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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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so called because it is to be received Sacramente Tertullian was the first that used this word the Church hath used it a long time it being above fourteen hundred years since he wrote Some think the names of Gods appointing are better then what are given by Ecclesiastical custom II. The Proper Nature of a Sacrament It is an applying of the Covenant of Grace to Gods people for their good by visible Signs Signum est quod praeter speciem quam ingerit sensibus aliud quidpiam in cognitionem inducit A sign is that which represents one thing to the eye and outward senses and another to the minde Circumcision is called a sign and a seal Rom. 4. 11. See Gen. 17. 11. Some signs are only significant as the ivie of wine some obsignative as the seal the thing contained in the Writ some exhibitive as anointing the Prophetical Kingly or Priestly Office The Sacraments do not only signifie the promise of Grace in Christ but also seal and exhibit the thing promised Vossius de Sacramentorum vi efficacia The Sacraments are signs to represent Instruments to convey Seals to confirm the Covenant Others thus distinguish of Signs First Some only serve to signifie and call to remembrance as the Picture of a man is such a sign as cals him to remembrance Secondly A ratifying sign as a Seal if one conveys Lands or Goods to another and sets his Seal to it this further clears his Title Thirdly Which exhibit the putting on a Cap or Ring makes him a Master or Doctor the delivering of one a Staff is the making of him a Lord Chamberlain the Sacrament is all these Christ cals to thy remembrance and sets before thy eyes all the benefits that come by him and shews thee all thy duties thou owest him 2. It is a sealing sign so circumcision is called Christ Grace the Promises Heaven are thine 3. It is an exhibiting sign brings Christ to the beleever communicates him more to him What ever other Ordinance the Church hath wanted ever since the Lord had a Church on earth it hath had this When man was perfect God gave him Sacraments even in Paradise the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Some Sacraments God gave unto man 1. In his innocent estate which were two 1. The Tree of Life 2. The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. 2. In his corrupt estate 1. Either before Christ prefiguring him 2. Or after Christ as memorials of him The Sacraments before Christ were 1. Either such as did belong to all sorts of people 1. The Flood and Noahs preservation in it 2. The Rainbow 2. Such as were peculiarly appointed to the Jews 1. Extraordinary during but for once or a short time and answering either to Baptism as 1 Cor. 10. 1. The Red Sea 2. The Cloud or to the Lords Supper 1. Manna 2. The Water flowing out of the Rock 2. Ordinary as 1. Circumcision answering to our Baptism Col. 1. 2. 2. The Passeover answering to the Lords Supper The Sacraments after Christs coming to continue till the end of the world were 1. Baptism 2. The Lords Supper III. What is the use of the Sacraments in the Church and what benefit the people of God receive from them They convey the mercies of the whole Covenant of Grace therefore Circumcision is called the Covenant Gen. 17. All the benefits of Christ are applied in the Sacraments the water out of the Rock is called Christ 1 Cor. 10. God doth nothing by the Word or Prayer but this Ordinance doth the same thing the one of the Sacraments is for begetting of life the other for confirming it It is an application of the whole Covenant of grace in a sign IV. The Parts of a Sacrament A Sacrament taken in its full extent comprehendeth two things in it 1. Rem terrenam That which is outward and visible which the Schools call properly Sacramentum And 2. Rem coelestem That which is inward and invisible which they term Rem Sacramenti the principal thing exhibited in the Sacrament 3. This sign must have the expresse Commandment of Christ for none can institute a Sacrament but he that can give the inward grace 4. There must be a promise of divine grace else it is no seal and it must be annexed to the Sacrament by God The command is for our warrant the promise for our encouragement In Baptism 1. the signum is washing with water 2. the signatum the bloud of Christ applied by the Spirit Iohn 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. This was represented by the vision at our Saviours Baptism of the holy Ghost descending upon him in the similitude of a Dove As in our natural birth the body is washt with water from the pollution it brings with it into the world so in our regeneration or second birth the soul is purified by the Spirit from the guilt and pollution of sinne See Ezek. 16. 4 5. and Iohn 15. 5. 3. Christs command is Matth. 28. 19. Go and baptize 4. His promise is He that beleeves and is baptized shall be saved So in the Eucharist the outward and visible sign is the Bread and Wine 2. There is an Analogy between Bread and Wine which nourisheth the body and Christs body and bloud which nourisheth the soul. 3. A promise of saving grace to all that use the outward rites according to Christs institution Matth. 26. 28. V. The Necessity of the Sacraments They are necessary only Necessitate Praecepti not medii men may be saved without them That is necessary to the salvation of man without which he cannot possibly be saved These things are either 1. Simply necessary on mans part acknowledgment of sinne faith in Christ Jesus and repentance 2. So farre necessary as that the contempt or neglect of them bars a man of salvation Such are the Sacraments and outward profession The neglect of Circumcision and of the Passeover and the abuse of the Sacrifice of Peace-offerings by eating the same in uncleannesse wittingly was to be punished with cutting off No man was circumcised in those fourty years in which the Israelites were in the wilderness but many were born and died in that time Mark 16. 16. he saith He that beleeves not shall be condemned not he that beleeves not and is not baptized shall be condemned See that place Iohn 3. 5. answered in my Annotations VI. The Efficacy of the Sacraments The Papists say the Sacraments conferre grace by the work wrought as the pen of itself writeth the hand of the writer moving it so the Sacraments of themselves sanctifie being administred by the Minister They hold the efficacy of the Sacraments to be so great that there needeth no preparation or qualification of the receiver The Reformed Churches maintain That except the receiver be thus and thus qualified he loseth the benefit of the Sacraments See Acts 10. 47. Sacraments do not conferre grace by the actual doing and
315 Distinguished l. 4. p. 316 Four things in sin ibid. A raigning sin what and how known l. 4. p. 317 The evil of sin l. 4 318. to 320 The degrees of sin l. 4. 321 322 Sins of omission worse then sins of commission in some respects l. 4. p. 323 What sins make us like the devil ● 3. p. 287 Sins against the Gospel greater then against the Law l. 4. p. 323 324 All sins are mortal l. 4. p. 324 to 327 God not the cause of sin l. 4. p. 326. to 329 How we communicate with other mens sins l. 4 p. 328 329 The punishments of sin l. 4. p. 329. to 331 National sins what l. 4. p. 331 Signs of a Christian in regard of sinne l. 4. p. ● 332 He may have great corruptions ibid. 333 Two Questions about sin resolved l. 4. p. 335 336 The Saints are carefull to preserve themselves from sin and especially their own iniquities l. 4. p. 336. to 339 The sinfulnesse of ●●n should chiefly cause us to forbear it l. 4 p. 338 We must not only avoid but abhorre sin l. 4. p 338 339 We must take heed of little sins and secret sins l. 4. p. 339 How God punisheth the sins of parents in their children l. 9. p. 769 Sitting What Christs Sitting at the right hand of his Father means l. 5. p. 441 442 Of Sitting at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 735 Socinians Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason l. 1. p. 9 Confuted l. 4. p. 330 Sorrow Christs Sorrow godly l. 5. p. 428 429 Sorrow in us what and its sanctification l. 7. p. 565 566 Spectrum unde l. 3. p. 285. m Spirit Spirit what l. 2. p. 136 138 God is a Spirit ibid. 137 Angels are Spirits l. 3. p. 270 Starres how distinguished l. 3. p. 260 Steal Steal What it is l. 9. p. 827 It is forbidden ibid. Stork Stork why so called l. 3 p. 263 Her love to her young ones and theirs likewise to her l. 3. p. 263 265 Subjects Subjects their duty l. 9. p. 832 833 Sufferings Christs great Sufferings l. 5. p. 425. to 438 S●n the making of it a great work l. 3. p. 258 259 Superstition Superstitian whence and what a great sin l. 9. p. 784 Supper The divers names of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 878 879 How described l. 8. p. 879 The ends of it l. 8. p. 688 It is to be taken in both kinds l. 8. p. 687 688 Scandalous persons are to be kept from it l. 8. p. 682 Yet one may receive with the wicked l. 8. p. 683 684 Whether Iudas received the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l 8. p. 684 685 At what time the Lords Supper was instituted and its elements l. 8. p. 685 686 The elements may not be changed l. 8. p. 689 690 The breaking of the bread in the Supper not an indifferent Ceremony l. 8. p. 690 69● It is not material whether the bread be leavened or unleavened l. 8. p. 691 692 Whether it be necessary to mingle water with the eucharistical wine l 8. p. 692 693 694 The consecration of the elements l. 8. 694 695 The elements must not be adored l. 8. p. 696 697 The Sacrament is not to be carried up and down l. 8. p. 700 The necessity of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 705 And why we must receive it l. 8. p. 706 Of preparation for it l. 8. p. 706. to 721 There must be due carriage at it l. 8. p. 731 732 And after l. 8. p. 722 How oft it ought to be received and the gesture at it l. 8. p. 732. to 736 Surety Surety what l. 5. p. 451 452 Christ is our Surety ibid. Sybils were counterfeit pieces l. 1. p. 15 Synods Synods what they are and their kindes l. 6. p. 469 470 What required to them who are to be called to them and whether General Councels may er●e l. 6. p. 470 471 Whether Councels or Synods be above the Pope l. 6. p. 472 Syriack Syriack it was spoken in our Saviours time l. 1. p. 42 The Syriack translation of the New Testament l. 1. p. 62 63 T Tale-hearing TAle-hearing Hearkning to Tale-hearers is ●●in l. 4. p. 381 382 Targum why so called l. 1. p. 60 Tempter Tempter the devil so called and why l. 3. p. 282 His wayes of Tempting ibid. How to know his Temptations l. 3. p. 284 285 Christ was Tempted by him l. 5. p. 426 427 How the devil and world Tempt and how God preserves his people l. 8. p. 650 651 Theology what it is and its several kinds l. 1. p. 2 Thessalonica a chief City in Macedonia l. 1. p. 48 Thessalonians who do best on both ib. Testament The Scripture is distinguished into the Books of the Old and New Testament l. 1 p. 28 29 Why the Scripture is called a Testament l. 1. p. 29 The Books of the Old Testament for the most part were written in Hebrew l. 1. p. 29 And how divided ibid. Of the New in Greek l. 1. p. 41 And why ibid How divided l. 1. p. 40 to 44 Thanksgiving See Feasting Thought A Christian is to make conscience of his Thoughts l. 9. p. 850 The cure of evil Thoughts l. 9. p. 8●0 Thunder what it is and its use l. 3. p. 243 244 Timothy who do best on both Books l. 1. p. 48 Titles Titles of Books not used heretofore l. 1. p. 30 31 Whence the Hebrews take the Titles of their Books l. 1. p. 31 Titus who best expounds him l. 1. p. 48 Torpedo hath a benumming quality l. 3. p. 262 Tostatus commended l. 1. p. 117 Traditions Traditions what they signifie l. 1. p. 92 93 Reasons against the Popish Traditions l. 1. p. 94. to 99 The several kinds of them l. 1. p. 95 96 Translate The Scriptures ought to be Translated into vulgar Tongues l. 1. p. 21 22 The several Translations of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 65 Transubstantiation refuted l. 8. p. 697 to 700 Trees Trees their nature and use l. 3. p. 256 to 259 The Tree of Life and Knowledge of good and evil in Paradise why so called l. 3. p. 294 Whether the Tree of Life was a Sacrament ib. Trinity Trinity the word hath sufficient ground in Scripture l. 2. p. 204 The mystery of the Trinity cannot be known by the light of nature l. 2. p. 204 Yet it is necessary to be known by them that will be saved l. 2. p. 205 A difference between Trinity and Triplicity ibid. The Doctrine of the Trinity explained and applied p. 204. to 216 True The word of God is True and certain l. 1. p. 82 God is True l. 2. p. 183 184 Truth what it is and the several kinds of it l. 2. p. 183 V VAin glory l. 4. p. 382 Vatablus commended l. 1. p. 116 Versions The several Versions of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 64 What authority they have l.
a wonder some are hot in operation some cold some in one degree some in another some will draw some heal some are sweet some four some bitter some of milde tasts In the bowels of the earth the Lord created gold silver precious stones and the face of the earth above was beautified with grasse herbs and trees differing in nature qualities and operations Plants grow till they die whence they are called vegetables At the first Herbs were the ordinary meat of men Gen. 1. 20. and they have continued ever since of necessary use both for meat to maintain life and for medicines to recover health Solomons wisdom and knowledge was such that he was able to speak of the nature of all plants From the Cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall not that he spake of the greatest tree and lest plant as some interpret it because some trees are greater than the Cedar and some plants lesser than the h●sop but because he discoursed of noble and baser plants It is likely saith Bartholinus de latere Christi cap. 8. Salomonem ad crucem Christi ejusque per hysopum contemptum respexisse That Solomon had respect to the Crosse of Christ and his contempt by hysop We must here condem our stupidity and blindness of minde that are not provoked many times by this particular to magnifie the name of God When a man hath occasion to travel thorow a close or ground how great store of herbs seeth he whose nature yea names he is ignorant of yet admireth not God in them nor confesseth his power and goodnesse Secondly We are to lament the fruit of our sinne which hath made us blinde there is nothing hurtful to mans body but some herb or other rightly applied would cure it It is a great and worthy work of God to make grasse on the earth Psal. 104. 14 15. 147. 8. He maketh grasse to grow upon the mountains The omnipotent power of God was exercised to make this creature else it could not have been and at his appointment it came forth This is one of the benefits which God promiseth to his people upon their obedience Deut. 11. 5. Zech. 10. 16. There are many things considerable in this work of making grasse First The plenty store and commonnesse of it It groweth every where and in abundance covering the face of the earth and hiding the dry and naked face thereof Secondly The colour of it It is of a green and somewhat of a dark green colour which is neither over-light nor over-dark but of an indifferent and middle nature and so most fit to content and delight the eye refresh and preserve the sight Thirdly The usefulnesse of this creature for the Cattel it is a soft covering to make the lodging of the poor beasts more easefull for them even as it were a matteresse for them to lie upon It hath a sweet juyce and verdure in it by which it is pleasant to the tastes of the beasts as any dainty meat can be to us and is fit to nourish them to be turned to bloud and flesh so to make them fat and well liking Fourthly The wayes means and manner for bringing it forth for this use the whole course of the Heavens Sun Moon and Stars which run a large race daily with great swiftnesse and the great works done in the air for producing divers Meteors do tend in great part for the bringing forth of this grasse The grasse it self hath a life and vigour in the root of it by which it draws from the earth that moysture which is agreeable to it and disperseth it likewise 1. We are dull and blinde and behold not God in this great work when we go into the fields and can scarce tread beside it We do not consider Gods greatnesse and goodnesse in making so beneficial a thing so common We let this work of God perish in respect of any spiritual use we make of it to make our souls the better 2. Let us stirre up our selves to observe Gods hand in this work with others and confesse our debt to him that gives us Commons and Pasture for all our Cattel Trees are certain plants springing from a root with a single Trunk or Stemme for the most part shooting up in height and delineated with lims sp●igs or branches Leaves are Ornamenta Arboris munimenta fructus they serve to grace the Tree make it pleasant to behold and defend the fruit from the injury of the weather The Philosopher saith Homo est arbor inversa a man is a Tree turned upside down for a Tree hath his root in the ground and his branches spread above ground but a mans root is in his head therein is the fountain of sense and motion and there doth he take in nourishment but the arms and legs are branches of this Tree they spread downward The Psalmist compares a good man to a Tree Psal. 1. 3. The Palme-tree grows in Aegypt all along the shores of the red Sea It is said to yeeld whatsoever is necessary to the life of man The pith of it is an excellent Sallet better than an Artichoake which in taste it much resembleth Of the Branches they make Bedsteds and Lattices Of the Leaves Baskets Matts Fanns of the outward half of the Codde Cordage of the inward Brushes It is the nature of this Tree though never so huge or ponderous a weight be put upon it never to yeeld to the burden but still to resist the heavinesse thereof and to endeavour to lift and raise it self the more upward for which cause it was given to Conquerours in token of victory Hence figuratively it is used for the victory it self Plurimarum Palmarum homo and for the sign of it Palmaque nobilis Terrarum Dominos evehit ad Deos. Revel 7. 9. With white robes in token of their innocency and palms in their hands in token of their victory It is reported that the Arms of the Duke of Rhoan in France which are Lozenges are to be seen in the wood or stones throughout all his Countrey so that break a stone in the middle or lopa bough of a Tree and one shall behold the grain thereof by some secret cause in nature diamonded or streaked in the fashion of a Lozenge Fullers Prophane State l. 5. c. 6. It was a great work of God in making all sorts of Trees to proceed out of the earth Psal. 104. 16 17. The nature of the Trees is wonderful in these respects principally First The way and manner of their growing and being An Oak comes from an Acorn an Apple-tree from a Kernel What a kinde of power and vertue is that which God hath put into a kernel being so small a thing that it should pull to it self by an unknown way the juyce of the earth and should send some of it downward into little small strings as it were to fasten it self in the earth
Gen. 7. 19. Paradise signifieth a Garden the word being translated out of Greek into Latine and so into French and English In Hebrew it is called Heden which signifieth Delights a Garden of all manner of Delights a place beset with all kinde of fruitful and beautiful Trees Paradise was a little model of Heaven and a sign of the great Heaven assuring Adam that if he continued in obedience to God he should be translated into Heaven to enjoy God supernaturally as there he did enjoy him naturally for the Law saying Do this and live means it of everlasting life So Mr Wheatley held but M Ball seems to differ from him in his Book of the Covenant Man was to die if he disobeyed Gen. 2. 17. which implies strongly that Gods Covenant was with him for life if he obeyed In several other Scriptures the promise is annexed This do and live Negatio fundatur in affirmatione the life promised must be answerable to the death threatned that was not only a miserable condition but a separation from God for ever in hell therefore the life promised was not only a happy condition but a translating of Adam to Heaven and his injoying of God for ever there How long Adam should have lived before he had been translated is not determined There is an innate desire in the soul after the full enjoyment of God here this instinct was not put in men in vain Rom. 3. 23. And come short of the glory of God The word signifies to fall short of the race that price and crown he ran for the full and perfect enjoyment of God See Heb. 4. and what man fell short of by sinne if he had not sinned he should have obtained This is the received opinion of Divines That if Adam had not sinned then as soon as the number of Saints had been accomplished men should have been translated from the earth to heaven from their natural life to spiritual life as we reade of Enoch and Elias Heb. 11. 6. 2 King 2. 11. Dr Hampton on Gen. 1. 26. Though Menasseh Ben Israel de fragil hum Sect. 12. saith That common opinion that Enoch was translated with his body and soul to heaven doth not take place with them and saith that R. Solomon Abrabanel Aben Ezra interpret Gen. 5. 24. of a short death See more there There were two special Trees in it one called the Tree of life the other of the knowledge of good and evil Some say it was called the Tree of Life from the effect because of the hidden power and force it had of sustaining and prolonging mans life Although it be a Dispute Whether it had this force as meat to prolong life or as a medicine to prevent death old-age and diseases as likewise whether this power in the Tree were natural or supernatural Vide Menass Ben Israel de fragil hum Sect. 4. Therefore others say it was called so not from the effect but signification because it was an outward sign that God would give them immortality if they did continue It is questioned Whether the Tree of Life was a Sacrament Paraeus answers That it was a Sacrament three wayes First As an admonition to them that the life which they had they had it from God for as often as they tasted of it they were to remember that God was the author of life Secondly As it was a symbol of a better life in heaven if he did continue in obedience Thirdly Sacramentally of Christ as in whom Adam and Angels did obtain life Revel 2. 7. He is called The Tree of Life in the midst of Paradise but that is only allegorical and allusive so that what the Tree of Life was to Adam in innocency the same is Christ to us in our corrupt estate 2. The Tree of Good and Evil. It was not so called from any internal form as if it self were knowing good and evil nor from the effect as if by eating thereof it would have procured wisdom in man and made him wiser nor yet was it called so from the lying promise of the Devil concerning omniscience for God called it so before they met together therefore it was named so from the Event for God by this name fore-told what would follow if man did not abstain from it that he should experimentally know what was good and what was evil he should practically feel what he had lost and what evil he had plunged himself into Some have thought that those words Gen. 3. 24. should not be understood historically but allegorically that is that God gave him no hopes of coming into this place again but the Text contradicts that some have understood by Cherubims some species and images of terrible creatures as we call Scare-crows but that is simple to think that Adam was so childish to be afraid of those others interpret it of the fire of Purgatory The more probable Interpretation is that by Cherubims are meant Angels who did after a visible manner shake up and down this fiery sword Moses doth therefore call them Cherubims because the Jews knew what he meant having such forms over the Ark. Therefore it is taken for Angels not simply but as they appeared in some shape It is a curiosity to enquire how long they staid there although it is certain they ceased when Paradise was destroyed which was by the Floud Therefore this serves 1. For Information to instruct us 1. That every man and woman hath a soul there is a body and a spirit which enlivens and acts the body for all performances of the Compositum we must glorifie God in both 1 Cor. 6. 20. 2. It is immortal by Gods appointing but in it self endable because it hath a beginning that it may be capable of everlasting weal or woe 3. It is so immortal that it admits of no cessation or intermission the Anabaptists say It is asleep when it parts from the body till the day of Resurrection as soon as it leaves the body it goes either to Abrahams bosome or a place of torment This opinion of the souls sleeping is repugnant to the holy Scriptures Luk. 16. 23. Phil. 1. 23 and an heresie long since condemned in the Church The soul lives after death and in a state of separation Psal. 90. 10. and we flee away that is the soul as a bird out of the shell Eccles. 12. 3. Revel 6. 9. 2 Cor. 5. 1 8 9. See Ioh. 17. 22 24. 1 Cor. 13. 12. and B. Halls Invis world l. 2. Sect. 3. 4. At the last day it shall be united with the body and the body raised up for it and both be happy or miserable for ever 2. Be thankful to God that hath given us our souls and redeemed them by the bloud of his Son Propter hanc Deus fecit mundum propter hanc Filius Dei venit in mundum Chrysost. Blesse him especially for soul-mercies Eph. 1. 3. Ioh. 3. 2 4. and let the soul praise him Psal.
determines the matter That part of Theology which treateth of God and his Nature of his Simplicity Eternity Infinitenesse is altogether contemplative for these things fall not within compasse of action that part of it which treateth of our manners and the well ordering of our lives is meerly practick for it is wholly referred unto action Theology is more contemplative then practick seeing contemplation is the scope of action for by good works we aspire unto the beatificall vision of God Theology amongst the Heathens did anciently signifie the Doctrine touching the false worship of their gods but since it is applied as the word importeth to signifie the Doctrine revealing the true and perfect way which leadeth unto blessednesse It may briefly be defined The knowledge of the truth which is according to godliness teaching how we ought to know and obey God that we may attain life everlasting and glorifie Gods name or thus Divinity is a Doctrine revealed by God in his Word which teacheth man how to know and worship God so that he may live well here and happily hereafter Divinity is the true wisdom of divine things divinely revealed to us to live well and blessedly or for our eternal Salvation Logica est ars benè disserendi Rhetorica ars benè loquendi Theologia ars benè vivendi Logick is an art of disputing well Rhetorick of speaking well Divinity of living well Tit. 2. 11 12. Iam. 1. 26 27. It is such an art as teacheth a man by the knowledge of Gods will and assistance of his power to live to his glory The best rules that the Ethicks Politicks Oeconomicks have are fetcht out of Divinity There is no true knowledge of Christ but that which is practical since every thing is then truly known when it is known in the manner it is propounded to be known But Christ is not propounded to us to be known theoretically but practically It is disputed whether Theology be Sapience or Science The genus of it is Sapience or Wisdom which agreeth first with Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 6 7. Col. 1. 19. 2. 3. Prov. 2. 3. Secondly with Reason for 1. Wisdom is conversant about the highest things and most remote from senses so Divinity is conversant about the sublimest mysteries of all 2. Wisdom hath a most certain knowledge founded on most certain principles there can be no knowledge more certain then that of faith which is proper to Divinity The difference lurketh in the subject Wisdom or Prudence is either Moral or Religious all wisdom whether moral and ethical political or oeconomical is excluded in the definition and this wisdom is restrained to divine things or all those Offices of Piety in which we are obliged by God to our neighbour The third thing in the definition is the manner of knowing which in Divinity is singular and different from all other arts viz. by Divine Revelation The fourth and last thing in the definition is the end of Divinity which is 1. Chiefest The glory of God 2. Next A good and blessed life or eternal salvation begun in this life by the communion of Grace and Holinesse but perfected in the life to come by the fruition of glory This end hath divers names in Scripture it is called The knowledge of God John 17. 3. Partaking of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. Likenesse to God 1 John 3. 2. Eternal Salvation the vision and fruition of God as the chiefest good The next end of Divinity in respect of man is eternal life or salvation of which there are two degrees 1. More imperfect and begun in this life which is called Consolation the chiefest joy and peace of Conscience arising 1. From a confidence of the pardon of sins and of freedom from the punishment of it 2. From the beginning of our Sanctification and Conformity with God with a hope and taste of future perfection in both 2. More Perfect and Consummate after this life arising from a full fruition of God when the soul and body shall be perfectly united with God III. How Divinity is to be taught In the general it is to be handled Methodically There is a great necessity of method in Divinity that being usefull both to enlighten the understanding with the clearnesse of truth and to confirm the memory that it may more faithfully retain things therefore in Divinity there will be a special need of art and orderly disposal of precepts because the minde is no where more obtuse in conceiving nor the memory more weak in retaining There is a different way of handling Divinity according to the several kinds of it Divinity is threefold 1. Succinct and brief when Divine Truth is summarily explained and confirmed by Reasons and this Divinity is called Catechetical Systematical 2. Prolix and large when Theological matters are handled particularly and fully by Definitions Divisions Arguments and Answers this is called handling of Common-Places Scholastical and Controversal Divinity 3. Textual which consists in a diligent Meditation of the holy Scriptures the right understanding of which is the end of other instructions This again is two-fold either more Succinct and applied to the understanding of the Learned as Commentaries of Divinity or more Diffuse and Popular applied to the Capacity and Affections of the Vulgar as Preaching which is called Patheticall Divinity and is especially usefull to correct the manners of men and stirre up their Affections IIII. How Divinity is to be learned There is need of a four-fold minde to the study of it 1. Of a godly and heavenly minde most ardent Prayers in our learning being frequently poured out to God the fountain of light and wisdom that dispelling the darknesse of ignorance and errour he would deign to illuminate our minds with the clear knowledge of himself we cannot acquire Divine Wisdom as we do the knowledge of other arts by our own labour and industry it is a praise to learn humane a●● of our selves here we must be taught of God 2. O● a sober minde that we may not be too curious in searching out the profound Mysteries of Religion as about the Trinity Predestination we must be wise to Sobriety and not busie our selves about perplexed and unprofitable Questions being content to know such things which are revealed to us for our Salvation 3. Of a studious and diligent minde other arts are not wont to be gotten without labour this being the Queen of arts requires therefore much pains both for its difficulty and excellency 4. Of an honest and good minde Luk. 8. 40. We must learn 1. With a denial of our wit and carnal reason not measuring the unsearchable wisdom of God by our shallow capacities 2. With denial of our wicked affections 1 Pet. 1. 2 3. 3. With a firm purpose of Obedience Ioh. 7. 17. Psal. 50. 23. Prov. 28. 28. V. The things contrary to Divinity are 1. Heathenism being altogether ignorant of and refusing the true and saving knowledge of
Testament therefore it is not perfect In the Old Testament no doubt but the females had some remedy whereby they might be purged from original sin as well as the males circumcision was instituted only for the males the Scripture mentions not what was instituted for the females In the New Testament the perpetual virginity of Mary the mother of Christ. Two things are considered in circumcision 1. Signum 2. Res signata or the end and use of the sign Answ. The thing signified or efficacy of the outward sign of circumcision was common both to Males and Females the very institution of circumcision teacheth that for it was a sign of the Covenant the Covenant belonged to all which were of the seed of Abraham if they renounced it not Although there were no decision of the other point out of the Scripture yet would it not thence follow which the Jesuites pretend that some necessary point of Christianity wanted the ground of holy Scripture it being sufficient for us to know that she was a Virgin when our Savio●r Christ was born of her as the Prophets did foretel Yet as Chamier said well we believe that she continued a Virgin all her life time for in those things said he which are not properly de side we hold the authority of the Church is great if it contradict not Scripture or produce no other absurdity Vide Riveti Apolog●am pro Virgine Maria l. 1. c. 15. Helvidius would gather from those words Matth. 1. 25. until and first-born that Mary after had Children by her Husband The word till doth not import so much See Gen. 8. 7. and 28. 15 1 Sam. 15. 35 Sam. 6. 23. Matth. 28. 20. He is called the first-born in Scripture which first opens the womb whether others follow or no. 7. The Scripture is plain and Perspicuous The Perspicuity of the Scripture is a clear and evident manifestation of the truth delivered in it It is Perspicuous both in respect of it self and us 1. In respect of it self as appears 1. In the things delivered which although they seem obscure for their majesty and dignity yet they carry the light of truth before them therefore the Scripture is frequently termed a light Psal. 19. 8. and 119. 105. Deni 30. 11. Prov. 6. 2. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4 6. the Scripture is a most bright light The nature of a light is first to discover it self then all things else There are two things in Gods revealed will verbum rei the word and res verbi the mystery The Scriptures are hard if we look to the mystery but not if we look to the word as for example the Scripture teacheth that there is one God in three persons the words are plain and easie every man understands them but the mystery contained in those words pas●eth the reach of man we may well discern these things to be so though we cannot fully conceive how these should be so 2. In the manner of delivering or kinde of stile which is fitted to the things and persons shewing the greatest simplicity both in words either proper or figurative and in the clear sense and most perspicuous propriety of signification viz. That one which is called Literal and Grammatical 2. In respect of us because the Scripture is to us the principal means and instrument of faith every Principle ought to be by it self and in its own nature known and most intelligible and there being three degrees of faith knowledge assent and full assurance these cannot consist without the perspicuity of the Scripture the divine promises also of writing the Law in our heart and concerning the spreading abroad and clear light of the Gospel should be to no purpose if the Scriptures should not be plain in things necessary to Salvation All difficulty in understanding the Scripture ariseth not from the obscurity of it but from the weakness of our understanding corrupted by natural ignorance or blinded by divine punishment and curse therefore it no more follows from thence that the Scripture cannot be an infallible and onely rule of faith and life because some obscure things are found in it not understood of all then that the Books of Euclide are not perfect elements of Geometry because there are some abstruse Theoremes in them which every vulgar Geometrician cannot demonstrate or that Aristotles Organon is not a perfect Systeme of Logick because a fresh Sophister understands not all its subtilties More distinctly we say that the Scriptures are plain and obscure in a threefold respect 1. They are plain and easie to be understood by all men in Fundamentals and the special points necessary to salvation as the Decalogue the Apostles Creed the Lords Prayer and the like unless by those whose mindes the God of this world hath blinded if they be obscure in some less principal and circumstantial matters there is need of interpretation that the meaning may be more clearly unfolded 2. A difference of persons is to be considered either more generally or more specially 1. More generally as they are elect and regenerate or reprobate and unregenerate to those the Scripture is plain and perspicuous to whom alone it is destinated and whose mindes the Holy Ghost will inlighten by the Scripture Iohn 7. 17. Rom. 12. 2. 1 Cor. 12. 15. Psal. 19 7. Matth. 11. 5. and 25. 25. Psal. 9. 10 12 13 14. Yet the flesh and unregenerate part in them puts in impediments but that ignorance is removed at last Luke 8. 10. The reprobates continue involved in perpetual darkness and blinded with ignorance hypocrisie covetousness pride and contempt of divine learning even seeing they see not Psal. 36. 3. Isa. 29. 9. Ier. 5. 21. Isa. 6. 9. 2 Cor. 3. 14. there is a vail over their hearts 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. which is the cause why in so many ages under the Papacy the Scriptures were not understood because they preferred a lye before the love of the truth 2 Thess. 10 whose ignorance is a deserved punishment of that contempt which they shewed to the Scriptures and their authority 2. More specially the persons are distinguished according to the diversity 1. Of Conditions of life and vocations for so many places of Scripture are hard to this sort of men which are more easie to another neither is it required that all things be understood of all men the knowledge of more places is necessary in a Minister then a Trades-man and Husbandman yet it is an infallible rule to every one in his vocation 2. Of capacities and wits for every one hath his measure of Gifts so among Ministers some understand the Word more obscurely some more plainly yet it is to all a perfect Rule according to the measure of Gifts 3. Of Times all things are not equally obscure or perspicuous to all Ages many things are better understood now then in times past as the Prophecies and Predictions of Christ and the times of the Gospel so in
Pope approves The Practice of the Church is that which the Pope observes the Interpretation of the Fathers is that which the Pope follows the Determination of Councels what the Pope confirms so that the Pope must interpret all Scripture But divers Reasons may be alledged to shew that the true Interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought for from the Popes of Rome 1. Because the Popes of Rome have frequently and grosly erred in interpreting of Scripture as in Rom. 8. 8. Those that are in the flesh cannot please God that is Those that are married said Siricius the Pope Innocent so expounded those words Iohn 6. Unlesse you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his bloud you shall have no life in you that he thence concluded That there is no salvation without receiving the Eucharist and that it is to be given to Infants Pope Boniface interpreted Luke 22. 38. of the Temporall and Spirituall Sword delivered to the Pope 2. Because the Popes of Rome doe differ among themselves in interpreting of Scripture as Matth. 16. 18. Some Popes say rightly that by the Rock Christ or the Confession of Faith given by Peter concerning Christ is meant others interpret it of the person of Peter the Apostle others expound it to be the Romane Seat or Chair 3. Because many of the Popes of Rome have not only erred but been grosse and wicked Hereticks Liberius the Pope about the year 350 was an Arian and subscribed to the unjust condemnation of Athanasius and afterward as an obstinate Heretick was deposed Honorius the first was a Monoth●lite he held that Christ had but one will and so but one nature and for this Heresie was condemned in three General Councels Some Popes were Atheists as Leo the tenth who called the Gospel Fabulam de Christ● One cals the Pope that great Heteroclite in religion another saith The Pope is the worst of Cardinals who are the worst of Priests who are the worst of Papists who are the worst of Christians That the general consent of Fathers is no good Rule for interpreting Scriptures See Ia●●●us Laurentius his singular Tractate entituled Reverentia Eccles. Rom. erga S. Pat. veteres subdola Artic. 2. Proposit. 9. In his Auctarium he proves that the Protestants do more esteem the Fathers then the Papists and Jesuites For Councels Gregory the Pope equalizeth the four first General Councels to the four Gospels not in respect of Authority but in respect of the verity of the Articles defined in them He saith not They could as little erre but they did as little erre in their decisions or to speak more properly That their Doctrine was as true as Gospel because the Determinations in those first General Councels against Hereticks are evidently deduced out of holy Scriptures Dr Featley's Stricturae in Lyndomastigem concerning the 7 Sac. For if these four general Councels be of equal Authority with the four Gospels the Popes Authority as Papists say being above the Authority of the Councels it followeth That his Authority is greater then the Evangelists then which what can be more blasphemously spoken We say the true Interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought from general Councels First Because even universal Councels have erred the Chalcedonian Councel one of the four so much magnified by Pope Gregory in rashly preferring the Constantinopolitane Church before that of Alexandria and Antioch Those that condemned Christ were then the universal visible Church Matth. 26. 65. Iohn 11. 47. See Act. 4. 18. Secondly General Councels have been opposite one to another that of Constance to the other of Basil whereof one setteth down that Councels could erre and so also the Pope and that a Councel was above the Pope the other affirmeth the quite contrary Thirdly There were no general Councels after the Apostles for three hundred years till the first Councel of Nice when yet the Church had the true sense of the Scriptures Fourthly The general Councels interpreted Scripture by Scripture as Athanasius and Ambrose teach concerning the first Councel of Nice Fifthly Because they cannot be so easily celebrated to declare any doubtfull sense of Scripture They have expounded but few places of Scripture neither is it likely the Pope will assemble them to expound the rest The Papists say That the Scripture ought to be expounded by the Rule of Faith and therefore not by Scripture only But the Rule of Faith and Scripture is all one As the Scriptures are not of man but of the Spirit so their Interpretation it not by man but of the Spirit like wise Let Councels Fathers Churches give their sense of the Scripture its private if it be not the sense and interpretation of the Spirit Let a private man give the true sense of the Scripture it s not private because its Divine the sense of the holy Ghost and private in 2 Pet. 1. 20. is not opposed to publick but to Divine and the words are to be read No Scripture is of a mans own Interpretation that is private contrary to Divine The word is interpreted aright by declaring 1. The Order 2. The Summe or Scope 3. The Sense of the words which is done by framing a Rhetorical and Logical Analysis of the Text. In giving the sense three Rules are of principal use and necessity to be observed 1. The literal and largest sense of any words in Scripture must not be imbraced farther when our cleaving thereunto would breed some disagreement and contrariety between the present Scripture and some other Text or place else shall we change the Scripture into a Nose of wax 2. In case of such appearing disagreement the holy Ghost leads us by the hand to seek out some distinction restriction limitation or figure for the reconcilement thereof and one of these will alwayes fit the purpose for Gods word must always bring perfect truth it cannot fight against it self 3. Such figurative Sense Limitation Restriction or Distinction must be sought out as the Word of God affordeth either in the present place or some other and chiefly those that seem to differ with the present Text being duly compared together The End of the first Book THE SECOND BOOK OF GOD. CHAP. I. That there is a God HAving handled the Scripture which is principium cognoscendi in Divinity I now proceed to Treat of God who is principium essendi or thus The Scripture is the rule of Divinity God and his works are the matter or parts of Divinity This Doctrine is 1. Necessary 1. Because man was made for that end that he might rightly acknowledge and worship God love and honor him 2. It is the end of all Divine Revelation Iohn 5. 39. 3. To be ignorant of God is a great misery Being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them 2. Profitable Our welfare and happiness consists in the knowledge of God Ier. 9. 23. Iohn 17. 3. the knowledge of God
before another and ought not to do so now that God chooseth some it is of his meer grace for all deserve eternal damnation Vide Dav. Dissert Praedest p. 132 133. Obj. Predestination or Election is grounded on Gods foreknowledge Rom. 8. 28 29 1 Pet. 1. 2. Ergo say the Papists God out of the foresight of mans good works did elect him And the Arminians say that God elected them out of the foresight of mens faith and perseverance so Election and Predestination shall be grounded on the will of man Answ. The foreknowledge of God is 1. Permissive so he foresaw all mens sinnes the fall of Angels Adam 2. Operative so he foreknows all the good that is in men by working it God foresees to give men faith and then they shall beleeve perseverance and then they shall hold out There can be no difference till elective love make it When God hath decreed to give grace he foreknows that man which beleeves 2. Predestination is not onely an eternall act of Gods will but of his understanding Ephes. 1. 5. Act. 2. 23. 3. There is a twofold foreknowledge of God 1. Generall whereby he foreknew all things that ever were 2. Special a foreknowledge joyned with love and approbation as 1 Pet. 1. 21. Mat. 7. ●8 Arguments against the Papists and Lutherans That which is the effect and fruit of Election that cannot be a cause or condition for then a thing should be a cause to it self But these are effects Ephes. 1. 4. It should be according to them he hath chosen us because we were foreseen holy Acts 13. 48. A man is not ordained to eternal life because he beleeveth but he beleeveth because he is ordained to eternal life Acts 2. 27. and 13. 48. Rom. 8. 30. Secondly then we should choose God and not he us contrary to that Ioh. 15. 19. Thirdly Infants are elected who cannot beleeve or do good works This argument saith Rivet Disputat 4. de causa electionis although it be puerile by reason of the Subject yet it is virile if we respect its weight for the Adversaries cannot avoid it without running into many absurdities by denying that Infants are saved against that of Matthew 18 and by affirming that some are saved which are not elected against Rom. 11. Fourthly If man were the cause of his own election he had cause to glory in himself election should not be of grace See Master Bailyes Antidote against Arminians p. 26. to 46. All the sonnes of Adam without exception are not elected for election supposeth a rejection He that chooseth some refuseth others See Esay 41. 9. Iohn 13. 8. Whom God electeth he doth also glorifie Rom. 8. 30. but all are not glorified 2 Thess. 1. 10. 2. 13. Chosen out of the world John 15. 19. therefore he chose not all in the world but some 2. Saving faith is a true effect of Gods election peculiar to the elect and common to all the Elect which live to be of age and discretion but many are destitute of faith for ever therefore they must needs be out of Gods election 3. The Scripture saith expresly that few were chosen Matth. 20. 16 Rom. 11. 5 7. Few saved Luke 13. 23. The Elect considered apart by themselves are a numberlesse number and exceeding many in comparison of the wicked they are but few even a handful Mat. 7. 13 14. 22. 14. Luke 12. 3● Though some of the places of Scripture may be expounded of the small number of Beleevers in the daies of our Saviour yet some are more generally spoken shewing plainly that onely few do finde the way to life At this day if the world were divided into thirty parts nineteen of them do live in Infidelity without the knowledge of the true God The Mahometans possesse other six parts of the world Amongst them which professe Christ scarce one part of those five remaining do embrace the true religion And many more do professe with the mouth then do with the heart beleeve unto salvation The Arminians say there is an election axiomatical not personal they acknowledge that there is a choise of this or that particular means to bring men to salvation God say they hath revealed but two waies to bring men to life either by obedience to the Law or by faith in Christ. But they deny that there is an election of this or that particular man God hath set down with himself from all eternity not onely how many but who shall lay hold on Christ to salvation and who not ● Pet. 1. 10. speaks of an election personal Rom. 9. 11 12. of both elections axiomatical and personal See Iohn 10. 3 2 Tim. 2. 19. Some hold that Gods election is so uncertain and changeable as that the elect may become reprobates and the reprobate elect There is say they a constant and frequent intercourse of members between Christ and Satan to day a member of Christ to morrow a member of Satan Rom. 8. 28. All things work together for their good then nothing shall work for their greatest hurt that is their damnation And ver 30. he saith Those whom he predestinated he hath called justified glorified not others but those whom he hath predestinated these he called and justified Gods election is most firm certain and unchangeable Iohn 6. 37. 10. 28. Matth. 24. 24. By the Arminian Doctrine there can be no certainty of election for they hold that absolute election onely follows final perseverance in faith and that faith may be totally lost and faile finally So much concerning Election In the Scriptures reprobate and to reprobate are referred rather to the present conditions of wicked men then Gods eternal ordination concerning them But the decree of reprobation is exprest in such tearms as these God is said not to have given them to Christ not to shew mercy on some not to have written the names of some in the Book of Life Reprobation is the purpose of God to leave the rest of men to themselves that he may glorifie his justice in their eternal destruction Est decretum aliquod quo destinavit alicui Deus damnationem Twiss The Schoolmen and others distinguish between a negative and positive or affirmative act of Reprobation The negative act is called preterition non-election or a will of not giving life The positive or affirmative act is called pre-damnation or a will of damning the reprobate person So there are two parts of election viz the decree of giving grace by which men are freed from sin by faith and repentance 2. of rewarding their faith and repentance with eternal life The word Reprobation is taken three waies saith B. Davenant out of Iunius 1. For preterition and damnation joyntly 2. For the alone decree of damnation so to be reprobated is to be appointed to eternal torments 3. As it is opposed contradictorily to election so it is taken for preterition onely or non-election Daven Dissertat de Praedestinat c.
thus to conclude and determine Rom. 8. The Spirit witnesseth with our Spirit Those that finde this in themselves should feed upon this eternal comfort it is absolute eternal immutable nothing shall oppose it who shall lay any thing to the Elect It is full of love and grace We may make our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectual calling by two things 1. By a new light 2. A new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Iohn 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our misery by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2. Of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 3. A new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 4. These three are put together faithful chosen and called 2. By new obedience 1. It is every mans duty to give diligence to make his election sure both for the glory of God and the comfort of his soul but in Gods way and according to his Ordinance first Calling then Election 2. When he hath used his utmost diligence if he cannot make it sure it is his misery not his sin 3. When the Spirit of God reveals to a man either the truth of his own graces or else Gods eternall love to him then a man is bound to beleeve it It is 1. A certain assurance 2. Secret Rev. 2. 17. 3. Exceeding sweet rejoyce in that your names are written in the Book of life 4. It is an imperfect assurance the assurance of faith not of sight it may be eclipsed CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Deeree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods works are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Government and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejacent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it self and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of six daies both to his own glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or It is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his Name Or thus Creation is a transient or external action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meer command out of his own free will in six dayes space to the glory of his Name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personal actions they abide in himself 3. Of God The efficient cause of all things is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper work of God alone so that he is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Ier. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the work of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expresly given to the Son Iohn 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. He brooded on the waters Gen. 1. 1 2. Aquinas parte prima Qu. 44. Artic. 1. hath this question Utrum sit necessarium omne ens esse creatum a Deo The Schoolmen much dispute whether God may not give a creating power to a creature and answer no creature can be so elevated as to concur to the execution of an almighty act In Scripture it is alwaies made the work of God Gen. 1. 1. Prov. 16. 4. Psal. 33. 6. 8 9. Creation is an act of omnipotency The Apostles when they dealt with the Heathens urged the works of creation Acts 14. 10. 7. 26. Rom. 1. 19 20. 4. In the beginning by the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes order that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Act. 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautiful and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meer command as appears Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens which argues his omnipotency 7. Out of his own free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner He was happy enough in himself without men or Angels Psal. 115. 5. Prov. 8. 30. 8. The final cause to the glory of his Name Rom. 2. 30. Three Attributes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisdome goodnesse his power in that he made all things by a word and of nothing Isa. 40. 16. his wisdome is seen in the order and variety of his works Psal. 136. 5. and their exceeding wonderful and particular uses his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures Plutarch writeth that the old Philosophers the ancientest Divines amongst the Pagans were wont to describe pourtrayed out in stone wood and other matters the Images of their Gods with musical Instruments in their hands not that they would teach others or did beleeve it themselves that the Gods were Fidlers or Pipers or used to solace themselves with Lute or Viol but because they held nothing more fit or answering to the nature of God then to do all things in sweet harmony and proportion which the Wiseman calleth in number in measure and in weight Mountague against Seld. c. 1. The work of Creation say some is set out generally in a general proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 39 chapters of Iob and some Psalms almost whole as 104 136. this also is the first Article of our Creed that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. 17. 24. 28 doth point out God to the Heathen by this work
praise God if against us to be humbled If thou beest hungry and in penury murmur not nor repine but say with the blessed Martyr If men take away my meat God will take away my stomack Merlin during the massacre at Paris some fortnight together was nourished with one egg a day laid by an hen that came constantly to the hay-mow where he lay hid in that danger The whole power almost of France being gathered together against the City Rochel and besieging them with extremity who defended the Town God in the time of famine and want of bread did for some whole moneths together daily cast up a kinde of fish unto them out of the Sea wherewith so many hundreds were relieved without any labour of their own Be of good comfort Brother said Ridley to Latimer for God will either asswage the fury of the fire or else strengthen us to abide it In the time of the Massacre at Paris there was a poor man who for his deliverance crept into a hole and when he was there there comes a Spider and weaves a cob-web before the hole when the murtherer came to search for him saith one certainly he is got into that hole No saith another he cannot be there for there is a cob-web over the place and by this means the poor man was preserved Let us observe the signal acts of Gods providence amongst us He studies not the Scripture as he should which studies not providence as he should we should compare Gods promises and providences together What we hear of him in his Word with what we see in his Works There is a three-fold vision of God in this life In his Word Works and in his Son answerable to our vision of God will be our communion with him The very Providence of God is sometimes called Prudence Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia sed nos Tefacimus Fortuna Deam Coeloque locamus Juven Sat. 10. Prudence in man is a vertue some way like Providence in God Prudens dicitur quasi porrò videns Isid. in lib. Etym. Austin preaching once forgat what he had purposed to utter and so made an excursion from the matter in hand and fell into a discourse against the Manichees Possidonius and others dining with him that day Austin told them of it and asked them whether they observed it They answered that they observed it and much wondered at it Then Austin replied Credo quòd aliquem errantem in populo Dominus per nostram oblivionem errorem curari voluit Two daies after one came to Austin before others falling at his feet and weeping confessing also that he had many years followed the heresie of the Manichees and had spent much mony on them but the day before through Gods mercy by Austins Sermon he was converted and then was made Catholike The End of the third Book THE FOVRTH BOOK OF THE Fall of Man OF Sin Original Actual CHAP. I. Of the Fall of Man HAving in my Treatise of Divinity handled three principal heads there viz. the Scripture God and the Works of God I shall now proceed to speak of mans Apostasie and Restauration or of the Fall and Recovery of Man There is a four-fold Estate of man to be considered 1. That happy estate wherein he was made Ecc. 7. 31. 2. That miserable estate whereto he fell Rom. 3. 23. 24. and 5. 12. 3. That renewed estate whereto by grace he is called 1 Pe. 1. 3. 4. That glorious estate which is in Heaven reserved for him 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Having spoken already of his estate of Innocency or primitive condition I shall now speak of his corrupt estate in which I shall consider 1. The cause of it the Devils temptation and our first Parents yeelding to it 2. The parts of it sinfullnes●e of nature and life and the punishment of sin here and hereafter 3. The properties of it 1. Generall 2. Irremediable Though I shall not perhaps handle the last The Apostasie of man is his fall from the obedience due to God or the transgression of the Law prescribed by God In which two things are con●●derable 1. The transgression 2. The propagation of it Our first Parents being seduced by Satan sinn'd against the known Law of God in eating of the forbidden fruit Adams sinne was against his own light and therefore a presumptuous sin so some interpret that place Rom. 5. 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression that is those which had not the Law clearly revealed to them yet he was seduced by Satan whereas Satan sinned without temptation thence he is called the old Serpent because by the Serpent he seduced Eve When God saith Gen. 3. 22. Behold Adam is become like one of us knowing good and evill it confuteth S. Augustines conjecture that he beleeved not the Serpent but consented to his wife out of matrimoniall indulgence Etsi credendo non sunt ambo decepti peccando tamen ambo capti sunt diaboli laqueis implicati and sheweth manifestly that Adam also was circumvented with errour wherefore doth God else upbraid him so ironically that he is now like unto God That Sarcasmus in my understanding is a taxation of his credulous temerity in beleeving the Serpents promise When S. Paul 1 Tim. 2. 14. saith that Adam was not deceived but the woman he meant not to extenuate the mans offence or to exempt him from the fraud of the devil but to shew whether sex was more credulous or like to be seduced Doctor Hampton on Rom. 5. 9. The consummation of that transgression was the eating of the forbidden fruit or of the tree of knowledge of good and evill by Adam Gen. 2. 17. as the beginning of it was looking on it by Eve saith Paulus Fagius on Gen. 3. 6. 2. The tree was no better then the rest only God forbad him to eat of it for the triall of his obedience The lesser the thing was required to shew his obedience the greater was his fault in disobeying It is called disobedience Rom. 5. 19. and offence or fall Rom. 5. 15 17 18. Some say the devill as an unclean Spirit could not have accesse to Adams inward man to tempt him therefore he tempted him by a Serpent and audible voice as he did Christ by a visible Landskip of the world The time of Adams fall is not certain Some say he fell the same day he was created Neither Angels nor men did fall the sixth day before the Sabbath for then God looked upon all his works and they were very c good Gen. 1. 31. and therefore could not as yet be bad and evill by any sin or fall The objections against this from Iohn 8. 44. and Psa. 49. 12. are easily answered Some learned Divines as Simpson in his Chronology observes conjecture that Adam and Eve were cast out of Paradise the eighth day after
no other helps to make him understand the same but his own reason and understanding according to the true principles of it by reading only and barely those writings he should come and that certainly and infallibly to the knowledge of all things necessary for his salvation Neither is any thing requisite to the right understanding of the Scriptures in points of necessity to life and salvation but alone the diligent perusing and meek receiving of the same And yet Christ performeth this outward teaching in a fourth degree by the Ministry of his servants from time to time the Pastors and Teachers of all ages whom he raiseth up and instructeth in the knowledge of his truth that they may instruct the people And this is the outward teaching the inward is noted where he saith You shall be all taught of God it is the work of his Spirit putting into the minde a light to conceive the things taught and inclining it to hearken and consent to them of which there are two degrees the first fainter and lesser breeding a kind of belief or opinion the second is more deep and stable by which men are rooted and grounded in faith and do firmly believe the known truth and are guided and ruled by it The Properties of Christs Prophetical Office are two 1. He is a great Prophet as the people say Luk. 7. 16. indeed the greatest of all the Prophets that reveals all things as the woman of Samaria could say He shall shew us all things 2. He is a faithful Prophet in all his house as Moses also was faithful and his faithfulnesse stands in this that he did acquaint his Church with the whole will of God without adding and diminishing as Moses did and that he did as fully accomplish all the things typified as Moses did declare and set them down but it stands not in this that he gave a particular direction for all external things about his worship and government as Moses did for that we are sure he hath not done in his Gospel neither indeed was to do The Pope opposeth Christ in his Prophetical Office in making himself infallible he brings in new Sacraments unknown to Christ and his Apostles Christ is the onely absolute Doctor of his Church Matth. 23. 8. See Matth. 17. 5. Revel 5. 7 8. The Church of Rome hath added Traditions Will-worship humane Inventions to the Scripture Mahomet is extolled by many as the great Prophet of the world So you have the Prophetical Office of Christ now follows the third viz. He is King to which we may adde that of Lord because his Kingdom and Lordship signifie in a manner the same thing both serving to expresse the power and authority which he hath and exerciseth in and over his Church Psal. 72. per tot Isa. 9. 6. Micah 5. 2. 1 Tim. 6. 14. There is a three-fold Kingdom of Christ mentioned in the holy Scripture The first is his Kingdom of power or excellency whereby he being God is the supream Lord of all things Psal. 24. 1. 2. The Kingdom of his grace whereby he rules in the hearts of all his elect ever since the world began Psal. 2. 6. Zech. 9. 9. Ier. 23. 5. Ezek. 37. 22. Luk. 11. 20. 17. 21. 3. Of glory whereby he himself is now in endlesse and perfect felicity and of which happinesse his Saints shall one day partake Luk. 23. 42. 12. 32. Luk. 13. 29. 1 Cor. 6. 9. 2 Pet. 2. 11. Crakanth of the P●pes Tempor Monarc cap. 2. See more there This Government is a right of immediate executing the soveraign authority of God over all creatures in ordine ad salutem in order to the salvation of his elect Ioh. 3. 34 35. Christ was born a King but he entered not into his Kingly Office till after his resurrection Psal. 2. 6 7. He was a Priest and Prophet on earth Yet this is that which brings in the benefit of all the other Offices and makes us partakers of all the good in Christ. Of which the means are outwardly his Word and the Ministery thereof and inwardly his holy Spirit worketh in and by the Word The parts of it are First Governing and guiding his Subjects in the wayes which he hath appointed them to walk in and subduing the temptations of Satan and the world and lusts of the flesh to them and rewarding them at the last with eternall glory Secondly Confounding and destroying all his enemies and treading them under his feet The properties of it are 1. It is not a civil or earthly but a spiritual Kingdom Iohn 18. 36. 1 Cor. 15. 47. Rom. 14. 1. which doth look to the Spirit reacheth to the conscience and spiritual things it is not carnal nor of this world nor looketh to the outward man alone The King is spiritual viz. the Lord from Heaven the Subjects are spiritual viz. the Church regenerate the Law whereby the Church is governed is spiritual viz. the Gospel the goods bestowed upon the Church are spiritual as remission of sins the Spirit of grace and the manner of government is spiritual 2. Universal and that in four respects 1. In respect of all ages and times other Kings have the time of their rise and fall this dominion is eternal it shall have no end 2. In respect of all places Rev. 5. 9. to the end 3. In respect of all creatures Rev. 5. 4. In respect of all things and actions For him hath God the Father made Lord and King and he doth powerfully administer his Church to the sanctification preservation and salvation of those which refuse not to submit Christ doth one thing more then all Kings for their Subjects for he maketh his Subjects seeing all by nature are his enemies but by his Word and Spirit he subdueth them to the obedience of his will 1 Cor. 14. 25. that he may glorifie himself and his Father in their salvation 3. Absolute Rev. 19. Christ is Lord Paramount 1 Tim. 6. 14. He is a King by a threefold right 1. Of birth Gal. 4. 1. 2. Of donation Psal. 2. 8. Ioh. 17. 2. 3. Conquest Rev. 1. 18. He is King in Heaven in respect of his glory in Earth in respect of his grace in hell in respect of his justice Christ as Mediator is the Churches head 1 Cor. 11. 32. Ephes. 1. 22. 4. 15. 5. 28. Col. 1. 1. 2. 18 19. He is their head Ratione Unionis Ratione Regiminis Ratione Influentiae 1. In respect of Union 2. In respect of Guidance 3. In respect of Influence The Government of the Church is upon his shoulders Isa. 9. 6. 22. 21 22. Matth. 28. 19 20. Ephes. 1. 20 21. Psal. 68. 18. He is the onely head and King of his Church the Government of the Church is part of his Kingly Office He as Mediator hath the Government of the Church committed to him 1. The Church Mystical the number of all the Saints of God whether
in Christ understand nothing but an acknowledgement of the veracity of the sayings and the promises of Christ which ought to be given them not because Christ is true God with the Father but because God after his death raised him from the dead which he also foretold before and for this reason he was worthy to be believed in what he commanded or promised This is their Doctrine of justifying faith and justification as if Christ had come into the world and suffered such things for no other cause but that he might perswade us that an eternal reward is propounded to the obedient that being allured with the hope of reward we might obey him Bellarmine saith Justifying faith is not so much knowledge as assent and it is not a confidence of Gods mercy but an assent to all things which are contained in the Word of God Faith is more then a bare assent to the truth there is in it a fiducial acquiescence and a resting upon Jehovah as it is expressed in the Hebrew he rolled himself upon God as a man being weary of a burden casts himself and that upon something that sustains him Prov. 3. 5. Isa. 10. 20. 28. 16. 50. 10. The chief act of the soul in true faith wherein the essence of it mainly consists is a resting and relying upon Christ and him alone for the obtaining of favour and eternal life In respect of this property faith is oft called a believing in or on Christ and his name Iohn 3. 16 18 36. Iohn 6. 1. 5. 10. a trusting in Christ Ephes. 1. 12. a resting upon God 2 Chron. 14. 11. a resting upon his promise 2 Chron. 32. 8. a relying upon God 2 Chron. 16. 8. a cleaving and sticking close unto him Act. 11. 23. Mr Hilders on Psal. 51. 6. Lect. 83. There is in Faith First An act of acceptation one is willing to receive Christ on his own termes Secondly Of resignation it gives up the whole man unto Christ. The proper object of justifying faith saith Dr. Ames is not some axiome viz. God is favourable to me or my sins are pardoned but Ens incomplexum as they speak viz. Christ or the mercy of God in Christ and so the proper act of justifying faith is incumber● or acquiescere Christo. Not barely the promises but the person of Christ is the object of faith we are not to rest in the promises alone but to close with Christ in those promises Acts 6. 31. The Saints take comfort in Christ and prize his person above all his benefits First Because that is the greatest gift in which God shews most love Ioh. 4. 10. Secondly He is the person in whom all good things are deposited Cant. 4. 10. 1 Iohn 5. 10. Thirdly The great thing the soul fals in love with is the person of Christ Cant. 5. Phil. 1. 23. It is a great dispute among Divines What is the proper object of saving faith Some say the Evangelical promise which holds out Christ others Christ himself in a strict sense only Christ himself is the object of saving faith Iohn 7. 37. No proposition nor promise saves me only Christ. The common object of faith is every revealed truth but of justifying faith as it justifies that is in the act of Justification Reconciliation in Christ with a certain confidence There is Fides quae faith which saves the soul this closeth with every divine revelation promise threatning story sides qua as it saves me closeth onely with Christ. Faith which saves the soul hath for its object the whole word of God but as it saves the soul it closeth only with Christ. There is nothing in Scripture but it hath relation to Christ the types and old Sacrifices were shadows of him the moral Law is preparative for Christ yea there is something of him in every story and miracle Faith is an instinct after union with Christ Iohn 5. 12. He lives in me by faith Iohn 11. 26. Gal. 2. 20. This receives Christ Iohn 1. 11. it is the condition of the Covenant and so the qualification of them which shall have interest in Christ and his benefits Iohn 3. 16. Acts 8. 37. 16. 31. Faith carries the consent of the whole man a Chron. 30. 8. Quid est credere nisi consentire He that would receive Christ must 1. Know that Christ is designed by God and tendred as a Saviour to him in the Gospel 2. Must consider the reality and fulnesse of the promise and give consent to this prose this is the very act of faith 3. None can thus receive Christ but those whose hearts the Lord hath opened to close with Christ Iohn 6. 36 37. Acts 16. 1. Man sell by self-exalting and ariseth in a self-abasing which is by beleeving 2. Faith is the only way to dissolve the plots of the devil we fell by beleeving the devil rather then God and rise by renouncing him and by beleeving in the grace of God in Christ. What is the act the soul doth when it beleeves There are three acts of faith Notitia Assensus Fiducia Mr. Hildersam saith The effence and being of justifying faith consisteth in four acts of the soul whereof the former two are acts of the understanding the other two of the will First I must know Christ aright and that which the Gospel revealeth to us concerning him Secondly The assent of the minde to this 1 Tim. 1. 15. Heb. 11. 13. Thirdly The consent of the will Iohn 1. 12. Fourthly A resting and relying upon Christ and him alone for the favour of God and eternal life Knowledge comes three wayes 1. By sense 2. Reason as that the part is lesse then the whole 3. From testimony which is faith and relies wholly on witnesse faith is weak when it relates to humane testimony yet there is no such knowledge as that of faith when it relates to the testimony of God that is more sure then sense or reason God is so wise as he cannot be deceived himself and so good as he will not deceive others Knowledge and faith are ordinarily all one in Scripture and joyned together as things inseparable Isa. 53. 11. Iohn 10. 38. Iohn 6. 69. Iohn 17. 3. 1 Iohn 3. 2. 4. 5. 13 19. A beleever is set forth by the terms of an enlightened man and wise man Ephes. 1. 18 19. I know whom I have beleeved Bellarmine saith faith is better defined by ignorance then knowledge Fides melius per ignorantiam quam per notitiam desinitur It captivates reason unto the word of God that is carnall and rebellious reason but the true light of reason is increased and augmented by it This knowledge which faith works in the heart is distinct and certain 2. Assent they beleeved God and the Prophets that is they gave assent and credit to it because of the authority of God who is most true and cannot deceive not for humane motives This assent is 1.
Spirit the corrupt self is lookt on as an enemy Rom. 7. lat end I delight in the Law of God in the inward man and concludes but I my self that is his sanctified self serve the Lord. Mark what it is that thou esteemest in thy self Is it Grace Gods Image and what thou dislikest and strivest to destroy is it the body of sin 2. Then that love is subordinate to the love of God God to every sanctified man is the Summum bonum ultimus sinis therefore all other things are but media subordinata none of us must live to himself 3. Such a one loves himself for those ends God allows him 1. That he may be happy for ever God presseth us to duty by this argument that we may have eternal life 2. He would have thee get more knowledge grace experience that thou maist be more serviceable here The third object of our love is our neighbour Marks to know whether my love to my neighbour be a sanctified love First When it is subordinate to the love of God when I love him under God we must love our neighbour in God and for God Secondly I must love there specially where God loves those that have most of God in them All my delight is in the Saints Christ calls this a new Commandment Thirdly There will be a performing of all second Table duties Love is the fulfilling of the Law I will give him that respect which is due unto his place I will strive to preserve his life chastity estate good name I shall be content with my own and rejoyce in his welfare It is the nature of love to seek the preservation of the thing beloved The fourth object of our love is the rest of Gods creatures which he hath given to us Marks to know whether our love to the creature be right or no 1. When the beholding God in the creature draws the heart out the delighting to behold the wisdom and power of God in the creature 2. Mark for what end thou lovest the creature Every creature must be delighted in as it brings us nearer to God or serves as an instrument to honour him thou lovest the creatures because they are a means to keep thee in a better frame for duty CHAP. XXI II. Of Hatred THe affection opposite to love is Hatred 1. The nature of hatred 2. The image of God in it 3. The extream depravation of it by sin 4. The work of grace sanctifying it Of the first Hatred in a reasonable soul is a motion of the will whereby it flies from that which it apprehends to be evil and opposeth it indeavouring to hurt it It ariseth from a discord and disconformity of the object There is a two-fold hatred 1. Odium abominationis a stying only from a thing 2. Odium inimicitiae whereby ● pursue what is evil There was little use of this affection in our primitive pure estate there was nothing evil to man or in himself a concord in all There are dive●s causes of this hatred 1. Antipathy 2. What hinders us from attaining good envy jealousie there was nothing then to work this but the sinne of the devil only which whether man knew it or no is uncertain yet this affection was in him and sanctified First He was prone in his spirit to shunne a real evil sinne in that degree it was evil Secondly The depravation of this affection the image of the devil As much of our original corruption is found in this affection as any The greatnesse of the depravation of this affection appears in three things 1. The object of it 2. The Quality of it 3. The fruits Only sin is the proper object of it but now our hatred is wholly taken from sin it abhors nothing that is evil The second object of it now is that which is truly and properly good 1. God himself primarily all wicked men hate him Psalm 81. 15. Rom. 1. 30. in all his glorious perfections Justice Holinesse 2. Christ Iohn 7. 7. 15. ●h 3. All good men You shall be hated of all men for my names sake 4. All Gods wayes and Ordinances Fools hate instruction Prov. 1. Secondly The Quality of this affection It is 1. A causlesse hatred Christ saith They hate me without a cause and so the Saints may say 2. Perfect entire without any mixture of any love 3. Violent Psal 55. 3. 4. Cruel Psal. 25. 9. 5. Durable irreconcilable Thirdly The effects of it 1. All sins of omission 2. Abundance of actual wickednesse contempt and distrust of God his wayes and children Fourthly The Sanctification of this affection of hatred The work of grace in every faculty is destroying the power of corruption and creating in it those principles of grace that turn it again into the right way 1. It is taken off from those objects to which it was undeservedly carried afore 2. It is ordered aright for measure 3. It brings forth that fruit which God requires First What the work of Gods grace carries the affection of hatred to 1. It makes all our opposition to God and his Ordinances cease it ceaseth to hate good and hates that which is evil 2. It is carried to the right object which is every thing that is really evil to us the will shuns and opposeth it Two sorts of things are really evil 1. What ever is opposite to our natural being our life peace wealth name as sicknesse affliction death 2. What is contrary to our spiritual being as sin All evils of the first nature come from God Gods will is the rule of all holinesse therefore we should submit 1. Our will to God to do what he pleaseth That is the greatest evil which is against the greatest good God sin and wicked men oppose him the greatest evil must have the greatest opposition I hate every fal●e way sin strikes at the being and excellency of God we must dislike wicked men for sins sake 2. The work of grace appears in the degree and measure of working when it sanctifieth any affection It is according as the light of understanding guided by Gods counsel orders the Spirit of evils sin is to be more hated then punishment and the greater the sin the greater should be the opposition 3. The work of Gods grace in sanctifying this affection is much seen in the fruits of hatred This stands in two things 1. Hatred is a Sentinel to the soul to keep out evil it makes the soul warily shun and avoid those things which are really evil to me it is a deep and severe passion not sudden as anger 2. It quickens the soul to the destruction of the thing hated it maketh it endeavour its ruine Signs I. Of Hatred Speaking against a thing still and disgracing it is displeased at its company and cannot endure its presence II. Of Sanctified Hatred 1. If it be sanctified thou ceasest to be a hater of God This makes a creature so like the devil that no
Marks of the growth of grace 1. It is a proportionable growth a growth in all the parts our faith is sutable to our knowledge our love to our faith and practice to both 2. Constant at least in our desires and endeavours 3. It will grow against all hinderances The infallible Signs of growth in grace are these 1. When we grow more spiritual 1. In our aims when we have pure intentions in every action 2. In our duties when the minde is more enlightened to minde spiritual duties and to resist spiritual temptations when we oppose thoughts and lusts not only morally but spiritually evil and when we relish the more spiritual part of the Word 1 Cor. 10. 6. 3. In our motives when we resist sin not because it will damn us but because it is against Gods law purity and defiles us 2. When we grow more solid and judicious 1 Cor. 13. 11. Phil. 1. 9. Growth is not to be measured by the intensnesse and vigour of the affections that is more in young Christians 3. When we grow more humble by long experience reflexive light is increased one is more able to look into conscience and see his own defects Prov. 30. 2. The lowest degree of growth in grace may be discerned by two Marks 1. By longing for food 1 Pet. 2. 2. 2. By being humbled for want of growth Mark 9. 24. It is a good degree of our growth in grace to see how much we want There is difference between growth in gifts and graces 1 Cor. 1. 5 7. Many in these dayes grow in gifts gifts are for others and but for this life growth in gifts often puffeth up but growth in grace humbleth A Christian may grow either quoad amplitudinem scientiae or efficaciam scientiae the enlargement of his knowledge may be both in respect of the matter he may know more things then he did as also in the manner more clearly evidently and firmly then he did or else in the efficacy of his knowledge he knoweth them more practically 2. Means of our spiritual Growth 1. General the Word 1 Pet. 2. 2. it is compared to rain Deut. 32. 2. and such things as will further growth Isa. 55. 5 11. milk Children never grow so much in so short a time as when they are sed with milk sincere milk not mixed with errour 2 Cor. 2. ult 2. Particular Helps 1. We should labour to live under the means of growth and prize them Zech. 4. 12. the Sacrament is a strengthening Ordinance 2. We should overcome our lusts Iam. 1. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. The good ground hears the Word with a good and honest heart 3. We should be daily questioning our selves how we do grow 1 Cor. 12. ult Heb. 6. 1. 4. Be often in the use and exercise of that grace wherein we desire to grow 1 Tim. 4. 14 15. the right hand and foot are stronger because they are more used improve thy knowledge by teaching others and zeal when the name of God is dishonoured and faith by depending on God in all occurrences by applying the promises exercise repentance 2 Cor. 7. 7. humility God gives grace to the humble self-denial love that sets obedience on work 2 Cor. 5. 5. Constant prayer for Gods blessing on the Word and all other means Iude v. 20. The Disciples said Lord increase our faith Luk. 17. 5. Praying Christians will certainly be growing Christians Strength of grace is discovered by two things 1. When duties are easie Rom. 15. 20. 2. When crosses are light Bonds and afflictions abide me where ever I come saith Paul yet none of these move me Strength is an ability of working powerfully we must have it from Christ Isa. 45. 24. Col. 1. ult All graces shew their vertue and efficacy two wayes 1. When they strongly and lively produce their own acts as a strong assent and most firm and fixed acknowledgement of any truth shews a strong faith 2. By a laborious and earnest resisting their contrary as a strong casting away and loathing and abhorring doubting conceits shews faith also to be strong Christ by his Spirit 1. Increaseth graces in us faith love humility self denial 2. Acts the graces received Cant. 4. 16. Rom. 7. 18. 3. Brings to our mindes the truths of God and former works of God Heb. 12. 5. 4. Renews our comforts and freshly imprints the love of God upon the soul Rom. 5. 5. 1 Iohn 2 6. Obedience flows from love so he strengthens us We should labour to grow First In knowledge Hos. 6. 3. Grace increaseth by the knowledge of God Isa. 11. 18. 2 Pet. 1. 2. 2 Pet. 3. 10. our fairest portion in heaven is the satisfaction of our understanding in the knowledge of God Psal. 17. 15 Knowledge is the great promise of the New Covenant Ier. 31. 34. We should grow in the knowledge of the truths of Christian Religion of God Christ the Sacraments Justification Sanctification and labour to get a powerful practical experimental knowledge of these truths know the power of Christs death and resurrection Phil. 3. 10. Knowledge is the first and chief part of Gods Image Col. 3. 10. See Chap. 1. 10. Growth in knowledge is rather to be reckoned by the degrees of knowledge then by the objects and matters known Prov. 4. 18. I know God and Christ more practically savingly the Covenant more distinctly Heb. 6. 14. We must not from an expectation of new light be hindered from being establisht in the present principles Secondly In faith Matth. 9. 24. Luk. 17. 5. Rom. 1. 17. because faith of all graces is most defective things in Religion are so rare and excellent and most assaulted by Satan and growth in all other graces depends on the increase of faith See Luke 17. 5. We should labour to grow in the assurance of faith Heb. 6. 14. in the exercise of it Heb 10. 38. Gal. 2 20. 1. The people of God here must live a life of holinesse as our faith is so is our conversation 2. Must bear Christs Crosse as our faith is so will our carriage be under the Crosse Iohn 11. 14. 3. They should be full of peace and joy this will be according to our faith Lastly We should search and finde out what our wants are that we would fain have supplied there what we stand in need of we partake of the body and bloud of Christ for the supply and augmentation of those graces we stand in need of Luke 18. 40. The Sacrament is a Grace-increasing Ordinance consider what graces therefore are most defective in you and come to Christ for a supply of them Quest. Whether the Communicants ought to come fasting It is superstitious to think it irreverent receiving if a man have eaten any thing before Christ instituted it after Supper The Papists take it in the morning and fasting it cannot then be called the Lords Supper since it is rather a breakfast II. Directions for our carriage in the Duty By faith
meruit de nobis qui immeritis dedit scipsum nobis ●bid Nimis durus est animus qui dilectionem etsi non vult impendere nolit rependere John 14. 21. 8. 4● 15. 9. 16. 27. 1 Cor. 16. 22. Deu. 6. 5 Deu. 10. 12 20 1 Per. 2. 17. Levit. 19. 14. Hag. 1. 2. Jon. 1. 9. Mal. 2. 5. Deut. 28. 58. Prov. 1. 7. Timor cultus timor culpae It is the grace of not daring to offend God Mal. 1. 6. Deut. 10. 17. Psal. 76. 7 8. 66. 4●5 2 Chr. 19. 7. Jos. 4. 24. Dan. 6. 26 27. Deut. 13. 4. Prov. 3. 7. Psal. 5. 7. 2. 11. 33. 8. 76. 11. Eccles. 12. 13. Hab. 3. 16. Mat. 10. 28. Jer. 10. 7. 5. 22. Psal. 130. 4. Psal. 119. 120. Job 31. 23. Isa. 40. 15 16 17. Humilitas propriè respicit subjectionem hominis ad Deum T. Aqu. 2. 2. q. 162. art 5. 161. art 1. ad arg 5. 2 Sam. 7. 18. 1 Chron. 29. 14 15 16. Gen. 22. 10. See Gen. 18. 27. 1 Cor. 12. 11. Rom. 12. 12. 1 Thess. 1. 3. Heb. 12. 1. Jam. 1. 2. 5. 8. Rom. 5. 4. Psal. 38. 13 14. 39. 9. Jer. 14. 22. Matth. 11. 29. Joy is pu● for Hope Isa. 8 6. Spes enim bono gaudium parit Deut. 12. 12. 16 14. Psal. 32. 11. Iohn 3. 1. Phil. 4. 4. 1 Thess. 5. 16. Psal. 97. 12. Ier. 9. 23. 1 Cor. 1. 31. 2 Cor. 10. 17. Psal. 48. 11. Ioy in God is that Grace whereby the soul doth rest it self contented and satisfied in God as in its sole and perfect happiness Psal. 4 6 7. Psal. 69. 9. 119. 139. G 〈…〉 4. 8. Exod. 32. 19. Num. 15. 9. 2 Pe● 2. 8. 1 Kings 19. 10. Psal. 119. 136 Matth. 4. ●4 I●h 2. 14. 5 16. Ier. 23. 9 10 11. Act. 17. 16 17. Mans imagination or thinking power is to be set upon God with most life earnestness and constancy he is to frame in his soul thoughts of his excellency continually Psal. 139. 17 18. Psal. 63. 6. Psal. 119. 44 97. Mat 6. 21. Mal. 3. 16. Psal. 104. 34. Psal. 143. 5. 105. 2. P● 63 6. We must remember nothing so firmly nor so often as God Psal. 22. 27. Eccles. 12. 1. Prov. 2. 1. Psal. 77. 3. Psal. 42. 6. 78. 34 35. Psal. 63. 6. 119. 55. Isa. 63. 7. 64. 5. Psal. 20. 7. Num. 15. 39. 40. 1 Thess. 5. 13. Psal. 147. 2. Psal. 33. 1. Psal. 145. 5. Psal. 147. 13. 979. 1 Chr. 29. 12. 1● Psal. 148. 1 He cals upon all creatures to praise God meaning men should take occasion from all these to praise him Deut. 6. 13. 10. 20. Isa. 19. 18. Isa. 65. 16. 45. 23. Ier. 12. 16. Psal. 63. 11. Gen. 14. 22. Rev. 10. 5 6. Matth. 8. 2. Mark 1. 40. Luke 5. 12. Exod. 34 8. 2 Chro. 20. 18. Exod. 4. 31. 1 Kin. 19. 18. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat sese instar humilis catelli ad pedes alicujus sui domini provol●cre atque prosternere honoris ac reverentiae causa quasi illius pedes deosculaturum Valla deducit Adoro ab ad oro Orare autem est ore precari sicut supplico est plicando caput aut genu aliquid petere Zanch. de religione Vide plura ibid. Vide Jun. Thes. Theol. de Adoratione 2 Chron. 17. 3. Act. 15. 17. Isa. 55. 6. Isa. 31. 1. Psal. 27. 8. Zeph. 2. 3. Psal. 83. 16. 78. 34. Psal. 10. 4. 14. 2. 69. 6. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Mat. 10. 32 33. 2 Chron. 25. 3. Iam. 4. 12. Mat. 23. 9. Psal. 10. 4. 11. 14. 1. Mal. 3. 14. Psal. 94. 7. Ephes. 2. 12. Psal. 14 2. 3. ● Thess. 4. 13. Rom. 12. 3. 2 Cor. 12. 4. Deut. 29. 29. Act. 1. 7. Luk. 13. 24. John 21. 22. 1 John 2. 22. 5 10. Gal. 5. 20. Col. 2. 18. 1 Tim. 6. 4 5. 2 Tim. 3. 8. Isa. 1. 3. Jer. 2. 8. 8. 7. 1 Sam. 2. 12. 2 Pet. 3. 5 Psal. 28. 5. Ps. 106. 7. Deu. 29. 4. Isa. 5. 13. Psal. 92. 6. Isa. 53. 3. 5. 12. Mat. 22. 5. Heb. 2. 3. Luk. 14. 18. Heb. 12. 25. Jam. 1. 8. John 20. 27. Luk. 24. 25. Mark 9. 24. Zeph. 3. 2. Gen. 4. 13. 1 Thess. 4. 13. Isa. 28. 15 17. Mat. 24. 37. Ps. 30. 6. Num. 30 31. Isa. 32. 9. 11. Deut. 17. 13. 13. 11. Jer. 5. 22. Zech. 1. 11. Deut. 28. 58 59. Eccles. 8. 13. Superbia est perversae celfitisdinis appetitus Isa. 2. 11 12. 9. 8 9. Eze. 2. 10 Ex. 5. 21. 14 11. 17. 2 3. Job 33. 13. 1 Cor. 3. 2. Amos 6 3 4 5. Ho● 9. 1. Isa. 22. 13. John 16. 20. Deut. 6. 12. 8. 11. 32. 18. 2 King 17. 38. Psal. 144. 53. Isa. 62. 7. Psal. 42. 20 21. Ezek. 18. 12 13. They call the Virgin Mary the mother of mercy and compassion the hope of our salvation They pray unto the Crosse O Crux ave spes unica hoc passionis tempore A●ge piis justitiam Reisque dona veniam Mark 16. 14. 10. 5. Mat. 19. 8. Job 17. 7. Mark 3. 5. Rom. 1. 21. Exod. 23. 13. Jer. 5. 7. Zeph. 1. 5. Deut. 6. 13 Zeph. 1. 6. Amos 4. 10. Ier. 4. 1. Dan. 9. 13. 2 Chr. 16. 12. Deut. 12. 30. 11. 16 Herein it differeth from the first Commandment that commanded the worship of God which is natural this the worship which is by divine institution Downams Sum of Divin Cultus naturalis is that which nature directeth all people to or which ariseth from the nature of God This belongs to all reasonable creatures He that acknowledgeth the●e is a God will acknowledge that he is to be be believed feared trusted loved and prayed to this was performed by Adam in Paradi●e and by the Angels in Heaven Isa. 6. 3. Heb. 1. 6. Cultus institutus instituted wor●●ip ●●p●nd● on the revelation of the will of God this was commanded Adam in his innocency as the Tree of Knowledge of G●od and Evil and the Tree of Life shew Natural worship is the chief instituted worship may be interrupted A time of worship is Iuris naturalis the seventh day Iuris positivi Some in these dayes say all institutions are meer forms and men may use or not use them at their pleasure according to their light Qui non est religiosus non est Christianus Cultus institutus est medium ex Dei voluntate ordinatum ad cultum naturalem exercendum pro nov●ndum indica●tur hujusmodi media omnia à Deo instituta in secundò praecepto per prohibitionem oppositorum mediorum omnium cultus ab hominibus excogitatorum sub titulo sculptilis imaginis que cum praecipua fuerunt olim hominum inventa cultum Dei depravantia aptissimè proponuntur per Syn●●dochen in Decalogo