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A16736 The doctrine of the Gospel By a plaine and familiar interpretation of the particular points or articles thereof: with the promises, comforts, and duties, seuerally belonging to the same. VVhereunto is added, a declaration of the danger of not knowing, not beleeuing, or not obeying any one of them. Likewise, a rehearsal of the manifold heresies, wherein many haue erred contrary to them all. Diuided into three bookes. The first whereof, is of beliefe in God the Father ... Allen, Robert, fl. 1596-1612. 1606 (1606) STC 364; ESTC S106811 1,499,180 1,052

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iudged condemne not ye shall not be condemned forgiue and ye shal be forgiuen As we are allwaies to beware of rashe vncharitable iudging censuring of our brethren so then especiallie when wee are in the passions of anger and displeasure conceiued against them For then as we are vsually most vnaduised so are we most ready to condemne them of hypocrisie of all to naught Euery man is partiall in his own cause But our Sauiour will iudge all our iudgemēts yea euen the iudgements of all thrones he wil reuerse euery vniust iudgement Finally concerning the last branch of the answer that the meditation of the last iudgement hath great force to moue vs to the care of nourishing and holding fast the holy fellowship cōmunion of Saints it may appeare by the exhortation admonition of the Apostle to the Heb ch 10.24.25.26 Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue to good works Not forsaking the fellowship which we haue among our selues as the manner of some is but let vs exhort one another that so much the more because ye see that the day draweth neere For if wee sinne willinglie after that wee haue receiued the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes but a fearfull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall deuour the aduersaries And besides it is a true saying that out of the bosome or lappe of the true Church of Christ there is no saluation to wit for those that may enioy the communion of Saints and doe despise it Ioel 2.32 Here also may the prouerbiall speech haue speciall good vse Looke where the dead corps is thither will the Eagles flie Matth 24.28 God therefore of his infinite goodnes vouchsafe so to open our eyes and so to tou●h our heartes that wee may make these holie and blessed vses from thereuerend meditation of the most glorious and fearfull appearance of our LORD IESVS CHRIST when he shall come to iudge the worlde Amen ANd nowe that wee may conclude the whole doctrine of this Article Question What is the danger of not beleeuing of not yeelding this obedience of faith in respect of this last iudgement which our Sauiour shall giue vpon the quicke and the dead Answer All such shal be taken at vnwares neither can it bee but they must needes perish most woefully euen for euer and euer from the most glorious presence of the Lord our God And moreouer we may affirme it of like certaintie that they who doe not beleeue the second comming of our Sauiour Christ according to the truth of the holie Storie as yet to be fulfilled haue no true faith to beleeue that hee is already come Explicatiō proofe It is very true For they haue either of them like warrant from the holy Scriptures of God And this is as plainely foretold that it shal be also the manner of it how as the other was before it was yet performed Yea our Sauiour himselfe in whom the former prophesies were fulfilled doth most plainely foretell assure his Church of this that it shal be as visiblie reallie performed in the externall view of the world as that was Yea more vniuersallie then that was For as the holy Scriptures affirme Euery eye shall see him Wherfore most false and presumptuous is the hereticall doctrine which H. N. teacheth his Familie of loue it beeing so directly contrarie to the doctrine of our Sauiour concerning the same that hee that runneth as they say may see it if wee compare them together For first of all as was said euen now The danger of not beleeuing this article the comming of our Sauiour to iudgement shal be visible to all the world the cōming which H N. telleth his s●hollers of is onely visible and apparant to those of his Familie or rather it is as he teacheth onely spiritually discerned and inwardly felt of them Secondly the comming of our Sauiour shal be from heauen in the clowdes according as he was taken vp into heauen by a clowde The comming which H. N. fancieth is reallie and in truth from the earth or rather a strong delusion from the lying spirit of the Diuell out of hell as we may say not from any of the clowdes of heauen but from the most darke and clowdie conceit of his carnall braine though with such a glorious shewe of words as if he were taught it by an Angell of light from the highest heauen Thirdlie the comming of our Sauiour shal be with an audible sound of the last trumpet by the ministerie of an Angell from heauen and with a showt as it were and sensible mouing of all creatures the comming of H. N. is by his base writings which contrarie to the truth of our Sauiour Christ se●keth to hide it selfe in darke corners Neither doth it willingly shew it selfe but to such as holde themselues in great secrecie and stillnesse as hee himselfe prescribeth vnto them The true comming of our Sauiour shal be to raise vp all bodilie out of their graues yea bodilie to restore to life all the dead whether buried in the earth or drowned in the waters or burnt in the fire or any other way destroyed and consumed from the beginning of the world to the ende thereof the counterfait comming of H.N. is according to the fantasticall Trumpet of his doctrine and by the hoarse sound therof onely to raise vp the mindes of his Familie spiritually while they doe remaine here vpon the earth in or with their bodies That is to say It is nothing else in truth but by a spirituall illusion from the false and blasphemous ground of his hereticall doctrine to raise vp by his gratious word as he calleth it wherof he pretendeth himselfe to be a speciall Minister of God and to that ende raised vp from the dead the godlie Nature and very true Beeing of God in all such as will imbrace the same his doctrine the which verie true Essence and Beeing as hee saith lay before dead in them as it were in the graue of sinne As touching the wicked that are deade in their sinnes and departed this life or the godlie departed in the faith H. N. by his comming hath no power to raise them vp at all either bodilie or spirituallie Neither is hee so voyd of subtiltie that he will professe anie thing in that behalfe lest his forgerie should thence be easilie espied euen of his simple and vnwarie Disciples Moreouer as touching the godlie both departed this life from the beginning of the world and also such as shal be found liuing at his comming our Sauiour shall come to take them bodilie vp into heauen the comming which H. N. boasteth of by his Ministerie is onely to make them spirituallie happie and to set them as it were in a Fooles paradice by a speculatiue fancie dreaming of an happie estate heere vpon this earth And so he sheweth himselfe to all those that haue grace to
the contrary if we shall finde that our meate and drinke doe make vs drowsie and vnwilsome when we shall goe about good and holy duties and onely apt to rise from the table to play and spend our time in vanitie or to goe about some lewd practise or other then whether wee haue eaten much or little we may be sure that we haue dieted our selues very ill Such therefore is the admonition of our Sauiour concerning the first sort of dangers to be auoided not onely of drunkards but also of the more moderate persons as hinderances of our watchfulnes necessarily required to the obtaining of eternall saluation at the day of the last iudgement Now likewise the warning which he giueth touching the cares of this life doth not onely respect such as wee call earth-wormes and misers who minde nothing but the earth and are alwaies seruilely plodding thereabout and couetously seeking how they may increase their worldly pelfe or in another kinde those that through pouertie are distracted in their mindes about necessary prouision but out Sauiour speaketh likewise to those that are of a more liberall disposition warning all to take heede that they doe so limit their cares yea euen their lawfull cares in busying themselues or taking account of others in surueying of their lands in perusing their euidences of writing c. that in the meane while they be not hindered from reading the holy Scriptures of God the euidences of our eternall inheritance or from the sanctification of his holy Sabbaths c. The richer sort they are rather to take care how they may religiously husband and imploy that which they haue alreadie like good Stewards of God then couetously to hunt after more like vassalls of their owne lusts according to that more full instruction of our Sauiour Luke chapter 16. verses 9 10 11 12 13. a most excellent doctrine though the wicked Pharisies who were couetous mocked at it as it followeth in the same Text. And the poorer sorte are to quiet their mindes in the Lorde vsing their diligence and staying themselues through faith in his fatherlie prouidence according to that other most comfortable and plentifull instruction of the same our Sauiour Matthew chapter 6 from the 25. verse to the ende of the chapter Hetherto of the first part of the speech of our Sauiour recorded by Saint Luke wherein hee sheweth what are the common dangers which are to be watched against lest the iudgement of God should fall vpon vs at vnwares insomuch as be telleth vs plainely that it shall come as a snare vpon all that dwell on the face of the whole earth whosoeuer shall suffer their hearts to be oppressed with voluptuousnesse or their mindes to be snared with the cares of this life that they will not regard to seeke after the freedome of the Spirit of God that so they may haue libertie to seeke after his heauenly kingdome The second parte of the speech of our Sauiour sheweth as was saide and as it is plaine by the wordes themselues what wee are to pray for in regard of the danger which all of vs are in without watchfulnesse and prayer yea without continuall and constant watching in prayer according to that which was before obserued and as it is notably set downe by the Apostle Paul Colos 4.2 Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiuing The meaning of our Sauiour in this part of his admonition is this that wee doe continually remember in our prayers instantly to intreate the Lord our God and heauenly Father to giue vs grace that we be neuer found like the carelesse people of the world such as were in the dayes of Noah and in the daies of Lot vpon whom his fearefull iudgement fell while they lay securely in their sinnes and in the contempt of that warning which God gaue vnto them but that wee may be like Noah who beleeuing the warning of God and moued with reuerence and feare of the iudgement threatned prepared not onely the Arke but himselfe first and so escaped the wrath of God And that we may be like Lot in Sodome mourning to behold the wickednes of the world that so wee may escape when the world shall be condemned yea that we may escape all those things whereof our Sauiour hath giuen warning And therefore that in our prayers to God we be alwaies mindfull to beseech him to strengthen vs so by his holy Spirit that neither common troubles in the world by warres c. nor more proper troubles of the Church whether persecution by aduersaries or falling away of brethren or the arising of false Christes and false Prophets doe neither intice vs to imbrace any erroneous and hereticall opinion and religion nor feare vs from the profession and obedience of the truth of the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ And that wee continuing thus faithfull before him to the end of our liues whether we die before or liue till the comming of our Sauiour to iudgement may of his infinite mercie be for Christes sake accounted worthie to stand with comfort before his iudgement seate when as the wicked shall not be able to endure but against their wills to see him in so great glory whom they haue most vilely esteemed and most presumptuously dishonoured as if hee had beene no better then a base and contemptible man For verily like as when the traitours and rebels of an earthly Prince are found out and brought before the Iudge to be examined they are confounded and cannot without inward terrour looke the Iudge in the face so nay infinitely much more terrible shall it be to all wicked sinners and rebels against our Sauiour Christ at the day of his appearing when hee shall come in flaming fire to render vengeance howsoeuer vntill that day which they put farre from their thoughts they imbolden themselues to commit all kind of iniquitie both in life and religion without all feare or remorse Thus farre concerning the gratious admonition and warning of our Sauiour in more simple and direct speech without any parable or continued figure IT remaineth that wee doe henceforth consider how he continueth the same his most gratious and necessarie admonition vnder diuers and sondrie lightsome and familiar parables full of excellent instruction The which he doth no doubt add to the former part of his speech to the end it might take the more deepe and firme impression it being so exceedingly necessary and profitable for vs. Let not therefore that which our Sauiour seeth to be little enough to awaken and stirre vp our dull and drowsie hearts seeme too much vnto vs neither let that which hee laboureth to make lightsome and pleasant vnto vs be accounted of vs tedious and irksome to our owne further woe and smart For assuredly most extreame woe shall be to all such as will not take their warning from this so plentifull an admonition which our Sauiour doth of his aboundant grace with so great varietie of instruction inlarge
seruice because by the exercise of sundry bodily afflictions I was in the middest of my thoughts this way constrained to keepe house and chamber for a long time together more then ordinarily and chiefly because thereby I found my heart through the blessing of GOD vppon my afflictions more humbled and sanctified thervnto being as one liuing in Diem death euery day threatening dissolution and hasting the decay of the outward man And that in such sort that before I am olde the infirmities of age are with a swift foote as it were before the time come vpon me In which respect as I thought with my selfe necessitie lay vpon me also to make as much hast as I could to doe the best seruice to God and to his Church that I might possibly attaine vnto before I goe hence and bee not Fiftly in my very inward parts me thought I saw and doe see very clearely that nothing is more necessatie in these daies wherein all things are growing to most lamentable vncertainties for want of reuerend and studious attending to the word as if all things might be carried after probabilities of disputation Seeing therefore nothing I say more necessarie then such a writing as might by the reading of it retentiuely stay the mindes of Gods people in a grounded meditation of the most sure and certaine principles of religion by explications and proofes from the word of God which is the onely sure certaine ground and stay of mans vncertaine and weak wandering minds hauing good trust that it hath pleased God that this writing should bee in some measure fitted herevnto I haue beene hereby incouraged to proceed so farre as I haue done And the rather also that from the viewe of this labour it may appeare to the Churc●es of God yea euen in the sight of all in the world that will looke vpon it what those things are which the faithfull Ministers of Iesus Christ doe beate their wittes about and wherein they spend themselues among their seuerall flockes and charges And that it might from hence also appeare in how many truthes that is in particulars aboue number we do agree teaching the same things from one and the same word by one and the same Spirit with a sweet consent in comparison of those fewe things wherein the iudgements of some doe differ till God shal in them all so cleare our iudgements and frame our hearts to a more full agreement in all things against the distractions of these heauie daies Finally seeing the former part of my collectiō of the doctrine of the Law being wel accepted of many I conceiued so much the better hope that this of the Gospell should finde good entertainment among the good seruants of God But now how well all this busines hath beene performed it belongeth to you the well learned and godly Ministers of the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ to discerne and iudge and accordingly so farre as you shall find cause either to reproue or to giue the glory to God And if you finde that which your soule liketh then say you spare not that whatsoeuer is well God hath heerein glorified himselfe by as weake and vnworthie an instrument of his as could haue beene found out among numbers of those whom it might haue pleased him to vse to such a seruice as this is And concerning my owne selfe this I willingly professe and say as it is in the peaceable and prouerbiall speech of Gideon What is my vintage in comparison of the gleaning of the least of you my reuerend Fathers and brethren if your labours in the holy Ministerie of the word had beene gathered together as these are And who am I but as the diligent Apothecarie to admit the greatest commendation that may seeme to agree in comparison of the most learned and skilfull Phisition or onely as the painefull Bee to fill the hiue with the hony drawne out of your sweete flowers as was acknowledged in the beginning Now therefore vpon these considerations gathering some hope of your fauourable interpretation of all things seeing all is well meant and intended towards you yet me thinke that I heare some say that this kinde of writing is ouer-long and tedious and able to discourage the minde of the Reader before he set his minde vnto it To this vnder your correction I answere First that if such as so may thinke will orderly reade the Questions and Answeres onely then shall it be freed from that conceite of theirs by many degrees of breuitie Secondly I doubt not but euen the same being once acquainted with the Questions and Answeres and giuing their mindes to meditate vpon them wil growe desirous to read and stay their thoughts vpon the Proofes also and that so doing they shall through the blessing of God finde no small profite ioy and comfort to their soules in that they shall find them to bee the marrowe and life of those Answeres which bee not the very wordes of the holy Scriptures and some lightsome clearing also to the same holy Scriptures themselues Thirdly I would desire such as so thinke to answere themselues from a familiar similitude which they may take from their owne counting-housen I meane such as bee rich in the world who for the most part can afford the least time to the diligent reading and studying of holy things that as they doe not account it a vaine or vnnecessarie thing to haue many more bagges of money standing together then they can presently vse because they can one time or other finde vse to improue them all to gaine so they would in this case bee of like iudgement to thinke that it is to the best purpose in all the world to haue the largest spirituall Treasurie that may bee containing the greatest varietie of the instructions comforts and duties of the Gospell of Gods heauenly kingdome though they doe but at conuenient times busie themselues to reade that which is brought to their hands concerning such or such a profitable discourse either for instruction or for comfort or to stirre vp to dutie euen as the necessities of their soules shall from time to time require Whom also I would in the name of God earnestly pray that they would consider further with themselues how necessarie a thing it is specially for them that be rich in this world that they should haue by them besides that most notable meanes of publike Preaching which God hath sent them the helpe of such holy writings as might most strongly stay their mindes in the long and serious thoughts of the necessarie points of their saluation because otherwise the vehement and vncessant cares of this life wil assuredly like a cancre fret out or as a viper gnawe out the very heart stringes of Religion euen in them that be not the worst sort of worldly minded men Last of all as touching length of writing that is not to be accounted too long which is no longer then the largnes of the matter it it selfe
legally taken for a perswasion of the truth of Gods promise in respect of perfect obedience yeelded vnto him but by the faith of the Gospell that is by faith apprehēding applying to a mans self the perfect righteousnes of Iesus Christ for his perfect iustification in the sight of God For the faith of the Gospell hath alwaies a necessary relation to Christ and so is it necessarily to be vnderstood in this high principle of Christian religion concerning our iustification by faith according to that we read 2. Cor 5 21. God hath made him to be sin for vs that is he hath imputed and laied our sinnes to his charge and proceeded against him as if he had bene a most grieuous sinner though he knew no sin that is was nothing at all guiltie of it that we should be made the righteousnes of God in him that is that we being most grieuous sinners might haue his righteousnes imputed and freely giuen vnto vs through the rich grace and mercy of God as verily as if we our selues had wrought performed the same Whereby also it is euident that the true Christian faith in that it iustifieth doth it not as it is an action simply considered but as in the action of it it receiueth imbraceth Christ with his righteousnes euen passiuely as a man may truly say And in this sense as was saide we wil not refuse to vnderstand by this word iustified that we are made righteou● seeing through faith in Christ a man is of a sinner in himselfe made no sinner but righteous in Christ by the imputation of his righteousnes vnto him according to that of the same Apostle Ro. 3 26. God is iust a iustifier of him which is of the faith of Iesu And ch 4 5 He iustifieth the vngodly accounting his faith for righteousnes Neuertheles we must therewitha l needes acknowledge as the truth is that the vsual acceptation of this word to iustifie is in the holy Scriptures to esteeme account or to declare pronounce iust by acquiting of sin imputing of righteousnes that euen of the meere grace fauour of God for I●sus Christ his sake as we will now henceforth further declare And first to begin with that which is writtē Act. 13 38 39. Be it known vnto you men and brethren saith the Apostle Paul that through this man that is by I●sus Christ is preached vnto you forgiuenesse of sinnes And from all thinges from the which yee could not bee iustified by the lawe of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified That is to say he is perfectly acquitted set free deliuered frō the guiltines punishmēt of it Like as the same Ap. Ro. ch 6. v 7. speaking of deliuerance from the power of sin by the vertue of the death of Christ he expresseth it by this word of iustifying from it as we read in the Greeke text where he borroweth the word of iustification to expresse the nature of sanctification which is a singular effect or fruit of the true iustifying faith and an open testimonie and prooofe of the same But let vs proceede to see what the nature of iustification it selfe properly taken is according to some other testimonies of the holy Scriptures To this purpose read againe Rom. 3 24. v 26 chap. 4 5. Tit. 3 7. We being iustified by his grace are made heyres according to the hope of the eternall life But that which is written Rom. 8 33 34. shall bee principally considered of vs at this time Who saith the Apostle shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen It is God that iustifieth Who shall condemne In the which place the Apostle hath a respect to the like wordes of the Prophet Isaiah ch 50 8. c. Where the holy Prophet speaking thus of the perfect faith and assurance of Christ the head that he should perfectly be iustified by his owne inherent righteousnesse and actuall obedience to his father against all that could be obiected against him He is neare that iustifieth me who will contend with me saith the Prophet as it were in the person of our Sauiour Christ Yea further Let vs stand together saith hee who is my aduersarie Let him come neare to me Behold the Lord God will helpe me Who is he that can condemne me c. The same doth the Apostle apply to the encouragement of all true beleeuers in Christ the members of his body that they also by him and for his sake shall haue their free discharge from the iudgement seate of God that they may say likewise with great comfort and confidence Seeing God hath not spared his owne Son but gaue him for vs all how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Who shal lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen And so forth as was alledged euen now But yet in this differing manner as is most necessarie to be obserued that the iustification of our Sauiour Christ is in respect of himselfe by a reall and perfect iustice examined and tried in a most exact course of iudgement before the iudgement seate of God and not by faith such as ours is For he neuer offended in his owne person but perfectly obeyed the lawe of God and therefore might not in iustice haue bene condemned had he not set himselfe a mediator before God in the behalfe yea euen in the person and condition of vs miserable sinners But our iustification insomuch as we are in our selues all of vs damnable sinners it is from God of meere grace and fauour in that by faith onely the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed to vs and made ours as if as was saide wee had perfectly performed it our owne selues Yet so as we must neuerthelesse acknowledge our selues in our selues to be alwaies miserable sinners and therfore according to the instruction of our Sauiour himselfe to pray continually for the forgiuenes of them c. Like as iust Iob though he had the comfortable assurance of his saluation through faith in his Redeemer as hee professeth in the 19 ●hap of his booke And chap. 13 15 19. Loe saith he though God slay me yet will I trust in him He will be my saluation also And verses 18 19. I knowe that I shall be iustified who is he that will pleade with me c. Neuerthelesse he doth therewithall professe likewise that hee will reproue his owne waies as being faultie in the sight of God as we read in the latter part of the 15 v. And in the holy Gospell of our Sauiour Christ wee read likewise that the Publican confessing and bewailing his sinnes was iustified and not the Pharisie who iustified himselfe Luk. 18 10. And ch 16 15. Our Sauiour Christ doth more generally condemne the Pharisies for the same their pride saying Ye are they which iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your hearts for that which is highly esteeemed among men is abomination in the sight
1. Sam. 12.24 Yea the feare of God is not onely a helping grace to this parte of repentance but it is a principall grace of repentance it selfe according as it is written Pro 1.7 and Ps 111.10 The feare of the Lord is the beginning yea as the word may well signifie a chiefe point of wisdome And Ps 2. Wee must serue the Lord in feare as we saw before That godlines hath the promise of the life both present and to come the Apo Paul assureth vs 1. Tim. 4.8 And that the meditation of these promises help forward repentance it may be perceiued by that wee read Psal 119.11 I haue hid thy promise in my heart that I might not sin against thee And in the next vers O blessed Lord teach me thy Statutes Read also 2. Cor 7.1 Seeing then wee haue these promises dearely beloued let vs cleanse our selues from all filthines of the fleshe and of the Spirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God Yea generallie that all mercies of God aswell past and present as to come ought to mooue vs to repentance call to minde that place 1. Sam. 12.24 alledged euen now For to this ende the Prophet of God exhorteth the Israelites to consider the great things which the Lord had done for them nothing doubting but it must needes prouoke all that feared God among them to settle their hearts to serue him Read also in the same 1. book of Samuel ch 15.17 and 2. Sam. 12.7.8 Isa 5.1 c. and Mica 6.3.4.5 Ro 2.4 ch 12.1 c. where and in many other places the Lord calleth reasoneth earnestly for obedience from the consideration of his mercies benefites bestowed vpon his people Beholde saith our Sa Chr to the impotent man whom he had healed thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Iohn 5.14 Verilie euery bit of bread which we eat euery garment which we put on euery creature that wee beholde euery flower that we smell to c they ought all and euery of them to be esteemed of vs as continuall admonitors to moue vs to hearty repentance Finallie as touching the first branche of the Answer concerning the power of our Sau Chr his resurrection read Rmo 6.4 c. and Ephes 1.19 c. and chapt 2.1 Read also 1. Pet. 3.21 These graces therfore are those which we may reckon for the former sorte of helps to stirre vp to newnesse of life Finally as touching the first branch of the answere concerning the power of our Sa Ch his resurrection reade Ro 6.4 c. and Ephe 1.19 c. and Chap. 2.1 Reade also 1. Peter 3.21 These graces therefore are those which wee may reckon for the former helps to stirre vp to newnes of life Question NOw which are those that may furthermore helpe forward the same Answere First an earnest meditation of our former vnprofitablenes yea of our offensiue and harmefull life among the people of God euen to the dishonour of the most holy name of God himselfe Secondly a like earnest desire to take a better course for all time to come Thirdly ioy and delight in well doing Fourthly earnest prayer to God for daily increase of his grace and power in vs to the same end Finally carefull meditating of all good reasons and a diligent vsing of euery good and holy meanes which God of his infinite mercy and goodnes hath ordained to further vs in the practise of either part of repentance both to the honour of God and also to the common benefit of his people Explicatiō proofe Touching our former vnprofitablenes yea harmfulnes by our euill example and by our incouraging of others to doe euill and that wee ought euen from thence to prouoke our selues to be the more carefull henceforward to walke in good duty and for the same cause also to watch for and to lay hold on all good occasions to doe euery good works wee may attaine vnto to the end we may by the daily increase of the amendment of our liues more glorifie God and also make amends among his people whom wee haue any way damnified or seduced either in soule or outward estate read Ezek 44 6. Thus saith the Lord God O house of Israel ye haue enough of all your abominations Likewise Ro 13.11 And that considering the season that it is now time that we should arise from sleepe for now is our saluation nearer then when we beleeued to wit when wee first beleeued And 1. Pet 4.3 It is sufficient for vs that wee haue spent the time past of the life after the lust of the Gentiles walking in wantonnes c. For seeing we owe the obedience of our whole life vnto God principally and then for the Lords sake vnto his people the reason is plaine that by how much wee haue misspent a greater part of our liues heretofore we ought to spend the rest of it more dutifully for the time to come And therefore I cease to add any more at this time concerning the first branch saue onely that which the Prophet of God saith I considered my waies and turned my feete into thy testimonies Psal 119.59 Secondly concerning earnest desire and zeale to doe well read 2. Cor. 7.11 Where the Apostle commendeth the Corinthians for this grace that there was a great desire and zeale in them And hereunto he exhorteth all Christians Tit. 2.14 that they would be zealous of good works And Cha 3.8 carefull to shew forth good works And Reuel 3.19 Be zealous saith the Lord and amend Thirdly for ioy and delight in well doing read Gal. 5.22 Ioy is a fruit of the Spirit And 1. Cor 13 6. Loue reioiceth not in iniquitie but it reioiceth in the truth Read also Prou 21.15 It is ioy to the iust to doe iudgment And Psal 119 14. I haue had as great delight in the way of thy Testimonies as in all riches And verse 16. I will delight in thy statutes and will not forget thy word And verse 97. And Rom 7.22 I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man And againe Psal 119.32 I will runne the way of thy commandements when thou shalt inlarge mine heart Verily we ought to take more delight in godlines then euer wee tooke in sinne Fourthlie for Prayer to this ende Reade Psalm 19.14 Let the wordes of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight O Lorde my strength and my Redeemer Read also Psalm 139.24 Consider O God if ther bee any way of wickednesse in mee and leade mee in the way for euer As touching other meanes and reasons to further repentance wee will inquire of them by and by But before this I would haue you shewe why wee must be so pricked in our consciences and so sorrowfull for sinnes and so ashamed of them c. as hath bene declared Question WHy must these things be so Answere Wee must a Matth. 9.12.13 feele
God effectually moue vs to repentance As the Apostle reasoneth against one sinne so will we reason against all other Shall I take the members of Christ that is those members which are in profession honourably ingrafted into him to the honour of his name and make them the vile and base members of an harlot to his dishonour God forbid Fourthly from the consideration of the fewnes of those that shall bee saued for want of repentance our Sauiour Christ sheweth vs that wee ought to take an earnest occasion from thence to striue to enter in at the straight gate Luke 13 23 24. And that there is no saluation without repentance it is euident from the beginning of the same chap. And 1. Sam. 12 25. If yee doe wickedly ye shall perish both ye and your king Reade also Luk. 3.8.9 and chap. 13 6 7. and Reuel 2.21 22 23 ch 3.15 16. Likewise the examples of Gods iudgements vpon others ought to admonish vs to repent 1. Cor. 10. verse 11. Read also Ier. 3 8 and Dan. 5 20 21.22 23 24 c. Euery mans owne punishments ought much rather to haue the same effect in himselfe Iob 33 29 3● The want of making this vse of Gods corrections is reproued Isay 9 13. The people turneth not vnto him that smiteth them neither doe they seeke the Lord of Hosts And Amos ch 4 6 c. 11. Finally this ought to be the vse of those afflictions which God laieth vpon his best seruants For thus we ought to reason as the holy Scriptures teach vs. If the righteous be scarcely saued where shal the sinner and vngodly appeare And if such and such things be done to a greene tree what shall be done to that which is dry F●ftly that hope of forgiuenes is a comfortable incouragement to repentance it may be considered from that we read Hosh 6 1.2 3 yea such an incouragement to repentance it is that as one saith truly without hope of forgiuenes none can kindly repent Nemo recte egerit poenitentiam nisi qui sperauerit indulgentiam The Angels reioyce when a sinner repenteth Yea God himselfe is after a sort reioiced with it Luk. 15. Sixtly that the treasuring vp of the word of God in our hearts is a principall furtherance of repentance it is proued by that we read Ps 17 4. Concerning the workes of men by the words of thy lippes I kept mee from the pathes of the cruell man And Ps 19.11 By thy commandements thy seruant is made circumspect And Ps 119.11 I haue hid thy promise in my heart that I might not sin against thee And ver 9. By thy cōmandements thou hast made me wiser then mine enemies for they are euer with me c. Read also Pro. 2 1● 11 c. Finally for the benefit of the societie of the godly to the nourishing and bettering of repētance read Ps 141 ● Heb. 3 13 ch 1● 24 25. Read also Ps 133. No doubt the goodnes cōmoditie of the cōmuniō of Saints cōsisteth in this as in a speciall part of it that we are thereby incouraged confirmed in a godly course of life Holy instructions admonitions and exhortations are as the dewes of heauen which make the barrē earth of our soules fruitful c. Hetherto of repentance what it is and which are the helpes or hinderances of it Question Now when are we thus to repent Answere We must begin presently euen while it is called to day as the holy Ghost speaketh and thence forth we must labour to increase so long as we liue So indeed we read Psal 95 7.8 To day if ye will heare his voice harden not your hearts c. And Heb. 3.7.8 13. Question Why must we thus speedily repent Answere Sundry of the former reasons mouing to repentance are likewise of speciall weight to moue vs to speedie repentance Explicatio and proofe It is true For seeing our life is short and vncertaine it is necessary that wee should not neglect the present opportunitie lest that should come vpon vs which is written Ps 73 19 O how sodenly are they destroied perished horribly consumed As a dreame when on awaketh Answerable to the example of the sodaine destruction of the Sodomites c. Seeing also the increase of sinne especially if it bee ioined with contempt of the Gospell which most graciously calleth vs to repentance it increaseth wrath we haue cause to feare yea rather wee may be sure that if we obstinatly refuse to repent it shall be easier for Tyrus Sydon and for Sodom Gomorrha then for vs at the day of iudgemēt Mat. 11 20 21 22.23 24. Moreouer seeing continuance in sinne confirmeth sinne and maketh it more difficult hard for vs to repent afterward as wee haue learned from the Prophet Ieremiah there is great cause that we should speedily breake off the euil custome of sinning that it get no prescription of time against vs. These reasons haue beene already mentioned Question But shew some other if ye can What reasons else can ye alledge to this purpose Answere By how much repentance is longer delaied specially as was said if it be with contempt against the often admonitions of the holy word and Gospell of God the truth of it will be so much the more hardly discerned euen in the conscience of him that at the last it may be doth truly repent It vsually falleth out so indeed and therefore are such more deepely plunged in sorrowe c. It may seeme that late repentance is rather an extorted then a free and kindly repentance It may seeme that sinne hath forsaken such rather then that they haue forsaken sinne c. Question What other reasons can you shew why we should speedily repent Answere Because God vouchsafeth vs his holy Sacrament of Baptisme the heauenly seale of his couenant of our adoption to be his childrē euen frō our infancie yea because he hath loued vs in his beloued son our Lord Iesus Christ before we were conceiued and borne Explication and proofe This verily if it be duly pondred is a reason of speciall waight and importance to bind vs both to most speedy repentance and also to most constant and dutifull obedience euen from the first time wherein we may haue the least inckling and vnderstanding that may be concerning the exceeding great grace and cōstancy of Gods purpose in this his couenant sealed to vs as it were from ●e●●en by Baptisme to the very end of our liues and for euer and euer Mat. 〈…〉 Luk. 20.4 5 6. For shall the Lord accept of vs miserable sinners vas●● of Satan and children of wrath by nature and shall we refuse him the God of mercy the onely fountaine of spirituall freedome and of euerlasting life and sal●ation God forbid Let vs therefore hearken to the holy exhortation of the m●st ●ise Preacher that wee remember our Creator in the daies of our youth c. Ye seeing our Sauiour Christ forbiddeth those that
receiue saith our Sauiour Christ c. Nowe this wee knowe is a speciall petition which wee are to aske of God that it would please him to increase our Faith as wee haue the example of the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ Thus much for the explanation and proofe of this answere NExt to this it is not as I suppose amisse that you shew after what manner I meane in what course and order the holie Ghost doth work this worke of our regeneration and newe birth with the increases thereof in the seuerall parts or branches of it so farre as for the present wee can discerne Question What is the order of this his working Answere First hee sheweth euery one of the Elect children of God his owne ignorant sinnefull and damnable estate yea hee subdueth their soules to an acknowledgement of the iust deserued damnation which is due thervnto and accordinglie to feare and tremble at the curse of the Lawe Secondly hee inlighteneth the minde to see the Saluation of God with hope to bee a partaker thereof Thirdlie hee stirreth vp the affection of the heart to a longing desire after it and therewithall to mourne for sinne which might iustly separate betwixt vs and it Yet so as hee causeth the heart to long with patience in waiting for the comfort and assurance of attaining vnto it Fourthlie he powreth into the soule and conscience a feeling and ioyous tast of Gods loue and of his gratious readinesse to shew mercie yea hee giueth such a certificat of their particular Adoption to bee the children of God that they reioyce more therein then if they had wonne the whole world Finallie the holy Ghost doth not cease to stirre vp euerie true beleeuer to an earnest care and indeuour of daylie profiting by all holy meanes both in Knowledge and Faith and also in Repentance and obedience of the Gospell comforting and strengthening them also against all such lettes and discouragementes as they doe meete withall For the first of these read Iohn ch 16.9.10.11.12 The holie Ghost as our Sauiour Christ hath taught vs reprooueth the world of Sinne and of Righteousnesse and of Iudgment Of sinne saith our Sauiour because they beleeue not in mee c. Wherby it is euident that not to beleeue in Christ is a very great and a grieuous sinne For the second read Ephes 1.17.18 where the holie Ghost is called the Spirit of wisedome and Reuelation inlightening the eyes of our vnderstanding to know the hope of the calling of God c. Read also 1. Cor 2.9.10 The things which the eye hath not seene c. God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit For the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God And for the comfort of Hope see Rom 8.24 Wee are saued by Hope Thirdly for that desire and longing after Saluation which the holy Ghost worketh read in the same chapt the 23. verse and also verses 26.27 Wee which haue the first fruits of the Spirit doe euen sigh in our selues waiting for the Adoption euen the redemption of our bodies Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for wee knowe not what to pray as wee ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed c. And the children of God are noted by this property that they loue the saluation of God Psal 40.16 And which is in effect all one they are said to be such as loue the appearing of the Lord. 2. Tim. 4.8 And therefore they pray Come Lord Iesu come quickly Reuel 22 20. And Psal 119.41 Let thy louing kindnes come vnto me ó Lord and thy saluation according to thy promise Neuerthelesse they wayte with patience according to that of the Patriarke Iaacob Gen 49.18 O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation And as Simeon vppon whom was the holy Ghost as the Euangelist testifieth waited for the consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 And as we read Rom 8.25 If we hope for that we see not we doe with patience abide for it According also to that in the 123. Psal Behold as the eyes of seruants looke to the hand of their Maisters and as the eyes of a maiden to the hand of her Mistres so our eyes waite vpon the Lord our God vntill he haue mercie vpon vs. And that the holy Ghost causeth the children of God to mourne for their sinnes it hath beene shewed before in which respect they are said to be such as mourne in Sion Isai 61.3 The which mourning also ministreth hope of Gods mercy Lamen chap 5.19.20.21 Ezek chap. 9. For the proofe of the fourth branch read Rom 5.5 The loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. And chap 8.15.16 Ye haue receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby wee crie Abba Father The same Spirit beareth witnesse with our Spirit that wee are the children of God Herein as the Apostle Peter teacheth wee haue cause to reioice with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Ep 1.8 And in comparison heereof all is but dung as the Apostle Paul truly estimateth Phil 3.8 Finally touching the care of further profitting both in knowledge faith and repentance which the holy Ghost worketh it may be proued from that wee read Philip 1.7 God will performe the good worke which hee hath begun And the prayer of the same Apostle warranteth the same 2. Thessa 1.11 God will fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnes and the worke of faith with power Hee will leade from knowledge to knowledge from faith to faith and from glory to glory according to the image of God Rom 1.17 2. Corinth 3.18 Read also Prouerb 4.18 The way of the righteous shineth as the light which shineth more and more vnto the perfit day And for proceeding in knowledge consider of that 2. Cor 5.16 Henceforth know wee no man after the flesh yea though we had knowne Christ after the flesh that is not so purely as we ought looking too much to his abasement c. Yet henceforth know we him so no more A figuratiue concession like to that 1. Corinth 4. ● Consider also of the similitude which the same Apostle vseth in the 13. chap of the same Epistle verse 11. When I was a childe I spake as a childe I vnderstoode as a childe I thought as a childe but when I became a man I put away childish things So it is in the spirituall age as it were of Christ not onely in comparison of our estate heere with that it shall be in the Kingdome of glory but also in respect of that differing measure of grace heere in the Kingdome of grace which now wee speake of For as in the worke of nature all the parts and powers are not perfect at once but they growe in the wombe first Ecclesiast 11.5 and after by the milke of the mothers breast c so is it in the worke of grace Wee are borne of the Spirit wee must growe vp still by the
of the flesh is enmitie against God The issue whereof is death to those that follow it as it is in t●e former verse And Pro. 14.12 Read also 1 Cor. 3.18 Let no man deceiue himselfe If any man among you seeme to be wise in this world let him be a foole that he may be wise Explicatiō and proofe For the proofe of the second duty Read Deu. 4 6 7 8 and Ier. 8. ver 9. and ch 9. verses 23 24. as before in the comfort For the third read Ro. 11 33. and Eccles 3 11. He hath made euery thing beautifull in the time and season thereof c. Yet no man can finde out the worke that God hath wrought from the beginning euen to the end And chap. 7 15 16. c. For the proofe of the fourth duty read Psal 34.17 18 19.20 and 68.20.1 Cor. 10.13 Eccles 7 28. Read also Psal 25.10 The way of the Lord is strength to the vtright man In which respect well saith our learned Interpreter Via Domini est per invia That is God maketh way where there is no way For the last duty of giuing God the glory for the gift of all wisedome and vnderstanding Read Exod. 31 1 2 3.4.5.6 1 Sam 18.14 and Isai 28.23 c. to the end of the Chapter Read also Prou. 6.6.7.8 and cha 30.24.25.26 27.28 Ier 8. ● And yet more principally Read Dan. 2 19.20 21 22 23 And in the Ep of Iude verse 25. To God onely wise our Sauiour be glory and maiestie and dominion and power both now and for euer Amen The duties belonging furthermore to the comfort of faith in the almighty power of God and generally touching the work of creation and gouernment we doe here of purpose omit as we did before in the comforts because wee shall afterward haue a speciall occasion to consider of the same WE come to the duties of faith cōcerning the long suffering patience yea the infinite mercy and goodnes of the Lord our God Question Which are they Answere By how much the mercies of the Lord our God are more aboundant toward vs by so much ought wee first of all to take the more diligent heed that wee doe not in any wise despise or lightly esteeme them Secondly that we doe not distrust or despaire of the same his mercies as if there were any defect or failing in them Thirdly that we doe not in any case presume or waxe wanton against them albeit God is easily intreated and ready to forgiue such as offend him Explicatiō and proofe These euils euen as very wicked extremities are carefully to be auoided yea to be accursed and abhorred of euery true beleeuer For they are most contrary to the nature of true faith Against the first wherof read Rom. 2.4 Despisest thou the riches of Gods bountifulnes and patience and long suffering We must take heed therefore that wee be not like those gracelesse subiects or children which are ready to despise the clemencie and lenitie of their gentle Princes and Parents Against the second read Ier Lamen ch 3.22 His compassions faile not Read also Isai 1.18 and ch 40. 28. 29. 30. 31. And Rom 5.20 Though sinne aboundeth yet grace aboundeth much more and 1 Tim 1 15. Against the third read Rom 6 1 c. What shall we say then shall we continue still in sinne that grace may abound God forbid c. Read Ep Iude 1 4. Though God be perfectly mercifull yet we must know that he is not so mercifull but that he is iust also We may not thinke God to haue but one eye as it were As he hath an eye of mercy so he hath an eye of iustice As he knoweth how to pitty humbled sinners and repenting sinners c so will he surely punish seuerely euerie obstinate and presumptuous transgressour and rebell He will deale wel with these that are well disposed c but he will deale roughly with those that be froward according to that which we read Psal 18.25.26 This hath God himselfe with so loud a voice proclaimed of himselfe as wee saw before that we neede to speake the lesse of it now Question BVt is there no other duty belonging to that singular comfort which faith taketh in the infinitnes of Gods mercies but only that we abuse thē not Answer Yes it is on the contrary the most bounden duty of euery one of vs whosoeuer doe beleeue in the mercies of the Lord our God to be so much the more loth to displease him in any thing yea rather to be so much the more carefull and studious to please him in all holy obedience by how much he is not onely more loth to enter into iudgment against vs but also more ready euery way to doe vs the most and greatest good Explication and proofe Thus generall indeed is the duty or as we may rather say the dutifulnes of faith is the comfort of Gods aboundant yea infinite mercies The mercies of the Lord our God ought to be esteemed of vs as the most pretious and dainty Iewell that we haue to deale withall And accordingly they are most charily holily to be dealt with of vs. For if we should prophane the mercies of God what refuge or sanctua●ie should be safe for vs to flie vnto for rescue against the hote and fierce pursuite of his iustice For the proofe wherof read Rom. 2.4 The bountifulnes of God leadeth thee to repentance And ch 12.1.2 I beseech ye therefore bretheren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God which is your reasonable seruing of God And fashion not your selues like vnto this world c. Read also 2 Cor 7 1. and 1. Sam. 12. ●● ●nd Isai 5.1 c. Moreouer call to mind Mat. 4.17 1. Iohn 3.8.9.10 and Gen. 29.9 And Psal 1●0 4 Mercy is with thee O Lord that thou maiest be feared And Psal ● 7 In the multitude of thy mercy I will come into thy house and in thy feare will I worship toward thine holy temple Yea we ought to serue the Lord with ioyfulnes and with a good heart for the aboundance of all things Deut. 28.47 And Psal 119 64. The earth ô Lord is full of thy mercy teach me thy statutes BVt shew you yet something more particularly if you can what some of the duties of faith are which doe belong to the comfort of Gods infinite mercy and goodnes toward vs. Question Which may some of them be Answere Seeing the Lord our God is so aboundant in mercie to vs that hee forgiueth vs all our sinnes though neuer so great and grieuous so often as we do truly repent and turne vnto him it is our duty to be readily affected to forgiue one another our mutuall offences and both to admit seeke reconciliation how often in how great matters soeuer we haue ●ust occasion euen so farre as they concerne one another Moreouer seeing the Lord our
of all the workes of Gods creation against all such as speake euil of any one of them to any the least reproch and ●●shonour of his most holy and reuerend name Finally Faith concerning the workes of Creation and the comfort of them teacheth all true beleeuers to humble themselues vnfainedly before God the most gratious and almightie Creator of them Explicatiō and proofe Here againe let vs call to mind that of duties belonging to God in respect of his works of Creation Some pertaine to iudgement other to affection some to speach and some to the actions of life Now that it is our dutie first of all to esteeme of all the workes of Gods creation very reuerendly yea euen of those that bee the least and basest of them in comparison of other it standeth with verie good reason in so much as the same God who made thee one hee made the other also Hee that created the greatest created also the least the basest as well as the most noble the most deformed as wee account deformitie as well as the most comely and beautifull as wee esteeme of beautie they haue all one and the same Author and Maker And therefore well may wee reason for the honour of the workes of Gods creation as the Apostle Iames doth for the authoritie of euerie commandement of the lawe because one God and Law-giuer gaue them all Chap 2.11 Reade Psalme 104.24 and 1.39.14.15.16.17.18 Read also Prou. 6. ver 6.7 c. and chap. 30.24 c. Yea and the Lord hath of purpose put a difference betwixt creature and creature that the excellencie and beautie of the one might the rather appeare by comparing it with the other the lesser with the greater the weaker with the stronger the slower with the swifter the lighter with the heauier the colder with the hoter c. And all this the Lord would haue so for a more perfect declaration of his manifold diuine wisedome according to that Psalme 104.24 O Lord how manifold are thy workes In wisedome hast thou made them all the earth is full of thy riches c. Reade also Romanes 1.19.20 c. Acts. 17.24 c. For euen to this end God made the world and all thinges therein that by the creation thereof his eternall power and Godhead being considered in his workes might be made manifest to all men that they might seeke him yea and sensibly finde him c. And thus also it is plaine that it is our dutie to glorifie and praise God in all his workes according to that notable admonition which wee reade Iob chap. 36.24.25.26 Remember that thou magnifie his worke which men behold All men see it and men behold it a farre off Behold God is excellent c. And according to the generall exhortation of the 148. Psalme where all creatures are stirred vp to praise God euen in this respect that they are his creatures Reade also Reuelation chap. 14.7 the exhortation of the holy Angell there And the rather are wee thus to glorifie God in his creatures because they being the workes of his hands doe make the difference betwixt him and all false Gods Ier. 10.16 and Acts 17.23.24 c. Wherefore according to the third branch of the answere it is further manifest that as we must for our owne parts esteeme reuerendly of all the works of God and accordingly glorifie his name therein yea in such manner that euen those that are pudenda and a cause of shamefulnes and blushing to vs by reason of our sinnes ought to be accounted honourable as they proceede from the most wise and iust God so must we haue care to cause others as much as lieth in vs to doe the like For who looking vpon the Frogge or Caterpiller or little Flie or poore disdained Lowse but so soone as he remembreth that God did euen by these his creatures confound one of the proudest and cruellest Kings and people of the world euen the Egiptians Who I say considering this can but praise God in this respect that God should by such base and contemptible creatures worke so glorious a worke According to that Psalme 78.45.46 c. 105.29.30.34.35 And as wee must of dutie speake honourably of God for them so may wee not indure to heare any thing spoken to the contrarie dishonour of his most blessed name Well haue the Ministers of Gods word as wee reade in ancient record zealously reprooued and condemned those blasphemous heretikes who haue ascribed any part of the worke of Gods creation to the Diuell such as the hereticks called Paternians E●●omians and Ethicoprucopta are reported to haue beene who feared not to affirme that the inferiour parts of the bodies of ●●en and women are the worke of the Diuell Likewise well haue they reproued and condemned the Heretikes called Seu●riani who condemned wine as not being a creature of God And with them well also haue they condemned the Marcionites who accounted this whole world to be a worke vnworthie to be ascribed vnto God The like reproofe and zealous condemnation is to be continued and maintained of all faithfull Ministers of the holie word of God and of all faithfull Christians against the same and all other the like blasphemous maligners and railers against any of the workes of our God God himselfe no doubt will take our parts heerein and iustifie himselfe against all their blasphemous derogations Theater of Gods iudgements chap. 31 Concerning Blasphemers M. Perkins Exp●● Sy● speaking of Gods Omnipotency Mornaeus cap 11. de Verit Religionis Act M●●u in his collection of Gods seuere iudgements against Blasphemers a little before the end of the Booke whatsoeuer they may bee And verie worthily also haue other the good seruants of God to the same ende recorded the iust iudgements of God against such lewde and wicked persons from time to time Against some for reproching his thunder and against other for other their diuellish and licentious calumniations and contempts And namely right worthily is it recorded against a King of Spaine Alphonsus the ninth that hee bare his punishment from the iust hand of God because hee presumed to say that if hee had bene at the creation hee could haue disposed of the worlde in a better manner then now it is Reade the notable admonition of M. Foxe to beware of blaspheming of Gods wisedome or workes any way from an example of a fearfull iudgement of God vpon a Girle about 12. yeeres olde The graue Father vpon a speciall occasion maketh a verie notable and large admonition worthie to be diligently read attended and obeyed of all that shall reade the same The which for their sakes who haue not that booke yea and to the ende that such as haue the booke may yet haue so necessary and worthie an admonition more neere hand and in their present view I will not thinke it tedious to copie out at large both it and the occasion of it as the godlie Father himselfe hath set it downe The
euer and hath beene most perfect from all eternitie there are neither former nor latter consultations with him THese thinges thus cleared let vs now goe forward Wherein that wee may proceede in some order howsoeuer the holy Prouidence of God is one onely entier in it selfe let vs for our instruction and for the helpe of our infirmitie consider of it as beeing either more generall ouer all creatures or more speciall concerning some aboue the rest And that also either before the fall of mankinde or concerning the fall it selfe or else euer since the fall And touching the more speciall prouidence of God let vs consider of the grounds and declaration of it according to the order of the creation it selfe that is according to the workes of God in euery seuerall daies creation as hath beene from the historie thereof set downe before Question First therefore what ground of holy Scripture haue you for the proofe and declaration of GODS more generall prouidence before the fall of mankinde Answere For the prouidence of God in the generall vpholding of his creatures this may be a sufficient proofe and declaration in that so soone as mention is made of the bringing forth of the creatures it is saide forthwith that the Spirit of GOD sustained and vpheld them Explicatiō proofe It is true For that is the true sence and meaning of those wordes in the beginning of Genesis That the Spirit of God moued vpon the waters as they haue beene more fully opened and interpreted before From whence it is well worthie to be marked that the prouidence of God in the supporting of his creatures is as ancient as the creation it selfe The which as it had the beginning with it I meane as touching the actuall operation so it both had and hath still the perpetuall continuance with the continuance of the creature it selfe to the vpholding of it For the creature can no more consist and continue by the owne power then it could possibly consist and take the beeing and beginning of it selfe THus much therefore may briefely suffice for the proofe of the generall prouidence of God in the continuing vpholding of his creatures from the first moment of the creation and so forth Question And nowe that wee may proceede what ground haue you for the prouidence of God in the ruling and gouerning of his creatures before the fall of mankinde Answere The ground of this is determined with the historie of the creation contained as wee haue seene before in the two first chapters of Genesis so much as concerneth all visible and earthly creatures by expresse mention of them And touching the inuisible Angels though Moses writeth nothing expresly of them by name before the fall of mankinde yet from other hely Scriptures we learne for certaine thus much that the Lord vpholding and continuing his elect Angels in their holy and pure estate as they were created hee left the rest to themselues who of their owne accord fell soone away from their holy originall and so depriued themselues of the fauour and grace of GOD and became lyars and murtherers from the beginning Wherefore euen thenceforth that is from the very beginning of their fall from their obedience God hath begun to reserue them in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day Explication and proofe So indeede we reade expresly in the 6. verse of the Epistle of Iude. And Iohn chap 8.44 And this is briefely the summe of all that which God hath iudged meete to teach vs concerning his gouernment ouer his Angels before the fall of mankinde Let vs therefore leauing them for a while come to his gouernment ouer the rest of his creatures the which the Prophet Moses doth expresly describe vnto vs. Question Wherein is this part of GODS gouernment most generally to be discerned Answere It appeareth in this that he appointed such foode and nourishment as was meete to support and mainteine euery liuing creature in life and that euen as well in the vegetatiue life more proper to trees and plants as in the sensitiue life of men and bruit beastes and also of the foules of the aier and fishes of the Sea and whatsoeuer else And in that hee blessed them all with the power of generation conception and bringing forth increase and multiplication according to their seuerall kindes Explication and proofe So indeede we read Gen ch 1. verses 12.22.28.29 30. And in this respect also the Apostle Paule speaking of the continuall prouidence of God in his vpholding and gouerning of his creatures saith thus Act 17 25. Hee giueth to all life and breath and all thinges else And againe verse 28. In him wee liue and mooue and haue our beeing This is therefore the more generall prouidence of God in his gouerning of his creatures Question What was his more particular or speciall gouernment Answere God continued the orderly succession of the night and day according to the ordination of it in the first daies worke And to the same purpose hee likewise confirmed the instrumental gouernment and ordering thereof as it were in the hand and ministerie of the Sunne and the Moone according to the creation of the fourth day God also according to the creation of the third day continued the limitation and boundes of the Seas within their compasse so that they could not returne to ouerwhelme the dry land againe as of their owne nature they would Moreouer albeit God continued his owne souereigne and imperiall gouernment ouer all his creatures as well earthly as heauenly yet hee honoured Adam the first man whom he had created with a ministerial gouernment ouer all earthly ●reatures to rule and order them so farre as should bee to his best commoditit and comfort Finally God did in this his more particular prouidence make a more speciall prouiso as we vse to speake for the propagation and in crease of mankinde aboue all other creatures Explication and proofe That these things are so we may easily perceiue by that which we read Gen chap 1.16.17.18 Secondly reade againe Psalm 104.6.7.8.9 Thou coueredst the earth with the deepe as with a garment the waters would stand aboue the mountaines But at thy rebuke they flee away c. Thirdly read Gen 1.28 and chap 2.15 16.19.20 For God allowed man a more liberall ordinarie and dieate then to any other creature And for the authorizing of him aboue the rest he warned as it were and gathered together all creatures before Adam to take their names as hee should thinke good to call them For that was a special token of subiection like as when one man is content to weare the liuerie which annother bestoweth vpon him For the last point of the answere read Gen chap 2. verse 22. the last part of the verse and verses 23.24 And let it be considered to the illustration of Gods holy prouidence in this behalfe that God did not onely as was obserued before create onely one woman
altogether prophane and abuse the blessed and glorious word and Gospell of God and our Sauiour Christ it is most iust that God should take seuere vengeance vpon them by giuing them ouer to strong delusion that they should beleeue lies c according to the holy menace of the Apostle Paul 2. Thessalon 2.10.11.12 For seeing it cannot be denyed but that it was iust with God seuerelie to punish the heathen for their smothering of the dimme light of naturall vnderstanding which was remaining in them as we read Rom 1. verse 18 c. Much more must it be acknowledged to be most agreeable to the most pure iustice of God to double his wrath against those that despise the perfit light of his Gospell and doe rebell against his most holie Spirit which shineth forth most gratiouslie and admirablie toward them in the same Nowe therefore for the conclusion of all obiections against the Fatherlie prouidence of our good God let vs come to the last question which is this Howe it should come to passe that the Lord of his infinit mercie granting his children the meanes of their saluation and most vigilantlie watching ouer their saluation yet some of the most deare and best beloued of them should be so left to themselues that they should at anie time fall into some greeuous sinne or other as king Dauid and king Salomon did Peter also and manie more when as God could by the gratious power of his Spirit haue preserued them from such grieuous falls Question Howe therefore may this be perceiued to accord with his Fatherlie prouidence and gouernment Answere The Lord doth hereby iustlie and yet also in exceeding great mercie chastice some former f●●e either of negligence or it may be of some degree of presumption to make the humane corruption and infirmitie of all men without exception euery way more fullie knowne for the common instruction and admonition of all And also to this gratious ende among the rest that the reioycing of the children of God may neither rest in themselues nor vpon any other creature but onely in and vpon the Lorde himselfe who alone is the onely constant and neuer-failing direction strength and saluation of his people Moreouer euen in this wonderfull is the Fatherlie goodnes of God who neuer suffereth any of his children finally to perish in their falls but he raiseth them vp againe by repentance and reneweth the ioy of their saluation vnto them Wee are to wonder at it in deede and with admiration to blesse and praise his most holie gratious and blessed name for euer and euer Amen The whole answere is euident from the examples euen now alledged To the which purpose also let vs hearken to the Prophet Ieremiah chap 9. 23. 24. Let not the wise man glorie in his wisedome c. But let him that glorieth glorie in this that hee knoweth me saith the Lord for I am the Lord which doe shewe mercie iudgement and righteousnes in the earth for in these things I doe delight saith the Lord. Likewise the Apostle Paul 2. Cor 1.30.31 Let him that reioyceth reioyce in the Lord. Thus therefore for the conclusion of this discourse let vs resolue our selues vppon the vndoubted acknowledgement of the Fatherlie Prouidence of our most gratious and mercifull God against all the cauils that may by anie bee obiected against it For by the groundes of the Answeres alreadie alledged wee may with like facilitie answere euerie other whatsoeuer they may bee But what though wee should not be able throughlie to discerne the reason of some of Gods diuine proceedings and iudgements towardes any other of his child●en or toward our owne selues Should it be a sufficient reason for vs to call into question the Prouidence of God God forbid Excellentlie well saith M. Caluine that it is one of the chiefe exercise of our faith to be humbled vnder the mightie hand of God and with silence to rest quietlie in his iudgements Sciamus inquit vnum esse expraecipuis exercitijs fidei nostrae humiliari sub forti Dei manu cum silentio acquiescere eius indicijs In Psalm 39. vers 1● Alas we poore wretches through our negligence doe not know many of those things which we both might and ought to know How then may wee presume or once imagine that we may attaine to knowe the reason of euerie secret worke and iudgement of God The mercie of the Lorde saith the holie Prophet reacheth to the heauens and his faithfulnesse to the cloudes His righteousnes is like the mightie or huge mountaines his iudgements are like the great deepe Ps● ●6 vers 5.6 Read also Iob ch 33. ve s 1● 1●.14 Behold saith Elihu to Iob in this thou hast not done right I will answere thee that God is gre●ter then man Why doest thou striue against him for he doth not giue account of all his matters For God speaketh once or twice and one seeth it not c. to wit vntill hee open the eares of men euen by their corrections which hee had sealed as it followeth in the 16. verse And againe chapt●● 36. 22. c. Beholde God exalteth by his power What teacher is like vnto him Who hath appointed to him his way Or who can say● Thou hast done wickedly Remember that thou magnifie his worke which men beholde All men see it and behold it a farre off Beholde God is excellent aboue that wee can knowe c. It is meete therefore that euery one of vs doe reuerence and with holie admiration glorifie and adore that in the Diuine counselles and workes of the Lord God whereof wee in our shallow conceits can apprehend no reason that may satisfie our curious and carnall mindes to our liking It ought aboundantlie to suffice all that bee godlie and dutifullie minded toward God that it hath pleased him to reueale vnto vs in his holie Scriptures so much as it is meete for vs for to desire to knowe And the rather also for that hee doth therwithall vouchsafe accordinglie to giue vs good experience if wee will open our eyes to see it that hee guide●● and disposeth of all things both mercies and iudgements as they doe most ex ●●isitelie serue in the ende to the manifolde profite and comfort of all his elect children and people VNto these manifold profites and comfortes therefore let vs nowe henceforth settle our mindes and call them altogether away from such hautie speculations as be too high and vnseemely for vs to climbe vnto For this is the second of those two latter pointes mentioned among the obseruations set down before the which as you answered doe serue to the more full opening of the comforts which are furthermore to be found in the faith of Gods Fatherlie prouidence And that to verie good purpose For if we can finde out this that all iudgements of God vpon the wicked and likewise that all his afflictions most sharp chasticements vpon his own children doe tende to their singular profite and
comfort how then may they be thought any way to impeach his Fatherlie pouidence Let vs therefore to so good a purpose make our diligent inquirie into this pointe also Question And first concerning the fearfull iudgements of God against the wicked howe may the execution of them redounde to the benefite and profite of the children of God Answere First because they daunte them for a time yea those of them that are of the most wicked and reprobate or desperate minde so that by the terror of the iudgements of God vpon them they are discouraged and driuen from the pursute of many their most dangerous and mischieuous enterprises against the Church of God Secondly they are hereby humbled though not of any heartie good will but rather of a seruile minde and dissemblinglie to doe some good to the faithfull seruants of God yea sometime to become vassalls and seruants vnto them Thirdly God doth by his fearfull iudgementes executed vppon the wicked make his diuine Prouidence and souereigne iustice to be for the time famouslie knowne and after a sorte acknowledged in all the world but specially of the faithful in the church of God to the more setteled confirmation of their faith Finallie by the fearful iudgements of God cast downe vpon the heads of the wicked they are conuicted in their owne heartes to acknowledge against themselues that the children of God notwithstanding all their outward afflictions are in better estate then themselues Explicatiō and proofe These and if there be any such like they are indeed the notable effects of Gods fearfull iudgements against the wicked euen to the benefit of the childrē of God according to the thanksgiuing of the Church of God Psalme 136. Which celebrateth the praise of the iudgements of God against the wicked as a fruit of his euerlasting and constant mercie toward his owne Churche and people The first branch of the Answere may be exemplified from the Egiptians who by the plagues wherewith God visited them were not onely stated from their vnreasonable proceedings against the Israelites but they were also ouercome at the last to do all the good they could vnto them euen to the inriching and adorning of them with their iewells so far forth that they did leaue themselues as it were naked and bare And which I pray you of all those that were ouer-whelmed in the red Sea while they pursued the Israelites after they had let them go out of their captiuitie would not likewise haue wished themselues to haue ben rather in their estate then in their owne when they saw the Seas violently returning vpon them And haue not wee our selues had a notable experience in our owne age of our singular benefit by that famous iudgement which Almighty God cast vppon the inuincible and proude nauie of our late chiefe enemies and their confederates Anno. 1●88 No doubt but the heauie hand of God being then as it were palpablie perceiued and leste euen in their own iudgements vpon themselues it made them the lesse bolde to renew the like attempt against vs nay contrariwise the more willing to be at a kinde of peace with vs. And doubtlesse it shall be as a plentifull streame of water still to quench that fierie malice and ambition at the least as touching that high degree of scorching heate wherewith they were at that time inflamed vnlesse which God of his infinite mercie staye and forbidde the extremitie of our sinnes and intollerable vnthankfulnes for so glorious a deliuerance doe as it were with much wood and brimstone through the iudgement of God against vs set on fire altogether inflame their rage and giue them power to burne vs vp as stubble Secondly as touching the seruile submission of the wicked caused by the iudgements of God consider it from the 44 and 45. verses of the 18. Psalm Where after that King Dauid hath reported how his sword which was the sword of the Lords battels had preuailed against his enemies who were also the enemies of all the Lords people As soone saith hee as they heare they shall obey me strangers shall be in subiection vnto me though lyingly as the Hebrew verbe Iechahhashu there vsed signifieth strangers shall shrinke away and feare in their priuie chambers Yea alreadie they had done thus For the King sheweth what the Lord had formerly done for him in that behalfe And it may well be also a prophesie of the continuance of the same hand of God still for the benefit of his Church frō time to time euen so often as he in his wisdome shal see it so meete There is also a notable historie to this purpose concerning the Gibeonites in the 9. chap. of the booke of Iudges Read also 1. Kin. 20.31 c. The seruants of the King of Aram submit themselues with halters about their necks to the King of Israel Yea though Ahab was a wicked King yet thus wrought the Lord for his owne names sake and for the remnant of the people And 2. Chron. 32.22 23. After that God had executed that his memorable iudgement against the King of Ashur and his prowd Armie Many are said to bring offerings to Ierusalem and presents to Hezekiah King of Iudah so that he was magnified of all the Nations frō thence-forth And Act. ch 12. By the feareful iudgment of God against Herod the Lord made way for his word to grow and multiply There are many such like examples to be obserued Thirdly concerning the manifestation of Gods most holy iustice and soueraigne prouidence by his iudgements against the wicked to the euicting of them and to the strengthening of the faith of his people reade Psalm 58.10 11. The righteous man shall reioyce when he seeth the vengance he shall wash his feete in the blood of the wicked And men shall say verily there is a fruit for the righteous doubtles there is a God that iudgeth the earth Reade also Psalm 83.17.18 Let them saith the Psalmist that is let thine enemies be confounded O God c. That they may know that thou who art called Iehouah art alone euen the most high ouer all the earth And Psalm 9.16 The Lord is knowne by executing iudgement And Psalm 126.2.3 When the Lord brought againe the captiuitie of Sion to wit after the Babilonians were subdued c. then said they among the heathen The Lord hath done great things for them And therefore much rather doth the Church it selfe in the same place acknowledge it saying The Lord hath done great things for vs whereof we doe reioyce Read also Ps 33 1● 11 12. and 119.52 I remembred thy iudgements of old and haue bene comforted Thus the iudgments of God being to the terror of the wicked they are contrariwise a ioy cōfort to the godly Finally concerning the last branch let it be considered that as Balaam the foolish Prophet saw euen in his prosperitie the blessed estate of the people of God to be so great that hee wished that hee himselfe might
reuerend attention to the word of God lest at any time we should be any way dangerously peruerted and turned aside from the true faith of the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ 〈…〉 God the Son who was cōceiued by the holy Ghost The which holy care and manifold great grace God of his infinite mercy The groūd of the article and very rich grace grant vnto vs all for Iesus Christ sake Amen And thus hauing inquired more generally into the doctrine of our Christian beliefe in the second Person of the holy Trinitie according to these titles attributed vnto him Iesus Christ the onely Sonne of God our Lord it followeth nowe that wee are to proceede to make our more particular inqui●ie concerning the manner howe it came to passe that the same second Person of the blessed and glorious Trinitie the Sonne of God was incarnate and tooke the nature of man and thence-forth to consider of his holy natiuitie and birth and so of all that hee hath wrought and suffered for our redemption and saluation as it followeth further in the Articles of our beliefe Beliefe in God the Sonne who was conceiued by the holy Ghost Question WHat therefore is next set downe in them Answere It followeth thus in the next place Who was conceiued by the holy Ghost Question It doth so in deede But what ground of holy Scripture haue you to warrant your faith in this point of your beliefe Answere We haue a sure ground and warrant for it in the first chapter of the holy Gospel written by S. Matthew verses 18 19 20. Explicatiō and proofe This mysterie of the conception of our Sauiour was reuealed from God by the message of an Angell to the Virgine Marie first before he was conceiued in her wombe as we read Luk. 1.31 Thou shalt conceiue in thy wombe and beare a Sonne and shalt ca lt his name Iesus saith the holy Angell And chap. 2.21 the Euangelist Luke remembreth againe that this was spoken by the Angell before our Sauiour was conceiued in the wombe But after the conception it was likewise vpon a speciall occasion reuealed to Ioseph by the Angell of the Lord before the birth of the child as the Euangelist Matthew reporteth in the place by you alledged Let vs heare his words Question Which are they Answere When as Marie the mother of Iesus Christ was betrothed to Ioseph before they came together she was found with child by the holy Ghost Then Ioseph her husband being a iust man and not willing to make her a publike example was minded to put her away secretly But while hee thought these things behold saith the Euangelist the Angell of the Lord appeared to him in a dreame saying Ioseph the Sonne of Dauid feare not to take Marie for thy wife for that which is conceiued in her is of the holy Ghost This testimonie may not vnfitly be alledged in the first place here though in order of time it followed that other in the first chapter of S. Luke because that may more fitly be reserued till wee come to speake of the Promise of this conception to the benefit of vs the whole Church of God Vnto the which time also we will reserue that which is to be obserued more fully concerning this point Explication and proofe Neuerthelesse here we may not neglect the testimonie which was giuen of it the second time and that by the message of a holy Angell vpon such an occasion as serueth notably to confirme the truth of this great mysterie that our Sauiour was conceiued by the holy Ghost in the wombe of the virgine Mar●e she remaining still a virgine For seeing both Marie and Ioseph were verie chast and godly persons and minded not to come to the mariage bed till they should be married though they were alreadie betrothed as Ioseph for his part is cleared in that it is testified of him that hee was much troubled at Maries conception Bel●efe in God the Sonne who was conceiued by the holy Ghost so soone as he perceiued it to be so and Marie also The meaning of the wordes cannot be accused of Ioseph nor iustlie suspected of him to haue dealt vnfaithfullie and vnchastlie against him And therefore though hee were a iust man and hated sinne yet hauing a secrete perswasion of Maries innocencie and partlie it may be giuing credit to the strangenesse of that defence for herselfe which it is likely shee did at the least insinuate and secretelie lispe out vnto him hee durst not once thinke of vsing any hard course against his Spouse but onely thought to put her away secretlie and to leaue the iudgement of so great a secrete to the Lorde himselfe By all these considerations in the best probabilitie that wee might alledge but in way of certaine demonstration from the testimonie of the holie Angell and by the full satisfaction of Ioseph against all feare and doubfull distraction about the matter the article of the Conception of our Sauiour by the holie Ghost in the wombe of the blessed Virgine is vndoubtedlie confirmed vnto vs. Of the which because as was before determined wee shall haue occasion from the other testimonie of Saint Luke to consider more fullie from the example of the Virgine Marie herselfe when wee come to the Promise Wee will content our selues to haue spoken onely thus much at this time and so come to the meaning of the Article WHat therfore I pray you is the meaning of these words that our Sauiour Christ the Sonne of God Question was conceiued by the holy Ghost of the Virgine Marie Answer To the vnderstanding of these wordes three things are to be knowen and well considered of as I haue bene taught Let it be so which are they Question The first is this that the Sonne of God was by the power of the holie Ghost made verie true man Answere in that hee tooke our nature of the substance of the Virgine and so was of the true seede of Dauid and made fleshe of a woman in the fulnesse of time according to the expresse doctrine of the holie Scriptures The second thing to be considered is that the same humane nature of our Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of God was most perfitlie sanctified euen from the verie first moment of the conception whereby not onely all originall sinne and corruption whatsoeuer was vtterlie preuented but also the spirituall seede of all fulnesse of heauenlie grace and holinesse was conferred with power to growe vp with most mightie increases The third thing is this that from the same first moment of the most holie conception of our Sauiour the humane nature was vnited to the diuine and so became one in persone with the same to continue for euer and euer though alwaies distinct in nature without anie either confusion or the least separation of either from the other Explicatiō and proofe These pointes indeed as you haue well learned are to be diligently considered to
nature so as he is Father to no creature beside this confirmeth plainely that his prayer must needes be most effectuall with God aboue all that euer haue prayed or can pray Yea so as no prayer hath euer beene accepted from any but as they haue had doe and shall haue respect to the vertue and grace of his mediation and prayer And herein our Sauiour Christ performeth one speciall dutie of his most holy office of high Priesthood in that he praieth for sinners as wel as in that he yeelding to be fastened to the Crosse offereth vp himselfe an euerlasting and most propitiatory sacrifice vnto God that by his blood issuing out by the wounds of his holy hands and feete he might wash away the sinnes of all his elect Let vs come to the reason which is this For they know not what they doe Not that ignorance excuseth the offender or that he sinneth not because he knoweth not that it is a sinne which he committeth This is not the meaning of our Sauiour Christ for then what neede was there that he should pray so earnestly for forgiuenes or vse any prayer at all to that end In that therefore he praieth yea seeing he prayeth so earnestly that they may be forgiuen though they did not know what they did it is euident that their sinne was grieuous in the sight of God though they sinned of ignorance And so we read that God in his law appointed sacrifices to be offered for sinnes done of ignorance he giuing therein plainely to vnderstand that ignorance excuseth not seeing euery one might haue knowledge if the fault were not in our owne negligence but contrariwise that sinnes done of ignorance are damnable if they be not pardoned for Christs sake vnto whom all the sacrifices pointed Read Leuit. chap. 4. the whole chapter What was the meaning of our Sauiour then in this reason which hee vseth No doubt his meaning is to giue to vnderstand that there is a great difference betwixt sinnes committed of ignorance and those that are committed of presumption malice against knowledge and conscience yea betwixt one and the same sinne committed in so diuerse a manner from so differing a ground and originall For that done of ignorance must needes be sinfull in a lesse degree then the other and accordingly pardoned more easily or with lesse difficulty as one may say Our Sauiour therfore in vsing this reason would leaue some special ground of comfort for those of his persecutors whosoeuer should afterward come to the conscience of their sinne when their consciences should beare witnes with them that they did they knew not what so were within the cōpasse of the prayer of our Sauiour when as on the contrary he would exclude all such frō the comfort of it whosoeuer sinned of malice against their knowledge with a high and presumptuous hand as some of his persecutors did as may appeare by his doctrine concerning the sinne against the holy Ghost deliuered against them Matth. 12.31.32 And as Stephen the holy Protomartyr next after our Sa Christ doth plainly declare Act. 7.51 in that he chargeth them to haue resisted the holy Ghost Concerning all which the Apostle Peter saith that our Sauiour committed his cause to him that iudgeth righteously 1. Epist. 2.23 But how may it be said that any of those that persecuted our Sauiour Christ and did execution vpō him were ignorant of that sinne which they cōmitted seeing they knew no cause against him why they should so deale as they did For no man can be ignorant of this that it is a sinne to do violence against any man without cause It is very true Neuerthelesse in this case our Sauiour may iustly say that a number of them knew not what they did For their sinne was greater then they were ware of yea though they had beene conuicted in their consciences to haue dealt vniustly cruelly against a righteous man For they knew not that this righteous man was the Lord our righteousnes they knew not that he was the Sonne of God the Lord of life glory c. For then surely as it is testified of those whom our Sauiour praieth for they would not haue crucified him According as we read Act. 3.13.14.15.17.18.19 And chap. 13.27.28 And 1. Cor. 2.7.8 We speake the wisedom of God in a mysterie c. which none of the Princes of this world haue knowne for had they knowne it they would not haue crucified the Lord of glory Note It is not onely ignorance for a man not to know a thoght or action to be a si●ne but also not to know how great and gr●euous a sin that is which his con●cience telleth him though l●●● n●ly that it is a 〈◊〉 But to conclude the interpretation of this reason of our Sauiours praier did he onely pray for the forgiuenes of those that sinned of meere simple ignorance No doubt our Sauiour being most aboundant in pitty compassion did vnderstand ignorance in as large a significatiō as it might possibly be extended vnto Yea so farre as if malice were of ignorance or that ignorance was more then malice we are not to account any such whosoeuer were of the elect of God to be excluded or excepted by our Sauiour The which affection he carrieth still toward all other that belong vnto God euen to this day whosoeuer sinne in the like manner against him in persecuting of his seruants for his Gospels sake or in resisting his holy word and ordinances though none can now so directly iniurie his most holy glorified humanity as these did The vse of all is briefly this that insomuch as by ignorance men are carried headlong to rush into so great sin as they are not ware of therfore The ground and history of his crucifying it is the duty of all to seeke after true knowledge iudgement from the word of God that by the light direction therof they may not only auoid sinnes of ignorance to do they cannot tell how great euill but that they may be wise to obey God and in obedience vnto him to doe more and greater good then they can see or vnderstand of as doubtlesse euery one doth that walketh faithfully in his calling as in the sight presence of God But of the vses both for duty and also for comforts we shal by the grace of God inquire consider more fully afterward Now the course of the holy story requireth that wee come to the third part of the execution of the sentence of Pilate against our Sauiour with the sufferings and other worthy matters appertaining vnto it This third part of the holy History of the execution as was obserued containeth the time of the continuance of our Sauiour vpō the Crosse The which time we may not vnfitly distribute or distinguish into these three parts or spaces d●mensions as it were First frō the third houre of the day vnto the sixt Secondly from the sixt houre to
after restoreth them And Dauid saith the sorrowes of death compassed me and the terrors of Hell laide hold on me This is an vsuall exposition receiued of the church and they which expound this Article thus giue this reason thereof The former words was crucified dead and buried doe continue say they the outward sufferings of Christ now because he suffered not onely outwardly in body but also inwardly in soule therefore these wordes he descended into Hell doe set forth vnto vs his inward sufferings in soule and when he felt vpon the crosse the full wrath of God vpon him This exposition is good and true Such is the excellent and sound interpretation of these three faithfull witnesses concerning the greatnes and grieuousnes of the sufferings of our Lord Iesus Christ whose testimonies may worthily be mentioned in stead of many who both before and since haue with like faithfulnes witnessed the same and may stand us in speciall good stead to helpe against both the defectiue expositions of some hucksters who goe about to deceiue vs with their nine pennie harps in stead of whole and true currant shillings and with gold wanting so many graines as may iustly be refused without further allowance though wee doe not charge them with the false coyne of brasse and copper as also against their carnall and vnsauorie cauills vniust imputations and causeles confutations to the discredit of this most holy doctrine For whatsoeuer may be pretended to the contrarie by such as in this case as hath beene truly affirmed bable out that which they knowe not because they neuer earnestly considered what it is nor of how great importance that we are redeemed from the iudgement of God let vs as the truth it selfe requireth be resolued of this that the sufferings of our Sauiour were euery way so great for vs that we cannot possibly erre in conceiuing of them to be greater then they were but rather that wee shall alwaies come short of the full comprehension of the grieuousnes of them And therefore no doubt did our Sauiour himselfe vpon the crosse so mightily and plainely publish them by sound of voice aboue humane strength that he might not onely pierce the high heauens that his complainte might come vp before God but also to pierce deepe not into the eares alone of the hearers but euen into the deepest ground of their hearts to awake them both at that time and vs to this day by the preaching thereof to thinke most seriously of them as being farre aboue all our thought For seeing they amazed our Sauiour himself yea euen from the beginning of them that he was at a stamme what to say and now at the ende is after a sort confounded to feele himselfe as one for the time forsaken of God not onely for want of comfort but also for extremitie of anguish both in body and soule how should we thinke that we are able to attaine to the full and perfit knowledge of the measure of them but onely so farre forth that we knowe and beleeue that they were to vs infinite and aboue the measure of our knowledge and knowne to Christ himselfe alone in the infinite wisedome aed commiseration of the diuine nature Away therfore all nice mincing and carnall interpreters of this high miserie which vnder a a pretence of singular holines and fauour to Christ doe deepely dishonour and profane both it and him and suffer themselues rather to be led by the spirit of Sathan who secretly bewitcheth them then by the spirit of Christ who hath thus loud and openly with stronge and mightie voice vttered the exceeding greatnes of his owne most deepe miserie and all for vs that he might deliuer vs from infinite and perpetuall calamitie and make vs partakers of eternall glorie To him therefore be the full infinite and endles glory of all his sufferings infinite in measure and valewe though finite in time by the infinite power and grace of his deitie which must of necessitie swallowe vp all torment with death and hell it selfe in full and perfite victorie Amen Hetherto of the first of the foure speeches of our Sauiour more immediately before his death nearely approaching and by occasion thereof a generall rehearsall of the whole doctrine of the Gospell concerning the incomprehensible greatnes and grieuousnes of his sufferings for our infinite and most hainous sinnes both for ours and for all the elect Hereunto before we proceede to the second we are to adde in the order of the holy storie the consideration of that most wicked and profane mockerie which some of the hearers make at this most graue and dolefull lamentation of our Sauiour For say they by and by This man calleth Elias And other saide Let be let vs see if Elias will come and saue him Or as the Euangelist Marke saith in the same sence If Elias will come and take him downe O most profane and licentious impietie Who would haue thought that the fearefull and strange darkenesse of three houres long before which no doubt damped them a●l and put them to silence could no more preuaile with them then that immediately vpon the renewing of the light they should returne to the like wickednes againe But herein the holy prouerbe is true chap 27,22 Though thou shouldest bray a foole in a morter among wheate brayed with a pestell yet will not his foolishnes depart from him And we may e●idently see in these the nature of all such as be voide of the true grace and feare of God who although they cannot but for the present bee stricken with the speciall declaration of Gods diuine power and anger yet so soone as God taketh away the tokens of his wrath they make but a mocke of his iudgement as Pharaoh and his people did sondrie times vntill at the length he brought a most fearefull destruction vpon them euen as these Iewes also and other wicked people did not long after this their contempt of his fearefull threatening by this extraordinarie darkenes which he sent And would to God we our selues did not too lightly and forgetfully passe by the admonitions which God hath sent vnto vs by earthquakes c. the which for a time haue something affected vs. But let vs come to consider a litle what their mockerie was Behold he calleth Elias say they A thing which they could not easily haue spoken of further from the mind of our Sauiour who knowing and feeling that he had immediately to doe with the maiestie of God yea so as no Angel or any creature could comfort him and therefore in the garden minded not the Angel that came to offer his seruice vnto him but being in an agonie praied the more earnestly to God who alone must be his comfort there is no doubt but that he litle regarded to seek to Elias for helpe at this time Neither did these think as they spake but onely through contempt they drawe the most graue and dolefull words of our Sauiour Christ into a most
saith My soule is very heauie euen vnto death yet to speake properly their soules cannot die Now that which wee haue said of Sheol we may likewise affirme of Haides and that euen from the places already alledged 1. Cor. 15.54.55 Acts 2.27 Reuel 6.8 and chap. 20.13 For as was said before though Haides as well as Sheol doe in the holy Scriptures first and more properly signifie the graue yet wee must not restraine them to that signification onely The Hebrew word s●ith Iunius doth in very many places of the Scripture generally note whatsoeuer condition of the dead and for the same cause is to be referred sometime to the graue sometime to hell synecdochicallie and sometime to both together according to the circumstance of the place And againe the Latine Fathers vse the word Inferos as well as the Greekes doe Haiden indifferently for euery place or condition of the dead no not in sundry of the places already alledged Vox hebraea inquit lumus in Psal 49. stationem quamlibet mortuorum in vniuersum notat permultis Scripturae locis ideóque modò ad sepulchrum modò ad infernum synecdochicé modò ad vtrumqúe simul pro ratione locorum accommodanda est The same he saith likewise concerning Haides in his note vpon Tertul de Idololat cap. 13. Obseruandum quod ait Apud inferos de Lazaro Nam inferos Latini Patres vt Graeci Hadem pro omni loco aut statu mortuorum dixerunt promiscue Atque in hunc sensum Lazarus Diues apud inferos collocantur Quomodo Iraeneus Chrysostomus ex verbis Lucae 16.23 locuti sunt Tertullianus locis quamplurimis Thus much for the proofe of the first branch of the more generall signification of Sheol and Haides Touching the second branch to wit that they are sometimes vsed in the holy Scriptures to signifie the destruction of other things in the world moreouer and besides the corruption of the bodies of men and the altering of the state and condition of their soules by reason that they are by death seperated from their bodies it is euident Num. 16.32.33 Not onely Korah Dathan and Abiram with their families but also their goods and all that they had descended into Sheol And Isai chap. 14.11 Thy pompe is brought downe to Sheol and the sound of thy violls that is they are destroyed according to that wee reade in plaine termes Ier. chap. 51. verse 52 53 54 55. Reade also Ezek. 26.19 20 21. the same in words of like signification So likewise the destruction and ouerthrow of the Citie of Capernaum is threatned and signified by this word Haides yea and also the euerlasting condemnation both of the soules and bodies of the Citizens thereof so many as were obstinate despisers of the doctrine and miracles of our Sauiour Christ Matth. 11.23.24 Hetherto of the more generall signification Nowe more particularly And in the first place that the same wordes are vsed to signifie the continuance power and dominion of death as it were some great Lord and Commander reade the Prosopopie of the holy Prophet Isai 14.9 Sheol beneath is moued for thee to meete thee at thy comming saith the Prophet speaking of the King of Babylon raising vp the dead for thee euen all the Princes of the earth and hath raised from their thrones all the Kings of the nations This signification of Sheol is vsuall when it is put after the word Death by an increase or amplification of speech to the which purpose also diuers times the word signifying power is expressed as we haue seene before Psal 49.15 and 89 48. and Psal 6.5 Hos 13.14 Likewise Haides in the new Testament 1. Cor. 15.55 Reuel 6.8 chap. 20.13 Death and Haides The power of Death is also noted Rom. 6. verse 9. as preuailing so long as the body of our Sauiour Christ lay in the graue Secondly that Sheol signifieth the place of the euerlasting torment of the wicked which we doe vsually call Hell reade Psal 9.17 The wicked shall bee driuen backe euen to Sheol We may well vnderstand it not onely for the graue but also for hell as it is englished seeing that is the place appointed for the soules of the wicked after this life And Psal 49 14. Sheol consumeth their beautie Tremel●us translateth it Infernus Hell Likewise Psal 139.8 Sheol is opposed to Heauen where the Emphasis is most full if we english it Hell And Prou. 9.18 King Salomon saith That the wicked that follow their owne lusts are in the depth of Sheol which likewise may well be translated and vnderstood of Hell the receptacle of the soules of such wicked persons And chap. 15.11 Hell and d●struction are before the Lord. Sheol naabhaddon Hell and destruction may well be matched together seeing the King of hell is called by the name of Abaddon a destroyer Reuel chap. 9.11 And againe Sheol may well be taken for hell in the same 1● chapter of the Proue●bs verse 24. The way of life is on high to the prudent to auoide from Sheol beneath Moreouer Isai chap. 5.14 we may extend the signification of it to hell And chap. 28.15 where the wicked said We are at an agreement with Sheol But they are vtterly deceiued For the fire of Gods wrath sh●ll kindle and burne vpon them euen to the very bottome of Sheol ●nadh Sheol tachtijah according to the phrase of Moses Deut. 32.22 The fire of which wrath as he saith further in that place shall consume the earth with her increase and set on fire the foundations of the mountaines Now in the new Testament the other word Haides is likewise vsed is Matt. 16.18 The gates of Hell that is all the destroying power of the Diuels of hell shall not ouercome the Church and faith of the people of God by al● the siege and battery either spirituall or outward that they can possible either lay themselues or by their instruments procure against the same Likewise Luke chap. 16.23 The rich man being in Haides that is in hell torments c. Thus then both Sheol and Haides signifie hell the place of infernall torment The reason why these words are translated from the signification of the graue to signifie hell also may be for that the graue being a place of darknes and naturally vnpleasant and vncomfortable may fitly be vsed in way of a similitude something to resemble and shaddow it forth Let vs now come to the last of the more particular significations euen to bitter dolours and griefes of the soules of the children of God neare vnto the sorrowes of death yea of Hell sometimes in their owne weake sense and iudgment For the which reade Psalm 18.5 where the Prophet Dauid calleth the exceeding great sorrowes which he indured the sorrowes of Sheol the which some translate graue other Hell but all is one in effect The Prophet beeing in these grieuous sorrowes and trouble of heart saith in the same place I called vpon the Lorde and cried to my God
not take his lawfull delight and pleasure while his Captaine was in the danger and difficulties of warre in the field But Peter for want of such due consideration is like to such a foolish souldier as rusheth into the battell without all weapons and armour And therefore no maruell though he was grieuously wounded and very narrowly escaped death yea though he was speedily reskued To this purpose the holy prouidence of God is worthily to be obserued which to the end that Peters presumption and selfe-confidence might be chasticed for a common admonition to all would not suffer him to be hidden but so soone as he is come in at the doore he is challenged by one to be a Disciple of Christ yea the partie eyeth him and hauing well looked on him and as we may say faced him he vseth these words This man also was with him Luke 22.56 And after this another And by occasion thereof many together make their challenge against poore Peter They reason also against him from his speech that he was a Galilean and therefore the more like to be one of them Mat 26.73 yea one of the company among the rest laieth to Peters charge that he saw him with our Sauiour in the garden And this man as S. Iohn testifieth was the Cosen of him whose eare Peter had cut off in the garden Thus Peter being pitifully snared as a doue deceiued and without heart as the Prophet speaketh falleth for the reliefe of himselfe most vnfaithfully to denie his Maister euen at the first assault And as the heate of the skirmish increased so did hee shewe himself more and more cowardly yea worse then a coward proceeding from simple deniall to a swearing and cursing deniall and from a sodaine deniall to a deniall vpon an howres respite and that also after that he was admonished by the crowe of the Cocke once Marke 14.68 Luke 22.59 In which space of time and by this admonition of the Cocke hee ought to haue beene brought to some better thoughts then before seeing our Sauiour made that a signe of admonition vnto him Thus pitifully did Peter fall for a iust punishment of his carnall confidence in his owne strength and the rather because he neglected that warning which our Sauiour had giuen him before In the which fall no doubt Peter should haue lien for euer had not our Lord Iesus Christ taken tender compassion of him giuen him grace to repent For no meanes could moue him to consider his sinne till our Sauiour turned backe and looked vpon him and therewithall touched his heart by the finger of his holy spirit Mat 26.75 Mark 14.72 Luke 22.62 Wherefore now for our owne admonition to the end we may not fall with Peter let vs take heede that we doe not presume with him as hee did at this time of his so grieuous a fall Neither let vs be negligent in prayer as he was at the same time But let vs receiue instruction and learne to be wise from his folie praying God to make vs without any such fall faithfull in some measure as Peter was in an excellent degree euer after his conuersion Yea and according to the wise example of such as haue obtained the crowne of martyrdome let vs in all times of triall and persecution giue our selues much to prayer and supplication to God that by distrusting our owne selues we may settle our hearts to put our whole trust in the liuing God Verily it is no small triall when the goods and libertie and life of a man are called into question all together as our blessed Martyres who gaue their liues for the testimonie of the truth of God giue vs to vnderstand by their practise and also by their letters to others which they concluded often with Pray Pray Pray Vnto this example of Peter wee may add that other of Iudas also for our further admonitiō to the same end insomuch as though it pleased God to giue Peter grace to repent who sinned of infirmity yet he would not grant it to Iudas who sinned not through sodaine feare and terrour but malitiously and of deliberate and set purpose yea as it is very likely euen against the holy Ghost in a very high degree Wherefore from the most fearefull example of Iudas let vs in any case learne to take heede that we doe not secretly harden our hearts as Iudas did neither yet that we stomake any that rebuke vs for our faults as he did our Sauiour Let vs also from his example take warning to beware of hypocrisie and to resist all beginnings of euill betimes whether it be theeuish pilfrie or any other sinne Neither let vs content our selues onely with an externall profession of Christianitie as Iudas did Nay rather let vs take earnest warning that we doe on the contrary labour after inward truth of heart in the profession of the name of Christ and that we keepe our selues so faithful and vpright to God his truth and his church that we may neuer vpon any occasion become false brethren Chiefly let vs be faithfull to God and so shal we be preserued in fidelitie toward his church and euery part and member thereof Now the excellencie of truth aboue hypocrisie we may also easily perceiue by comparing these examples of Iudas and Peter together For although the repentance of Iudas might externally be thought greater then Peters insomuch as Iudas confessed his sinne openly and restoreth the mony which hee had receiued for the hier of his wickednes c. but Peter wept not openly he doth not openly confesse his sinne but onely secretly to God when he had withdrawn himselfe from companie c. yet because that which Peter did was done in truth and he sought to God for mercie in trust of his goodnes therefore was it accepted of God when as the repentance of Iudas being extorted and in despaire of Gods mercie through an euill conscience both it and Iudas himselfe were reiected This repentance growing from an euill cause it rested in an euil issue For he most vnnaturally cruelly and violently threw down himselfe as it were from a high gibbet or win-beame and so hanged himselfe that with the vehemencie of the fall his bowells gushed our of his body Thus as the common saying is he must needes goe whom the Diuel driueth For like as he gaue entertainment to the Diuell to fill his heart to practise his wickednes so no doubt through the iust iudgement of GOD the Diuel was full as great with him to driue him to worke this horrible mischiefe vpon himselfe Wherefore let vs I beseech ye be exceedingly carefull that we tread not in Iudas his steppes nor walke in his crooked waies And if at any time wee fall let vs pray earnestly to God that it may please him to vouchsafe to giue vs Peters repentance which was a true and beleeuing repentance and not the confounding and despairing repentance of Iudas And thus by the way as it were these two
how gratious the promise is It is a true saying saith the Apostle 2. Tim. chap. 2.11.12 For if we be dead with him that is with out Sauiour we shall also liue with him If we suffer we shall reigne with him And Reuel 2.26 27 our Sauiour testifieth thus by his holy Apostle from heauen He that ouercommeth and keepeth my workes vnto the end to him will I giue power ouer Nations and he shall rule them with a rod of yron and as the vessells of a potter shall they be broken Euen as I receiued of my Father so will I giue him the morning starre that is singular brightnesse and glorie comparable to the morning starre answerable to that prophesie of Daniel chap. 12. ● They that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And againe Reuel 3.21 To him that ouercommeth will I grant to sit with me in my throne euen as I ouercame and sit with my Father in his throne Let him that hath an eare heare what the Spirit that is the spirit of our Lord Iesus Christ by his holy Apostle from heauen sa it vnto the Churches These promises therefore and such duties to the constant performance whereof they are made are diligently and religiously to be attended and beleeued of euery true christian Finally touching the last branch of the answer to wit that all diuine honour and glory is to be giuen to our Sauiour for the whole worke of our redemption and eternall saluation We haue the practise of the Church of God in the hea●ens yea and of the holy Angells also exemplified before vs Reuel chap. 5. v●rses 6 7 8 c. they doe most solemnly giue high glory to our Sauiour Christ in that behalfe falling downe and saying Thou art worthie c. And verse 12. The Angells say with a lowd voyce Worthie is the Lambe that was killed to receiue power and riches and wisedome and strength and honour and glory and praise Yea the vision declaring what is the duty of all as well in earth as in heauen representeth vnto Iohn that all the creatures which are in heauen and on the earth and in the sea and all that are in them doe say Praise honour and glorie and power be vnto him that sitteth vpon the throne that is to God the Father and vnto the Lambe for euermore That is to the Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ who according to this Article of our faith sitteth for euer at his right hand And this is that wherevnto we and all the Church of God in the daies of the Gosp●l are prophetically exhorted and earnestly stirred vp by a fiuefold repetition of the same words Psal 47.5 6 7. God is ascended with triumph euen the Lord with the sound of the trumpet Sing praises to God sing praises sing praises vnto our King sing praises For God is the King of all the earth that is of the whole Church both Iewes and Gentiles sing praises eu●ry one that hath vnderstanding Or rather thus sing praises with a Psalme of instruction that is to say fit to instruct vs in this mysterie of the exaltation of our Lord and Sauiour And herevnto the excellencie of the person of our Sauiour is very forcible and a●so the highnesse of that place from whence all the mercies of God are confirmed and the daily fruits thereof renewed vnto vs. For we vse to esteeme gifts and tokens of loue at very high price when they come from Persons of high place Most of all therefore and m st highly ought we to esteeme those most excellent gifts and blessings which doe continually descend vnto vs from the most royall hand of our Sauiour Christ euen from the right hand of God in the highest heauens To him therefore be all honour and glorie and praise for euer and euer Amen And thus albeit this yeelding of glory and praise to our Sauiour is a part yea a chiefe part of his diuine worship and might well haue beene spoken of in the second branch yet it neede not be thought to bee much amisse that it should in this wise be made a speciall conclusion of the whole answer touching the duties of faith belonging to the manifolde comfort of faith touching this Article NOw for the shutting vp of all The danger of not beleeuing this Article according to our order of handling euerie other Article of our faith What is the danger of not beleeuing in our Sauiour Christ and of not obeying him as one thus most highly aduanced to the right hand of the most sacred Maiesty of God Ans It cannot be that the faith of any such should be perfitly established Nay rather all that shall remaine in this their vnbeliefe and disobedience against our glorious Lord and Sauiour shall not onely be excluded from euery benefit of Christ but also stand most deepely subiect to extreame wrath and iudgement as a iust punishment for so great and intollerable a contempt Explication proofe It must needes be so indeede For seeing as it was said euen in respect of the appearance of our Sauiour in the time of his humiliation that he which did not then beleeue in him was condemned alreadie because hee beleeued not in the name of the onely begotten Sonne of God Iohn 3.18 Much rather may it be affirmed now after that our Sauiour is ascended thus into heauen and fully established in his glory And wee may here againe call to minde the wordes of our Sauiour Iohn 8.23 24. and verses 34 35 36. The summe whereof is this that if we beleeue not in him as one that came from heauen as one being sent from God and is gone againe to God into heauen we shall die in our sinnes Herevnto likewise serueth that which our Sauiour spake chap. 16.9 that the holy Ghost after his ascension to the right hand of God in the heauens should rebuke the world of sinne to wit in it selfe euen to the owne condemnation as touching those that would not beleeue in him thus leauing the world after his manifesting of himselfe and going away againe to him that had sent him In which place of Scripture also our Sauiour said further that the holy Ghost should after the same his ascension conuince the world of righteousnesse that is should shew by reall proofe and demonstration euen by reason of his ascension that our Sauiour is righteous for so are the words of our Sauiour himselfe Because I goe to my Father and ye shall see me no more Our Sauiour meaneth till the end of the world And last of all our Sauiour added in the same place of the Euangelist Iohn that the holy Ghost should come to conuince the world of iudgement that is to say that wrath and vengeance is due to all that will not beleeue in him seeing hee hath made it most cleare and euident that the Prince of this world that is the
of it The citie of Ierusalem and the Temple thereof were by Gods speciall ordinance and appointment singularly holy vnto him and of great account euen for his owne name and mercies sake and so were the people also for many ages of ancient time a peculiar people vnto him and chiefly beloued of him And yet all that could not hinder the due course of Gods vengeance after that the bountifulnesse of his mercie and long suffering was most notoriously abused by them It was in vaine for the Disciples to stand vpon the goodlines strength of the building or any such thing to disswade or pitie the destruction thereof So likewise whatsoeuer may bee saide concerning the beautie of the heauens though they bee honoured by the name of his throne the fruitefulnesse of the earth which is called his foote-stoole the stately buildinges that are built vpon it by the ministerie of man the pleasant orchyardes and gardens the rich furniture of houses the beautifull plate and Iewels which are the delights of men all shall bee in vaine and of no force with God to stay that vniuersall iudgement which hee hath for the sinnes of the world when once they shall be full ripe determined to bring vpon it moreouer and beside his particular iudgements wherewith hee will euery day visite the earth in the meane while Wherefore also let nothing be able to hinder our hearts from a dutifull attention toward the doctrine which our Sauiour vouchsafeth to deliuer vnto vs in this behalfe And first concerning the time of this last and greatest iudgement of all other and therewithall concerning the signes of it our Sauiour doth first more generally referre vs to the tribulations before described concerning Ierusalem or rather to the tribulations described before that in the first part of the answere of our Sauiour which as was said treateth of the common troubles both of the world and also of the Church which should not onely goe before the destruction of Ierusalem but also followe after euen to the neare approaching of the last iudgement of our Sauiour And then more particularly according as hee had told his Disciples that beside those before expressed signes they should haue no other speciall signe of the calamitie to come vpon Ierusalem but the compassing of the citie by the Roman Armie so hee doth proportionably tell his Disciples or rather vs by speaking to them seeing vpon vs are come the dayes of the more neare approaching of the ende of the worlde that there shall bee noe other signe more particular then those which hee hath alreadie mentioned vntill hee shall by his very comming declare really and indeede that the ende it selfe is come So that then beside the generall signes going before the ende of the world answerable to those which went before the destruction of Ierusalem wee haue here in the wordes of our present text a description of those signes which shall more immediately goe before the comming of our Sauiour and then of the comming of our Sauiour himselfe at the very ende of the world from whence and whether hee will come together with the manner of his comming and the persons whom hee will iudge who also are described by the effectes which his comming shall haue in their hearts though to a contrarie ende and purpose in diuerse of them as wee shall obserue Let vs therefore weigh these thinges in order And first concerning the time of the last iudgement our Sauiour Christ saith that it shall be immediately after the tribulations before expressed The which wordes wee must either vnderstand of the common troubles generally set downe in the first part of the answere of our Sauiour they being as well forerunners of the end of the world as of the destruction of Ierusalem or else we must vnderstand this word immediately to be spoken not so much in respect of our computation of time as in regard of the estimation of God with whom a thousand yeares is but as one day as the Apostle Peter teacheth 2. Ep 3.8 But seeing our Sauiour speaketh familiarly to informe his church rather then to disclose the vnsearchable minde of God therefore we may iustly vnderstand it in the first sense Neuerthelesse this being yeelded there ariseth a further question concerning the darkening of the Sunne whether our Sauiour doth in these wordes speake properly and in the naturall sense or tropologically and in a borrowed phrase or speech To the which we answer that it is true indeede that the Lord by his holy Prophets hath vsed these very same speeches metaphorically to signifie great troubles and publike alterations of states and kingdomes in the world as Ezek 32 7 8. to expresse that great distresse which hee would bring vpon Egypt by the King of Babylon when I shall put thee out I will couer the heauen saith the Lord and make the Starres thereof darke I will couer the Sunne with a cloude and the Moone shall loose her light All the lightes of heauen I make darke for thee and bring darkenes vpon the land saith the Lord God I will also trouble the hearts of many people And Isai 13.9.10 the same borrowed speeches are vsed to describe the fearefull destruction of Babylon by the Medes and Persians Behold the day of the Lord commeth cruel with wrath and fierce anger to lay the land wast and he shal destroy the sinners out of it For the Starres of heauen and the Planets thereof shall not giue their light the Sonne shal be darkened in his going forth the Moone shal not cause her light to shine And thus it is said Amos. 5.18 woe vnto you hee speaketh to the wicked that desire the day of the Lord to wit of his mercy what haue ye to doe with it the day of the Lord that is of his v●sitation vpon sinners is darkenes and not light As if a man did floe from a lyon and a beare met him c. And ver 20. shall not the day of the Lord be darkenes and not light euen darkenes and no light in it Likewise Ioel ch 2.2 And in the same ch v. 3● 31 the same speeches with a further allusion to some former strange works of God are vsed to note the strange effects which shuld follow vpon the first comming of our Sauiour into the world and in the times succeeding by the Preaching of his Gospell I will shewe wonders in the heauens and in the earth saith the Lord blood and fire and pillars of smoke The Sunne shal be turned into darkenes and the Moone into blood before the great and terrible day of the Lord doe come Thus I say these kinde of speeches as we see are vsed to note strange things and alterations metaphorically Read eccles cha 5.16 ch 12.2 And what could more significatly expresse the same Neuertheles this letteth not why we may not vnderstand our Sauiour in these words not onely to vnderstand strange euents by a figuratiue phrase of speech but also the very accomplishment
feast at night but also that the Bride-groome should be brought to the Bride by a traine or companie of maidens the daughters of his neare friendes Yet I doubt not but he doth of purpose chose to giue forth this parable vnder the name and example of womankinde yea euen of yong and tender maides to admonish them as well as men that as they are appointed of God to bee heires of the same grace and saluation so they may knowe that the same dutie of watchfulnesse and constancie in the faith and in all good fruites thereof is to be performed of them in their places and callings as well as of men Yea the yonger are hereby admonished as wel as the elder yong men and maides also old men and children as it is in the 148. Psalme No youth or tendernesse of those that bee of discretion must exempt vs from vsing all good diligence and painefulnesse in seeking after the kingdome of heauen Wee knowe the curse which the Lord threateneth whereof euen the daintie and delicate both men and women that will scarcely set their foote on the ground shall bee partakers as well as the rest for their want of care to obey the Lawes and commandements of God Deut 28. verse 5● and 56. Let vs therefore all without exception knowe that it is our dutie to watch diligently and carefully to prepare our selues against the day of the Lords iudgement whensoeuer he shall come For otherwise as our Sauiour telleth vs. The Kingdome of heauen shall be likened to ten Virgines to wit as touching this point of admitting and receiuing those onely tha● be carefull to prepare themselues aright and of excluding and reiecting all the rest The particulars of this parable are thus to be vnderstood and applied The Bride-groome signifieth our Sauiour Christ in respect of that spirituall mariage which hee mindeth eternally to celebrate and solemnize with his Church at the ende of the worlde the which hee hath alreadie espoused to himselfe as it is most plentifully and delightfully described in the most holy and excellent songe of songes by King Salomon In which respect also Iohn Baptist calleth our Sauiour the bride-groome and professeth himselfe to bee for his part a friend of the bride-groome Iohn 3.29 And our Sauiour calleth his twelue the children of the marriage chamber and himselfe as the bride-groome for the time he was present with them Mat 9.14 15. The tenne Virgines doe represent the visible Church of God here in this world Of the which some regard onely the external calling and the outward profession of the Gospell so farre as it hath praise and allowance of men and these are but hypocrites other doe not rest themselues in the outward calling and profession but seeke after inward truth the power of godlines through the sanctification of the spirit of God And these alone are the true members of the visible church insomuch as they onely appertaine to the secret election end internall calling of God As touching the equall number of fiue of the one sort that is the wise and fiue of the other who are saide to bee foolish it is not to bee stood vppon as though that were intended by our Sauiour insomuch as wee knowe what hee hath saide other where to wit that many are called but fewe chosen Yet this is certaine that euery true member of the Church is truly wise seeking after inward truth as was saide and that all other are foolish how many soeuer they are who looke no further then to an outward profession albeit they heare daily that God maketh no reckoning of the outward man though that seeme to be neare when the heart is remoued farre from him The long staying of the bridegroome noteth the distance of time betwixt his ascension vp into heauen and his comming to iudgement at the ende of the world which proueth longer then men would haue thought For so it falleth out oftentimes in matters of great solemnitie that many occasions breede delay aboue that the attendants doe knowe off And verily many great workes of God were to be wrought betwixt our Sauiours leauing of the world and his returning to it againe which required as wee haue experience a long tract of time And it is of the infinit mercie of God that there is such a delay to the end that none of his elect might perish but in his due time come to the knowledge and faith of their saluation The fayling of the oyle in the lampes of the foolish noteth the detection and discouerie of their hypocrisie and that they were not grounded and truly rooted in Christ They had a certaine historical knowledge but not the graces and gifts of sanctification neither sought they after them The full supply of oyle which the wise furnished themselues withall as it were against a deare yeare noteth their inward truth and stedfastnesse of faith and godlines they hauing their lampes as it were vnder the two oliue trees of God for the continuall cherishing and feeding of the light thereof as we read Zech 4.1.2 Yet not so but the wise haue their infirmities and failings as if they were not better then the rest in inward truth who seemed to be as good as they in outward shewe but their inward truth reuiueth all when as the best motions of the rest doe quickely vanish quite away The sudden comming of the bridegroome noteth the sudden comming of our Sauiour to iudgement when the time of his stay is once expired Neuertheles that iudgement which shall be the condemnation of the foolish it shall be the saluation of the wise For this as was saide in the beginning is signified by the shutting of the gate against the rest The which no noubt shal be as dolefull to those which shall be depriued of this feast as it shall be ioyfull to those that shall be made partakers of it according to that Reuel chap 19.7 Let vs be glad and reioyce and giue glory to the Lord our God for the marriage of the Lambe it come And verse 9. Blessed are they that are called to the Lambes supper Finally in this parable it is most needfully to be marked of vs that when the opportunitie of accompanying this Bride-groome to the mariage feast is once past that there is no recouering of it for euer after And not to prepare and furnish our selues throughly is in a manner all one as if we neuer set foote out of doores Wherefore as we began so let vs end Take we heed that we be prepared and that we may be found watching alwaies because we knowe not the day nor the houre when the Sonne of man will come THe last parable is yet behind tending to the same end with the former as it is plaine by the manner of the inferring or knitting of it with the same as it followeth in the text Question How is that How much a talent was according to our present coine thoug it bee not easie to oftimate
But they doe well to dispute the matter now prouided they would speedily moderate and determine the question well before the time of the account here spoken of doe come For assuredly then the terme will be out and no further day granted for any disputation about the matter And happie shall they be that shall turne all their care to practise that vsurie which our Sauiour hath commended as being the onely lawfull and blessed vsurie which bringeth sound and durable gaine with it euen to as great abundance may be desired For to him that hath saith our Sauiour shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance when as on the contrarie that shall be taken away which the vnprofitable seruant refuseth to make any vse of Thus much of this parable as it is recorded by Saint Matthew Wherevnto as was said that other in the 19. chap of S. Luke accordeth touching the substance and scope of it As for the circumstances often seruants answerable to the number of the 10. virgines in the former parable of the Mina or pound a great deale lesse summe of mony giuen to euery one in stead of the talents in diuers proportions deliuered to the rest they doe nothing preiudice the same substance and drift of either parable No more doth the diuerse proportion of the gaine or diuerse measure of the reward This onely is to be materially obserued in Luke which is not set downe in Matthewe that the noble man going into a farre countrie was hated of his Citisens who after his departure rebelled against him though all in vaine For at his returne the noble man doth execution vpon all those rebells Euen so shall it bee at the ende of the world None of those that refuse to submit themselues to the regencie and gouernment of our Sauiour Christ here in this world shall escape his reuenging hand according to the conclusion of the parable in these wordes Moreouer those mine enemies which would not that I should raigne ouer them bring hither and slay them before me The Lord Iesus himselfe will see the execution done vpon all those that rebell against him and his Gospell by the ministerie of his holy Angels immediately vpon his sentence iudgement pronounced against them at the last day Mat 13.41 42. and verses 49.50 The consideration of all these things must needes be of great force to awaken all that shall duly weigh and beleeue the wordes of our Sauiour to bee faithfull and true to be continually watchfull that at the last iudgement they may be found good and faithfull seruants to God And I doe hartily pray God that the same good effect may be wrought in our hearts who haue heard these things thus plentifully laide forth vnto vs and that also in so great varietie of perswasion as our blessed Sauiour hath in wonderfull desire of our saluation commended the same vnto vs that whether we dye before his comming or liue till his comming wee may be found such as wee ought to bee For as hath beene often saide it commeth all to one reckoning in effect whether wee liue to that day or no. For as wee dye now so shall we be found then either iust or vniust true beleeuers or hypocrites Wherefore seeing our death is as vncertaine to vs how soone it shall be to euery one of vs for our parts as the comming of the Lord shall be to the whole world let not any of vs stop our eares or harden our hearts against the gracious warning which is giuen vnto vs. And the rather because though the day of our death is not farre off when it is at the furthest yet we haue experience by the sodaine deaths of many that it may be nearer then we can thinke For sometime as we see the summons and arrest and the execution of death come all at once vpon others And why may not death vse the like expedition in the cutting off of our dayes It may fall out so for any thing that any of vs doe knowe Let vs therefore I pray you euen all and euery one of vs let vs I say watch that none of vs may at any time be taken vnprepared to our destruction but that we may be in a readines to meete the Lord with comfort to our eternall saluation Amen And thus farre for the ground of the Article of our faith concerning the comming of our Sauiour to iudge both the quicke and the dead out of the holy Euangelists both for the time thereof and concerning the signes so farre as they may bee discerned of vs and also touching the place from whence and whither he shall come and in what manner he shall shewe himselfe and who they are whom he shall iudge Moreouer wee haue herewithall seene diuerse of those vses both for comfort and also for dutie which we are to make from the doctrine and faith of this Article Wherein though we haue somewhat broken our order to the end we might not breake the course of our text which is more to be regarded then our order yet if neede be we shall very well salue it againe because by how much we haue as it were increased the burthen here wee shall goe away the lighter and make the more expedition there IN the meane while let vs proceede to that which followeth and that also in as good and commodious a course as wee may attaine vnto touching the order of our Sauiours proceeding in the execution of his last iudgement euen as he himselfe hath likewise foretold and described the same This followeth in our text of the Euangelist Matthew from the beginning of the 31. verse to the end of the chap Let vs heare the words of our Sauiour Question Which are they Answer 31. And when the Sonne of man commeth in his glory saith our Sauiour and all the holy Angels with him then shall he sit vpon the throne of his glory 32. And before him shall be gathered all nations and he shall seperate them one from another as a shepheard seperateth his sheepe from the goates 33. And he shall set the sheepe on his right hand and the goates on the left 34. Then shall the King say to them on his right hand Come yee blessed of my Father inherit the kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world 35. For I was an hungred and yee gone me meate I thirsted and yee gaue me drinke I was a stranger and ye lodged me 36. I was naked and ye clothed me I was sicke and yee visited me I was in prison and ye came vnto me 37. Then shall the righteous answer him saying Lord when saw we thee an hungred and fed thee or a thirst and gaue thee drinke 38. And when saw we thee a stranger and lodged thee or naked and clothed thee 39. Or when sawe we thee sicke or in prison and came vnto thee 40. And the King shall answer and say vnto them verily I say vnto you in as much as ye haue done
comfort of all true Christians seeing they shal behold him to be ordained their Iudge who was before anointed to be their euerlasting redeemer and Sauiour Explicatiō proofe These indeede are very sufficient reasons to let vs see why it should be so And they are no other then such as haue good warrant from the holy Scriptures like as you haue alledged concerning the former three Touching the last reason that is the comfort of the faithfull we shall haue further occasion to consider of it afterward Neuerthelesse albeit the iudgement is committed to our Lord Iesus Christ euen in that he is the Sonne of man we must not think that the Deitie is excluded either of the Sonne of God himselfe or of the Father or of the holy Ghost but the iudgement shall proceed from the whole Trinitie though the Sonne onely is the administratour and pronouncer of it Let this suffice for the first point who the Iudge is Question THe manner of his comming is next How is it described that it shall be Answer The Sonne of man saith our Sauiour shall come in glory and all the holy Angels with him Explication This glory which our Sauiour speaketh of is the glory of the onely begotten Sonne of God that is to say a most diuine glory euen the glory of God the Father as he himselfe spake before Math. 16.27 For saith he there the Sonne of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his Angels Here in this place our Sauiour calleth it his owne glory because it is due vnto him euen in that he is the Sonne of man by the gift of the Father who else-where is called the Father of glory Ephes 1.17 and the God of glory Act. 7.2 and the King of glory Psal 24.7.8.9.10 that is most glorious in himselfe and also the fountaine of all true honour and glory to all other It shall be the perfect declaration of that glory which the disciples saw some bright glimses of as we read Iohn 1.14 Math. 17.2 and 2. Pet. 1.17 It shall be that glory which our Sauiour praied for Iohn 17.5 Now glorifie me thou Father with thine owne selfe with the glory which I had with thee before the world was Now according to this glory euen the diuine glory of our Sauiour shall that power be wherewith hee shall come that is to say it shall be the very almighty power of God according as we haue seene before affirmed by our Sauiour himselfe Math. 24.30 and Luke chap. 21.27 The same glory and power of our Sauiour Christ is further illustrated for a helpe of our weakenes to conceiue the more gloriously of it from the attendance of the holy Angels who shall at that time accompanie him as his seruants with all their glory and power to the execution of this his iudgement And for this cause they are called his Angels Math. 16.27 like as the glory is in our present text called his owne glory Now verily this we may be sure of that the glory of our Sauiour must needes be an exceeding great glory which shall exceede all the glory of the thousands yea the myriades and tenne thousand thousands of the Angels which shall accompanie him more no doubt then the Sunne excelleth all the starres of heauen in brightnes and glorie Thus therefore as the Iudge of the Assise when he commeth in his circuite to execute iudgement from the Prince is for honours sake accompanied with the high Sherife and the honourable and worshipfull of the Country so yea by infinite oddes shall our Sauiour Christ comming to execute this iudgment of all iudgements that we now speake of be accompanied with such a glorious traine as neuer any Iudge was or shall be accompanied withall from the beginning of the world to the end of the same The vse of this exceeding glory shall be this euen to procure the more reuerend estimation from the godly and also to the end that the very wicked may be constrained to tremble before the same And in this respect also it is that according to the words of our Sauiour mentioned before Math. 24.31 the holy Apostle Paul doth likewise make mention of some other things as signes and appurtenances to this most excellent maiestie and glory as we reade 1. Thess 4.16 1. Cor. 15.52 saying The Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a showte and with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God Yea and that no doubt in farre more glorious and magnificent manner then it sounded at the giuing of the law Exod. 19.19 though the sound of the trumpet at that time was long waxing lowder and lowder And though the law was giuen by the ministerie of Angels Gal. 3.89 yet it was with lesse appearance of glory then there shall be at the comming of our Sauiour Christ to iudge both by the law and also according to his Gospel as the same Apostle testifieth Rom. 2.12.16 Thus much of the manner of the appearance of our Sauiour when he shall come to iudgement at the end of the world Question NOw in the third place How shall hee addresse and dispose of himselfe to the pronouncing of this most reuerend and glorious iudgement Answer Then saith our Sauiour the Sonne of man shall sit vpon the throne of his glorie Explication What manner of throne this throne of glory shall be it is better to suspend our iudgement then to imagine any particular likenes of the Maiestie of it in our mindes till in due season we shall be the beholders of if with our bodily eyes Neuerthelesse this wee may be as sure of before hand as if we saw it presently with our eies that it shall answer to that description of the throne of God whereof we read Dan. 7. ver 9.10 And Reuel 20.11 Where the Apostle Iohn saith That he saw a great white throne and one that sate vpon it from whose face fled away both earth and heauen and their place was no more found Which throne no doubt shall be infinitely more glorious then the ynorie throne of K. Salomon not onely white as that was but most bright answerable to the purity and righteousnes of that iudgement which shall be pronounced by the Iudge that shall sit downe vpon it according to that we read Psal 45.6 and Heb. 1.8 O God thy throne is for euer and euer the Scepter of thy Kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnes Thou louest righteousnes and hatest iniquitie c. According also to the like testimonies which haue their finall prospect toward this last iudgement Psal 5.4 and Psal 7.11 and 9 7 8. and 94 20. Read also Gen. 18 25. Rom. 2 5 6 And Eccles 3 16 17. and chap. 5.7 But there is yet another thing set downe concerning our Sauiour his addressing of himselfe to the pronouncing of this his last sentence And that is that by the Ministerie of his holy Angels he will gather all those whom he wil iudge before him and seperate
grace in them to their sanctification it may appeare Gal. 5.21 The fruit of the Spirit is loue c goodnes faith c against whom saith the Apostle there is no law And Iames 2.13 Mercy reioyceth against iudgement Moreouer it may appeare by that we reade in the former Apostle Colos 3.12 Now therefore as the elect of God holy and beloued put on tender mercy kindnesse humblenesse of mind c. And thus saith our Sauiour himselfe shall men shew themselues to be the children of the most high Luke 6.35 36. Secondly that mercifulnesse and the fruits thereof are of exceeding regard acceptance with God it is euident in other places of holy Scripture though most notably in our present Text. Namely it is euident in that the Lord saith by his holy Prophet I will haue mercy and not sacrifice Hos chap. 6. verse 6. And our Sauiour himselfe sheweth it plainely where he promiseth assuredly that a cup of cold water giuen to any of his Disciples in the name of a Disciple that is because he is a Disciple shall not be vnrewarded Thirdly that the practise of the duties of mercy is both the way to glorifie God and also to attaine to his kingdome of glorie it cannot be doubted of those that know how earnestly and often these duties are commanded vnto vs euery where in the holy Scriptures For a taste whereof reade Exod. chap. 22. verses 21 22 23 c. 27. Deut. 15.7 c. Prou. 19.17 Isai 58.6 7. c. Ezek. chap. 18 7. Micah 6.8 and Zech. 7. verses 8 9 10. Luke 16.9 Make you friends with the riches of iniquitie riches being so called because they are vsually either gotten by fraude and oppression or vniustly detained from the relieuing of the poore that saith our Sauiour when ye shall faile to wit when life shall faile ye they may receiue ye into euerlasting habitations That is that you walking in this way or exercising the duties of mercy may through the infinite mercy of God be receiued into the kingdome of heauen Finally that the conscionable care and ready practise of those fruits of mercie are comfortable assurances to them that practise them that they are the children of God for whom he hath prepared his eternall kingdome we may be assured of it from that saying of out Sauiour Matt. 5. where he pronounceth the mercifull blessed and promiseth that they shall obteine mercie Likewise by the testimonie of Saint Iohn 1. Epist 3.14 We know that we are translated from death vnto life because wee loue the brethren The fruites of which loue hee doeth describe to be in a principall parte the actions of mercie and compassion in relieuing such as want with their worldly goods verses 17 18 19. Thus then we may perceiue how in sundry respects of great vse moment vnto vs the words of our Sauiour For I was an hungred and ye gaue me meate c may well be accounted a reason of the former part of his sentence for the acquiting of the godly As for those that can see no reason of this allegation of our Sauiour but the merit of the workes there mentioned they shew themselues more then purre-blinde And though they seeke for helpe both from Grammar and also from Logicke yet neither of them nor any of their riotous rhetoricke will relieue them in the pride of their opinion The causall coniunction in Grammar doth indeed serue to shew the reason of a former sentence but it doth not necessarily shew a reason from the cause of a thing but as often from the effect and from other kinde of arguments likewise as from the cause And Logicke also teacheth that there be diuers kindes of causes principall and lesse principall c. And of the principall and chiefe causes euery one hath a sufficient power granted of God ordinarily to produce the proper effect Yet that there should be a meritorious cause it cannot in the naturall proprietie of speech which it vseth allow of it And least of all can it allow that the lesse principall cause should in any reason beare the name of merit c such as are the workes of the most righteous in comparison of their eternall saluation though we ascribe the most we may vnto them Hetherto of the words of our Sauiour in such sense as they may be accounted a reason and that in diuers respects without any the least aduancing of the merit of mans workes THe same words of our Sauiour may likewise be esteemed as a law or rule whereby he will frame or order his iudgement Question How may this be Answer It may euidently appeare from hence that our Sauiour will order his iudgement according to his law and Gospel Explicatiō proofe It is true that you say For the faithfull shall be acquited by the Gospel wherevnto the law giueth witnesse as we reade Rom. 3.20 21 22. by the works of the law shall no flesh be iustified in his sight that is in the sight of God for by the law commeth the knowledge of sinne But now is the righteousnesse of God made manifest without the law hauing witnesse of the law and of the Prophets To wit the righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all that beleeue And the wicked shall be condemned by the law which the Gospel establisheth as Rom. 2.5 6 c to the 18. verse And chap. 3.31 Reade also Matth. 5.17 18 19.20 And Iohn 3.18 19 20 21. And chap. 12.47 48. And Heb. 4.12 13. This is plaine in our text both on the behalfe of the godly to their saluation and also to the condemnation of the wicked For to the one as we haue alreadie seene hee giueth the praise of well doing in obedience to the law of God which requireth mercie aboue sacrifice And the Gospel as we know pronounceth the mercifull blessed and promiseth as was alledged before that they shall finde mercie But contrariwise as wee shall haue further occasion to consider in the other part of the sentence or iudgement of our Sauiour hee sheweth that the vnmercifulnesse of the wicked which both the lawe and the Gospel do condemne is a great part of the cause of their condemnation For as we reade in the new Testament beside the curse which the law of God a wardeth there shall be iudgement mercilesse to them that shew no mercy Iam. chap. 2.13 Thus much concerning the words of our Sauiour containing the reason or rule of the first part of his iudgement as was said It followeth now in the third place that we come to those words of our Sauiour wherein he cleareth a doubt or scruple which might arise from the same words of the reason in that he saith not to the godly The poore haue beene hungrie and yee fed them thirstie and yee haue giuen them drinke c. but thus I was hungrie and yee fed mee c. For how might this seeme to be so insomuch as our
then surely it could not be but the serious meditation remembrance of it would haue these blessed effects and workings in our hearts which you haue spoken of Now therefore to the end we may helpe our selues this way let vs consider some testimonies of the holie Scriptures which doe call vpon vs to make such vses as haue bin mentioned from the reuerend meditation expectation of it And first of all touching the leauing and forsaking of sinne by reason of this iudgement of our Sauiour which is to come let vs read and consider Actes 3.18.19 Amend your liues therefore saith the Apostle and turne that your sinnes may be put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. And he shall send Iesus Christ who before was preached vnto you Read also ch 17.30.31 where the Apostle Paul indeuoured by this argument to moue the Athenians to repent of their former grosse superstitions and idolatries And ch 24. v. 26. where he vseth the same argument to perswade vnhappy Foelix if possibly it might haue bene to repent of his vniust and voluptuous life The which most weighty perswasion because both the Athenians and also Foelix despised nothing could preuaile to doe them good We read not of any christiā church flourishing at Athēs in the Apostles daies as were in many other cities to whom they directed their epistles namely in Thessalonica of which it is testified that the citizens therof hearkening to this doctrine turned to God from idolles to serue the louing and true God And to looke for his Sonne from heauen whom he raised from the dead euen Iesus who deliuereth vs from the wrath to come 1. ep 1.9.10 and so became one of the most famous Churches in all the world And for the leauing of the whole vanity of this world euen to this purpose that wee might set our hearts vnfainedly to walke in the feare of God the conclusion of the book of the Princely Preacher inferred vpon the whole discourse going before in the book called Ecclesiastes is very notable from the weight of this argument Let vs heare the ende of all saith K. Salomon Feare God keep his commandementes for this is all that pertaineth to man For God will bring eueryworke vnto iudgement with euery secret thing whether it be good or euill Read also Heb. 1. v. 10.11.12 1. ep of Iohn ch 2. verses 15.16.17 Philip 3 7 8 9 10 11. Wherefore that we may effectually awaken our selues out of our naturall securitie it is to singular purpose that euery one of vs do bethinke our selues earnestly of the cōming of this Iudge who is priuie to all our wayes in the whole course of our liues childhood youth mans age middle age and old age that both in our single life also in our married estate whether in magistracie or in ministerie of the word c who also iudge righteous iudgement without respect of Person c. It the malefactor would duely think of the cōming of the earthly Iudge to go his circuite of Assise how he shal come with the power autority of the king accompanied with all the Iustices of the Shire c to assist him in doing of iustice specially if he did know before that he could not escape but must be apprehended and brought before him it would surely cause him to take heede of breaking the Kings peace Much more would the due meditation of the most glorious fearfull appearance of the most high K of Kings our Lo Iesus at the last day be effectuall to stay vs from sinning against the diuine Maiesty of God seeing we may be sure that none shall possiblie escape this vniuersal iudgemēt of his For what is the greatnes of any earthly Prince in comparison of the heauenlie Maiestie of this our diuine Iudge such as it shall be at that time what is their companie of Iustices c to the traine of infinite thousandes of the holie Angells And how little are their temporall penalties in comparison of Gods infinite and eternall iudgement Wherefore to the ende wee may take the right course to escape this most fearefull iudgement of God let vs in the meane while euery one of vs for our parts make our profitable vse of all those iudgements of God which he bringeth forth daily in that he sendeth warres plagues famine c For all of them are sent as admonitors remembrancers and forerunners of that great and last iudgement For so as wee haue seene before doth our Sauiour giue to vnderstand in his description of the foregoing signes of his comming to this iudgement And it is that which God hath after a sort commonly imprinted in the hearts of men For when things fall out any thing strangely euery one is ready to say All things grow so ill that I thinke the world is neare to an end c. Finally we must wel consider concerning this first point that we must leaue and forsake our sinnes past with godly sorow for them to the end we may escape this iudgement For we knowe who telleth vs that it is godly sorowe which causeth true and vnfained repentance Now touching the second point that is to say watchfulnes against sinne for the time to come we may read how it is perswaded from the consideration of this last iudgement namely from the vncertaine certainty of it Marke chap 13. verse 32. For like as the death of euery man is most certaine but the point of the time therof vnknown so is the day of the general iudgement Yea so vncertaine that as our Sauiour himselfe saith in that place of Saint Marke not onely the Angels of heauen but also the Sonne of God himselfe in that he is man was before his resurrection ignorant of the day and houre of it and that the Father onely and no creature beside was to that time priuie to it though we should grant that our Sauiour since his glorification doth know it euen in that he is man all other remaining as ignorant of it still as euer before Wherevpon our Sauiour warneth and exhorteth all that they doe watch lest they should be found vnprepared as we read from the 33. verse to the ende of that chapter as we haue seene at large before And Luke 21.34 Take heed to your selues saith our Sauiour lest your hearts should be oppressed c. For as a snare shal it come c. Watch therefore and pray continually that ye may be vouchsafed worthy to escape all these things Furthermore touching watchfulnes against sinne from this argument of the last iudgement reade also 1. Thes 5. verses 6.7 Therefore let vs not sleepe as doe other but let vs watch and be sober c. And Reuel 14.9.10.11 And ch 16.15 Behold I come as a thiefe blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments lest he walke naked and men see his filthines Thirdly for diligent studie and constant practise of godlines in the feare
vires dum viribus adait Vires vt vigeat quod fuit ante nihil 5. Erigit Spiritus illapsos quia vis data saepe vacillat Erigit lapso● spe i●het esse bona Psal 51.10 11.12 Spiritus aduersis cum mens sit languida rebus Erigit emergit mens modò prossa malis Spiritus erectos vi● cum sit lubrica vitae Eph. 3.16 Ne recidant firmat si recidant que●uuat Spiritus imbelies diuinis im●uit armie 6. Confirmat Praelia prima decet posteriora fugat Ipsius arma fides spes coelestia verba Quae sanctis scriptis edidit ipse Deus Spiritus his armis Satanae mendacia pellit Ephes 6 1● 11. c. His quisque tegitur tutos vbique manet Spiritus externis signis da● pignora certa Vine verbis addens pectora tarda mouet Spiritus hisce Dei diuinis dotibus auctum Dirigit rectis passibus ire facit Isai 63.13.14 Psal 143 1●● Spiritus acta regit voces corda gubernat 7. Regit Ne cor lingua manus sint superata malis Spiritus in laetis animum dat tristibus aequum 1. Thes 1.5.6 2. Ep 2.13.14 c. Vt grates habeat mens in vtrisque Deo i● Spiritus ornatos-donis regit arte peritos Vt sint sancta Dei munera sancta viris Epilogus Solatur Gignit Firmat Docet Erigit Auget Dirigit Oranti Spiritus ista dabit The same in English The Promise 1. The holy Ghost doth cleare the minde 2. He doth renewe the will 3. He doth the soule with comfort store 4. He doth all grace instill 5. When weaknes growes and flesh preuailes And grace doth take some foile The Spirit comes and flesh subdues The diuel doth recoile 6. With double strength grace fenced is And so more strong to fight The next assaltes are soone represt What force may foile Gods might 7. The holy Ghost of all mans life The guide and staie he is In all estates weake man he holdes Lest he should goe amisse For left to selfe as apt to straie Is man as seely sheepe And eke as apt to be destroide If God doe not him keepe Much lesse poore soule could he attaine To happie state in heauen If holy Ghost of all his gifts Withdrawe but one of them THe meaning of the Article thus explaned let vs now come to the promise Question Where haue wee any promise that the holy Ghost shall be giuen vnto vs Answer In the 11. chapter of Saint Luke verses 9.10.11.12 13. Rehearse you the words of the text Question Which are they Answer I say vnto you saith our Sauiour aske and it shall be giuen vnto you seeke and yee shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you For euery one that asketh receiueth and he that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened If a Sonne shall aske bread of any of you that is a Father will he giue him a stone or if he aske a fish will he giue him a serpent Or if he aske an egge will he giue him a scorpion If ye then which are euill can giue good gifts to your children how much more shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Ghost to them that desire him Explicatiō proofe A most gracious promise of a most glorious and mercifull Father and the same also most sweetly and familiarly illustrated and confirmed by our most blessed Lord and Sauiour to helpe the weaknes of our faith touching the assured perswasion of so singular a gift euen the gift of all gifts as wee may say c. For our Sauiour Christ knewe right well how great our weakenes of apprehension is this way in conscience of our vnworthines beside our slouthfulnesse in seeking after it the which he would by this his most gracious incouragement chase away Furthermore it serueth to this purpose very well The Comforts that the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of promise that is the promised Spirit Ephes 1.13 And the promise of the Father Act 2.33 The which promise of the Spirit that is the accomplishment of which promise we receiue through faith as the Apostle Paule affirmeth Gal 3.14 Wherefore wee most thankfully embracing this so high and pierlesse a promise let vs now proceede to consider of the vse of the doctrine and faith of this Article ANd first for comfort wherevnto the promise doth very aptly make way Question What is that Answer The comfort of beliefe in God the holy Ghost is most singular and therefore doth our Sauiour himselfe intitle him with name of the Comforter Explicatiō proofe It is true as we read Iohn chap 14. verse 16. I will pray the Father saith our Sauiour and he will giue yee another Comforter that he may abide with yee for euer And verse 26. But the Comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the Father wil send in my name he will teach ye all things c. And againe chap 15.26 And chap 16 7. And most worthily is he called the Comforter because he alone doth in speciall m̄aner and most immediatly comfort vs against al temptations and causes of discomfort And also because he alone doth in like special māner both giue vs the present comfortable feeling of all the sweet mercies of God in this life and also the ioyfull assurance and hope of all good things which are to come as wee shall see a none Question But first what are those temptations and causes of discomfort which the holy Ghost doth comfort vs against Answer First against our actuall sinnes and transgressions Secondly against our failings in all holy obedience Thirdly against our originall sinne and corruption of nature Fourthly against the troubles and afflictions of this present euill world Fiftly against the doubt of the truth of our faith and repentance and so of our election to saluation Sixtly against the discomfort of our continuall infirmities often renewed slips falls Explicatiō and proofe These indeede are the singular comforts which the holy Ghost doth daily renew vnto vs and that vpon these occasions following For first whereas the diuel and our owne guiltie and vnbeleeuing hearts tempt vs that we must needes be condemned through the iust iudgement of God because of our manifold great sins insomuch as God is most iust and must needes take vengeance of all sinners the holy Ghost assureth vs to our comfort that all our sinnes are punished in our Sauiour Christ and that the iustice of God is fully satisfied by his death so that they shall not be laide any more to our charge Secondly whereas the diuel further obiecteth that although this were true that our sins are satisfied for yet we could not be accepted in the sight of God except we were righteous the holy Ghost assureth vs further that our Sauiour Christ hath fulfilled all righteousnes for vs and that hereof his resurrection is an euident
doubt the danger is very great For the soules of all such as doe not beleeue this blessed immortality or die in carelesse neglect of the meanes whereby they should attaine vnto it they shall certainely be condemned to extreme and immortall or endlesse miserie euen from the very instant departure of their soule from the body Explicatiō proofe It is very true as the parable of the voluptuous rich man of whom we reade in the holy Gospel plainely sheweth Luke 16. His soule as our Sauiour giueth there to vnderstand for forthwith in Hell torments And so remained in the same most wofull torments neither could thenceforth by any intreatie obtaine any release or ease And Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape saith the holy Apostle if we neglect so great saluation as is offered vs in the Gospel All such as harden their hearts in vnbeliefe are condemned alreadie Iohn 3.16 and therefore no doubt they shall not stay without all punishment till the day of the last iudgement but shall presently after this life indure some part of it Let vs therefore I beseech yee take heede that we be not carried away after the example of the secure multitude neither yet with any other sorts of the wicked and vngodly lest we fall with them into this great and fearefull damnation To the which end and purpose it is necessarie that we doe arme our selues against those hereticall or atheisticall and godlesse opinions which bee contrarie to this Article As well theirs who doe simply denie the immortalitie of the soule as the opinion of them that doe suspend as we may say the immortalitie of it till the time htat the bodies shall be raised againe and so thus farre ioyne with the rest that it is after a sort mortall and without all vnderstanding or affection for all that while They that doe simply denie the soules immortalitie are not onely the Sadduces mentioned in the holy Scriptures Acts 23.8 who were heretikes sprong vp among true worshippers of God and Christians but also the Epicures who were as it were heretikes dissenting from the sounder sort of the Philosophers among the heathen and all Atheists and godlesse persons who are iustly odious to all other sorts of people in the world So that it may seeme exceeding strange vnto vs if any impietie might be strange in the chaire of Rome that Pope Paulus the third should at his death make such a confession of his faith or rather of his infidelitie and atheisme as this that now he should shortly make triall whether the soules of men are immortall or no and likewise of two other things to wit whether there be a God or any Hell of the which as he confessed he had beene in doubt all the daies of his life before Such as deferre the immortality of the soule till the resurrection of the body are some among those that are called Anabaptists whose heresie is called Psychopanychie because they hold that the soule sleepeth that is hath no perceiuance of ioy c no more then the body hath after it is dead till it be raised vp againe And thus all of them seeme erroneously to consent in this that the soule of man is nothing else but a certaine vital power or faculty consisting in a perfit temperature of the body and therfore hath as they imagine no liuely Beeing longer then life abideth in the body But this consent of theirs is no better then a most wicked and vnfaithfull conspiracie against the truth of God as it is most euidently to be proued against them both from the originall of the soule together with the manner of the creation of it differing as farre from the originall and creation of the body as heauen is differing from the earth as hath been decared before in the doctrine of the Creation and also from that which is said of the soule that it beareth the image of God yea euen from the continuall testimonie of the holy Scriptures which speake of the soule as of a distinct existence or Beeing beside the body according as it is written that it commeth from God as from the Father of Spirits and returneth to him againe as to the Iudge of all mens soules and Spirits According also as it is said that the soule or Spirit being in man is knowne of none but of it selfe beside of God who is the searcher of the heart as we read 1. Cor. 2.10.11 So that to all who will vnderstand it is most plaine that the soule of man is not a bare faculty or power of life and motion arising from the body but euen that which doth as we may say essentially quicken sustaine and gouerne the body and all the members thereof so long as it abideth in it and that the seperation of it from the body is onely the death of the body and not of it selfe as hath beene alreadie declared in the interpretation and vse of the doctrine concerning the same Wherefore whatsoeuer either reasons from nature or testimonies from holy Scriptures any of the aboue named heretikes or heretical disputers do pretend to serue to the maintenance of their wicked hereticall and godlesse fancies they are nothing but so many sophistications against all soundnes of reason and so many ignorant and false allegations against the manifest truth of the holy Scriptures The refutation whereof being long Vrsinus in his Cōmentaries of Catechisme And in his Treatises of Diuinitie In the Article of the Creation And Mornaeus in the 1● and 15. chapters of his booke of truenes of Religion and not so necessarie though profitable no doubt to the right vnderstanding of many places of holy Scriptures abused to that purpose I had rather it should be reade in the writings of those that haue learnedly discouered the vanity of them or to doe it at some other time then at this present to stand vpon them Onely this I will now add in a word that vpon the things already set down it is sufficiently cleared that though the wicked may easily cast away and damne their owne soules by following false principles and by transgressing of the holy rules of life and of that obedience which God hath set yet they can by no meanes extinguish them or destroy their Beeing But they must of necessitie come before God to receiue their iudgement and for euer and euer to endure their most wofull torment Wherevpon also it is in like manner verie plaine that all such are most lamentably deluded by the Diuell whosoeuer doe thinke to relieue themselues against any present troubles and distresses by murthering of themselues as many doe insomuch as they doe thereby hasten the increase of their owne most dreadfull misery Thus much as it were by the way concerning this first benefit which all true beleeuers enioy by the death of our Sauiour Christ so soone as this naturall and fraile life of ours is ended euen the blessed estate of the soule in heauen so soone as it leaueth this
good dutie that any of vs should content our selues to know God onely farre off and aloofe as we may say as the manner of the most is but it is our dutie most carefully to prepare our selues to draw neare to him in the reuerend feare of his most gratious Maiestie Wee must grow from faith to faith as it were from one age of Christianitie to another from childehoode to mans estate c. We must serue God both outwardly and inwardly with body and with soule euen from the most secret and hidden power and inclination thereof These are briefly the excellent instructions contained in these holy Scriptures In the vrging whereof I was and now am still the more earnest because whereas euery one seemeth to lay readie hold on this that God is good and that he is a mercifull God as he is indeede very few make conscience to reason from his mercies to prouoke themselues thereby to be more carefull to serue and obey him Yea so much the rather haue I beene the more earnest as my dutie bindeth me because the most part of people doe most vndutifully and vngratiously abuse all the goodnesse and mercies of God to imbolden themselues to securitie yea to a greater licentiousnesse in their sinnes which no doubt is a most grieuous and horrible sinne in the sight of GOD and cannot but verie fearefully indanger all such gracelesse persons to the most heauie wrath of God Question NOw therefore in the last place What proofe haue you for the danger of generall vnbeliefe Answer and disobedience to the Gospel In the 2. chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrewes verses 1 2 3 4. thus writeth the Apostle 1 Wherefore we ought diligently to giue heede to the things which we haue heard lest at any time we should let them slip 2 For if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and euery transgression and disobedience receiued a iust recompence of reward 3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great saluation which at the first beganne to be preached by the Lord and afterward was confirmed to vs by them that heard him 4 God bearing witnesse therevnto both with signes and wonders and with diuers miracles and gifts of the holy Ghost according to his owne wil. Explicatiō Here we haue a three fold comparison One betwixt the Law and the Gospel Another betwixt the chiefe instruments which God vsed to publish his law to wit his holy Angells and the chiefe publisher of the Gospel that is the Sonne of God himselfe of infinite excellency and authority aboue all Angells The third betwixt the contrary vses and ends of the one and of the other The law by reason of sinne armeth the curse through the righteous iudgment of God but the Gospel offereth saluation to all true beleeuers through the free grace and mercy of God All of these comparisons agree in this generally to declare the exceeding great danger of not beleeuing of not obeying the Gospel insomuch as the mercy of God most gratiously and most honourably offered thereby euen to the eternall saluation of all such as will thankfully receiue it is most wretchedly despised and reiected through vnbeliefe We know also what our Sauiour the Son of God himselfe hath most fearefully pronounced Matth chap. 11.20 21 c namely that it shall be easier for the Citizens of Tyrus and Sidon and for them of the land of Sodome in the day of iudgement then for such as neglect his Gospel ratified and confirmed by so many miracles as he wrought to the same end Reade also Heb. chap. 10.26 c. and chap. 12.18 c. 29. the like amplification of the greatnesse of this sinne agreeable to the former testimonie and declaration in the second chapter It is a most fearefull saying which we reade 2. Thes 1.7 8 9 10. where the Apostle affirmeth that The Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mightie Angels in flaming fire rendering vengeance vnto them that doe not know God and which obey not vnto the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ Who shall be punished with euerlasting perd tion from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power When he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be made maruelous in all them that beleeue Likewise in the first Epistle of Peter chap. 4. verses 17 18. The time is come saith the Apostle that iudgement must begin at the house of God If it first beginne at vs what shall be the end of them which obey not the Gospel of God And if the righteous be scarcely saued where shal the vngodly and the sinner appeare The greatnesse and consequently the danger of the sinne of vnbeliefe is notably expressed by the Apostle Iohn in his first Epistle chap. 5. verse 10. in that hee saith that it is euen as much as if one should goe about to make God a lyar which is most horrible once to thinke Reade also 2. Epist verses 8 9. Looke to your selues saith he to that elect Ladie to whom he writeth and to her children that wee loose not the things which wee haue done but that wee may receiue a ful reward Whosoeuer transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God But contrariwise as it followeth in the same verse hee that continueth in the doctrine of Christ he hath both the Father and the Sonne If ye beleeue not saith the Prophet Isaiah chap. 7.9 ye shal not be established It is a generall sentence to shew that the minde of man is alwaies vncertaine and restlesse further then it is setled by faith to repose it selfe wholly in the liuing God Finally for the danger of vnbeliefe and disobedience to the Gospel reade the fearefull but most true doctrine of our Sauiour Christ Iohn 3. verses 18 19.20 21. He that beleeueth in the Sonne shall not be condemned but he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie because he beleeueth not in the name of the onely begotten Sonne of God And this is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loued darkenesse rather then light because their deedes were euill For euery man that doth euil hateth the light neither commeth he to the light lest his deeds should be reproued But he that doth truth commeth to the light that his deeds might be made manifest that they are wrought according to God And againe verse 36. He that beleeueth in the Sonne saith Iohn the Baptist hath euerlasting life and he that obeyeth not the Sonne shal not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Thus we see the exceeding great danger of vnbeliefe and disobedience to the Gospel plentifully confirmed vnto vs. God of his infinite mercy giue vs grace to make our best vse and profite by the gratious admonitions and warnings which are giuen vs against the same NOw for a generall conclusion of the whole doctrine of our christian beliefe one thing yet further I desire to deliuer and
sauing Iustice herein is At full reueal'd to thee Repentance with the fruites thereof From liuely Faith that springs Repentance Within this Booke vnfolded is And many heauenly things To wit the chiefest Principles Of doctrine pure and sound Twelue Articles whereof we haue Articles of faith Of Faith from Scriptures ground The vertues of which pretious pearls So rare and knowne to few Are here found out and clearely laid All open to thy view One God Three Persons The glory of the Trinitie One God in persons three The Father Sonne and holy Ghost Presented are to thee The Father of Almightie power Father Creation The first among the rest His frame of world right glorious Is liuely here exprest Whose wise and holy Prouidence This mightie frame doth guide Prouidence Who all for all but most of all Doth for his Saints prouide His onely Sonne our onely Lord And Sauiour most deare Sonne Conception Birth Whose wonderfull Conception Whose like we doe not heare In wombe of Marie Virgin still By holy Ghost conceiu'd Yea borne and as all children be Into this world conuey'd Life Doctrine Miracles Sufferings Death His holy life his doctrine sweete His wonders strange and rare His bitter and his cursed death Here liuely painted are Buriall Descension Resurrection Ascension His buriall and power of death On him thus brought to graue His third daies resurrection Ascension eke we haue Sitting at the Fathers right hand Intercession His sitting at the Fathers hand In kingly Maiestie There making intercession For vs continually His cōming in the cloudes as Iudg Last iudgement With power and terror great Whē all the Natiōs shal be brought Before his iudgement seate Euen thus our full redemption Redemption From sinne and paines of hell Wrought by the Son of God alone This Booke declareth well Next vnto whom on holy Ghost Holy Ghost Third Person we rely Who to his liuely members all All comforts doth apply These liuely members are dispers'd Catholike Church Throughout the world so wide In heauenly mansions some with Christ Are placed to abide All which make vniuersall Church A ioynt communion Communion of Saints Of Saints a holy fellowship One head and body one Forgiuenesse of sinnes Whose sinnes great offences are Forgiuen and discharg'd And so from wofull bondage they For euer are inlarg'd Their bodies at the day of Doome Resurrection of the body In honour all shall rise To be vnited to their soules Made holy strong and wise A life eternall liue they shall Life euerlasting In glory there to raigne All teares from eyes shall wiped be And neuer feele more paine These mysteries profound deepe Which reason cannot reach All plainely here vnfolded are This light Gods grace did teach Now blessed be that Lord our God And praised be his name Who by his spirit to seruant his Both heart and hand did frame In Iudgement sound with wisedome like In method plaine cleare This Volume large to finish quite All glorie most d●e to our one onely most w●se almighti● and euer●iuing God As now it doth appeare All le ts so oft all trialls great All doubts all feares all paine All ended are with comfort much A sweete contenting gaine Now Father deare we thee intreate Euen for thy Christ his sake To blesse this worke to those good ends For which we paines did take Euen for the glory of thy name And honour of thy Sonne By comfort of the holy Ghost Whereby it was begunne That we in faith may know thee Lord One God in Persons three To serue the here and after death To raigne for aye with thee Amen Richard Blackerbie Minister of the Word To the Christian Reader THey who haue taken no small paines for thee good Christian Reader doe intreate thee to take a little paines for them and also for thy selfe in mending with thy pen the typographical errata or any other escapes which God shall discouer vnto thee in thy Booke Fauourably considering this with thy selfe that in a worke of much and long busines of this kinde easily will many humane infirmities of the eye both of the body and also of the minde mixe themselues yea euen with the best and most carefull indeuours about the most holy and weightie things we haue to deale withall Such as in the compasse of the present labour are these which follow and as we hope very few beside of any great moment Such as they be we pray you to correct in manner as followeth In the Preface PAge 2. line 18 read populous for popular P. 7. l. 26. put out not In the Contents of the first Booke Page 1. line 21. for page read pages And line 26. for 109. 105. In the first Booke Page 3. line 19. for rightous read rigorous P. 10. l. 36. read worke And line 39. malitious P. 12. l. 3. please P. 15. l. 23. for 13. read 12. 3. P. 18. l. 30. Ep● for 3. P. 22 last line ad after disobedience these words many were made sinners so by the obedience P. 59. 5. lines of the ●orme page printed againe P 107. l. 3● reade capacitie And P. 108. l. 14. grauitie P. 126 in the margine misericordia In the second Booke Page 2 line 8. a comma wanting af●er Iesus And line 40. that is for the. P. 15. l. 2. for 6. read 61. And line 19. for would could And line 51. of Christ put out of P. 24 l. 34. read therefore P 26. l. 12. a more for more a. And line 21. read ch 5. for 3. P. 33. l. 36. 1. Tim 2. P. 35. l. 20. in Bardelauistae u. ● for n. P 47. l. 16. read and of the apprehension And line 20. read addeth for and. P. 50. line 2. for of our read of the birth of our ● 54 l. 48 loue is for hope And l. 56 they for we P 57. l. 19 of his for of the benefit of his P. 65. l. 8. by meanes of diete for any mean●esse of diete P. 69. 13. the most for his most P. 76. 41. put out 4. P. 78. 37. read appointed to a. P 82 35 behoofull for vs to P. 84. 1● for 52. read 42. P. 90. 19. read for mouth may mouth that we may And P. 128. 24 for sodder soder And l. 35 for and giueth ●●e giueth P 129. 50. read hypothesie for hypocrisie P. 150 1 for though reade because P. 153 19 put out or accusation and ● 2● read all other as vvel in their superiour as inferiour places l. 21 al●o how to P 159. l. 5. imitation 〈◊〉 for imitation And l. 24 ●a●e for haue and line 39. for who rather read whether P 160. 37. put our selfe P 164. 2. read though for according And P 165 1 two other for two vvorthie P. 16● 38 And for At. P 167 41. read So perf tly obedient was he to God so perfitly louing c. P 17● read pictured and 17 tell all my and 48. had done their P 183 23 for as read was P 184 20 for 28. read 2 8. P. 185 18. read haue my hope any way P 186 3 read not but he P. 189 l. 40 41 read so great mercy being so great and P 190. 55. read This first p 19 19 for then read euen p. 203 12. for are read we are p. 212 24 read him that And 213. 3 but halfe And 214 5. soule for sonn p 215. last line that euer they p. 227 49 read mighty And 232 37. seeing And 23● scourge for scorne And 277 20. then by his And 291. 32 committing for omitting p. 335 51 read tutissi●am p. 340 39 read The comfort I say is c. And 141 l. 46. 47 th● the humanitie And 377 22 let goe And 503 32 for of read vpon 412 47 but a limme for but for a time p 430 line 2 occup●tion is for occasion l 6 occasion for ocupation p 432 20 thus for then p. 448 40 for selues the read selues to be the. And last ●ne though some more p. 450 54 read gardedst And 455 24 so the comming And 458 for them but read for them it cannot b● but And 459 13 first thing the. And 460. 39 minde all these things to p. 463 l. 4 renew p. 464 1 wickednesses And l. 28 Paul v●●verse p. 476 36 cōmanded p. 483 39. Beth gra●ijah p. 502 1 therefore p. 505 23 Laterane p 518 4 mercy p 524. last line read ●●iritual for special p. 525 9 for very read verif ed. p. 529 6 Council p. 530 were into a. p 536 28 vehistahaui p 539 44 read ye●●hough they be of the. for no not of the p 545 55 for of then read of these things p 551 7 read Iz el p 5●2 20. read willingly ●alking in p. 563 28. for Gen. 8 read 19. p. 610 33. for of 21 read also of In that which remaineth such hath been the blessing of God that ●e trust very fewe escapes shall be found like vnto these And thus good Christian Reader crauing thy friendly assi●●ance for the correcting of that which hath escaped vs we commend thee and all the holy labours of e●●y of vs to the most gratious and honourable blessing of God our heauenly Father to the spirituall ●enefit of vs all by the most blessed and effectuall operation of the holy Ghost through Iesus Chri●● our Lord. Amen Thine as their owne euen ●●olly in the Lord. R. A. R. B.
time shortly ensuing the ascension of our Sauiour vp into heauen in tha●●he compareth his comming to the lightening which comming out of the East shineth into the West as it is applied Luk 17.20.21.22.23.24 Like as also his comming shall be bodily to the sight and viewe of all people in the cloudes of the aire descending from the highest heauen when he shall come to iudge the world as it is in the text of Matthewe The vse of which doctrine of our Sauiour as it was double vnto the beleeuing Iewes before the destruction of Ierusalem partly for direction and partly for consolation and comfort * Read also Luk 17.23.24 c. to the ende of the ch where he plainly extendeth the words of our Sauiour to the end of the world so it may wel be and it is vnto all true be●●euing Christians to the end of the world and euen in regard of the ende it selfe For instruction thus first for that insomuch as our Sauiour hath sufficiently confirmed himselfe to bee true Messias and his doctrine to bee the onely true doctrine of saluation by those miracles which he wrought first by himselfe among the Iewes and afterward by his holy Apostles both among Iewes and Gentiles that therefore wee are not to bee drawne away from him or from his doctrine vnder pretence of any other miraculous workings whatsoeuer Secondly this doctrine of our Sauiour serueth for our instruction against all secret and hereticall inticements of false Prophets and Heretickes whose manner is vsuall among many of them to drawe Disciples away from the publike profession of the Gospell euen in the times of the libertie thereof to secret corners as if they were a companie more holy then the rest and had a more perfect doctrine Whereof wee may take the Familie of Loue for one chiefe example among the rest But saith our Sauiour though they say behold Christ is in secrete places beleeue it not Our Sauiour will haue his Doctrine publikely Preached and professed vnder good Christian Princes and hee will haue it publikely professed vpon all iust occasions vnder Idolaters and Tyrannous Princes though they will not suffer the Gospell so long as they can hinder it to be publikely Preached He cannot like that it should be smothered in corners It shall as he saith breake forth like lightening that is it shall be published openly and in the publike viewe of the world and accordingly he will haue it to be publikely imbraced and professed Thirdly the Doctrine of our Sauiour in this part of his answere to his Disciples serueth to teach vs nowe as well as it did to teach the beleeuing Iewes before the destruction of Ierusalem that as they were not to tye themselues to Ierusalem and to stay their flight from it as if then Christ might no where else bee found so neither are wee to tye our faith to any place as many doe their faith to the Church of Rome but to resort thether and to stay there where Christ is truly Preached as well in one place as in another wheresoeuer and whether soeuer the Lord shall call vs. And to this purpose hee vseth the prouerbiall speech Wheresoeuer the dead carkesse is thither will the Eagles resort Albeit Luke 17.37 it seemeth that our Sauiour vsed the same prouerbiall speech at some other time in way of a promise that our Sauiour would gather all his elect at the last day into his heauenly kingdome where he himselfe should be Thus the Doctrine of our Sauiour serueth for our instruction And for comfort it is likewise very notable in that he assureth vs that none of the elect of God shall be deceiued by any false Christs or false Prophets though their comming be neuer so deceitfull and strong to delude the wicked Not that they haue any such wisedome of themselues that they can thereby discerne their spirituall craft or any such strength that they should in their owne might withstand their delusions but because God who hath elected them will also endue them both with wisedome and also with power from aboue so as his grace shall bee sufficient to preserue them According to that of the Apostle Saint Paul 2. Thes 2. verses 13.14.15.16.17 Wee ought to giue thankes to God for you brethren c. These thinges thus briefly considered according to promise let vs henceforth hast to that which followeth which is as was saide the third part of the answere of our Sauiour and doth particularly concerne the time of his last iudgement which shall be as hee further declareth at the ende of the world Yet so as wee shall againe perceiue as was saide in the beginning that some part of the speech doth more specially concerne the calamitie and destruction of Ierusalem then the end of the world as wee shall easily perceiue when we come vnto them This last part of the answere of our Sauiour concerning the ende of the world which is the time of the last iudgement it comprehendeth therewithall both the signes of his comming and also the place from whence and whether hee will come Likewise the manner of his comming and the persons whom he will iudge with diuerse other points which were propounded in the beginning of our inquirie into this place BVt let vs proceede by degrees And first concerning the time when secondly the signes of his comming and thirdly the place from whence and whether he shall come fourthly the manner of his comming and therewithall the persons whom he will iudge when he shall come For these foure points are somewhat more nearely lincked together What are the wordes of our Sauiour Question How doe they followe in our text Answer It followeth thus from the 29 verse vnto the 32. 29. And immediately after the tribulation of those dayes shal the Sunne be darkened and the moone shall not giue her light and the starres shall fall from heauen and the powers of heauen shall be shaken 30. And then shall appeare the signe of the Sonne of man in heauen and then shall all the kindreds of the earth mourne and they shal see the Sonne of man come in the clouds of heauen with power and great glory 31. And he shall send his Angels with the great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather together his elect from the foure windes and from the one end of the heauen to the other These words as we may euidently perceiue doe properly belong to the second comming of our Sauiour to execute his last iudgement and therefore they are likewise more properly belonging to that Article of our faith which we doe now enquire of Neuertheles the former speech was not to be neglected of vs seeing our Sauiour himselfe thought good to speak of the destruction of Ierusalem as of a good inducement or preparatiue to the more reuerend and profitable consideration of this And indeed what iudgement of God might so fitly be a representation or as a warning piece to stirre vs vp to the due expectation