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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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of God being mightier then all our Enemies which joyned with his Soveraignty and Goodness we need not fear though we were in the paws of Lyons or the mouth of the Grave 3. From his Glory which is the end or final cause of our Requests for we desire these things for his glory therefore will he grant whatsoever in our prayers may redound to his honor and glory 4. From the eternity of his Kingdom Power and Glory being for ever and ever therefore he cannot be weary of our prayers no time can period his goodness 5. From our confidence expressed in the last word Amen for the Lord will grant unto us whatsoever we believe shall be granted when we ask The Kingdom of God is twofold 1. The Kingdom of his Providence whereby he rules and governs all things in heaven and earth even the Devil and all his Angels and Instruments 2. The Kingdom of Grace whereby he governs his Church by his Word and Spirit and both these are here to be understood Further Gods kingdom in this place imports 1. That he is All-sufficient of himself to do all things whatsoever needing no help or instrument beside his Soveraign will Gen. 17.1 2. That he hath an absolute Soveraign Right Title and Interest to and in all things in heaven and earth 3. That he hath Soveraign Rule and Authority over all things in heaven and earth yea over Hell it self and all the powers and principalities thereof governing all things whatsoever as he pleaseth and bringing them into an absolute subjection The kingdom is here called God's and appropriated to him alone for these Reasons 1. To shew that God hath his Kingdom of himself and from himself alone thus the Kingdom of Grace and Providence are both his 2. To distinguish God from earthly Kings for though they have a Kingdom Power and Glory yet they have all these from God not of themselves and onely for a certain limited time but God hath them all of himself alone not from any other and that for ever and ever Thine is the Power that is Gods Power is his own of himself alone not received from any other to distinguish the true God from all Creatures who have it not of themselves but from God By power is meant an ability in God whereby he can do whatsoever he will For the better conceiving whereof observe these two things 1. That God is not onely powerful but even Power it self in regard of his Nature as he is Goodness Wisdom c. Angels and men are called powerful as receiving power from God but God onely is Power it self because his Nature is Infinite in power as in all his other Properties 2. That Power and Will in God are one and the same for our better conceiving of them they may be distinguished but in themselves they differ not for Gods willing of a thing is the effecting doing of it It is not so in us for we will many things that we cannot do but whatsoever God willeth that he doth By appropriating glory to God is here meant 1. That God hath made all things for his own glory Prov. 16.4 2. That whatsoever we ask are means of his glory Joh. 12.28 3. That the things we ask shall be referred to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 The Reasons why Gods Kingdom Power and Glory is said to be for ever and ever 1. Because in themselves they are everlasting Psal 45.6 102.28 145.13 2. Because of us they should never be forgotten Psal 145.2 3. 3. To distinguish it from earthly Dominions all which have their periods both in Government and Governors Psal 119.96 Isa 40.6 4. To shew forth the dignity of Gods Church and his Children who have a Father whose Kingdom is everlasting and everlastingly shall raign with their Father in his Kingdom of Power Glory and Eternity Of this word Amen there is a double use 1. To express our desire and wish that we may be heard 2. To testifie our faith in the assurance of receiving those things that we crave both which are to be practised in prayer and are expressed by Christ Mat. 11.24 From the union of the word Amen with our Petitions we learn 1. That every childe of God may believe particularly and certainly the pardon of his own sins and endeavor to attain thereunto if as yet he cannot 2. That all prayer ought to be made in a known tongue for else the Assent and Affiance of the heart cannot be given together This Conclusion of the Lords Prayer thus conceived and understood is useful to us many ways 1. For a ground of trust and confidence in God in all distresses for as the Kingdom is his we are his Subjects and he is willing to help as the Power is his we are assured he is able to help us and as the Glory is his he will shew mercy to his people and hear their prayers Psal 50.15 2. To teach us that Prayer and Thanksgiving must alway go together 3. To shew us a way how to obtain our requests in prayer we must confess our own unworthiness and give all Praise Glory and Honor to God 4. To let the proudest of us know that God is to be feared above all Creatures 5. To move us to love God and to yield all chearful obedience to him The Reason why there is here mention made onely of these three Properties of God is as some think to point out the three Persons For the Kingdom is Christs 1 Cor. 15.35 Power the Holy Ghosts Rom. 15.13 19. and Glory the Fathers Rom. 6.4 though indeed we may not limit our conceit of them but understand them in prayer as of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead so of the Unity of the Godhead in the Trinity of Persons Our Father which in Heav'n art Thy Name still Be hallowed Thy Kingdom come Thy Will Be done in Earth as 't is in Heaven Give us This day our daily Bread And forgive us Our Trespasses as those forgive do we That Trespass against us And let 's not be Into Temptation led but deliver Vs from all evil For thine for ever The Kingdom Power and Glory is Amen The Kingdom Power and Glory is Amen CHAP. IV. §. 1. The Creed THe sum of those things which are to be believed are comprised in the Creed commonly called The Symbole of the Apostles because it is a token or profession whereby the Church with her Members is discerned from all her Enemies and from all other Sects This Symbole is a brief and summary form of Christian Doctrine or a brief sum or Confession of the Points of Christian Religion or Evangelical Doctrine the Articles whereof are the Square or Rule whereunto the Faith and Doctrine of all Orthodox and right believing Christians ought to agree This self-same Symbole is called also Catholick because there is but one Faith of all Christians and though there were new Symboles made as that of Athanasius of Nice of
that is he is a person equal to God in Power and Glory by whom the Father worketh immediately or to sit at Gods right hand is to raign in equal Power and Glory with the Father for Christ doth all things likewise as doth the Father and is endued with the same Power with the Father which also he exerciseth He is that person Omnipotent by which the Father governeth all things immediately but especially by which he defendeth the Church against her Enemies and this indeed is the proper meaning of Christs session at the right hand of the Father How Christ rose again 1. He rose by his own power even by his Godhead John 2.19 2. He being truly God and Man rose according to that Nature according to which he suffered Luke 24.39 3. He did rise truly and indeed so that his soul did truly and indeed return into his body 4. He rose the third day as it was foreshadowed in Jonas Why Christ rose again 1. In respect of the Prophesies which were uttered of him Psal 16.10 Mat. 17.23 2. He rose for his Fathers and his own Glory Rom. 1.4 3. For the worthiness and power of the person that rose being Author of life it self 4. In respect of the Office of the person which rose his Meadiatorship 5. He rose for us and that in three respects 1. For our Justification Rom. 4.25 2. For our Regeneration 3. For our Salvation and Glorification In the Resurrection of Christ observe these 2 things viz. 1. His victory and triumph over Death and Hell 1. He declareth himself to be very God rising again by his Divine Power 2. By his Resurrection he subjecteth to himself all things both in Heaven and Earth 3. He manifested himself to be that blessed Seed that had broken the Head of the Serpent that is had overcome the Kingdom of Satan 2. The fruit and benefit which accrews unto us by it viz. 1. Thereby we know him to be the Messias in whom the Prophesies were fulfilled 2. We are confirmed and warranted by Christs Resurrection 1. Of his Merit that he hath fully and perfectly satisfied for our sins 2. Of the application of his Benefits which could not have been bestowed if he had not risen 3. The Gift whereby we are justified he vanquished Death that he might make us partakers of that Righteousness which he had gotten us by his death 1 Cor. 15.16 Rom. 4.25 4. The Gift of the Holy Ghost by whom Christ regenerateth us and giveth us eternal life 5. The Vertue which is conveyed into all Believers enabling them to rise from sin 6. A President or Seal of newness of life we are also stirred up by his power to a new life Rom. 6.4 7. Our continued Preservation by his perpetual and applyed Righteousness 8. The Resurrection of our Head Christ is a cause and pledge unto us of our glorious Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.12 Rom. 8.11 9. The consummation and perfecting of all his benefits and the final glorifying of his Church For what causes the Resurrection of our Bodies is the fruit of Christs Resurrection 1. Because Christ is our Head and we his Members 2. Because he hath abolished our sin the cause of death 3. Because as the first Adam received blessings for all and lost them all so the second Adam received gifts for others and communicates them with us 4. Because the same Spirit dwelleth in us which is in Christ Rom. 8.11 5. Because Christ is Man for by Man came the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.21 But here take notice That there are other causes for which the wicked shall rise again even the just Judgement of God whereby he hath appointed them to eternal pains for the same thing may have more effects and diverse causes as it relates to several respects The Duties arising from our Faith in Christ touching his Resurrection 1. To live as those that be at peace with God for as he dyed for our sins so he rose again for our Justification Rom. 5.25 and being justified by faith we have peace with God Rom. 5.1 2. To rise up to newness of life The Signs of which spiritual life are chiefly these four viz. 1. An heavenly minde Col. 3.1 2. An holy and innocent life Ephes 4.24 3. Greater joy in the Grace of God through Jesus Christ then in any thing either of pleasure or profit in this world Phil. 3.8 4. Growth and encrease in Sanctification 1 Pet. 3.18 In Christs Ascension and sitting at the right hand of the Father consider these three things viz. 1. His Command to his Apostles at his Ascension whereby the glad tidings of his Resurrection and Ascension was not to be confined within Judea 2. The Consequents thereof 1. He opened for us a way to heaven before shut up by our sins 2. Being now gone into Heaven is yet present with us even to the end of the world 3. We have au advocate with the Father 4. That now sitting at the right hand of the Father he hath so established his Kingdom as the Gates of Hell in vain oppose it 3. The Use hereof That we being conversant here upon Earth should have our conversation in Heaven whence we expect the return of our Judge Why Christ ascended viz. 1. For his own and his Fathers glory 1. For he was to have a celestial Kingdom Eph. 4.10 2. It was meet that the Head should be glorified with excellency of gifts above all the blessed as being Members of that Head 2. In respect of us 1. That he might gloriously make Intercession for us by his vertue efficacy and will 2. That we might also ascend and be assured of our Ascension John 14.2 3. That he might send the Holy Ghost and by him gather comfort and defend his Church from the Devil and all her Enemies unto the worlds end John 16.7 The benefit we receive by Christs Ascension viz. 1. He maketh Intercession to his Father in Heaven for us 1 John 2.1 2. And this his Intercession signifieth 1. The perpetual vertue and strength of Christs Sacrifice 2. Both wills in Christ both Humane and Divine propitious and favorable to us whereby he will that for his Sacrifice we be received of his Father 3. The Assent of his Father approving this his Sons will and accepting the value of of his Sacrifice as our sins Ransom 2. Our Glorification or Ascension for seeing Christ our Head is ascended we are certain that we also shall ascend into Heaven as being his Members having a sure pledge that he who is our Head will lift up us his Members John 14.2 3. He sendeth us his Spirit in stead of a pledge between him and us John 14.16 4. It is a Testimony 1. That our sins are fully pardoned us who do believe 2. That Christ is indeed Conqueror of Death Sin and the Devil 3. That we shall never be left destitute of comfort 4. That Christ will for ever defend us What the right hand of God signifieth 1. The Omnipotency or
not by Grace Now the distinction of the Persons is notably set forth unto us in the Baptism of our Saviour Christ Matth. 3.16 17. where it is said that when Jesus was baptized he came out of the water there is the second Person And the holy Ghost descended upon him in the form of a Dove there is the third Person and the Father the first Person pronounced from Heaven that he was his onely beloved Son in whom he was well pleased Again the Trinity is proved 1 John 5.7 This is the Mystery of all Mysteries to be received of us all namely The Trinity of the Persons in the Unity of the Godhead The Persons are they which subsisting in one Godhead are distinguished by incommunicable properties 1 John 5.7 Gen. 19.24 John 1.1 They are Coequal and distinguished not by degree but by order Divided they cannot be by reason of the infinite greatness of that most simple Essence which one and the same is wholly in the Father wholly in the Son and wholly in the Holy Ghost so that in these there is diversity of Persons but Unity of Essence The Communion of the Persons or rather Union is that by which each one is in the rest and with the rest by reason of the Unity of the Godhead and therefore every each one doth possess love and glorifie another and work the same thing John 14.10 Prov. 8.22 30. John 1.1 and 5.19 Again a Person is a distinct subsisting of the whole Godhead and an individual Understanding and an incommunicable Subsistence living of it self and not sustained by another So that the three Persons in the Trinity are not three several Substances but three distinct Subsistences or three divers maner of being of one and the same Substance and Divine Essence The Divine Essence is one and the self-same thing truly subsisting in the three Persons Now the Essence doth not beget an Essence but the Person of the Father begetteth the Person of the Son and the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Son by an eternal and incomprehensible spiration And thus the three Persons make all one Divine Essence and one God being in Nature Coessential in Dignity Coequal in Time Coeternal in Greatness Incomprehensible in Power Irresistible in Will Unchangeable in Place not Circumscript every where present without sight the First and the Last without Time making all things mutable without any passive mutability in himself In this Mystery of the Trinity how in that most simple and single Essence of God there should be three in one and one in three Differing but not divided Several but not sundred All one for their Nature All distinct for their Persons is a secret of secrets rather stedfastly to be believed and reverently to be adored then over-curiously to be searched into Again in the Divine Essence there be three distinct Persons the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost God the Father is indeed the beginning of the Godhead but yet in respect onely of the order of the Persons For in the Godhead we may not seek for any first or last in degree or dignity or time but onely in order of existing or working The Son is the Wisdom of the Father begotten of the Father before the world The Holy Ghost is the infinite Power proceeding from the Father and the Son The Scripture ascribeth to the Father the Beginning of working To the Son Wisdom and Counsel To the Holy Ghost Vertue and Power Notwithstanding they be alike in all things in respect of Eternity Dignity and Power because there is one most undivided Divine Essence common to them and so they be one God There be three which bear witness in Heaven the Father the Son and the holy Ghost and these three be one 1 John 5.7 And although the word Creator is given to the Father Redeemer to the Son and Sanctifier to the Holy Ghost yet in truth they are common to all three Persons in one Essence And though the Father is said to be the First the Son the Second the Holy Ghost to be the Third yet one is not more ancient then the other as the Father more ancient then the Son or the Son then the Holy Ghost but all of a like Coeternity for the Persons are one after another in order of Nature but not of Time John 1.1 2. Gen. 1.2 26. The things they have in common in regard of their work are to Create Gen. 1.26 John 1.3 to Redeem and to Sanctifie Isa 43.1 49.7 The Creation is given to the Father Redemption to the Son Sanctification to the Holy Ghost not as they are simply an operation or work for so should other persons be excluded from it but in respect for the order and maner of working which is peculiar and proper to every one of them in producing and bringing forth the same external work So that our Creation Redemption Sanctification are each appropriated to some one Person of the Trinity and yet all three Persons have their joynt working in them For the works of our Creation Redemption and Sanctification are the operations of the Godhead outwardly that is external operations which God worketh on his Creatures and they are undivided that is common to the three Persons which they by common Will and Power work in the Creatures by reason of that one and the same Essence and Nature of the Godhead which they have All the Persons therefore Create Redeem and Sanctifie Again Essence is a thing subsisting by its self the very Being of God Absolute and Communicable Person is a thing subsisting Individual Living Understanding not sustained in another neither part of another Essence is the Being of God Person is the maner of this Being which is threefold and so maketh three Persons The Essence is Absolute and Communicable the Person Respective and Incommunicable By the name of Trinity are understood the three maners of Being in God that is three not Essences but Persons of the same Divine Essence Now Trinity and Triplicity as also Trinal and Triple differ for that is said to be Triple which is compounded of three Essences or is distinct by three Essences but Trinal is in Essence but one and most simple though it hath three maners of Being God therefore is not Triple because there are not moe Essences but Trinal because he being one according to his Essence is three according to his Persons yet still but one God So that there is one Existence or Essence of the three which is from none but of it self because it is but one but the maners of the Existence are three Wherefore as concerning Existence Being or Essence it self the three Persons are of themselves as concerning the maner of Existing or Being the Father is from none but of himself the Son of the Father the Holy Ghost from both the Son begotten the Holy Ghost proceeding As it is one thing to be a Man another thing to be a Father or a Son yet one and the
laying hold on those things which were not instituted for them but for the Disciples of Christ 2. Because they prophane the Covenant and Testament of God by taking to themselves the Signs and Tokens of the Covenant and so would make him the Father of the wicked 3. Because they tread under foot the blood of Christ by not receiving his benefits by faith when as they profess they do and so mock God 4. Because they condemn themselves by their own judgement for they accept of this Doctrine yet are conscious to themselves that they are hypocrites and so condemn themselves All deadness and hardness of heart must not keep us from the Lords Table for it is twofold viz. 1. Sensible which is in Gods children which they bewail this may not discourage the Communicant from approaching the Table 2. Insensible which is a great and dangerous Judgement and one proper to the Reprobate They onely are to be admitted to the Supper of the Lord who by their confession and life profess faith and repentance and the Reason is 1. Because the Church should prophane Gods Covenant if it should admit unbelievers and men impenitent for he that doth a thing and he that consenteth to it are both guilty 2. Because if such should be admitted the Church should stir up the anger of God against her self as of whom wittingly and willingly this should be committed The Supper of the Lord is often to be celebrated for these Reasons viz. 1. Because of the words of institution 2. Because in respect of the end and purpose of the institution for it must be done in remembrance of Christ The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is not to be omitted when it is administred in the Congregation whereof we are members for they were to be cut off from the people who neglected the Passover but this Sacrament is greater then it in two respects viz. 1. This Sacrament is more clear because it doth more lively represent Christ exhibited in the flesh but the Passover onely represented Christ which was to come 2. Because the mercy we are now to remember is greater then that of the Passover the one being our Redemption from Sin and Hell the other our deliverance out of Egypt though that was not all The resemblances between the Passover and the Supper of the Lord viz. 1. As one is called the Lords Passover Exod. 12.12 so this is called the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 2. God calleth the Lamb the Paschal Lamb because the Angel in the common destruction passed over the houses of the Israelites so Christ calleth the Bread by the name of his body that was broken for us Luke 22.19 3. In the Passover the Lord saith This shall be for a memorial Exod. 12.14 so Christ saith Do this in remembrance of me Luke 22.19 4. God saith of the Lamb Take ye Exod. 12.5 Christ saith of the Bread Take ye Mat. 26.26 5. God saith of the Paschal Lamb Eat ye Exod. 12.11 Christ saith of the Bread Eat ye of the Wine Drink ye c. Christ would at the last Supper of the Passover institute this his Supper for these Reasons 1. That now an end was made of all the old Sacrifices and he did substitute a new Sacrament which should succeed and be observed that Paschal Sacrament being abolished 2. That the same thing might be signified difference of time onely excepted the one signifying Christ to come and to be sacrificed the other come and sacrificed 3. That he might stir up in his Disciples and in us greater attention and marking of the cause for which he did institute it doing nothing before his death but what was of most weight and moment The absurdities following upon and Reasons against Popish Transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ in the Supper of the Lord some wherof are also against Consubstantiation 1. If the bread and wine be turned into the very body and blood of Christ then shall be no Signs in the holy Supper and then no Sacrament for Sacraments cannot be without visible Signs Thus it overthroweth the Sacrament consisting of two parts a visible Sign and an invisible Grace signified but if bread were really the body of Christ then there could be no outward Sign to represent the inward Grace 2. Christs blood should be seperated from his body which can never be 3. The body of Christ should be infinite and therefore he should not be a very man nor truly ascended for by making the body of Christ to be in more places then one at the same time the nature of a true body is destroyed 4. That then the wicked and hypocrites as well as the godly coming to the Supper should then receive Christ and be indeed partakers of the body and blood of Christ yea irrational creatures which is horrible Blasphemy to imagine and determine 5. It maketh two Christs one that giveth another that is given one at the Table another in the mouthes and stomacks of the Disciples 6. The Apostle calleth it Bread oftentimes even after consecration 1 Cor. 10.16 11.26 27 28. and Christ instituted this Supper before he was crucified 7. If the body and blood of Christ had been really in the bread and wine Christ should have eaten himself even his own body and drank his own blood and have given his dead body with his living hands 8. This communion is common to the Fathers and us but the Fathers could not communicate any otherwise with Christ then by faith in the Word and Old Sacraments 9. Christ is ascended really with his body into heaven which must contain him until his coming again Acts 3.21 1.11 John 16.28 Matth. 26.11 The great wide difference between the Lords Supper and the Popish blasphemous idolatrous Mass 1. The Supper of the Lord testifies to us that we have perfect forgiveness of all our sins for that onely Sacrifice of Christ which himself once fully wrought on the cross Heb. 7.27 But in the Mass it is denyed that the quick and the dead have remission of sins for the onely Passion of Christ except also Christ be daily offered for them by their Sacrificers 2. The Supper of the Lord testifies also that we by the Holy Ghost are grafted into Christ who now according to his humane Nature is onely in heaven at the right hand of his Father Heb. 1.3 and there will be worshipped of us John 4.21 22 23. But the Mass teacheth that Christ is bodily under the forms of bread and wine and therefore say they is to be worshipped in them So that the very foundation of the Mass is nothing else then an utter denyal of that onely Sacrifice and Passion of Christ Jesus and an accursed Idolatry 3. The Popish Mass changeth or rather abolished the Rite instituted by Christ for it taketh away the cup from the people and most presumptuously addeth many toys 4. The Mass transformeth the Sign into the thing signified for it denyeth that there
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
all We can thy Love or our Salvation call This doth with mutual tenderness combine As thou art Ours so grant we may be Thine §. 4. Which art in Heaven HEaven here signifieth the habitation of God of the holy Angels and of blessed men and God is said to dwell there not that he is there onely for he is every where but because his Majesty power and glory is more apparent in heaven then in earth and doth also there immediately shew and manifest himself whence we learn with reverence to pray unto him being our Father most glorious and most powerful for to be in heaven what is it but to be above all things and to have them in subjection Psal 115.3 So that we say Which art in heaven because there he sheweth himself chiefly to the Saints Eccles 21.24 and from thence he manifestth himself to man Psal 57.3 There is mention made of three Heavens in Scripture 1. The Air in which we breath Gen. 1.26 2. The Sky in which are the Stars Deut. 1.10 3. The Heaven of Heavens in which Christ the Angels and Saints departed are 1 Kings 8.27 called by Christ His Fathers house Joh. 14 2. by Paul Paradice 2 Cor. 12.4 by Matthew The Throne of God and The City of the great King Mat. 5.34 This is the heaven here specially understood being as it were Gods Mansion-house God by an excellency is said to be in heaven and that in three especial respects 1. To shew that there is no proportion betwixt him and Earthly Potentates for he is infinitely more excellent then any under heaven Psal 113.5 2. To shew that he hath his eyes continually on all his servants he seeth every thing that they do as one placed above and over them Psal 102.19 33.19 Prov. 15.3 3. To shew that he is Almighty able both to recompence his faithful servants Psal 123.1 and also to execute vengeance on those that are unfaithful to God and cruel to his servants Eccles 5.8 The Lord commandeth us to say Our Father Which art in heaven for these Reasons 1. Thereby to shew the opposition and contrariety of earthly fathers and this Father 2. To raise up in us a confidence that God heareth us 3. To raise a reverence of him in us 4. That we call on him in fervency of Spirit 5. That the minde of him that worshippeth be lifted up to heavenly things 6. That heavenly things be desired 7. That the error of Ethnicks might be met withal who think that they may worship God in Creatures as also of the blinde Papists who suppose they may worship the God of heaven in an Image of Earth 8. To admonish us that we are not to direct our prayers to a certain place as in the Old Testament God is said to be in heaven 1. For his glory which doth most shine in the third heaven it being there most manifested to the holy Angels and blessed Saints by an immediate vision and fruition 2. There there is not onely a natural but also a supernatural and extraordinary demonstration of his glorious Attributes of Justice Mercy Power Wisdom c. 3. From his purity and holiness even as heaven is pure and not obnoxious to corruption in such maner as the inferior bodies are 4. For his excellent majestical and inaccessible brightness even as the most shining heavenly Creatures the Sun and Stars which are but dim Creatures in respect of his glorious brightness and all this serveth to breed in us humility and reverence in coming before the Lord. This Prayer begins not with a Preface of Gods Soveraignty Omnipotency Justice c. but with this of Paternity and that in Heaven for these Reasons viz. 1. His Soveraignty would terrifie us because we have rebelled 2. His Omnipotency would amaze us being dust and ashes 3. His Justice would affright us being guilty of our sins 4. His Paternity doth allure us as prodigal sons coming to a liberal and merciful Father Luke 1.15 18. yet so as he is in heaven whereby we are held back from unreverently presuming on this paternal stile he is so graciously pleased to vouchsafe us that filial honor to entitle him by From this place of God the Father in heaven we may draw these necessary Observations 1. That the eye of Faith is needful to behold him withal for heaven is too high for any bodily eye to pierce into but by faith Moses saw him who was invisible 2. Though Potentates have none on earth above them yet in heaven there is one higher then the highest of them 3. That they who cannot be heard on earth have yet one to Appeal unto 4. That the command under which earthly Princes are is far greater then that which themselves have Their Commander is in heaven 5. That the poorest and meanest that be may have as free access to God as the wealthiest and greatest and their suit shall be as soon received Job 34.19 6. That the great ones on earth have as great cause to fear the revenging hand of God for any sin as mean ones These words Which art in heaven instruct us 1. Towards what place we are to address our selves in prayer 2. When we pray to come before God with reverence godly fear and filial trembling Remember therefore to use all reverence in prayer 3. To ask of God in prayer heavenly things especially Luke 11.13 other things as helps onely to them 4. To make it our principal care how we may come to heaven for there our Father is and though our bodies be on earth yet in affection and desire our souls should mount to heaven 5. That God is therefore able to grant our requests 1 Kings 8.30 6. That we may pray with confidence unto him Psal 123.1 7. That in prayer our heart must be in heaven 1 Kings 8.48 Psal 25.1 This is the true worship Joh. 4.23 8. That we are here as Pilgrims and that our conversation must be in heaven Phil. 3.21 Heb. 13.14 9. That we must look for all graces and helps from heaven Jer. 1.17 10. That by Pilgrimages we need not seek to God Psal 145.18 11. That he differs far from earthly parents who would help but cannot oftentimes 12. That no creature can hurt us Psal 2.4 5. 118.6 Rom. 8.30 13. That we must prefer him before earthly parents Mat. 8.22 14. That we also shall be with him in heaven God is said to be in heaven not as though he were included in the Circle of the Heavens for the Heavens and the Heaven of Heavens is not able to contain him 1 Kings 8.27 and indeed he is neither included nor excluded being Infinite and so every where but because his Majesty and glory is most eminent in the highest Heavens to his Saints and Angels and thence doth he manifest himself unto us in his Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy while we are on earth for Heaven is his throne and Earth is his footstool Isa 66.1 Thus the words Which art in Heaven
Ephesus of Calcedon yet is there not a diversity of Faiths for these are not other from this Apostolique Symbole but certain words are added as an Explication of this by reason of Hereticks by whom because of the shortness thereof this was depraved There is no change either of the Matter or of the Doctrine but onely of the form of declaring it as easily may appear by comparing them together This Creed is called Apostolique or the Creed of the Apostles for these Reasons 1. Because it containeth the sum of the Apostolique Doctrine 2. Because the Apostles delivered that sum of Doctrine to their Schollars and Disciples which the Church afterwards held as received from them not that the Apostles composed the form of this Creed but believed and preached the subject matter of it The ends why the Creed was penn'd by the Apostles left unto the Church were these 1. To be a Rule of faith and preservation from Heresie 2. That it might be a mean of distinguishing betwixt true Christians and Hereticks 3. That every man entring the profession of Christianity might continually have before his eyes that Faith for which he should suffer persecution and to the defence whereof he should stand unto the death 4. That every one of the Catechumeni which were new converted Christians might have in a readiness what to answer and believe at their initiation thereinto The principal parts of the Apostolick Creed are three 1. Of the Father and our Creation 2. Of the Son and our Redemption 3. Of the Holy Ghost and our Sanctification Though our Creation Redemption and Sanctification are each appropriated to some one person of the Trinity yet have all three Persons their joynt-working in them For the Creation is given to the Father Redemption to the Son and Sanctification to the Holy Ghost not as they are simply an operation or work for so should the other persons be excluded from it but in respect for the order and maner of working which is peculiar and proper to every of them in producing and bringing forth the same external work Or thus The works of our Creation Redemption and Sanctification are the operations of the Godhead outwardly that is external operations which God worketh on his Creatures and they are undivided that is common to the three Persons which they by common will and power work in the Creatures by reason of that one and the same Essence and Nature of the Godhead which they have but in respect of that order of working which is between them it is otherwise For the Father Createth but mediately by the Son and the Holy Ghost the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son The Father and the Holy Ghost Redeem us but mediately by the Son but the Son immediately from the Father by the Holy Ghost So the Father and the Son Sanctifie us but mediately by the Holy Ghost but the Holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Son The Christians Faith or Faith's Epitomy Or Ensign of true Christianity The Faith for which the valiant Martyrs fought With all the Princes of the Ayr and sought For life by losing it quenching the flame Not by their Blood but with new fire which came From their resolved Faiths Spiritual eyes From whose most zealous spicy flame did rise In Heav'n a Crown of Immortality On Earth the Phoenix of their Memory §. 2. I believe in God the Father Almighty Maker of Heaven and Earth THat is I believe that God is my Father as by Generation and Creation so by Regeneration and Adoption able to do all things as it pleaseth him the Creator of the whole world and the Lord and Governor of the same I believe not we believe with the Papists as the Church believes but every man must so believe as to be able to give an account of his Faith when lawfully called thereunto Now it is one thing to believe God another thing to believe in God To believe God sheweth onely a Faith of knowledge or historical Faith To believe in God declareth true Faith or confidence that is to be perswaded That whatsoever God is and is said to be he is all that and referreth it all to our safety for his Sons sake that is to resolve that he is such an one to me in particular God is to be considered in the three persons Father Son and Holy Ghost a person being nothing else but a maner of being in the Godhead Now no man is able to know God according to the excellency of his own Nature Joh. 1.10 18. but the Scripture delivers us such a knowledge of him as is both necessary and profitable for us Rom. 1.19 20. We must therefore acknowledge God to be such as himself hath manifested himself to be and though he cannot be defined because he is Immense and because his Essence is unknown to us yet may he be described by his Attributes and Properties the persons and principal works which may be thus God is a Spiritual Essence a Spirit John 4.24 or simple Spiritual Essence Exod. 3.13 an everlasting Spirit 2 Chron. 3.17 Infinite Psalm 139. Jer. 23.24 most holy Isa 6.3 onely wise 1 Tim. 1.17 most just and most merciful Exod. 34.6 7. Almighty Rev. 1.8 And he is but one Exod. 10.3 Living Psal 84.2 True Jer. 10.10 without body parts or passions John 4.24 of infinite power Ezek. 10.5 wisdom Psal 147.5 and goodness Psal 106.1 The Maker Gen. 1.1 and Preserver of all things Mat. 10.29 30. other from all the Creatures Incomprehensible most perfect in himself Immutable of an immense Power Wisdom and Goodness True Just Pure Merciful most free angry and wroth with sin of whose days there is no beginning nor ending Rev. 1.8 And in the Unity of this Godhead there be three Persons of one Substance Power and Eternity the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost 1 Joh. 5.3.2 Cor. 13.13 Or which Essence is the eternal Father who from everlasting begot the Son according to his Image and the Son who is the Coeternal Image of the Father and the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Son And the Eternal Father together with the Son and the Holy Ghost hath created Heaven and Earth and all Creatures and worketh all good things in all And that in Mankinde he hath chosen unto himself and gathered a Church by and for the Son that by his Church this one and true Deity may be according to the word delivered from above acknowledged celebrated and adored in this life and in the life to come And lastly he is the Judge both of the just and unjust The Name Father as it is opposite to the Son is understood personally or it signifies the first person of the Godhead as here but as it is referred to or compared with the Creatures it is taken essentially signifying the whole Divine Nature which is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost And Creation is here ascribed unto God
direct all things to my safety The Power of God is twofold 1. Absolute whereby he can do whatsoever can be Infinite and yet will not hereby he could of stones raise up Children unto Abraham 2. Actual whereby he most powerfully doth all things which he willeth Thus his Power in saving us dependeth upon his Will not his Will upon his Power So also are the works of God of two sorts 1. General which are divided into the works of 1. Creation 2. Preservation 3. Administration 2. Special which are wrought in the Church and Company of Elect to justifie sanctifie and glorifie them and are either works Of Reparation and restoring or Of perfection accomplishment Again the Power of God is 1. Infinite 1. In its own Nature and of it self 2. In regard of the diversity of objects unto which it doth extend it self 3. In regard of the manifold effects it is able to do and bring to pass 4. In regard of the action of this Power by which it worketh and can work Eph. 1.9 2. Universal over all the works of God Mat. 28.19 3. Immutable everlasting to crown us if we obey to condemn us if we disobey 4. It is most certain for it is shewn in raising Christs body from death God is called a Father 1. In respect of Christ his onely begotten and natural Son 2. In respect of all Creatures as he is Creator and Preserver of them all 3. In respect of the Elect whom being adopted in his Son he regenerateth The duties to be performed by us to shew our faith in God the Father are these four 1. We must obey his Will he is our Father 2. We must be like unto him and bear in us some resemblance of his Majesty Eph. 5.1 3. To moderate our care for worldly things he is our Father 4. To look up to God upon every accident and to consider his anger against sin when we suffer any way whatsoever and if it falleth out well unto us to be thankful to him as from whom alone all good cometh That God the Father Almighty is the Maker of Heaven and Earth or that the World was Created by God may beside the Testimonies of Scripture be proved by Reasons such as these 1. By the Authority of God himself avouching the same 2. The Originals and Beginnings of Nations shew it 3. The novelty and lateness of all other Histories compared with the Antiquity of the Sacred 4. The Age of men decreasing shew a former and better strength and that not without some first Cause 5. The certain course and race of Times even from the beginning of the World to the exhibiting of the Messias 6. The order of things instituted in Nature 7. The excellency of the minde of Men and Angels 8. The principles or general Rules and natural notions engendred in our mindes 9. The tremblings of Conscience in the wicked 10. The Constitution and Founding of Common-weals 11. The ends of all things profitably and wisely ordained 12. The very order of Causes and Effects which cannot be carried backward or forward infinitely To Create signifies 1. To order or constitute 2. To make something of nothing without any motion with a beck or word onely 3. The continuating of Creation or Creation continued which is the Providence of God How God made the world 1. The World was Created of God the Father by the Son and the Holy Ghost Gen. 1.2 Joh. 1.3 Job 33.4 2. Most freely without any constraint not by any absolute necessity but by necessity of Consequence that is by the Decree of his Will which Decree though it were Eternal and Unchangeable yet was it most free 3. With his beck onely or will without labor wearisomness motion or any change of himself that is not by any new action of his but by his forcible Will onely which from everlasting would that things should on a sudden exist and be at such a time as he had freely appointed decreed Isa 40.28 4. God created the World and all things therein of nothing not of any pre-existent or fore-being matter but of no matter not of the Essence of God nor of any matter Coeternal with God 5. He Created it at a certain and definite time and even at the beginning of times not from everlasting 6. God Created all things most wisely very good that is every thing in its kinde and degree perfect 7. He did it all not in a moment but in the space of six days which if it had so pleased him he could have made in an instant The end or final causes of the Creation of all things 1. The first and chief End is the Glory of God 2. The manifesting knowledge and contemplation of his Divine wisdom and goodness shining in the very Creation of all things Ps 19.1 3. The Administration and Governing of the World which is his Providence 4. To gather a Church of Angels and Men who should acknowledge and magnifie this great and wonderful Creator 5. That all other things might serve for the safety both of the soul and body of man as also for the life necessity and delight of men Gen. 1.28 Psal 8.26 The use of the doctrine of the Creation of the world viz. 1. That the glory of the Creation be given wholly to God and his wisdom power and goodness therein acknowledged 2. That neither the Son nor the Holy Ghost be excluded but each have their own parts yielded them therein 3. That as the world was created of God by the Son and the Holy Ghost so also we must know that by them Mankinde is restored 4. That seeing God created all things of nothing we must know that he is able to restore them being corrupted and ruinated into their first state again 5. That we must not refer the original of corruption to God but know that it was purchased by the faults of Devils and men Joh. 8. 6. That knowing God as in the creating so also in the maintaining and governing of all things not to be tyed to second causes or to the order by him setled in Nature but that he may either keep or alter it we should with confidence and full perswasion look for and crave those things which he hath promised yea those things which in respect of second causes seem impossible 7. Seeing all other things were created for mans use profit or happiness we above all other creatures especially being Redeemed from sin and death to Righteousness and life should for ever celebrate the wonderful known goodness of God 8. That we knowing God in as much as of nothing and through his meer goodness he created all things to owe nothing to any but all his creatures to owe themselves and all that they have to him their Creator should confess that to be most just whatsoever he shall do concerning us and all his creatures Jer. 45.4 9. That we should refer the use of all things to the glory of God since that we have received all