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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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pray according to faith and without faith no man can be assured that he shall be heard neither receiveth he what he asketh Considence in the Mediatour A confidence in the Mediatiour that we may resolve that both our person and our prayers please God not for our owne worthinesse but for Christs sake our Mediatour So Daniel prayeth that hee may be heard for the Lords sake Dan. 9.17 John 16.23 Heb. 13 10. and Christ willeth us to pray unto his Father in his Name Our prayers are to be put on our Altar Christ so shall they be acceptable to God Confidence of being heard Confidence of being heard In the former Faith is required whereby we with full confidence resolve that we are through Christs merit just before God and that God is reconciled unto us by Christ Here the faith of being heard is required which cannot stand without the former faith of being justified Because yee are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts which crieth Abba Father Hee that cometh to God must beleeve that God is and that hee is a rewarder of them that seeke him But here in this full perswasion of being heard A difference of things to be prayed for wee are to observe the difference of such things as are to be desired Some gifts are necessary to salvation as spirituall gifts Some are corporall without which wee may be saved Spirituall blessings are simply to be desired with a trust and full perswasion of being heard even that we shall receive them as we desire that is in speciall But gifts which are not necessary to salvation whether they be corporall or else such spirituall as without which wee may be saved these are to be desired verily but with a condition of Gods will and pleasure that he will give them us if they serve for his glory and be profitable for us or that he will give us other of better quality either at this or some other time Wee must follow in asking these benefits the Leper which said Lord if thou wilt thou canst make mee cleane For neither doe the Elect when they aske such things desire simply to be heard For oftentimes wee aske things Matth. 8.2 not knowing what and what manner of things they be and so neither know wee whether the obtaining of them in speciall if we should be heard in them will profit us or be pernicious and hurtfull to us Object Hee that asketh doubtfully asketh not according to faith neither is heard Wee aske corporall blessings doubtfully because wee aske them with condition Therefore not according to faith Answ 1. The Major is either particular or false For the nature of faith requireth that wee be certaine not of all corporall benefits but onely of spiri●uall blessings which are necessary to salvation as of remission of sinnes and of life everlasting In corporall blessings it sufficeth if faith submit it selfe to Gods Word and crave and looke for such things as are availeable to salvation Answ 2. The Minor also may be denied For albeit we aske corporall blessings with a condition yet do we not simply doubt of obtaining them For wee beleeve that wee shall receive those corporall blessings which wee aske of God so that they be expedient for us unto salvation and otherwise if they are like to prove hurtfull unto us wee desire not to be heard in that which we pray Therefore we neverthelesse aske in faith while we submit our selves to the Word and Will of God and desire to be heard according to his good pleasure For faith submitteth it selfe to every word and will of God and the will of God is this That wee aske spirituall things simply and corporall conditionally and that we resolve with our selves that we shall receive the former in speciall but the latter as farre forth as they serve for Gods glory and our salvation And thus if wee pray wee doubt not to be heard A confidence in Gods promise A confidence and trust in Gods promise that wee know and think that God hath promised to heare as many as call upon him with those conditions before alledged Call upon mee in the time of trouble Psal 59.15 Esay 65.24 so will I heare thee and thou shalt praise mee Before they call I will answer and whiles they speake I will heare Without this promise of hearing● there is no faith without faith prayer is but vaine Except wee give faith and credit to Gods promises and think of them while we are praying they availe us nothing neither can we desire ought with good conscience but rather when after this sort we know not what we aske doubting of Gods hearing of our petition we doe not pray but mock God Now the confidence which we have of Gods promise in hea●ing us breadeth in us a certainty of his hearing and our salvation and this certainty kindleth in us a study of invocation and of making supplications unto God By these conditions and circumstances of sincere and true prayer it doth easily appeare A difference between the prayer of the godly and the wicked how much the praying of the godly and the wicked differ The godly endeavour to observe all these conditions in their praying The wicked contrarily either omit and neglect them all or keeping one or two conditions erre in the rest Some erre in the knowledge of the nature and will of God therein omitting the first condition some erre in the things which are to be asked when they aske either evill things or uncertaine or nor approved by God Some aske these hypocritically some without a feeling of their want some not with a confidence in the Mediatour some persisting in their wickednesse thinke yet that God heareth them some desire things necessary to salvation with a distrust and diffidence some lastly aske not thinking of Gods promise and therefore not according to faith ON THE 46. SABBATH Quest 119. What Prayer is that Ans Our Father a Mat. 6.9 10 11 12 13. Luk. 11.2 3 4. which art in heaven Hallowed be thy Name Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our daily bread And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespasse against us And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever and ever Amen The Explication THe forme of prayer prescribed by Christ unto us is recited by the two Evangelists Mat●hew and Luke This questionlesse is the best most certain and most perfect forme of prayer for it was delivered by Christ who is the Wisdome of God and his words his heavenly Father alwaies acknowledgeth and heareth Moreover it containeth most briefly all things that are to be desired necessary for the soule and body Lastly it is a rule whereby all our prayers must be directed Two causes why Christ del●vered unto us this form
the Kingdome to the Father The Rule for answer to this is Of the phrase of Scripture wee must iudge according to the whole Scripture that is by marking circumstances of the Text alledged and by conference of other places with it The Son shall deliver up the Kingdom unto the Father not by laying it downe but by manifesting it or changing the forme thereof For the Father also reigneth now neither shall the Son ever cease to reigne Likewise he shall deliver it by subjecting all things under him So the Father also delivereth the Kingdom unto the Son neither yet doth he forgoe it The Son doth nothing to wit nothing of himselfe or without the precedent will of his Father yet he doth something by himself from his Father Other Rules whereby the objections of the Arrians are dissolved 1. NOthing hindereth why they who are equall in nature may not be in degree of office unequall 2. That which the Father hath given unto the Sonne that hee should ever have it hee will never demand of him againe but that which was but for a certaine time given and committed unto him the same hee must meeds depart from and resigne 3. That consequence doth not hold in reason which is brought from a thing that is respective to a thing that is absolute 4. That is said of the person in the concrete which is proper only to one nature but not otherwise than in respect of that nature unto which it is proper 5. There is a double wisedome one existing in the creatures which is the order of things in nature wisely disposed and the doctrine or knowledge as well of nature and the law as also of the Gospel Another wisdome is subsisting in God which when it is opposed unto the creatures is the very divine minde or eternal decree as touching the order of things in the Father the Son and the holy Ghost that is it signifieth the three persons but when it is distinguished from God then it is taken for the Son of God the second person only The former wisdome existing in the creatures is created the other subsisting in God is uncreate 6. God absolutely named in the Scripture is never meant but of very God himselfe 7. Whereas the Son and the holy Ghost are of the Father and the Father worketh by the Son and the holy Ghost neither was humbled as the Son the Scripture doth oftentimes especially in Christs speeches understand by the name of the Father the Son also and the holy Ghost 8. When God is considered absolutely or by himselfe or is opposed to the creatures the three persons are comprehended but when hee is opposed to the Son the first person of the God-head is understood which is the Father 9. The name of God being put simply or absolutely is essentially taken that is for the God-head it selfe and compriseth all three persons but when the property of any person is joyned therewith it is taken personally 10. The Scripture distinguisheth the persons when it opposeth or compareth them among themselves or expresseth their personall properties whereby it restraineth the name of God common to them all to one certain person and it meaneth them altogether when it opposeth the true God to creatures or false gods or considereth them absolutely according to his own nature 11. That which began at some certain time to be manifested may not thence be concluded never to have been before 12. The Son is wont to referre that to the Father which yet hee hath common with the Father not making any mention of himselfe when hee speaketh in the Mediatours person 13. The Son is said to see learne heare and worke as from the Father in respect of both natures yet not without a difference still remaining For unto his humane understanding the will of God is made known by revelation But his God-head doth by it selfe and of his owne nature know and behold from everlasting most perfectly the Fathers will 14. The externall operations of the three persons if they were distinct they should make verily distinct essences because one working and another ceasing there should be diverse essences but the internall operations because they are the communicating of one and the same whole essence make not a diversity but an unity of essence 15. When God is called the Father of Christ and the faithfull it doth not hereof follow that he is after the same manner their Father and his 16. The Father was never without the Son nor the Father and the Son without the Spirit inasmuch as the God-head can neither be augmented nor lessened not changed 17. It followeth not that whosoevers person is from another his essence also is from another 18. As often as in Scripture one person of the Deity is opposed to creatures or feigned gods and is distinguished from them the other persons are not excluded from the Deity but the creatures only between whom and the true God comparison is made This we must also observe in all exclusive and superlative speeches The principall arguments against the Divinity of the Son and the holy Ghost together with the answers unto them 1. ONe essence is not three persons for one to be three doth imply a contradiction God is one essence Therefore there cannot be three persons of the God head Ans The Major is true of an essence created and finite that cannot being one be the same and whole substance of three or be three but it is false of the infinite most simple and individuall essence of the God-head For this as it existeth one and whole together in many nay in infinite places and things so may it be remaining one the same and whole essence of moe yea and moreover it is necessary so to be seeing the generation of the Son and the proceeding of the holy Ghost is the communicating of the essence of the Father 2. Whose operations are distinct their essences also must needs be distinct The eternall operations of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are distinct Therefore they have also distinct essences Answ The Major of this reason is true of persons having a fi●ite essence but being understood of the divine person it is false if it be meant of those internall operations whereof the Minor speaketh Wherefore inverting the Major wee returne it backe upon the adversaries themselves Whereas the internall operations namely the generation of the Son and the proceeding of the holy Ghost are the communicating of the Fathers essence whole and the same in number it must needs be that there is not a diverse or distinct but one divine essence of all three persons 3. That which hath a beginning is not eternall but the Sonne and the holy Ghost have their beginning or originall from the Father Therefore they are not eternall Answ That is not eternall which hath a beginning of essence or nature and time But the Sonne and the holy Ghost have a beginning or originall of person or order or
effect likewise is taken away The wages of sinne is death Further Rom. 6.23 if he hath abolished death and that by a sufficient satisfaction for our sins which satisfaction he hath shewed and declared by his resurrection to be sufficient it is certain that his resurrection is a most certain testimony of our resurrection for he having performed a sufficient satisfaction for the sins of his members the members cannot remain in death But the resurrection of Christ the head is an argument of the perfect satisfaction for the sinnes of his members Therefore Christs resurrection is also an argument of the perfect resurrection of his members 3. As the first Adam received the blessings for himselfe and all his posterity and lost the same from all So Christ the second Adam received life and all other gifts for himselfe and others and therefore also will communicate eternall life with us 4. Seeing the same spirit dwelleth in us which did in Christ he shall work also the same in us which in our head he did For the spirit is alwayes alike neither could he work in the head and sleep in the members Therefore seeing Christ hath raised himselfe up by his spirit from the dead he will verily also raise us up If the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you Rom. 8.11 he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because that his Spirit dwelleth in you 5. Because Christ is man and our brother for except he were man we should have no hope of the resurrection of our flesh For 1 Cor 1● 11 by man came the resurrection Therefore for his tender love and affection he will not leave us in death and so much the rather in regard of his power and glory For if he being dead raised himselfe much more being alive shall he be able to raise us up and if in the time of his humiliation he had power to raise himselfe much more may he raise us out of the grave now he reigneth in glory a● the right hand of his Father Object 1. Then the wicked shall not rise againe because Christs resurrection is neither an argument nor the cause of the resurrection of the wicked but of the godly onely Answ There be other causes for which the wicked shall rise againe even for the just judgement of God whereby he hath appointed them to eternall paines For the same thing may have moe effects and diverse causes Object 2. These are the benefits of his death therefore not of his resurrection Ans They are of his death as by it he deserved them of his resurrection 1. In respect of the manifestation of them for by his resurrection he declared that those benefis were purchased for us For by escaping from this punishment he made plaine proofe of his full and perfect satisfaction for sinne 2. In respect of the application of them Because by his resurrection he applieth his benefits unto us 2 Cor. ● 9 He being rich was made poore and being poore was made rich againe that he might enrich us Object 3. The effect is not before the cause The cause of these benefis which is his resurrection was not before the first resurrection therefore neither the effect that is the benefits themselves Answ The resurrection was not as touching the accomplishment thereof but in the counsell of God and in efficacy and vertue it was in the Old Testament For then also were men received into favour they were indued with the holy Ghost and received the other benefits but for and by the Mediatour which was in time appointed to be humbled and glorified Knowledge that Christ is the prophecied Mel●ias By Christs resurrection we know him to be the Messias as in whom the prophecies were fulfilled Assurance that he is the Mediatour By it we are assured that he now executeth the office of the Mediatour that he applyeth unto us the benefit of redemption that he preserveth us perpetually in that righteousnesse which he hath applied unto us that he beginneth in us a new life and so doth also assure and ascertain us of the consummation and accomplishment of eternall life all which he could not doe except he had risen againe Affurance that he will alwaies defend his Church Seeing he now liveth and reigneth for ever we are certaine that he will preserve and defend his Church The consummation of all his benefits The last though not the least fruit of Christs resurrection is The consummation and perfecting of all his benefits and the glorifying of his Church For Christ did therefore die and is therefore risen and hath therefore perfectly delivered us from sin that we may be joynt heires with him of his kingdome and glory Col. 1.18 Rom. 8.17 He is the first-borne of the dead We are the heires of God and heires annexed with Christ He shall conforme and make us like unto himself because we live by the same spirit whereby he doth And this spirit is not unlike himselfe Rom. 8.11 If the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because that his spirit dwelleth in you John 14.3 I will come againe and receive you unto my selfe that where I am there may ye be also The summe of the fruits of Christs resurrection is that seeing Christ is risen it is manifest that he is declared to be the Son of God and as touching his humanity is endowed with that glory which becometh the nature of the Sonne of God and further that he endueth us also with his spirit regenerateth us by the vertue of his spirit and will at length consummate and perfect the new life begun in us and make us co-partners of the same his glory felicity and everlasting life The meaning of the Article He rose againe from the dead Now what is the meaning of this Article I beleeve in Christ which rose againe the third day from the dead Answ The meaning hereof is that I beleeve 1. That Christ did truly recall his soule into his dead body and quickned it 2. That he retained a true soul and true body but both now glorified and free from all our infirmities 3. That he rose by his owne vertue and power 4. That he rose to this end to make me a partaker of his righteousnesse sanctification and glorification which he had purchased for us by his death Quest 46. How understand you that He ascended into heaven Answ That Christ his Disciples looking on was taken up from the earth into heaven a Acts 1.9 Marke 16.19 Luke 24. ●1 and yet still is there for our sakes b Hebr. 9.24 4.14 Rom. 8.34 Col. 3.1 and will be untill he come againe to judge the quick and the dead c Acts 1.11 Mat. 24.30 The Explication CHrists ascension into heaven is a
is proclaim and declare him to be no member of the Church Therefore To account one for a publican is not only to think in mind but also to pronounce him an aliant from the Church and to excommunicate him Objections against the example of the Apostles excommunicating alledged 1 Cor. 5. 2 Cor. 8.5 2 Thess 3. 1 Tim. 1. c. THey who at this day disallow the Discipline of the Church elude the example of S. Paul two wayes Some simply deny that the Apostle speaketh of Excommunication when he saith He that hath thus done let him be delivered unto Sathan For say they to deliver unto Sathan is not to excommunicate but by some miraculous punishment through Sathans means to cut off or at least curse and banne him and deliver him to Sathan to be tortured yet so that hee continue a member of the Church notwithstanding Others grant that Paul speaketh of Excommunication but they deny that the example pertaineth to us because now there are Christian Magistrates maintainers of discipline of which Magistrates the Church was destitute in the Apostles time Ans But against the former of these make the Apostles words To deliver up to Sathan To put from the Church is to excommunicate 1 Cor. 5.2 Put away from your selves that wicked man and With such a one eat not These cannot be understood of a miraculous punishment by death such as Ananias and Sapphira suffered but they signifie the ordinary authority and judgement of the Church 1. Because he saith Put ye away and reprehendeth them because they have not yet abandoned him And Yee are puffed up and have not rather sorrowed that he which hath done this deed might be put from among you Now all these had not the gift which Peter had Therefore hee should wrongfully reprove them for not shewing some miracle 2. Because he requireth the consent of the Church When ye are gathered together 1 Cor. 5.4 and my spirit But there was no need of such a concourse or an assembly for manifestation of a miracle 3. Because hee will that the incestuous person be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh 1 Cor. 5.5 that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus that is he will have him so dealt withall that notwithstanding he might live and repent that his flesh might be tamed with true contrition that the old man might be mortified and the new man quickned Wherefore the Apostle would not that he should be slain 4. He speaketh of the separating and exiling him from the Church when he saith Purge out the old leaven Company not together with fornicators With such a one eat not All these speeches intimate a separation not any mortall punishment 5. The conference of places of Scripture teacheth that they who either in word or in life deny the Christian faith are not to be reputed Christians Ambrose saith that this incestuous person when his offence was once known was to be banished from the company of the brotherhood that is from the Church Now they who are cast out of the Church are worthily said to be delivered up to Sathan because they are conversant and resident in his kingdome as long as they repent not Three causes why Paul commanded the incestuous person to be excommunicated They who maintaine the later opinion alledge a false cause when they say that Paul therefore would have the incestuous person excommunicated because then there was no Christian Magistrate For Paul rendreth farre different reasons hereof which continue in force unto this day 1. The Commandement of Christ When yee are gathered together and my spirit in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that is by that authority and warrant of Christ Tell it unto the Church Let him be unto thee as an Heathen or a Publican 2. That the excommunicated person might repent and be saved Let him be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus 3. Lest others should be tainted and infected with the same fore Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lumpe For Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us that we should live with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth and become a new sprinkling and cast out the old leaven of maliciousnesse and wickednesse or at least if we cannot cast it all out yet that we professe not the toleration thereof These are the causes why Paul commanded that the incestuous person should be excommunicated out of the Church but we no where reade that the Church did therefore excommunicate wicked persons because it wanted a Christian Magistrate For the duties of the Church and of the Magistrate alwayes were and yet remaine distinct It is certaine then that the Apostle speaketh of Excommunication when he saith Deliver him unto Sathan Put away the wicked man from among you and that he treateth of the ordinary power of the Church against malefactors whether any miracle then betide or no. Object 1. Nathan excommunicated not David an adulterer Therefore Paul excommunicated not the incestuous person Answ David repented after the first warning therefore he ought not to be excommunicated Paul also speaketh with condition of repentance Put him away to wit if he repent not or hath not already repented on which repentance he commandeth that he be received againe This condition we must necessarily understand because that Christ would that certaine degrees of admonition should first be practised and God at any time receiveth the penitent into favour The Theefe on the Crosse is not excommunicated but upon his repentance received of Christ Mat. 18.28 If thy brother shall sin against thee untill seventy times seven times thou shalt forgive him Wherefore not offenders but obstinate persons of which sort David was none are to be excommunicated Object 2. Christ excommunicated none Therefore Paul did it not neither ought the Church to excommunicate any Ans The consequence is not good to argue from the deniall of the fact to the deniall of the right and lawfulnesse of the fact The argument is no better than this Christ baptised none Therefore Paul might not and the Church may not baptise any For Christ indeed baptised none but he commanded his Apostles to baptise all Nations So likewise he excommunicated none but he commanded the Church to excommunicate the rebellious and obstinate Mat. 18.17 5.24 Acts 8.36 Let him be unto thee as an Heathen Leave thy gift at the Altar c. Philip said to the Eunuch Thou maist be baptised if thou beleevest with all thine heart Therefore he had not baptised him if he had not beleeved Object 3 Paul saith Ye have not * * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrowed that he which hath done this deed 1 Cor. 5.25 might be put from among you Therefore they should have prayed that God would miraculously take him away by the Devill Answ Yee
have not sorrowed signifieth ye have not been earnest in taking away that scandall which should be removed from you from you I say because in the end Paul saith Put away from your selves that wicked man Therefore these words That he might be put from among you signifie that he was to be cut off not by Sathan but by the Church Repl. Paul useth the same word of himselfe 2 Cor. 12.21 I shall * * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bewaile many of them which have sinned already and have not repented c. Here to bewaile signifieth not to be carefull of removing a scandall from the Church Therefore neither in the former place Answ We answer out of the text In that place he saith If I come againe I will not spare 2 Cor. 13.1 Where he noteth the cause of this his griefe in that he is constrained to punish severely the obstinate that is in the end to excommunicate them out of the Church Object 4. The Apostle expoundeth himselfe that he did not enjoyne the Corinthians to excommunicate the incestuous person when he saith 2 Cor. 2.6 It is sufficient unto the same man that he was rebuked of many Therefore those words Account him for a Heathen and a Publican and Put him away from among you signifie onely a rebuking Answ This reason deceiveth by a fallacy of consequent because a generall rule is not builded upon an example For because here was need of rebuking only seeing the party repented it doth not therefore follow that alwaies the same only is required Repl. What they did that Paul commanded But they did only reprehend and rebuke Therefore Paul commanded them onely to reprehend him when he commanded them to put him away from among them and to deliver him up to Sathan Ans Paul commanded that they should reprehend him but not that only because he commanded also that they should reject him if he repented not But if he repented it should be sufficient to reprehend and rebuke him Wherefore it doth not follow They only reprehended him Therefore Paul commanded them only to reprehend him This is a true answer unto the former reply but there is another also cleere and manifest For the Greek word which the Apostle here useth signifieth not only reprehension and rebuking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also that excommunication which is by words only And in this sense not onely it may but also must be taken because he saith So that now contrariwise yee ought rather to forgive him Therefore he was now excommunicated and not as yet received but to be received Neither was he only reprehended and rebuked but also cast out and rejected Matth. 18. And when also he saith Of many hereby is confirmed that by the name of the Church whereof Christ speaketh is not understood the common multitude but the chiefe Governours of the Church Againe For this cause did I write saith the Apostle that I might know the proofe of you whether you would be obedient in all things He praiseth them therefore because they obeyed Wherefore before repentance he forbiddeth That they company not together with the excommunicated person And further he also saith I pray you that you would confirme your love towards him The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we interpret to confirme signifieth by publike sentence to speake a thing So it is taken Galat. 5.15 A mans covenant when it is confirmed that is ratified by publike authority The Apostles meaning therefore here is that they should declare their love towards that man by publike testimony Therefore to forgive is to receive the excommunicated person into favour and that doth he often repeat Now there was also some space betweene the writing of the former and the later Epistle to the Corinthians Therefore he stood in the meane time excommunicated In the former Epistle Paul saith That he heareth that some wicked persons were among the flocke Them he willeth to be excommunicated And it is likely that the Corinthians obeyed this his commandment in excommunicating them and so wrote to Paul that they had obeyed him therein because in his second Epistle Chap. 2. he commendeth them and willeth them to receive againe the incestuous person upon repentance Object 5. Excommunication needeth no excuse but Paul excuseth himselfe for that he had commanded him to be delivered up to Sathan Therefore he commanded not that he should be excommunicated but enjoyned some more grievous penance Answ The Major is false because excommunication from the Church and Kingdome of Christ whereas it is a most grievous punishment it requireth a farre greater excuse than any bodily punishment Object 6. The Ministers cannot shut men out of the Kingdome of God Therefore Paul commandeth them no such matter Ans To the Antecedent we answer that they indeed cannot by their owne authority but they can in Christs name according to the Apostles direction When ye are gathered together and my spirit in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ Againe they cannot cast men out of Gods Kingdome but they both can and ought to denounce rejection unto such as God professeth in his word that he doth reject For to excommunicate is nothing else but by denouncing to obstinate offenders their rejection from God to subscribe unto Gods divine censure Now this the Church not onely can but ought also to doe Therefore Paul reprehended the Corinthians because they excommunicated not the incestuous adulterer but expected untill they were admonished hereof Therefore he reprehendeth them because they had swerved from the common rule that is performed not the known and ordinary office of the Church that according to the commandement they should account of him as of an heathen or publican Obj. 7. Paul commandeth that he should be delivered to Sathan for the destruction of the flesh But the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 importing destruction signifieth every-where in Scripture violent death Therefore here in this place also is insinuated a miraculous slaying of the body by Sathan that the soule might be saved Ans It appeareth out of the circumstances that destruction here signifieth the mortifying of the old man for the opposition of the flesh and the spirit and the very phrase is most usuall with Paul in this sense The whole scope also of the matter ratifieth the same for he will that he should be delivered unto Sathan that the flesh may be mortified and the spirit saved that is that he may be converted in this life and saved in the life to come Therefore his meaning is not that he should be miraculously destroyed and deprived of life Rep. But no man can be delivered unto Sathan for his conversion or the mortification of the old man in him Ans It is true that this delivery and giving over to Sathan of it selfe worketh no such effect but by accident that is it is of Gods mercy that the elect are reformed by chastisements And in the same sense wherewith
assoiled out of the place of Paul 1 Cor. 15.24 He shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father Wherefore as concerning the forme and manner of administration he shall deliver the kingdome after our glorification that is he shall cease to discharge the office of the Mediatour There shall be no need of conversion of purging out of sin of protecting of us against our enemies he shall not gather the Church he shall not raise the dead he shall not glorifie nor perfect them because then they shall be perfect He shall not teach them because they shall be all taught of God Prophecies shall be abolished tongues shall cease and knowledge shall vanish away because When that which is perfect is come 1 Cor. 13.8 10. then that which is in part shall be abolished There shall be therefore no need of these instruments and meanes any longer by which now the Church is gathered and saved There shall no longer be any enemy the Church shall gloriously reigne with Christ and God shall be all in all that is shall manifest himself immediatly unto the blessed Saints In that City which is that consummate kingdome I saw no Temple Revel 21.22 23. for the Lord Almighty and the Lambe are the temple of it And the City hath no need of the Sun neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God did light it and the Lambe is the light of it 3. Who is King and Head in Gods Kingdome The whole three persons Christ in a speciall and particular manner THe Head or King of this kingdome is but one because the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are but one God Now the Father is King and ruleth by the Son and the holy Ghost Christ the Son is King and Head of this Kingdome after a singular maner 1. Because he sitteth God at the right hand of God and ruleth with equall power with the Father 2. Because he is Mediator that is Because he is the person by which God worketh immediately and giveth the holy Ghost John 15.26 Ephes 1 22● I will send him unto you from the Father He hath appointed him over all things to be the head to be Church 4. Who are the Citizens or Subjects of Gods Kingdome THe Citizens of this kingdome are 1. The Angels in heaven confirmed and established in grace 2. The blessed Saints in heaven who are called the Church triumphant 3. The godly or converted in this life who have as yet certaine remaines of sin and are called the Church militant 4. Hypocrites namely the called of the visible Church only but not elected These are counterfeit and apparent Citizens to the outward shew who indeed are not the Citizens of Christs kingdome but only in name but are in truth the bond-slaves of the Divell Hypocrites notwithstanding are called the Citizens of the kingdome Mat. 8.12 22.16 as the Jews are termed by Christ the sons and children of the kingdome Of these it is said The first shall be last that is they who will be accounted first and yet are not shall be last that is shall be declared to be none of the kingdome of God 5. What are the Laws of this kingdome THe Laws whereby this kingdome is administred and governed are 1. The word of God or the doctrine of the Law and Gospel 2. The efficacy of the holy Ghost working and reigning by the word in the hearts of the elect 6. What benefits are bestowed on the subjects of this kingdome THere is no kingdome which hath not regard to the commodities of the subjects And Aristotle writeth to Alexander A kingdome is not injury but bountifulnesse Wherefore this kingdome hath also his proper goods and commodities These are the spirituall and eternall benefits of Christ as true faith and conversion remission of sinnes righteousnesse preservation therein and the continuance of the holy Ghost John 8.38 glorification and life everlasting If the Sonne shall make you free yee shall be free indeed Rom. 14.17 The Kingdome of God is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost John 14.27 My peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you not as the world giveth give I unto you 7. Who are the enemies and foes of this kingdome THe enemies of this kingdome are the Divels and wicked men Now of wicked men some are in the Church as hypocrites who callenge to themselves the name and title of Citizens of the kingdome when as they are nothing lesse others are without the Church and professed enemies as Turks Jews Samosatenians Arrians and whosoever defend errours against the grounds and foundations of Religion 8. In what place this kingdome is administred THis kingdome as concerning the beginning or gathering thereof is administred here on earth yet so that it is not in any one certain place Iland Province People 1 Tim. 2.8 but is spread through the whole world I will that the men pray every-where Where two or three are gathered together in my Name Mat. 18.20 there am I in the midst of them We never go out of this kingdome if we abide in true faith This kingdome as touching the consummation or perfection thereof is administred in heaven And although I goe to prepare a place for you John 14.3 12.26 17.24 1 Thes 4.17 I will come againe and receive you unto my selfe that where I am there may ye be also Where I am there shall also my servant be Father I will that they which thou hast given me be with me even where I am We shall be caught up to meet the Lord. 9. What is the time of the durance and continuance of this kingdome THe beginning and gathering of this kingdome dureth from the worlds beginning to the end thereof because at all times there were are and shall be some members of the true Church whether few or many to be gathered out of this world to the kingdome of God The consummation or perfection of this kingdome shall indure from the glorifying of the godly to all eternity 1 Cor. 15.24 Then shall be the end when he hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father which is to be understood as was before observed as touching this forme of administration of that kingdome 10. How this kingdome cometh It cometh foure waies THis kingdome cometh to us foure waies 1. By the preaching of the Gospel whereby is revealed the light of the true and heavenly doctrine 2. By conversion when some are converted to God and are endued of God with faith and repentance 3. By making progresse or increase when the godly receive increase or when the proper gifts and blessings of the faithfull are augmented with perpetuall increase in the godly or converted Revel 22.11 He that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still 4. By consummation and full accomplishment when the godly
shall be glorified in the second coming of our Lord. Revel 22.20 Even so come Lord Jesus 11. Why we are to desire that the kingdome of God come WE ought to desire that the kingdome of God both that which is here begun and that which is else-where to be perfected come 1. For the glory of God or in respect of the first petition because that we may sanctifie and hallow his Name it is required that he rule us by his word and spirit For except God erect in us this his kingdome and deliver us out of the kingdome of the Devill we shall never hallow and sanctifie his Name but rather shall defile and pollute it 2. Because God will give his kingdome onely to those that aske it like as he giveth the holy Ghost unto them only that ask him Out of these premisses we plainly perceive what it is which we ask him in this petition Here therefore we desire that God will by his Son The summe of this petition our Mediatour sent from the very beginning into the world 1. Preserve the Ministery which he hath ordained 2. Gather his Church by the Ministery of his word and the working of the holy Ghost 3. Rule his Church gathered and us the members thereof with his holy Spirit who may conforme us unto him soften our hearts regenerate our wils 4. Defend us and his whole Church against our enemies and tyrants 5. Cast away his and our enemies into eternall paines wherewith he may punish them for ever 6. And at length deliver his Church from all evils and glorifie it in the world to come with life everlasting Object That which cometh neither sooner nor later for our prayers is in vaine desired of us and therefore we are not to desire it But the kingdome of God that is the delivery of the Church from all evils and miseries shall come neither sooner nor later for our prayers then God hath decreed it Therefore we are not to desire the delivery of the Church Answ The Major is false For so then might we conclude or reason of all Gods benefits that they are not to be desired seeing they all remain in the counsell and purpose of God Repl. 1. But God hath promised other benefits with this condition that we must aske and desire them Answ So also shall full delivery from all evils befall them only in that day who in their afflictions and crosse wish for and desire that delivery and pray that this delivery may come speedily according to the decree of God Revel 22.20 and that no one elect may be excluded Repl. 2. But we must not desire that God would hasten the delivery of his Church because that would be with losse of many of the elect who are not as yet borne Answ When we desire that God would hasten the delivery of his Church we desire also that whosoever of the elect are as yet remaining may be all speedily gathered not one of them being excluded and this we crave Why we desire the speedy comming of Christs Kingdome 1. That the Church may speedily be delivered that all the godly may rest from their labours 2. That there may be a swift end of wickednesse and impieties and the enemies may be cast into everlasting pains 3. That the glory of God may soone be manifested in this perfect delivery of the Church and finall abjection of the enemies thereof This delivery therefore of us and of the whole Church we must crave of the Lord with daily prayers if so we will our selves at the length be delivered with the Church But they which desire not the Lords coming to them he also shall not come Seeing then we must desire that his kingdome may come and therefore must withall desire our full delivery hereby it is evident how impious a thing it is to be afraid of the judgement of God and the last day of doome because such as do this shew themselves not to be godly neither to desire the full deliverance and glorifying Object But terrible will the day of judgement be Therefore we are not to desire it Answ It will be terrible but to the wicked only For unto the godly it is said Lift up your heads Luke 21.28 Therefore God will have them to rejoyce and to wish for the approaching of that day For what thou rejoycest in that also thou wishest Come Lord Jesus Revel 22.17 ON THE 49. SABBATH Quest 124. What is the third petition Answ Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven that is Grant that we and all men renouncing and forsaking our owne will a Mit. 16.24 Tit. 2.11 12. may readily and without any grudging obey thy will which onely is holy b Luke 22.24 Ephes 5.10 Rom. 12.2 and that so every of us may faithfully and cheerfully performe that duty and charge which thou hast committed unto us c 1 Cor. 7.24 even as the blessed Angels do in heaven d Psal 103 20 21. The Explication HEre we are to consider 1. What the will of God is 2. What we here desire and how this petition differeth from the second 3. Why this petition is necessary 4. Why that clause is inserted As it is in Heaven 1. What Gods will is THe Will of God signifieth in Scripture Psal 103.21 1 Thes 4.3 1. The Commandment of God Ye his servants that do his will This is the will of God even your sanctification 2. It signifieth the events or rather Gods decree concerning future events in which that his decree is daily revealed Mat. 25.30 Esay 46.10 Rom. 9.19 Not as I will but as thou wilt My counsell shall stand and I will do whatsoever I will Who hath resisted his will 2. What we here desire and how this petition differeth from the second THy will be done that is Cause and grant that we men may do not our will but thy will which only is just and holy and that we may obey thee We desire then A deniall of our selves which consisteth of two parts The deniall of our selves which is two-fold 1. That we may be ready to renounce all our own affections which are dis-agreeing from the law of God A right and ready execution of our duty Our duty is twofold 2. That we may be ready also to undergo our crosse and to ascribe and submit our selves willingly unto God in all things We therefore desire that God will give us his grace whereby we may be able to deny our own corrupt will and forgo all things which are repugnant to the will of God We desire a right and ready execution of our duty that every man in his vocation may cheerfully serve God and execute his will as well in common as generall duties and in his proper and speciall duty Common Our common duty is that which is required not of us only but of all Christians also and compriseth vertues necessary for all the
heed lest he fall A declaration of the miseries of this life A declaration of the miseries of this life lest we should wexe secure and love and cleave to the world A confession of Gods providence A confession of Gods providence whereby as Cyprian testifieth is shewed that the Divell can effect nothing against us except God first permit him that so our whole feare and reverence might bend to God-wards seeing in our temptations that wicked one can doe nothing except power be given him of God Now the Divell hath power over us according as our sinnes reigne in us as it is said Who gave Jacob for a spoile Esay 42.24 and Israel to the robbers did not the Lord because we have sinned against him For they would not walke in his wayes neither be obedient unto his Law And this power indeed is given him to a double end either to our punishment when we offend or to our glory when we are tried c. Thus far Cyprian The order and coherence of the petitions Now we are to observe the order and coherence of these petitions 1. The Lord commandeth us to desire the true knowledge of God and his promise which is the cause of all other his blessings 2. He willeth us to desire that God would governe us by his Spirit and so continually preserve and confirme us in this knowledge 3. That every of us may doe and fulfill thereby his duty in his vocation and calling 4. That he would give us those things whereby every one may doe his duty namely corporall blessings The fourth petition then agreeth with the former because if we must at all be in our own vocation and calling we must live and have things necessary for the maintenance of our life 5. He adjoyneth next after the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings a very fit objection of our unworthinesse That thou mayest give us spirituall and corporall blessings forgive us our debts Wherefore the fifth petition is the ground and foundation of the rest which being overthrowne the rest fall to ground For if thou resolve not that thou hast God gracious and favourable unto thee how shalt thou have him to be mercifull How shalt thou continue in that knowledge which thou hast not How shalt thou doe thy duty and the will of God seeing thou art his enemy and endeavourest the contrary How shalt thou ascribe all things to God How shall they turne to thy salvation 6. After the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings there followeth lastly the petition of our deliverance from evils both present and to come And from this last petition we returne againe to the first Deliver us from all evils both of crime and paine both present and to come that we may know thee to be our perfect Saviour and so thy name may be hallowed and sanctified of us Quest 128. How concludest thou this Prayer Answ For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever that is we aske and crave all things of thee because seeing both thou art our King and almighty thou art both willing and able to give them all unto us a Rom. 10.11 12. 2 P●t 2.9 And these things we therefore aske that out of them not to us but unto thy holy Name all glory may redound b John 14.15 J●●●m 33.8 9. Psalme 115.1 The Explication THis last part of prayer serveth to confirme our faith and beliefe or confidence of being heard and obtaining our desire to wit that God will and is able to give us those things which we desire Thine is the kingdome Thine is the kingdome This first reason is drawne from the duty of a King which is to heare his subjects to defend and preserve them Therefore thou O God seeing thou art our King mightier then all our enemies having all things in thy power good and evill evill so that thou art able to represse them good so that there is no good so great which thou canst not give as is agreeing and standing with thy nature and seeing we are thy subjects be present and assist us with thy power and save us as who art loving unto thy subjects and thy protection and safe-guard is alone saving and preserving He is called a King 1. Because he hath power over all creatures 2. Because he is the peculiar King of the Church The power And the power The second reason is drawne from the power of God Heare us O God and give us what we desire because thou art mightier then all our enemies thou art able to give us all things and thou only art able in thee alone resteth this power joyned with exceeding goodnesse The glory And the glory The third reason is taken from the end or finall cause We desire these things for thy glory From thee alone the true God and soveraigne King we desire and expect all good things and professe thee to be the Author and fountaine of all good things And verily because this glory is due unto thee therefore also do we desire them of thee Heare us therefore for thy glory For this petition and expectation of all good things from thee is nothing else but the attributing and yeelding unto thee thy due glory and honour and especially because thou wilt also for thy glory sake give us those things which we desire For what things serve for thy glory the same wilt thou performe and do but those things which we desire serve for thy glory therefore thou wilt give them us Give us therefore these things that we desire and the glory shall returne and redound unto thee if thou deliver us For so shall thy kingdome and power and glory be manifested Object We seeme to bring perswasive and moving arguments unto God whereby we may move him to doe what we desire But in vaine are reasons used to him who is unchangeable God is unchangeable Therefore in vaine use we these reasons unto him Ans This is a fallacy putting that for a cause which is no cause For we grant this argument in respect of God but not in respect of us For we do not when we thus speak use reasons to move God or perswade him to do it but to perswade our selves that God will do this and to confirm and assure us that we shall be heard and to acknowledge our necessity and the goodnesse and truth of God Wherefore these reasons are not adjoyned to our prayers as thereby to move God but only to confirme and assure us that God will doe what we desire because these are the causes why he doth it Thou art a most good King therefore thou wilt give these things to thy subjects Thou art most powerfull and mighty therefore thou wilt shew thy power in giving these gifts which are most great and which can be given of none other but of thee alone It shall be to thy glory therefore thou wilt doe it because thou hast care of
breadth move his body from the earth 6. To ascend to heaven is to put off infirmity to passe to a heavenly and immortall state to vanish to be united to God to sit at Gods right hand to be raised to high honours 7. That Christ in his Ascension hid himselfe in a cloud and Proteus-like turned himselfe into shapes or as they say he put on a cloudy hood as the Poets feigne of Venus Hom. Illiad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who when she delivered Paris hid him in a thick cloud So Jeremie Lament 3.44 Thou hast opposed to thy selfe a thick cloud that the speeth may not passe through 8. We will not omit these bitter scoffes of the Brentians that by Mathematicall computation Christ in regard of the bulke and violent motion of his body upward hath not as yet perhaps pierced the planeticall Spheres and arrived unto his Fathers house 9. That there he is walking up and downe or perhaps laid downe to rest ARTICLE IV. of Christs sitting at the right hand of God I. CHrists sitting at the right hand of God is not the ascension it selfe into heaven for they differ 1. In order of time for he first ascended before he sat downe at Gods right a hand 2. In their forme Ascension is a locall motion b upward Session is the glorious condition of the person c ascending 3. In their proximate ends Ascension was performed for the d Session but Session for the e Church 4. In duration Ascension was done but once as being a transient act but Session as an immanent act the Kingdome and glory of Christ indure for f ever Lastly in their subjects for Ascension belongs also to the g Saints but the Session at Gods right hand is the glory of the exalted Mediatour h alone Testimonies of Scripture a Mark 16.19 After that the Lord had spoken to them he was received up into heaven and sits at Gods right hand b Acts 1.9 Whilst his Disciples beheld he was lifted up c Heb. 8.1 We have such an High-Priest who is set downe at the right hand of the throne of the majesty in the heavens d Phil. 2.9 Wherefore God hath highly exalted him and hath given him a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee should how 1 Pet. 3.22 Christ at the right hand of God is gone into heaven Heb. 9.24 Christ is entred into heaven that he might appeare in the sight of God for us e Ephes 4.10 Christ hath ascended far above all heavens that he might fill all things c. f Luke 1.33 Of his Kingdome there shall be no end 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet g 1 Thes 4.17 We shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall we ever be with the Lord. h Heb. 1.13 To which of the Angels said he at any time Sit at my right hand II. Neither is this sitting of Christ the Incarnation it selfe or the personall union of the flesh with the Word as some giddy heads contend because 1. In the Symbole in which is no tautologie these are distinguished 2. No where in Scripture is the humanity said to sit at the Word but to be assumed by the a Word 3. The union was made in the womb of the mother the sitting is in b heaven 4. The union was in the first minute of the conception but the sitting began after the e ascension 5. The union is simply immutable the sitting is in some sort mutable in respect of the externall forme of the Kingdome which as the Apostle d witnesseth when death is abolished shall be altogether immediate and without enemy for now Christ being in the midst of his enemies as a Rose among thornes reignes by divers media or governes by divers meanes but then he shall reigne without any medium or enemy because God shall be all e in all Testimonies of Scripture a Heb. 2.16 For he did not assume the Angels John 1.14 The Word was made flesh bc Luke 1.31 Thou shalt conceive in thy womb and shalt bring forth a Son Ephes 1.20 God hath placed Christ at his right hand in heaven d 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet the last enemy that shall be destroyed is death e Rev. 21.23 Esay 60.19 The Sun shall no more be thy light by day nor shall the brightnesse of the Moone enlighten thee but the Lord shall be thy everlasting light III. But the full and absolute glory of Christ being exalted in his heavenly Priesthood and Kingdome is expressed by this phrase taken from humane affaires and applyed to divine because Kings do most honour those whom they place at their right hand for by the right hand of God who is a spirit we cannot understand any corporeall member or place neither doth the sitting at Gods right hand signifie the corporall situation of Christ for except we understand this spiritually Tom. 6. contra Scr. Arian saith Austine the Father will be upon the Sons left hand IV. And this glory is so proper to Christ the Mediatour that it belongs not to the Father nor to the Holy Ghost much lesse to any creature for it was not said to the Father nor to the Holy Ghost nor to any Angel Sit at my right hand Heb. 1.13 untill I make thine enemies thy foot-stoole But of the Son only it is said 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne untill c. Whence it followes that to sit at Gods right hand is not the same that Christs humane nature omnipotent omniscient omnipresent or lastly to be equall with God or to be God himselfe whether he hath obtained that dignity by the personall union or by his ascending into heaven or by other cause V. But albeit this glory of the Mediatour is to us ineffable while we are in this life yet if we carefully compare the Apostles three places by which he chiefely describes it we shall in some manner conceive it that it principally consisteth in these Testimonies of Scripture touching Christs sitting at Gods right hand Ephes 1.20 21 22 23. God raised Christ from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places Far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come And hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be head over all things to the Church Which is his body the fulnesse of him that silleth all in all 1 Cor. 15.24 25 26. Then cometh the end when he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father when he shall have put downe all rule and all authority and power For he must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death Phil. 2.9 10. Therefore God hath highly
very God and eternall life Christ which is God over all blessed for ever Therefore the Son is that one and the same God or that selfe-same divine essence which is God 3. Whose essence is distinct their spirit is not one in essence which proceedeth of both and is proper unto both but is either of a diverse essence or compound whether he be of a part or of the whole essence of them of whom he proceedeth But one and the same is the Spirit of the Father and the Son proceeding of both proper unto both and by him both work effectually Gal. 46. God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Therefore the Father and the Son are one essence and the same God Otherwise each essence should have his proper spirit and diverse 4. Vnto whom the eternall Father communicateth the same essence which himselfe hath and that whole hee is of the same essence with him Vnto the eternall Son the eternall Father communicateth his essence the same and whole Therefore the Sonne is of the same essence with the Father The Minor is proved because Christ is the onely begotten and proper Sonne of the Father begotten therefore of the essence of the Father But the divine Essence or God-head by reason of the immensity and great simplenesse thereof can neither be multiplied nor divided Therefore the Father communicateth the same and that whole unto the Son Wherefore as in respect that it is the whole essence of the God-head which is commmunicated unto him of the Father hee is co-equall with the Father so in respect that it is the same which the Father hath and retaineth hee is co-essentiall and consubstantiall with the Father Certaine generall heads of those reasons wherewith Heretickes both old and new oppugne this Doctrine That there is both an equall and one and the same God-head of the Father and the Son and also of the holy Ghost with Rules whereby answer may be easily and soundly made unto their objections 1. THe Heretickes build on most false principles and grounds such as this is If the Father begot one of his substance he could also have begotten moe and the Son also might beget another 1. Rule or moe sons For answer this Rule is to be held Wee are to judge of God according to his owne word not according to Hereticall braines and he is to be acknowledged such as he revealeth himselfe in his word as being the eternall Father with the only begotten Son and the holy Ghost For God hath so revealed himselfe that he begot the Son and that one Son only Therefore wee ought to rest here and not to imagine false conceits of our owne 2. They reason out of naturall principles or grounds which are such as are true in things created and finite but false in God who is an essence infinite as Three cannot be one Three persons really distinct cannot be one essence An infinite person cannot beget an infinite person That which begetteth and that which is begotten are not one and the same essence Likewise He that communicateth his whole essence to another doth not himselfe remaine the same which he was To this we answer by another Rule 2. Rule Those principles which are true of a finite nature are foolishly and impiously translated to the infinite essence of God And arguments of this sort are refuted not by a simple deniall of them but by distinguishing between natures capable and uncapable of those principles whereon they ground 3. Of the properties of the humane nature in Christ they inferre the inequality and diversity of his God-head As Christ suffered died c. Therefore he is not God The Rule whereby we answer to this 3. R●el is Those things which are proper to the humane nature are not to be drawn to the divine nature For Christ died not as God but as man 4. They confound the office of the Mediatour with the nature or person that is they goe from the office to the nature As Christ is sent of the Father Therefore he is inferiour to the Father 4. Rule The Rule to answer this is The inequality of office doth not inferre inequality of nature or persons Or as Cyril saith The sending and obedience take not away the equality of power or essence So the Father is said to be greater than the Son not in nature or God-head but in manifestation For not the Father but the Son was made base and miserable in the humane nature assumed Where then Christ saith that his Father is greater than he it is meant in respect of his humane nature and in respect of his office of the Mediatourship 5. They exclude and shut out the Son and the holy Ghost from those things which are attributed unto the Father as the fountain of all divine operations As The Son saith that his workes are the workes of the Father Therefore hee is not authour of them neither doth hee those works of his own power but only is the instrument whereby God the Father doth them The Rule and Answer hereto is 5. Rule Those things which are ascribed unto the Father as fountain are not removed from the Son or the holy Ghost to whom they are communicated that they may have them their owne and proper For the Son worketh likewise and in like manner Vnto whom the Father likewise did give to have life in himselfe 6. They detract those things from the Son and the holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 5.26 whereby the Divinity in the person of the Father is discerned from creatures or false gods To which this Rule answereth 6 Rule As often as in Scripture one person of the God-head is opposed to creatures or false gods and is discerned from them the other persons are not excluded from the God-head but onely those things are excluded against which the comparison is made Or The divine properties operations and honour are so attributed to one of the persons as that notwithstanding they are not taken away from the other persons of the God-head but onely from creatures Againe A superlative or exclusive speech used of one person doth not exclude the other persons of the God-head but creatures and feigned gods unto whom the true God either in one or in moe persons is opposed John 10.25 The Father is greater then all that is then all creatures not then the Son or the holy Ghost I give eternall life unto them that is no creature doth give it For both the Father also and the holy Ghost doe quicken and give life The Father onely knoweth the day of judgment that is no creature That they may know thee to be the onely very God Mat. 24.26 John 17.3 here the Son is not excluded from true Deity but Idols and false gods to which God the Father is opposed 7. They wrest the phrase of Scripture to another sense as 1 Cor. 15.24 7. Rule The Son shall deliver up