the morning were the second day by an equall succession of light and darkenesse 2. Cor. 4.6 God in the first day made light to shine out of darkenesse when there was no capable subiect for the receiuing of it now he stayes a whole day of 24. houres for light and darkenesse to come and goe in a proper subiect Oh then how should we trust this God to shine in our hearts even when we are most vncapable Q. What is the creation of the colder elements A. Whereby he created them with formes lesse actiue and therefore colder these elements are clogged with more matter then forme and therefore the action of them is much hindred Isa 1.2 Heare O earth the dullest of Gods creatures is brought to convince man of disobedience which should be the most forward Q. What are they A. Water and earth Gen. 1.9 Let the waters be gathered and let the drie appeare Q. What is the Creation of the water A. Whereby it was made in the lower part of the first matter most cold and moist His cold appeares to be greatest by his gathering and his moysture in this that it is fluide and of a spreading nature yet much inferior to the ayre as may appeare by putting our hands into oyle and water as likewise by pictures which hold their colours the longer for that they are laid in oyle Now because water sooner dries vp then oyle it is plaine that ayre which is predominant in oyle is moyster then water Gen. 1.9 Let the waters vnder the heaven be gathered together this is done by the cold of them and therefore no wonder to see the Seas tumble together Q. How is this water devided A. Into the waters aboue and the waters beneath Gen. 1.6 And it is probable that both these waters met together in Noahs flood Gen. 7.20 with 11. Q. What meane you by the waters aboue A. The clouds and whatsoeuer water is aboue in the ayre Gen. 1.6 Psal 104.3 and 148.4 For as cold gathers them below so aboue c. and may very well be called Gods botels as containing all those gatherings Iob 38.37 Q. What meane you by the waters beneath A. The Sea and all the waters here below Psal 33.7 Hee gathereth the waters of the
to make way for the Sea seemes to lie vpon the very waters and to be vpholden by them and so appeared by Gods commandement from vnder them and now to stand in them Q. How called God the waters beneath A. Iammim Seas Gen. 1.10 because there was the collection of many waters all rivers running into it Eccl. 1.7 We see many great rivers which at the first rising out of some hills-side might be covered with a Bushell which after many miles fill a very broad channell and drawing neere to the Sea doe even make a little Sea in their owne bankes Iam signifies the west because the Seas flow from that way c. CHAPTER XIIII Of the Elementaries Question VVE haue heard of the elements what are the elementaries Answere Whereby God made them of these foure elements by a mixture Gen. 1.11 Let the earth bring forth c. This was impossible without heat and moysture therefore other elements were in the composition as may appeare by the resolution of plants out of which water and spirit is to be distilled c. The mystery of this mixture may thus bee conceiued First water being of a running nature is stayed by earths drinesse Secondly earth being dry in the highest degree would destroy waters moysture being not answerable to his quality in the same degree therefore ayre comes in and takes part with water to moderate his excessiue drinesse Thirdly the coldnesse of water and earth together would easily extinguish the heat of the ayre except fire the greatest champion should step in and helpe the ayre against them both And those all foure being closed together fight it out vntill the quarrell be taken vp by euery one yeelding a little to another and remitting their forces vntill they all meete louingly together in the same elementary composition which is as a compound of them all But you will say this is rather Generation then Creation and therefore a foule confusion to bring it amongst divine precepts I answere The action of euery creature is but an imitable genesis or correspondent work-manship to Gods and therefore in euery thing the first course is extraordinary God shewing the creature his way of imitation Therefore all the elementaries were made of God though hee gaue commandement to the elements to bring them forth Q. How devide you these clementaries A. They are either animate or inanimate things with life or without life God shewing himselfe by his worke to be both life and being Now because God proceeds to perfection let vs first see the more imperfect elementaries Q. What are the inanimate elementaries A. Whereby they were made out of the elements without parts that is a body and a soule I confesse some dispute is about Mineralls which containe in them excellent spirits and are found very vivificall in cordialls but yet this is no proper life neither will it follow that they haue a vegetatiue life because they seeme to grow for that is onely by addition of matter and not a liuely extension of the same matter by a springing life increasing to his full perfection c. Q. How are they devided A. They are either Meteors or Mineralls for so it comes to passe that these things which haue onely a body and no soule are either of elements well ioyned together or else of such as hang very loosely together and are casily shaken asunder these things are passed over in silence by Moses and might well be left out of this Art saue onely that God doth wonderfully set forth his glory even by the weakest workes and those that are worst tyed together in their composition We will therefore stay a little in the handling of them for their knowledge shall be both pleasant and profitable Q. What are the Meteors A. All luch things as are mixed of the foure elements imperfectly Gen. 1.6 Of this kinde are the waters aboue Gen. 2.5 the raine that descends from them Psal 148. Clouds fire haile snow winde and vapours are called vpon to prayse the Lord because he created them What marvells doe we meete withall in this head of creatures the clouds the bottles of raine vessels as thin as the liquor which is contained in them there they hang and moue though weightie with their burden These the Lord maketh one while as some ayery Seas to hold water another while as some ayery Furnaces whence he scattereth his sudden fires vnto all the parts of the earth astonishing the world with the fearefull noyies of the thunders eruption out of the midst of the waters aboue he fetcheth fire and hard stones Another while hee makes the clouds as steele-glasses wherein the Sunne lookes and shewes his face in the varietie of colours which he hath not there are the streames of light blazing and falling Starres fires darted vp and downe in many formes hollow openings and as it were gulfes in the skie bright circles about the Moone and other Planets Snowes Haile c. Here might I discourse of a world of wonders to the astonishment of the readers but I must remember my Art which is to speake of Creation and not the generation of things for as the one belongs to Divinitie so the other to naturall Phylosophy And I take it that Meteors were rather generated of the foure elements then created though in all wee are to admire Gods hand though we cannot search out his action But if God lend life as I desire first to acquaint men more fully with the knowledge of Iehovah-Elohim so after with their workes And Creation according to Moses description will yeeld the exactest and divinest Phylosophie Q. What is the perfect mixture A. Whereby the bodies of things are more closely vnited and produced according to the predominant element not hanging by violence out of their proper elements but duely placed of God in their proper places whereby the first matter is filled and adorned God himselfe supplying that voyd and vnformed masse with foure formes and infinite varieties of creatures out of their composition and mixture They which lie the lowest and doe adorne the bowels of the earth wee call Mineralls and they are either Metalls or Stones the one hath water predominant in it the other earth and they are both precious and base purer or impurer And it is to be wondered at that man treading vpon these Mineralls should not learne to contemne them They lie furthest from heaven and the best of them are in India furthest from the Church It is as we haue said that which Midianitish Camels carry that Indian slaues get that servile Apprentises worke that greedy Iewes swallow worldlings admire and Ruffians spend and yet we cannot esteem of it as the meanest of Gods creatures far inferior to a spire of grasse Adam had them in the first Paradise Gen. 2.11.12 In the second we shall not need them Iob 28.1.2.3.5.6 c. There may you see how God hath placed them and how we come by them And so subiect to sinne as God
made a law to haue them purified before he would haue them vsed Num. 31.22.23 c. Hence it is abominable of these things to make Idoll gods Ezek. 16.17 Ioel. 3.5 Q. What are the elementaries with life A. Whereby they were created of a body and soule for life is nothing but the act of the soule vpon the body and the soule saue onely the reasonable is compounded of the foure elements and is nothing but the Spirits of them or that which is most formall and actiue in them Hence fire and ayre are most predominant in these spirits for as by extraction we haue the spirits of things taken from the masse and body by resolution of the composition so in the composition those spirits were as the soule of that liuing thing Wine is pressed from the grape which is the fruit of a vegetable plant and because it carries away with it the more formall elements and leaues the grosser and more materiall behind wee say it is generous and full of Spirits yea and out of this againe by Art are taken the Spirits of wine which are very liuely and of a quickning nature In all plants Ayre is most formall and therefore the vegetatiue life consists most in moysture and the spirit of it but in the Sensatiue and Motiue life fire and the spirit thereof is most predominant These Spirits which are the soules of Plants and Beasts are but the band or tye of the reasonable soule and body hence death in man is nothing but the extinguishing or consuming of these Spirits for as this claspe vnlooseth or knot vntieth so body and soule separate asunder Agues they consume and backe these Spirits within our bodies and so consequently kill vs colds and watery distempers doe not so much wast as weary and tyre them and at last extinguish them as a brand in a puddle of water Gen. 1.20.21.24.28 c. we read of life and Gen. 7.22 wee heare how God extinguished the same againe Q. What are the kinds A. Either such as liue a single life or a compound life Some creatures haue their Spirits or Soules from some one element formally others from more As for example all Plants liue most by the Spirit and moysture of the ayre Starres of the fire men and beasts by both They grow by the one haue sense and motion by the other Q. What is this single life A. Whereby he made some creatures to line by the formall and act it●e Spirits of some one element Q. What are their kinds A. Plants and lights the one with a growing and springing life the other with a stirring or mouing life Gen. 1.11 with 14. The first being more imperfect as ayre is lesse formall then fire is first handled Q. What is the Creation of the Plants A. Whereby the earth brought them forth with aspringing life onely Gen. 1.11.12.13 They were compounded of the foure elements but the earth doth predominate or beare rule in the body as ayre doth in the Soule and euery thing is placed in that element which beares greatest sway in the body or materiall substance of it Q. How were they created A. According to their kinds yeelding seed both the lesser and greater the lesser as grasse herbes flowers shrubbes the greater fruitfull trees and the rest without fruit All which the earth brought forth by the commandement of God and as it is the mother and breeder of them so is it the Nurse and foster-mother of them ever after Gen. 1.14 The act of the soule in plants is vegitation and they haue as it were a mouth to draw nourishment and prepare it for the stomacke and a kind of liuer and heart for concoction Now this facultie to nourish hath foure companions to waite on it First Attraction the Spirits drawing a portion to euery part Secondly Retention whereby the part keepes and holds what it hath gotten Thirdly Concoction to digest and convert what it hath gotten into it selfe Fourthly Expulsion whereby it reiecteth and electeth whatsoeuer is superfluous Now the seed is an excrement of the last concoction and therefore is from the assimulation of the nourishment which makes it like euery part Hence from simular parts it begets simular parts and out of so little a part being full of Spirits are begotten all other creatures In seed and food consists all vegitable life and a hurt in either is dangerous and often deadly From nutrition proceed augmentation and generation the one for extension of the same thing the other for preservation of it in others Extention is by heat hence females are lesse then males because their heat is lesse though often they haue more moysture Generation is by seed which receiues from plants and all other things the soule and substance of euery part Hence is it able to giue the kind that yeelds it And therefore the Lord sayes euery Plant yeelding seed after his kind Gen. 1.12 Teaching vs thereby that the seed vertually and potentially answeres the creature in euery part and member of it Q. When were these made A. The same day wherein the waters and earth were created Gen. 1.13 And so by succession of an evening and morning was there a third day or 24. houres In creation of the elements God began in the top of the matter but in the elementaries he began in the bottome first creating the Mineralls and then the Plants For God is a God of order and so passeth on in his worke from imperfection to perfection I meane where there is a succession of parts otherwise God begins with the best first For the Lord did not in the vniverse as men doe in building rake first in the earth to lay the foundation and adde the roofe last but he first laid on the roofe and last of all came to the foundation First heaven then fire next ayre and last of all water and earth Yet being the God of Art followed an exact methode in all for being come to the earth hee first makes things spring then moue after spring moue and walke by sense Lastly as an Epitome of all the rest he comes to man which growes moues walkes and aboue all the rest liues by reason Q. What is the Creation of the lights A. Whereby he made them in the element of fire with a motiue life to runne round carrying the same side still forward that they may bring light vpon the earth and separate betweene day and night and be for fignes and seasons dayes and yeeres Gen. 1.14.15 Iob 38.31.32.33 Psal 8.2.4 Psal 19.2.3.4.5.6.7 and 136.7.8.9 Ier. 31.35 Amos. 5.8 c. False and fabulous Phylosophie makes this doctrine a wonder and they that bring Moses to Aristotle laugh at this lesson Starres to liue is against reason for they are not nourished neither doe they increase or generate c. I may reply againe vpon Divines from Moses by a probable argument they were created after liuing things therefore they haue life c. Aristotles obiection is easily answered
which is a kind of feeling for both must haue their obiects present Now it is made by the passing down of the sensitiue spirit from the brain to the tongue c. Sight is made by conveiance of sensitiue spirits to the eyes where they are met with the light without that first comes to the watery humor which is as lead to a looking glasse that stayes the light then it comes to the glassie humor and there is gathered together then it comes to the crystaline or clearest humor and is carried vp vnto the braine by the sensitiue spirit that meetes it Hence Hippocrates saies that these sensitiue Spirits are a drie brightnesse and that is because fire is here predominant as wee may see by a blow vpon the eye the Spirits redoubled are made visible as fire Those that haue the brightest eyes as Catts c. see better in darkenesse then other creatures and worse in the light because the greater light darkens the lesser Hearing is a fourth sense and meets with the noyse in the eares there it centers for noyse is made by a circle in the ayre not much vnlike vnto that which wee see in the water when wee cast a stone into it Hence it comes to passe as many as stand within the circle or circumference of the sound made in the ayre heare it and the reason is because any point or center within the circle of the sound is potentially in euery part of it one point is enough to bring it to our eares yet we cannot see so for when we but looke at a thing that is round wee cannot see it all at once But I must not play the Phylosopher too much it is my desire that God for his workes may haue the due glory Smelling is the last sense and serues wonderfully to refresh the braine The inward senses that looke through these outward are fancie cogitation and memory and they are a little resemblance of reason which comes in the last place For fancie hath in it a kind of invention cogitation of iudgement and memory of methode And this is the sensatiue life wherein God shewes his owne act more eminently Q. How many sorts of creatures liue by sense A. Two either such as liue by it onely or haue beside all these a reasonable life This onely passeth Elements both formall and materiall yet the finest Spirits serue to knit it with the rest and so wee handle that life amongst Elementaries otherwise it is angelicall and purely of nothing by the power of the Creator Q. How many kinds haue we of the first life A. Either fishes and foules or beasts All which were made according to their kinds and were mightily to increase through Gods blessing and to fill their places with daily of-spring Q. What is the creation of the fishes A. Whereby the Lord caused the waters to bring them forth in abundance wherein also they increase and multiplie and replenish the waters Gen. 1.20.21.22 Iob 40.20 41.1 Q. What is the creation of the fowles A. Whereby he made them to flie in the ayre and to multiplie vpon the earth Gen. 1.20 Q. When were the fish and fowle made A. In the sift day or 24. houres Gen 1.23 These were more imperfect then the beasts of the field and therefore conclude a dayes worke by themselues God willing vs to take notice how exact he was in ascending vp to mans perfection Q. What is the creation of the beasts A. Whereby he caused the earth to bring them forth after their kinds and they are either walkers or creepers walkers cattell and beasts that is wild and tame creatures Gen. 1.24.25 Thus God formed and filled that first matter and prepared it as an habitation for man who though hee came naked out of the wombe of the earth was even then so rich that all things were his heaven was his roofe earth his floare the Sea his pond the Sunne Moone his torches all creatures his vassalls They that looke into some great Pond may see the bankes full though they see not the severall springs whence the water riseth so wee may eye the world but can never come to see the excellencie of it much more of the maker himselfe Kings erect not cottages but set forth their magnificence in sumptuous buildings so God hath made a world to shew his admirable glory And if the lowest pauement of that third heaven be so glorious what shall wee finde within Who would thinke that all these should be made for one and that one well-neere the least of all Sure I am the last with him therefore let vs conclude this worke of Creation CHAPTER XV. Of Mans Creation Question VVHat is the creation of things with a reasonable life Answere Whereby he made them of a body and soule immortall Gen. 1.26 Other creatures were made by a simple command Man not without a divine consultation Others at once Man he did first forme then inspire others in severall shapes like to none but themselues Man after his owne image others with qualities fit for seruice Man for dominion His bodie and soule are both immortall for death is an enemie 1. Cor. 15.26 And therefore no consequent of nature but a companion of sinne yet this is true that euery elementary is corruptible and resoluble and so is the body of man being taken out of the dust but as it was made a companion of an immortall soule immediately made of nothing so is it fit that it should be aboue its own nature elevated to be one though not per vim contactus yet per vnionem personae immortall and eternall Almighty God after he had drawne the large and reall map of the world abridged it into this little table of Man as Dioptron Microcosmicum which alone consists of heaven and earth soule and body In his soule is the nature of Angels though not so extensiue and actiue as wee may see in a little and great man c. In his bodie are the foure elements the Meteors and Mineralls as may appeare both by vapours and fumes and spirits He liues the life of a Plant he hath the senses of beasts and aboue all the addition of reason His body is more exquisitely made then any other as may appeare by the nakednesse of it For others that are clothed with feathers and haires c. shew that they are fuller of excrements The Lord brought him vpon the stage fully prepared that he might be both an actor and a spectator He had a body with hands for action and an head for contemplation Q. How did God create him A. In his owne likenesse and image Gen. 1.26 Colos 3.10 And it is so called because man was furnished in euery point to resemble the wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse of God not onely in this frame and perfection of body and soule but also by his actions and government of the creatures and this was naturall vnto man The Papists thinke that this image was supernaturall
that euery part hath best opportunitie to his owne functions so qualified with health arising from proportiō of humors that like a watch kept in good tune it goes right is set to serue the soule and maintaine it selfe But alas they are not now like the first copie from which they were drawne more like the ingrauings of Tombes walked on with foule shooes the very Characters of nature blotted out with originall sin and troden out with daily sinnes The Bookes of our consciences are clasped and sealed vp and the woefull contents are not read by the law they remaine as letters written with the iuyce of Orenges which are onely to be made legible by the fire of Gods wrath when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed Behold we were not more like God in our knowledge holinesse and righteousnesse then we are now vnlike our selues in their losse O God how may we prayse our selues to our shame for the better we were we are the worse What is it for the sonnes of prodigall and tainted Auncestors to tell of the Lands and Lordships which were once theirs their fathers Lord whet our desires that we may redeeme our losse in thy Sonne The fault shall be ours if this our very damage proue not beneficiall Q. How did God further deale with man A. He gaue him dominion over all his creatures Psal 8.6 Thou hast made him to haue dominion in the workes of thy hands thou hast put all things vnder his feete Gen. 1.26.28 A shame for him that was to subdue all things to suffer himselfe to be subdued by them become a very lacquey to his vile affections in doing homage to the three great Idols of the world Profit preferment and pleasure Nay should labour to subdue the Lord of his life to become his vassall The Glutton makes God his Cator his belly his God and himselfe the Guest The lascivious wanton makes God his Pandar and himselfe the lover The covetous worldling would haue God his broker and himselfe the vsurer The angry sinner would haue God his hangman or executioner and himselfe the Iudge The Ambitious inquisitor can some-times make God and Religion his stale but honour shall be his God If times serue the credit of the Gospell shall be subordinate vnto his credit and Christ shall be a stirrop to climbe to promotion the word as a trumpet to blazon our owne commendation and the Pulpit a stage or shop to set to view and sale our owne good parts Fie on such service or Lordship as shall make God to serue with sinne Isa 43.24 Amos. 2.13 And the meanest servants thus ride on Horse-backe It s fitter for the Savages of Calecut to place Satan in the throne and God on the foot-stoole then for a Christian to abase himselfe to the creatures and the Creator to himselfe Oh that the Sunne of peace should looke vpon these vncleane heapes or giue light to this brood of darkenesse They are rare hands hearts that are free either from aspersions of bloud or spots of filthinesse What base rule keepes man here below Oh the want on excesse excessiue pride close Atheisme impudent prophanenesse vnmercifull oppression over mercifull connivence to sinne greedie covetousnesse loose prodigalitie symoniacall sacriledge vnbridled luxurie beastly drunkennesse bloody trechery cunning fraud slanderous detraction envious vnderminings secret Idolatries hypocriticall fashionablenesse c. All drencht in prophanenesse and profusenesse and the very earth diepred with our villanies But I forget my felfe seeing my taske is to lay downe a rule and not inveigh against the breach of it Q. Wherein consists mans dominion over the creatures A. In a most free vse of all things for the glory of God his owne necessitie and lawfull pleasure and that without all let or hinderance of any of his actions and therefore if hee offended in them it was his owne fault Gen. 1.29 with Chap. 3.11 Man could not content himselfe in knowing God and all his creatures his curiositie is to know more then ever God made evill of sinne and evill of death How deare this lesson cost vs we know well enough smart with knowing We the sonnes of Eue inherite her saucie appetite and miscarry daily with the presumptuous affectation of forbidden knowledge Oh Lord teach me a sober knowledge and a contented ignorance thou hast revealed more then I can know enough to make me happie Giue me againe the tenure of grace that I may hold what I haue as well in the consistory of conscience as at the common-pleas least whiles I be a civill owner I proue but a spirituall vsurper make me once againe a spirituall owner and then I shall not care if I die a civill begger Q. What followes from hence A. First Gods commandement for the procuration of meate from the Plants to himselfe and the beasts as likewise the dressing of them Gen. 1.29.30 and 2.15 That which was mans store-house was also his work house his pleasure was his taske Earth serued not onely to feed his senses but to exercise his hands happinesse never consisted in doing nothing Idlenesse neither gets nor saues for wee doe ill whiles wee doe nothing and loose whiles wee gaine not Houres haue ever had wings to flie vp to heaven to the author of time to carry newes of our vsage Eue could not long keepe chat with the Serpent but God had notice of it and for such idlenesse turnes her out of Paradise God esteemes much of our times what ever our price be and plagues the losse of a short time with revenge beyond all times God giue me grace to take it by the fore-top that I may make that which is wild and fugitiue tame and pliable to my purposes for heaven Q. What secondly may be gathered A. The bringing of all creatures which could conveniently be brought vnto him as their Lord to see how hee would name them Gen. 2.19 All Arts were engraven vpon the creatures yet none but man could see them for he receiued them both actiuely and passiuely and therfore by Logicke vnderstood their natures and by Grammar gaue them names And so even in this shewed his dominion over them in that he knew how to governe and order them all Q. What in the third place may be observed A. That he was like a Lord placed in the Garden of Eden as in a stately Palace planted of God Eastward with excellent trees and other plants as well for pleasure as for profit and watered with a pleasant river devided into foure heades which was to wash the Garden not like Nilus that makes Aegypt fertile with invndation For that is the raine water that falls a good way off and comes tumbling from the hills and carries with it the soyles of other grounds by the fatnesse and mud whereof that land is made fruitfull but this was to wash away filthinesse and superfluous fatnesse in so excellent a soyle least all should turne blade and nothing corne This Garden was
God sealing our salvation for his owne names sake Q. What things are to be observed therein A. Two The causes thereof and the effects Gen. 2.17 Ezek. 18.2 Rom. 6.23 Sinne and death are as in separable in the cause as fire and burning death is a necessary consequent of such a cause Q. How many sorts of causes be there A. Two the one blameable and guiltie the other blamelesse and guiltlesse The law and sinne as well s the law and obedience worke together though in a distinct manner for of obedience the law is the principall cause but of sinne an accidentall as working beside his owne scope and maine drift which is to savour nothing but life and also as a contrary to sinne hence a sinner stands in violent opposition to the law and they striue the more because the one is readie to hinder the others act as bankes or flood-gates staying the streame make it either burst them downe or else swell over them and doe we not see how all such as are bent vpon any villany are more exasperated by disswasion then if they were let alone Pharaoh is better to Israel whiles they willingly obey then when Moses and Aaron come to preach their deliuerance then as a beast he turnes madde with baiting And so all the Martyrs should haue had the Heathen Emperours better tutors then tyrants if they had not provoked them by opposition of their wickednesse Nay doe we not see how the best mindes when they are troubled yeeld inconsiderate motions as water that is violently stirred sends vp bubbles Rom. 7.11.11.13 Q. How many be the causes blameable A. Two The principall and ministeriall the Devill a chiefe agent in mans apostasie abused the Serpent and the woman as his instruments to seduce man Gen. 3.2 Cor. 11.3 Satans policie was to take the subtill Serpent and simple Woman to defeat man of his happinesse as now he doth the Iesuites and females to draw men to Antichrist Q. What are the principall causes A. The Devill and Man though Eue was first in the motion yet was Adam principall in the action for he is first called to the barre to answere the transgression Gen. 3.9 1. Tim. 2.13.14 First he was the head of his wife and therefore it was his sinne that he gaue her no better instruction Secondly the Covenant of life was made principally with him and therefore it is said that when he had eaten both their eyes were open Gen. 3.7 She did eate before her husband and sinned personally but when he did eate with her then they both saw that they and all their posteritie were accursed Thirdly It is probable that Adam stood by all the time of the disputation and therefore his sinne was the greater that he rebuked not the Serpent and rescued his wife from all such suggestions or if he was absent whereof the Text makes no mention then should he shew himselfe a weaker vessell then his wife who had all the bad Angels in one craftie beast to set vpon her whereas he had onely one weake woman in his purest integritie to overthrow him Neither could his affection then to his wife be so preposterous as are now of corrupt naturalists who are blinded in loue His loue to his wife was created pure and therefore except his iudgement had beene first perverted as it was in his wife he could not so easily haue consented of meere affection to his wife I cannot beleeue but that the Devils in the Serpent did as well tempt Adam as Eue though first they began with her as a further meanes of inticing him The text sayes not that Eue went to seeke her husband but that shee tooke and gaue to her husband with her c. Genesis 3.6 Q. How were the Devils the cause of it A. They were by creation good and appointed of God to be mans keepers yet of their owne accord and free will they disdained and contemned their standing with God Iud. ver 6. and became proud rebellious and abominable lyers and blasphemers of God and of malice and hatred of man became seducers and murtherers of him Ioh. 4.44 It may well be disputed whether the Angels were Apostataes in heaven or Paradise If I may shew my iudgement and leaue it as a probable opinion it is this The third heaven is a place of puritie and absolute felicitie and therfore cannot for a moment or instant of time be the subiect of any pollution or misery If sinne had ever beene in heaven the place should haue beene polluted by it The very earth was stained with the sinne of his proper inhabitant and so should heaven if the proper and peculiar inhabitants had there sinned but such was the wise providence of Almightie God that at once he would giue a iust occasion of triall of the Angels in their obedience and saue heaven from all polution which he then and now and ever preserues most pure for his elect both Angels and men The occasion was giuen in their ministration to man not the celebration of Gods glory in heauen that they might see more fitting their place then the other but shall wee the most excellent of Gods creatures stoop so low as to become mans servants and subiect our selues to ourinferiours c Let vs thinke of a course to subvert his estate and bring him out of grace and favour with his creator so shall we according to our excellencie Lord it over him So that here might very well be a conioyned Apostasie in the ruine of them both O blessed God how farre is thy decree from all staine of sin and yet how full of Mercy and Iustice Thou wouldst not try all thy Angels some thou keptst at home whiles others fell in ministring abroad And all this that thy sonne might be exalted neither Angel or man ever prevailing without him Rev. 12.6.7 They that fight vnder this head are all saued if they warre vnder their owne power they cannot but perish The good angels were but lookers on till a Messias was promised and then are they all ministering spirits for the good of their fellow heires of salvation Heb. 1.14 Who can say blacke is the eye of Gods providence intending to glorifie his Iustice in the condemnation of some Angels and some men when he might haue executed all Let vs all sing with the sweet Singer of Israel Psal 119.137 Righteous art thou O Lord and vpright are thy iudgement Q. How was man a cause thereof A. By the abuse of Gods law and his owne free will being seduced by Satan and induced into sinne by the strength of his temptation subtiltie of his suggestion and is owne free reception of both voluntarily harkning thereunto contrary to Gods commandement when being assisted thereby he might easily haue resisted the same Gen. 3.6 Man was made a most free beginner of his owne action neither did God withdraw or with-hold any necessary grace from him he gaue him sufficient not to sinne neither was he bound to
and wicked men feele not the full extent of Gods wrath God will haue them to exercise the graces and vertues of his servants and so by accident they are preserved and reserved to the generall assize and fire of hell Christ shall come in fire and that fire shall be the melting of the elements which shall be confounded as in one masse The ayre is oyly and the earth is full of combustible matter as coales and brimstone Many pits are full of slime and as the Countrey where Sodome and Gomorrah stood was very bituminous clammie clay and glewish ground with store of slime pits and so very fit for the exhaling of that matter which was afterwards rained downe vpon them so the place that God is now a preparing for the damned may very well be in the confusion of all the elements together where fire shall fearefully seize vpon all things and God even prepare all as matter or fuell for his rage I heare not that the fire shall be quenched againe in which Christ shall come And the fire of hell is vnquenchable and may even in this become vtter darknesse because the Starres shall fall and melt away and the powers of heaven shall be shaken and as it were driuen to the earth and therefore the subiect of light being destroyed vpon the earth and within the earth may be this horrible darknesse and woefull fire Ier. 17.13 Some shall haue their names written in the earth and be as the Parables of the dust as others in heaven opposite shall be the places of the elect and damned and as it were a gulfe betwixt them Luk. 16.26 The reprobate shall then be more narrowly confined and more fearefully tormented To conclude learne further by this punishment of the Devils that their first sinne was in tempting of man for we see that the punishment of them is onely inflicted for this their rebellion and their continuing in it yea marke further how God hath punished the rebells in their enuie they enuied mans estate by creation and scorned to serue him they shall now see him advanced into their roomes and themselues imprisoned vpon that miserable earth which they converted from a Paradise into a prison from a delicate palace into a most damnable dungeon Thus whiles enuie feeds on others evils and hath no disease but his neighbours well fare it hath all those favours fall beside it selfe which it grudged to see in others It is nothing but a pale leane carcase quickned with a Fiend it keepes the worst diet for it consumes it selfe and delights in pining A thorne hedge covered with netles that cannot be dealt withall either tenderly or roughly What peevish interpreters of good things were the Devils that had rather step into hell then stoop a little to their Creator in seruing of an inferior creature which now they see more honoured then ever before Q. What punishment was inflicted on the Instruments and first vpon the Serpent A. A curse aboue all the beasts of the field enmitie betweene him and the woman and a sensible feeling of paine in his going vpon his belly and eating of dust Gen. 3.14.15 All things were for man and his comfort therefore it was an odious thing to be his over-thrower God layes a reasonable punishment on the vnreasonable Instrument These wormes were worthy creatures of God but now most wretched and ashamed to appeare abroad and therefore liue in the earth and are seldome to be seene Their skins paine them if they liue long and alwayes it is painefull vnto them to crawle or creepe because the belly is their softest part and oppressed with the guts and body lying vpon it In winter they stirre not being almost dead with cold Their meat is the earth a grieuous diet and the greatest enemie to life consisting of heat and moysture Wee may see by the wormes that feed on the earth how in dry weather they are withered and pined to nothing and what adoe they haue to thrust out their earthy food in a raynie morning Lastly this beast was cursed in this that now woman should take heed how she came neere him and he likewise stricken with a feare of her c. Q. What was inflicted vpon the woman A. Besides that which she hath common with man her inforred subiection to her husband and her manifold griefe in conception bearing and bringing forth Gen. 3.16 She should not now be so bold with her husband her limites were to be shortned and her yoke made more grievous Shee was an instrument of his hurt and is now to feele it by her liuing with him conceiuing by him bearing and bringing forth of his of spring The blessing of God before was great and should haue taken away all paine which now is iustly inflicted for her dissobedience The paine of the belly is to both instruments a memorandum of medling with forbidden fruit Q. What is inflicted vpon Adam and consequently vpon all his posteritie A. Sinne and death One sinne begets another and the second is an effect of the former both properly and accidentally properly as a branch of so bitter a root accidentally as inflicted by divine Iustice One and the selfe same effect may haue diverse causes as for example Iob 1.21 with 15. vers c. Satan Sabeans Chaldeans c. as well as God afflict Iob. Act 2.23 wicked hands as well as Gods crucified Christ Exod. 7.13.14.22 and 8.15.32 and 9.7.12.14.34.35 and 10.20.27 c. Pharaoh and God both harden the one in punishing the other in sinning God wills to punish one sinne with another the sinne he wills by accident the punishment by counsell It enters not into the minde of God to commit sinne Ier. 32.35 and yet it is his minde to punish the abomin●●● with their owne abominations They that are ambitious of their owne destructions never want the plagues of God to seize vpon them He that setteth and selleth himselfe to sinne shall find God as readie to offend him with lustice as he can be to offend God with iniustic As man sowes so shall he reape and if there be a brewing of death tunn'd vp in vessels of sinue it is good reason that the sinner should drinke it CHAPTER XIX Of originall and actuall Sinne. Question WHat sinnes are inflicted Answere Both originall and actuall Adams transgression turned the Chariot of the soule cleane out of the tract of good so that now it is impossible he should ever get into his way againe Small sinnes are like to slips and slidings whereby men fall and hurt themselues but great sinnes are like downefalls which wound lame dis-ioynt or breake some member c. Mans first sinne was a miserable downe-fall for it did wound and wast the whole man and made him euery way vnable to stirre hand or foot to please God Gal. 6.1 Catartizein is to let a ioynt and man is restored againe when God of his goodnesse doth bring euery facultie of soule and member of
be crept into clouts which are the ensignes of shame Our finenesse is our filthinesse and our neatnesse our nastinesse if we grow proud of what should humble vs. Againe such a maiesty was in man that the very bruit beasts should haue reverēced it which now being covered they contemne and dispise Onely some reliques of it remaine to testifie what was once in man the very Lyons will winke to looke man in the face and the Crocodile with a kind of remorse will wash the face of man with his teares whom he hath apprehended And now we cover not our faces and hands because they are as yet the greatest seats of mans maiestie Furthermore for comelinesse what deformities are in the fairest Absolons ill qualities shewed his temper was not absolute In beautiful faces all hold not proportion and it were no sinfull mixture if there were an absolute symetrie of all parts And for sanitie it is well seene by the infinite diseases of the body what a dyscrasie is in the whole A horse hath not so many infirmities as a man Aristotle thought it came from the worke of nature being more curious in man then any other creature Hence an error more dangerous and by consent of parts inlarged but Aristotle was a pegge too low seeing the whole distemper came from sinne c. Q. What else A. Subiection to the miseries which come by the losse of externall good things as first of such things wherewith the life of man was honoured as the losse of friendship honour rule over the creatures eiection or casting out of paradise with an interdiction or forbidding of vs to enter by the Cherubius Secondly of things necessary for the maintenance of this life as of food which though he laboured vntill he sweat againe yet should the earth bring forth briers thorns thistles Also of raiment and clothing without which he should suffer extreame cold nakednes And lastly in all his possessions and goods continuall calamitie and losse Gen. 3.17.18.19.23.24 Deut. 28.29.30 c. Sorrow for losse of friends disgrace in the creatures turning out of Paradise like some base borne brood vnworthy of such a princely palace if he might haue left it like a tenant or sold it like an owner it had bin some credit vnto him but to be cast out for a wrangler haue the good Angels turne against him which were created as his guard must needs much perplex his mind could be no les then foerūners of his end Add to this his food with famine faintnes his corne with cockle his sweat to drinesse of body drines of graine the very earth being now become a mother of weedes and step mother of wheate his cloathing eyther clogging nature in keeping it too hot or over-little leauing it to the annoyance of the ayre and to starue as well with cleanlinesse of apparell as cleanenesse of teeth and lastly euery calling subiect to calamitie and goods least good when most need and we cannot but conclude that all these together were great hastners of his death but aboue all seeing now in stead of a blessing Gods curse was carried withall and could be no lesse then a devouring canker or wartwort in all his actions and possessions Sinne lockes vp a theefe in our counting-house which will carry away all and if we looke not vnto it the sooner our soules with it Q. What is the perfection and end thereof A. The going out of the Spirits whereby the Soule departeth from the body and the body afterwards is returned and resolved into the earth and other elements whence it was taken Gen. 3.19 Eccl. 12.7 Obserue that neither soule nor body die but onely the Spirits that hold them together they fall asunder by the extinction consumption or congelation of the Spirits that runne along in the bloud c. Here then is nothing but improvidence that addes terror vnto this death Let vs but thinke of it and wee shall not feare it Doe wee not see that even Beares and Tigres seeme not terrible to those that liue with them how may wee see their keepers sport with them when the beholders dare scarce trust their chaine Let vs then be acquainted with this death and we shall be the better able to looke vpon his grimme countenance I am ashamed of this weake resolution that we should extoll death in his absence and be so fearefull in his presence Often in our speculations haue wee freely discoursed of such a friend and now that hee is come to our beds side and hath drawne the Curtaines and takes vs by the hand and offers vs his service wee shrinke inward and by the palenesse of our faces and wildnesse of our eyes wee bewray an amazement at the presence of such a guest Doe we not see that there is no helpe to heale vs but by pulling all asunder Lord teach me while I liue to die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse that so when I shall die vnto nature I may liue vnto glory Our sinne hath made it bitter and thy mercy hath made it better then life Good Physitians when they apply their Leeches scoure them with salt and nettles and when their corrupt bloud is voyded imploy them to the health of their Patients This Esau in stead of frownes shall meet vs with kisses and although wee receiue a blow from his rough hand yet the very stripe and stroke shall be healing I will therefore never grieue to tread in the steps of my Sauiour to glory I know my last enemy by his goodnesse shall be my first friend in my passage to another world Q. What is the second death A. The subiection of man to the miseries of the world to come Rom. 2.5 An heaping of wrath against the day of wrath The little sparke of immortality and beame of Gods eternity through sinne of an inualuable blessing becomes an intollerable curse subiecting of vs to the miseries of another life Oh that we could feele this as well as the other and vpon the first groanes seeke for ease What mad man will purchase this crackling of thornes such is the worldlings ioy with eternall shrieking and torment But it is no marvaile seeing onely wise men seeke for remedies before their disease sensible patients when they begin to complaine as for fooles they will doe it too late Oh that wee could weepe on earth that wee might laugh in heauen Who would not be content to deferre his ioy a little that it may be perpetuall and infinite Better that wee should weepe with men and laugh with Angels then fleering with worldlings and iolly ones to gnash and howle with Devils Q. What are the beginnings thereof A. In this life as forerunners emptinesse of good things and fulnesse of evill as ignorance of minde terror of conscience and hence a flying from God and hiding of our selues rebellion of will inordinate affections finding the reines loose in their neckes and like wild horses carrying vs over hilles
much wrangle and wrastle concerning Reprobation but with delectation recreate our selues with this divine worke of our Election This casts it selfe into a large compasse whereas in the other God contracts his hand and giues man leaue to mischiefe himselfe And although our Reprobation be from God yet our condemnation is from our selues The strait and straight line to heauen lies in this compasse that it is from the Father by the inchoation of decree in the Sonne by the dispensation of meanes by the holy Ghost for consummation of those meanes and to faith for the instrument of application Q. How is the Church devided A. It is either militant vpon earth or triumphant in heauen This distribution is of the Church eyther in respect of the members or of their condition Members as some are on earth others in heauen Condition as our fighting overcomming In this world our application is but inchoatiue in the world to come it shall be plenary Here with strife against sinne and Satan hereafter shall bee our glory and triumph We can see no more palmes then crosses if there were no resistence our Christian vertue would not appeare There is but one passage and that a strait one and if with much pressure wee can get through and leaue our superfluous ragges as torne from vs in the crowd wee are happy God would haue heauen narrow and hard in the entrance that after our paine our glory might be the sweeter One peece of iron cannot be souldred and fastned to another vnlesse both bee made red hot and beaten together so Christ and his Church the whole body and the members cannot so soundly be affected each to other vnlesse both haue experience of the like misery Rom. 8.17 this frayes many from being the Lords who though they would be glad of the crowne yet stand trembling at the Crosse It is Satans policie to driue vs from our military profession by the difficultie of our Christian ware fare like as some in hospitall Savages make fearefull delusions by Sorcery vpon the shore to fright Strangers from landing c. But wee are not to bee dismayed seeing God hath made the militant estate of the Church a degree vnto the triumphant It is a graduall no specificall distinction to say the church is militant or triumphant Eph. 6.11.12.13 Heb. 12.22.23 Q. What is the militant Church A. It is the number of all those that are applied vnto Christ by faith Here were must liue by faith after wee shall come to the fruition of Christ by sight Ephes 6.16 Heb. 11.1 2 Cor. 3.18 and 4.17.18 1 Cor. 13.12.13 This Church consists onely of men not as yet freed from the burden of the flesh and that is the reason why the worke of the Lord goes so slowly forward and makes many sit still with their hands foulded in their bosomes and wish they knew how to be rid of time and so become miserable loosers of good houres and good parts and the very hope of future reward because they will not striue with themselues Happy are those persecutions that driue vs to this hold and like an old beaten Hare weary of long chasing returne vs to this home to die in this borrough Q. Is the number of these alwayes alike A. No but sometimes greater and sometimes lesser and its invisible in regard of faith yet euery faithfull man may know himselfe and so may a man that hath the spirit of discerning judge of another to his comfort for faith in both is to be knowne by his fruits c. 1. Tim. 1.12 Heb. 6.9 Q. How shall a man doe in this case A. By his care to walke according to the rule of godlinesse he shall procure a comfortable testimony to his owns Soule and confirme others in the way of Religion Act. 24.16 2 Cor. 1.12 Heb. 13.18 Tit. 3.8 Q. Is the Church militant by it selfe in the world A. No it is mingled with tares and chaffe and as God left the accursed Cananites to be as prickes and thornes to his auncient people so still will he haue his deare ones to bee exercised with the wicked of this world that their graces may more fully be knowne and themselues wained from the wearisome world Hence it must needs be great folly to leaue visible Congregations because they are pestered with the prophane of the world there is no man that will cast away the gold or corne because it is mingled with his offall but will bestow some labour on the fanne fire or furnace God hath left meanes to purge his Church of prophane persons though he will haue some tares to try his Children and keepe them in awe of his maiestie nay make them labour the more to proue their election If all were good who would feare to goe to hell But seeing we may be Christians and not elect it will make vs more diligent to studie for true holinesse And knowing that many shall be damned with the water of Baptisme in their faces and Church in their mouthes It will teach Gods Saints in spite of all hypocrisie to worke out their salvation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 Our blessed Saviour out of the very feares of damnation hath fetched the safest securitie of salvation oh that we could out of this securitie as easily fetch the feare of his maiestie Math. 13.24.25.47 1 Cor. 5.10.11.12.13 Q. What are these tares and chaffe A. Such in the Church as haue but the name of Christians and yet are together with the Church in this world and so are called improperly by the name of the Church Visibilitie Profession congregation c. doe as well belong to the tares as the wheate the Reprobate as the elect and therefore are but accidents of the Church yea such adherents as are separable from the Church and therefore Papists and Separatists doe ill in teaching them to belong so essentially to it Math. 13.49.50 Rom. 9.6.7 1 Ioh. 2.19 Ioh. 6.70.71 Q. How is the Church militant with the tares distributed A. Into Congregations as great Armies into lesser bands It is impossible for all to heare one Pastor and therefore must the governed be ranked vnder diverse teachers that all may heare and learne 1 Thes 2.14 Eph. 4.11.12.13 Q. What is here to be considered A. The government of the Congregations which is an order of ruling and obeying in the outward communion of the Saints Our sanctification is not wrought all at once but by degrees and the Churches must beget children vnto God and therefore there must be an holy ordering of the people to bring this worke to passe Againe a law is necessary to keepe corruption vnder and if there were no power to restraine evils this field of God would runne all into thistles This worke must be continuall or else grace speedeth not Like as the body from a setled and habituall distemper must be recovered by long dyets and so much the rather for that none can intermit this care without relapses so in regard of
delicate dish finde other plaine dishes but vnpleasant so it fareth with all those which haue once tasted of heauenly things they cannot but contemne the best worldly pleasures As therefore some daintie guest knowing there is some pleasant fare to come will reserue his appetite for it so must not we suffer our selues to be cloyed with the course dyet of the world but keepe our desires for the ioyes to come And if worldlings find so much pleasure on earth as to thinke it worth the account of their heauen because they see such a Sunne to enlighten it such an heauen to wall it about such sweet fruits and flowers to adorne it such varietie of creatures for the commodious vse of it and yet onely provided for mortalitie and chiefely possessed by the makers enemies what then must heaven needs be that is provided for God himselfe and his best friends If the out side be so glorious what shall be within How can it be lesse in worth seeing God is aboue his creatures and Gods friends better then his enemies I will therefore not onely be content but desirous to be dissolved CHAPTER XXVI Of the Spirits application by Faith Question HItherto of the subiect of Application what are the parts Answere Preparation and the infusion of faith Such is the nature of man that before he can receiue a true iustifying faith hee must as it were be broken in peeces by the law Ier. 23.9 The word of God is both the hammer to breake our hard hearts and a fire to heat melt mollifie and dissolue them into the teares of godly sorrow A rocke may tremble and an iron vessell by violent stroakes may be broken in peeces and yet still retaine their hardnesse onely the sweet and pleasant fire of grace must soften them againe It is the bloud of the Lambe that must melt the Adamant and the Sunne-shine of Gods loue in Christ that must thaw the ice of our hearts Rom. 8.15 we are to be led from the feare of slaues through the feare of penitents to the feare of sonnes and indeed one of these makes way for another and though perfect loue thrust out feare yet must feare bring in that perfect loue as a Needle or Bristle drawes in the thred after it or as the potion brings health The compunction of feare saith Gregory fits the minde for the compunction of loue Psal 2.11 We are bidden to reioyce in God with trembling If Samuel had not made the people to quake at Gods thunder and raine hee should never haue brought them so to haue ioyed in the following Sunne-shine 1 Sam. 12.18.19 c. Hostile feare through the power of God may be initiall to the filiall And whereas that casts both the eyes vpon the punishment God can make it cast the one eye off the iudgement and fixe the other on the partie offended so Samuel teacheth Israel 1 Sam. 20.20 with 24. Feare not the thunder but feare him that sent it If ever wee will stoope the iudgements of God will bring vs on our knees Q. What is the preparation A. A fitting vs for our being in Christ for wee being branches of the wild Oliue must be made ready for our being in the true Oliue before wee can be grafted into it Rom. 11.17.24 Ioh. 15.5.6.7 The convexe or out-bowed side of a vessell will hold nothing it must be the hollow and depressed part that is capable of any liquor The broken contrite spirit makes way for Gods grace Psal 51.17 Sweetly Bernard God poures not the oyle of his mercy saue into a broken vessell for indeed whole vessels are full vessels and so this precious oyle would runne over and be spilt on the ground Oh if wee were so humbled with the varieties of Gods iudgements as wee ought how savory would his counsels be How precious and welcome would his feare be to our trembling hearts Whereas now our stubborne senselesnesse frustrates all the threatnings and executions of God Q. When is this done A. In the acceptable time and day of saluation in the which the Lord pleaseth to bring into act his purpose of salvation in gathering his owne out of the world and that sooner or later as it pleaseth him Wee may not mend the pace of God or spurre on his decree yet must we be diligent in the meanes vntill God blesse them for this end Every man hath power to goe to Church heare the word and be present at all outward seruices and the neglect of this hinders many in respect of better successe though not of Gods decree Wee therefore are guiltie of our owne time ill husbanded though God will not worke before his owne day Luk. 19.42 Rom. 13.11 2 Cor. 6.2 Q. What are the parts of this preparation A. First the cutting of vs as it were from the wild Oliue tree Secondly a paring and fitting of vs to be put into the true Oliue tree Rom. 11.24 The Gentiles were cut out of the Oliue tree which is wild by nature and contrary to nature grafted into a good Oliue tree c. Wee that grow wild in wickednesse want grace to seeke Christ and being contrary to his vertues are vnapt to ioyne with him without a great preparation Tell the prophane person in the midst of all his iollitie and revels of devotion pietie or iudgements and he will turne you off with the Athenian question What doth this babler say Tell the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4. of the water of life and shee will mocke at it till Christ sit as iudge in her conscience and pinch her with that close imputation of adultery there is no sowing Ier. 4. till the hard and clottie fallow ground be subdued by the Plough the vnhumbled sinner is as vnfit for Gods instruction as an vnbroken Colt for the saddle Our Gallants cannot be stayed from their Gallop till God touch their Soules with some terrour cast their bodies on their beds of sicknes turne their fooles feathers into kerchiefes then when they see their faces grow pale their eyes sunke in their heads their hands shaking their breath short their flesh consumed you shall haue them easie to be talkt withall now or else never will they learne with old Eli to say speake Lord for thy servants heare Thus wee see it is good striking when the iron is hot there is no fishing so good as in these troubled waters Now it is good striking whom God hath stricken for conscience is a nice and sullen thing and if it be not taken at fit times and moodes there will be no medling with it Q. What meane you by this cutting of vs from the wild Oliue A. Two things first a violent pulling of vs out of the corruption of nature or a cutting as it were by the knife of the law of an vnregenerate man from his security wherin he sleepeth he not so much as dreaming of any such thing Psal 119.70 Their heart is as fat as grease but I delight in thy law Shewing
6.8 Ioh. 8.48 Math. 1● 25 Let the Moone shine never so bright yet sonne Cur or other shall be found to barke against it but it is princely to doe well and heare ill the spirit of glory rests vpon such 1 Pet. 4.14 Iob speakes of a whole volume of reproches which he will take vpon his shoulder and bind as a crowne to his head Iob 31.35.36 It is honour enough to be graced for well-doing and Dauid may find comfort as well in the scoffes and scornes of his irreligious wife as the songs and praises of the religions maydens 2 Sam. 6.22 Doe worthily and wee cannot misse of fame Ruth 4.11 Ioh. 12.26 Rom. 2.7 And if a good name be to be chosen aboue great riches Prov. 22.1 who will not affect vertue for the glory of heauen Q. What are the degrees thereof A. The first is in assurance of our election and the loue of God never to be violated or broken off againe and that is by our effectuall vocation iustification and sanctification then for the time of this life the vndoubted perswasion of faith which makes those things extant or present that are hoped for and giues vs vndoubted evidence of those things which are not seene Heb. 11.1 And hereupon a certaine and infallible hope and expectation of the fruition of those good things which are prepared for Gods elect such indeed as the eye hath not seene nor so much as the eare heard nor that which is most entred into the heart and thought of man Lastly the fruition it selfe of glory and life everlasting First in the soule and that in the very instant of death it being translated from earth to heauen by the ministery of Angels Secondly in the body together with the soule in the day of the resurrection and last iudgement when the good shall be separated from the wicked to the right hand of Christ to heare come ye blessed c. and the wicked to the left to heare goe ye cursed c. In this life the godly haue a tast of the life to come and shall haue it in a greater measure so soone as the soule is separated from the body for then it is with the Saints departed and is for the modell and measure as it shall be with the whole man inioying the presence of Angels holy Patriarkes Prophets Apostles c. Neyther must we thinke that they that dyed before Christs comming in the flesh were depriued of this glory for Christ is hath beene and shall be yesterday and to day and the same for ever And then at the vniversall resurrection body and soule being conioyned together againe wee shall receiue a further augmentation of glory Psal 16.11 and 17.15 and 21.6 Ioh. 5.25 and 6.47 and 13.3 and 17.3 Phil. 1.23 Rev. 21.4 Heb. 4.9 The body at that day shall be either gloriously raised againe or in a moment changed into glory then shall euery thing imperfect in it be made perfect and it selfe immortall 1 Cor. 15.54 Children shall be men and men shall be the mirrours of glory and then shall be taken vp to meete their Lord and judge and with him shall iudge the world then afterwards in the sight of the damned shall ascend with their Sauiour into heauen and there shall be presented to his Father and by him placed in those mansions of glory which are prepared for them where they shall serue the Lord continually without any let enioying his presence for evermore at whose right hand they shall finde fulnesse of ioy 1 Ioh. 3.2 2 Cor. 3.18 Rev. 7.14.15.16.17 and 21.3.4 In vision fruition and perfection of holinesse Math. 22.30 How should this make vs to conquer our impatience and to swallow downe the miseries of this life O blinder then Beetles the Marchant refuseth no adventure for hope of gaine the hunter shrinketh at no weather for loue of game the Souldier declineth no danger for desire either of glory or spoyle and shall we frame to our selues either an ease in not vnderstanding or an idlenesse in not vsing those things which will be a meanes to vs not onely to avoyd intollerable and endlesse paines but to attaine both immeasurable and immortall glory pleasure and gaine Let vs summon the sobrietie of our senses before our owne judgement and that which saying cannot let feeling perswade Doe we not know what these tearmes doe import death iudgement hell or whom they doe concerne or how neere they are vnto our neckes Will wee like miscreants thinke hell is not so hot nor sinne so heavy nor the Devill so blacke nor God so vnmercifull as the Preachers say Doe we take these things for the fables of Poets and not for the oracles of Gods owne mouth Remember that prospect on thy death bed which in this life by reason of the interposition of pleasures or miseries could not so well be seene If thou be good thou mayest looke vpward and see heauen open with Steven and the glorious Angels attending as ready to carry vp thy soule If wicked then must thou looke downeward and see three terrible spectacles death iudgement and hell one beyond another and all to be passed through by thy soule and the very Devils attend to lay fast hold of it to carry it to torment In this life thou wast content with a condition common with beasts and therefore in the other art thou onely fitted for Devils Art thou not O wretched man euery houre in danger and wilt thou not be in doubt to step into them Remember the wicked are sayd to turne into hell and their merry dance to haue a miserable downfall What must thou be intreated like a mad-man to be good to thy selfe Hadst thou rather feele then feare these torments Rather endure them then for a short time thinke of them Where then is thy iudgement become Where are thy right wits or where at least is thy selfe-loue Canst thou pry after profit for the world and bee carefull to avoyd both losse and harme and yet never thinke what may hurt thy foule and loose thee heaven Oh the coldnesse of care that will not provide how to prevent these miseries Wee thinke heauen stands by our bed sides and Lord haue mercy vpon vs will bring vs thither when indeed hell stands neerer is readier for entrance Heauen is compared to a hill hell to a hole hee that climbes vpward must sweat and blow he that will tumble downeward shall at ease fall into the pit Oh then let vs neither refuse the hardnesse nor the hazards of the way but as Ionathan and his Armour-bearer passed betwixt two rockes one Bozez the other Seneh that is foule and thorny so wee must make shift here below to climbe on our hands and knees and when we are come vp wee shall see our victory and triumph Let vs with the holy and happy Apostles leaue all both pleasures and advantages to follow Christ and by a foreible entry by a maine and manly breach through all difficulties to
his his righteousnesse and sufferings are ours for vnion is ever the ground of communion 1 Cor. 1.30 2 Cor. 5.21 Q. What are the degrees of our Iustification A. Two Imputation and Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.18.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world vnto himselfe not imputing their trespasses vnto them Q. What is this imputation A. It is the charging of Christ with all our debts and the discharging of vs by his righteousnesse As God imputes our debt to his Sonne so doth he impute his Sonnes justice to euery child he calleth Isa 53.4.5 He is broken and bruised by our sinnes and wee are healed and helped by his stripes Q. What is the imputation of our debt A. The laying of our blame and default together with the punishment vpon our Suretie First God imputes all our sinnes to his Sonne as that first sinne of Adam then the consequents of it to wit both originall and actuall sinne and hereupon followes a reall obligation of the Sonne of God to payment and punishment Rom. 3.24 Gal. 2.16 Rom. 8.3 Gal. 3.13 Math. 27.46 Q. What is the imputation of Christs Iustice vnto vs A. First in regard of Adams transgression his conflict with the Devill and in spite of all his malice his perseverance in obedience as likewise the ascribing to vs of his iustice both originall and actuall and the merit of his death both first and second And hereupon a reall remission both of punishment and sinne and the fruition of salvation and happinesse The debt and the discharge answere in a parallell and equall distance of proportion Adams transgression in his conflict with Satan is fully satisfied by Christs combate and conquest his and our Apostasie and continuance in it by Christs obedience and perseverance therein His and our originall and actuall sinne is crossed and cancelled by the perfect lines of Christs originall and actuall iustice drawne over those crooked lines His vnder-going of our punishment in the first and second death takes away our curse in both and by so reall an obligation of himselfe and full discharge of it for vs he brings vs an acquittance sealed in his owne bloud that all our sinnes are pardoned and giues vs a new stocke of grace for the fruition of a better life so that now the poore sinner may say with comfort to Satans accusations thou art now put out of office thou hast nothing to doe with mee here is my discharge from God thou maist goe on and slander but thou hast no power to arrest me or carry me to thy prison He that is in good termes with his Prince feares not the approch of Heraulds or Pursevants he that is out of debt feares not Baylifes or Sergeants but imagines they come vpon some good message so the childe of God needs not feare death but that it comes from God as a messenger of his blisse and happinesse He therefore that would die cheerfully must thus know death to be his friend what is it but the faithful officer of our maker who ever smiles or frownes with his master It cannot nourish or shew enmitie where God favours when he comes fiercely and pulls a man by the throat and summons him to hell who can but tremble then the messenger is terrible but the message worse Oh you that prosper and flourish in your sinnes thinke of this death deales with you as Creditors doe with their debters sayes nothing whiles you trade lustily for hell but when once you begin to goe downe the winde in sicknesses crosses and povertie then arest vpon arest action vpon action then come the fowles of the aire I meane the Devils and seaze vpon the sicke soule as the Ravens vpon a sicke sheepe then doth conscience begin to write bitter things against the sinner and makes him possesse the forgotten sinnes of his youth Hence arise miserable despaires furious ravings of raging consciences that finde no peace within lesse without Oh blessed Soule that makes a timely exchange with Christ getting his righteousnesse for the sinnes thereof Rom. 3.24 and 8.33 Gal. 2.21 Tit. 3.5.7 1 Ioh. 1.8.9.10 Q. What is our reconciliation with God A. It is that whereby the controversie betwixt God and man is fully taken vp and they are at one againe All being fully discharged there is nothing betwixt God and man but peace and loue Rom. 1.7 Grace and peace The grace of imputation brings vs to this peace of Reconciliation Rom. 5.10.11 2 Cor. 5.18.19 Col. 1.20.21 Q. What followes from hence A. Both peace with God and all the creatures Psal 85.8 Rom. 5.1 Iob 5.23 Rom. 8.31 Here is the peace of conscience with God of charitie among our selues of amitie or an holy kind of league with all creatures and of outward prosperitie and good successe in all our wayes c. Q. What will follow in the second place A. Our adoption the branches being vnited once to the stocke may fitly be called the Sonnes thereof And being by nature of the wild Oliue but now translated into the true Oliue and springing forth of it may aptly be called the sonnes thereof By nature wee spring from the first Adam and are taken from thence and put into the second and so vnited with him are made the sons of God by adoption Isa 9.6 Christ is called the everlasting Father and so wee are his children but because he begets vs to his Father and is to deliuer vs vnto him Heb. 2.13 Our adoption is in regard of the first person Christ onely the meanes thereof and therefore the Scripture to avoid confusion of names vseth to call vs brethren in respect of Christ and sonnes in respect of the Father Rom. 8.15.23 Gal. 4.5 Eph. 1.5 Rom. 8.29 Q. What are the benefits of our adoption A. Hence wee receiue the spirit of adoption whereby wee are made the sonnes of the Father and hereupon such is the care of our heauenly father that he makes all things worke together for our good Rom. 8.28 both in prosperitie and adversitie 1 Cor. 11.32 2 Cor. 12.7 Psal 32.4 Heb. 12.10 A gaine by this Christ is our brother and wee are co-heires with him of eternall life and haue restored againe vnto vs the sanctified vse of all the creatures yea and the very Angels are become our attendants to keepe vs in all our wayes Psal 91.11 Furthermore Christ hath made vs to his heavenly Father both Prophets Priests and Kinges Rev. 1.6 Q. How be wee heires of that which is purchased A. The purchase was made by the Father who gaue his onely begotten sonne a price for our redemption So that wee haue title by our father who giues vs our right Secondly by sonne-ship for euery sonne of God is an heire and we haue giuen vs in this world the earnest of our inheritance Eph. 1.14 Oh then may not all the sonnes of God indure an hard wardship here on earth seeing they know alreadie what they are borne to Shall men part with good things in possession for
hope of better in reversion and shall we sticke at any worldly pelfe for the gaining of heaven Fie on such children as with Esau would sell this birth-right for a messe of this worlds pottage Lord make mee one of thy heires and I will be content to waite thy leisure for my pleasure in inioying Q. Hitherto of our being in Christ what is our coalition or growing vp with him A. It is our daily putting off of the old man with his corruptions and the putting on of the new man with his daily renewing in righteousnesse and true holinesse Ephes 4.22.23.24 2 Cor. 5.17 Gal. 2.20 and 5.24 They that are in Christ cannot but be new creatures and such as are daily crucifiers of sinne Q. What are the parts or rather degrees of this our coalition A. Regeneration and glorification Being adopted of the Father it is fit wee should come forth as his children therefore it pleaseth the Father of his owne will to beget vs with the word of truth Iam. 1.18 1 Pet. 1.23 First there is a divine conception of the adopted Sonnes of God and secondly a bringing forth of that worke Christ was conceiued in the wombe of the Virgin by the worke of the Spirit so must his brethren be conceiued in the wombe of the Church by the same Spirit Psal 110.3 Christ told Nicodemus that he was to be re-borne or else hee should never see glory Ioh. 3.3 Regeneration is as the conception Glorification as the nativitie or happy birth day The passion dayes of the Martyrs were called of old Natalitiasalutis the birth dayes of their salvation and that as well for festivitie as the nativitie it selfe Thus from an obscure conception we come to a glorious birth 1 Ioh. 3.2 Q. What is Regeneration A. It is as it were a new conception of vs in the wombe of the Church by the spirit of God and that of the incorruptible seed of the Word whereby our corrupt nature is begotten againe or restored to the image of God 1 Pet. 1.3 2 Pet. 1.4 Tit. 3.5 Gal. 4.6 2 Cor. 3.17 Colos 5.9.10 Eph. 4.23 Which is of the whole man and in this life is perfect in the parts though imperfect in the degrees as a child is a perfect man before he come to his full age And this may be called our sanctification whereby of vnholy wee are renewed by the holy Spirit to the image of our heauenly Father And here we are to consider two degrees of our sanctification the first is the inchoation or beginning of it the second is the processe or passing forward to greater perfection hence Rom. 8.30 our glorification followes our iustification sanctification being no other thing then a degree thereof still proceeding profiting and perfiting in true holinesse which is the greatest reward of godlinesse for as to doe ill and continue therein is the greatest misery so to doe well and persevere therein is the greatest felicitie Glory is the reward of vertue and God cannot crowne his servants better then with an increase of grace Now this progresse is orderly and begins in the Soule even in the very marrow and spirit thereof and so proceeds to the outward man and the actions thereof Ier. 4.14 Eph. 4.23.25.26.27.28 First conversion then conversation And here alas how many set the Cart before the Horse and beginne to change their liues before their lusts their hands before their hearts to purge the channell when the fountaine is corrupt and apply remedies to the head when the paine is caused from the impuritie of the stomacke What is this but to loppe off the boughes and never lay the Axe to the roote of the tree to prune the Vine that it may sprout the more Miserable experience shewes how such disordered beginnings come to miserable endings Many seeme to abstaine from sinnes which they never abhorre and leaue some evils which they loath not and so like swine wallow in them againe or like dogs follow their former vomit she wing plainly they did never inwardly distast those sinnes which for a time outwardly they neglected Againe as wee are to obserue order so wee are to labour for a thorow change 1 Thess 5.23 Holinesse as a dram of Muske perfumes the whole boxe of oyntment or is placed in the Soule as the heart in the body for the conveying of life to all the parts Some turne from one sinne to another others like Aethiopians are white onely in the teeth that is in verball profession else-where cole blacke in conversation they speake well and that 's all Others thinke it is well if they turne their mindes from error though they never change their wills from evill as a reformed Papist but an vnreformed Protestant as wanton in truth as ever he was wilde in error others againe thinke they haue done God good service if they giue halfe the turne as prostrating their bodies to Idoles when God shall haue their hearts or on the contrary when God hath their bodies they suffer the Devill to haue their Soules When mens bodies are in Sacello their hearts as Augustine complaineth are at home in saccellis suis Many by their looke and language out-face the congregation whiles their hearts are running and roving after covetousnesse If wee will beleeue eyther Phylosophy or experience wee shall finde our hearts where they loue not where they liue Lastly others resolue to giue all to God yet haue a leering eye and a squint respect vnto some of their sinnes with Lots wife casting a longing looke after their old Sodome Know the rule of the Schoole to be most certaine that as vertues so vices are coupled together and though in conversion to temporall good they looke diverse wayes yet in regard of aversion from eternall good they beare all one face Yet this must be added for the comfort of the weake that vnperfect sanctification if it be vnpartiall is accepted of God Onely let vs as the aire from darke to light in the dawning of the day proceed by degrees to our noone in grace or as the water from cold to luke-warme and then to heat so let vs haue our soules benummed with sinne warmed with grace and then further heated with true zeale and ferveneie Q. What are the affections or properties of Regeneration A. They are either from the death of Christ our mortification of sinne or his resurrection our vivification in righteousnesse and from hence our spirituall warre betweene corruption dying in vs and righteousnesse rising and growing in vs. Mortification is a daily dying to sinne by applying Christs death to our selues 2 King 13.21 The dead body no sooner touched the bones of Elisha but it was revived againe so wee no sooner touch Christ but he crucifies sinne in vs and reviues vs in the spirit Rom. 6.2.11 and. 7.4 Colos 3.3 Rom. 6.6 Vivification is a dally rising to newnesse of life by the vertue of Christs resurrection Ioh. 5.11 Eph. 2.4.5 The spirituall battell is waged betweene the part corrupted and