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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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corruption of nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the soule of a soule renewed Secondly that a man may come to this estate there must be some root and beginning whence this change may arise and that is no other than Christ crucified the Redeemer and Mediatour of whose bodie beleeuers are members of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5.30 for looke as Eue was made of the side of Adam so is euery beleeuer of the blood of Christ and as euery man so farre as he is a sinfull man springeth from the first Adam so doth euery man so farre as he is renewed spring from the second Adam Christ Iesus Now that a man may spring out of Christ he must first being taken out of the wilde Oliue the old Adam Rom 6.5 be set and ingrafted into the second Adam as a new stocke and that by faith wrought in the heart by the spirit of God by which incision hee receiueth from Christ two things first in regard of his soule holines secondly in regard of bodie incorruption seeing that the whole man is vnited vnto Christ and so both soule and body receiue immortalitie and glorie Thirdly in this new birth there must be a new life by which if any liue not he is not borne again for the distinct knowledge of which life wee must distinguish of life life is vncreated and created vncreated life is the life of God yea God himselfe of which kind this is not Created life is either naturall or spirituall Naturall is that which we liue by naturall meanes as meate drinke sleepe physicke c. of which kind this new life is not but this is that spirituall life whereby a man in this life is ruled by the spirit of God according to the word and it standeth in two thinges First when the spirit dwelleth in the heart Secondly when the spirit ruleth the hart or more plainely this life hath two degrees First when a man beginneth to sauour affect and will spirituall things loueth them and chiefely affecteth them Rom. 8.5 when they haue some sauour and rellish vnto him Secondly when a man in all estates liueth by a iustifying faith and ordereth his life thereby The iust man saith Abacuke liueth by faith and this is as it is truly called life eternall the beginning and first degree of which euerie beleeuer hath possession of euen in this life The second point in this ground is the weight of it for which obserue the necessitie of the new birth in the former words where it is said that without it a man shall neuer see the kingdome of God much lesse enter into it No man is in Christ and so consequently out of state of saluation who is not a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 No outward prerogatiue can bring a man in request with God vnlesse hee be a new creature Gal. 6.15 It is a constant truth of Christ Ioh. 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part in me The third point is The Aduersaries who are first euery man by nature the wisedome of whom herein is enmitie with God For euery one naturally is willing to yeeld vnto God some externall seruice and ceremoniall worship as in the Church to draw neere to God with their lippes but when they should come to their renewing and the mortifying of their lusts O then they storme and swell and cast off this yoke because they say it abridgeth them of their ease libertie and pleasure and they cannot bee their owne men for it Secondly the Romane religion which for many hundred yeres hath stood in ceremoniall and bodily actions rites gestures apparrell and most of all in outwarde penance borrowed partly of the Iewes and partly of the Heathens but all this doctrine of the new birth of mortifying hidden lusts and deniall of a mans selfe is dead and buried among them little hereof is spoken or written in the great volumes of their greatest Clerks But the doctrine which is from God is spirituall as God himselfe is and most concerneth the inner man Secondly they are great aduersaries hereof in teaching that man though captiue to sinne hath a power in his nature whereby if the holy Ghost free him he can of himselfe will and doe that which is good which if it were so then he is but in part new and so is no new man Secondly a regenerate man must be a new creature now creation is a framing of something out of nothing not of something into somthing Thirdly thus a man should be but halfe dead and so could not be borne againe but onely strengthened euen as a man in a swoune of whom wee cannot say properly he is reuiued because hee was not dead but recouered The 17. ground is out of Galath 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made you free For the meaning of which we must know that Christian libertie which wee are exhorted to maintaine standeth in a double freedome First from the Morall law secondly from the Ceremoniall From the Morall law two waies first from the curse of the law Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. Secondly from the rigour of it which requireth personall and perfect obedience this rigour is moderated by Christ whence followeth a freedome also from iustification by workes Rom. 5.1 Galath 5.4 The second freedome is from the Ceremoniall law which hauing an end put to it by Christ bindeth no man but our libertie is procured to vs in meates drinkes and all things indifferent with good conscience seeing to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1.25 Where we are commaunded to stand fast wee see the weight of it to be such as it may not be departed from nor forsaken for then we become debters againe to the whole law and so are fallen from Christ. Aduersaries hereof are first the Libertines as the Family of loue who being as they say deified are so carried by the holie Ghost that they cannot sinne no though they should commit fornication but no man is freed from obedience to the law by Christ although hee be from the curse and rigour of it Secondly all that take libertie to sinne because they say God in Christ is mercifull but Christ freed from sinne not vnto it Thirdly the Romane Church holding that the Pope hath power to make lawes binding conscience properly prescribing such things to be done the obseruing of which is the worship of God and meritorious as on the Popish fasting daies yea and Wednesdaies and Fridaies not to eate flesh euen this law bindeth the conscience of a Papist and such abstinence they say is a worke of merit and a worship of God But it will be said that Princes and Magistrates make such lawes of meates drinkes apparell and must be obeyed Ans. These lawes bind not conscience but the outward man Secondly they do not abrogate our libertie but moderate the ouer common vse for the common good but Popish
two things first who is a naturall man secondly that it is a sinne to be a naturall man for it is noted as a maine sinne in these seducers Touching the former a naturall man is he who liuing a naturall life is endued with a reasonable soule and is gouerned by nature reason and sense onely without grace or the spirit of God which may appeare first by the word naturall which signifieth such a man as in whom the best thing is nature and in whom there is nothing more excellent than his reasonable soule though corrupted Secondly by the exposition or rather opposition in the words wherein it is opposed vnto the spirit who is wanting vnto such a one to leade him in the way of a heauenly life Further that yet wee may know this matter the better there be three things to be found in a naturall man 1. He hath a bodie and soule vnited together in one person 2. In his soule he hath excellent powers and faculties as will vnderstanding affections 3. Hee hath all the ornaments of man yet so as without grace such as are strength of bodie and minde memorie knowledge of Arts and Sciences ciuill policie and vertues as Iustice Prudence Temperance discretion to discerne what is meete to bee done what not these are ornaments incident to corrupt nature seruing not to abolish but to restraine and bridle corruption and containe men in order for the preseruation of humane societie Now he that hath these three and nothing else is but a meere naturall man The second point is that it is a sin to be a naturall man Here it may bee asked how it commeth to passe that a naturall man because he is a naturall man offendeth God Ans. There bee two things in euery naturall man to bee distinguished first there is nature secondly the corruption of nature the former is from God the latter from mans fall which two may be indeede distinguished but cannot now be separated the one is not the other but the one is not without the other this corruption is that sinne which presseth vs down and hangeth so fast on Heb. 12.1 which hath corrupted the whole mā so as the whole frame of man that is his whole disposition and inclination is corrupted and euill from his youth Genes 8.21 his wisedome is enmitie to God that is euen the best thing that is or can be in the flesh is hateful to God Rom. 8.5 himselfe is dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes. 2.1 hauing no more abilitie to mooue to any thing truly good than hath a dead man to bestirre himself in and about the actions of life For the cleerer beholding of this corruption of mans nature marke that there bee two degrees of it the former whereof is a want of that goodnes and righteousnes which at first was and now ought to be found in our nature The latter is a pronenesse and disposition vnto all euill which carrieth the heart on euery occasion thereunto this corruption must bee conceiued as an ocean sea sending out into euery channell and veine of the soule and whole man streames and floods of wickednes for looke into the principall powers of the soule ye shall neede to goe no further for the finding of this truth For first in the minde is such an impotencie as whereby it is vnable to thinke or approoue of any thing that is truly good 2. Corin. 3.5 Wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke of any good but all our sufficiencie is of God 1. Cor. 2.15 The naturall mā perceiueth not the things of God which is most manifest thus first hee knoweth not God himselfe aright for although hee may know God as an infinite and eternall being or in some other attribute yet he cannot know him as a father to himselfe Secondly hee knoweth not neither conceiueth the corruption of his owne nature nor his sinnes originall and actuall in the staine and danger of them Thirdly he conceiueth not of the remedie of sinne the death of Christ but accounteth it foolishnes that life should be brought out of death Secondly as his mind is blind so a naturall mans will is rebellious and is not subiect vnto the will of God neither indeed can be Ioh. 6.44 No man can come to Christ vnlesse the Father draw him insinuating our withdrawing of our selues and resistance of his call vntill he turne vs make our wils of vnwilling willing wils to will that which is truly good whēce the Apostle saith that to will namely that which is truly good is not of our selues it is the gift of God Now hence wee may resolue that question why it is a sinne to bee a naturall man not because a man hath nature in him but because his whole nature is tainted with originall sinne Ob. The naturall man may pleade that he cannot helpe it hee was borne sinfull why then should he be blamed Ans. Rom. 5.12 In Adam we all sinned for when he eat the forbidden fruit we euen eat it in him are no lesse blame-worthie than he was Ob. But it will be said it is no reason that we should bee said to sin in him seeing then we were not Ans. Adam was a publike person representing all mankinde and euery particular person descēding from him and therefore what he did all and euery man did in him Euen as a Burgesse in the Parliament giuing his voyce and assent all the countrie or shire is said to giue their voices though they be absent and not present otherwise than in his person God then giuing a prohibition vnto Adam hee gaue it vnto all vs in him and threatning him he threatned vs and all mankinde this onely is the difference that hee being the roote or flocke and wee the branches arising from him hee sinned actually and we by relation and imputation If then the naturall man still pleade hee was no cause but was borne so the answere is cleere that himselfe is a cause although not in himselfe yet in Adam before he was borne he procured that he should be borne a naturall man Secondly it may be pleaded againe If I be a naturall man I am Gods creature as I am why then should I be blamed Ans. The former distinction betweene nature and corruption of nature must be here retained for by the former the naturall man is Gods creature and not in respect of the corruption of nature for this he created not as the other but suffred it to passe by generation from man to man for the execution of the punishment of the first sinne Quest. Why did not God stay this corruption in Adams person Ans. God could haue done it why he did it not the reason is neither knowne nor to be enquired a secret it is but yet a iust iudgement of God silently to bee with reuerence rested in and not with curiositie to be searched out Vse First some may hence gather if a man be iustly blamed for being only a naturall man and
Apostle calles his good purpose Rom. 8.28 yea to shew the freenes of this grace it is thence denominated and called the election of grace Secondly the meanes of this calling which in the Lords hands are diuers whereof some prepare to calling othersome are instruments of it as first the reading of the Scriptures seruing to bege●● generall historicall faith Secondly afflictions in bodie goods name friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground Thirdly the denouncing of Gods iudgements and threats of the law which sends to hell but giues no grace these are generall preparatiues others are instruments to effect inward calling as the preaching of the glad tidings of the Gospell which is the most principall and effectuall meanes of this speciall and effectuall vocation and to this Paul ascribes it as 2. Thess. 2.14 whereunto he called you by our Gospell that this is true consider a two fold worke of this Ministerie when it is powerfully applied to the hearts of men First it openeth the very heart of a man and laies him out to the beholding of himselfe shewing him that by his detestable sins he hath made himselfe more vgly in Gods eyes than any Toade can be in mans whereby he is prepared not to lie asleep in this estate but vnto the second worke which is to apprehend and applie the blood and merits of Christ exhibited in the Gospell for the washing and bathing of his sinfull soule that so he may be saued from wrath Thirdly the persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom hee had before predestinate those he called which seemes to be expounded in Acts 13.48 So many as were ordained to life euerlasting beleeued that is were called vnto the faith all therefore are not called It pleaseth some to teach another doctrine namely that God for his part calls all men effectually and giues them a power to beleeue if they will but the difference say they is in the will of man to prooue which they bring this comparison The Sunne shines on waxe and clay equally the waxe is softned but the clay is hardened But this is not true out of the Scriptures for it is not giuen to all to vnderstand the mysteries of the kingdome Matth. 13.11 these things are hid from most of the wise of the world and reueiled vnto babes Matth. 11.25 Knowledge is giuen to some not to others and consequently faith for they which haue not knowne cannot beleeue Fourthly the time of this calling The particular time of any mans calling is not reueiled but laid vp in the secret counsell of God in whose hands times and seasons are yet the extent of the time is large enough though stinted euen the time of this life some at the sixt houre some at the ninth and others at the eleuenth c. but not after because that then all means of calling men cease Now because men know not the date of their daies it behoues them out of hand to striue to enter not to deferre from day to day alleaging that some are called at the twelfth houre but accept of the Lords call while it is yet the acceptable time If the Lord now say Seeke my face let thy heart answere as an eccho which ●akes the word out of the mouth thy face O Lord I will seeke Psalm 27.8 such a pleasant harmonie God is delighted with If he say as the Prophet speaketh Behold now my people they are presently readie to answere Behold now our God and the rather because the Lord will be free and not stinted by thee that either he should call thee in thy crooked yeeres or not at all he will not be prescribed vnto extraordinarily to call thee at the twelfth houre as he did the theefe on the crosse when thou howlest vpon the bed of thy sorrow and gaspest vpon thy death-bed Therefore while it is called to day let vs heare the voyce and harden our hearts no more Fiftly wherein doth this effectuall calling stand Both in the outward and inward calling because the former is often in the meanes giuen to Nations people men at least to make them without all excuse but the second being secret and inward whereby the Lord makes a mans heart inwardly answere the outward calling possesseth him with a willing mind stedfastly to beleeue in the Lord Iesus and with an endeuour to please the Lord in all things thus is the heart pearced Psal. 40.6 the heart of stone changed into an hart of flesh that is made tractable and pliable Ezech. 11.19 and an heart which is a sacrifice accepted of God such an hart was Lydia● Act. 16.15 when God had opened it it was heedfull and attentiue to the words of Paul this hart can rellish the sweete promises of the Gospell and no other Sixtly the excellencie of this calling which wee shall perceiue by these considerations First in that it is a great work as was the creation of man at the first Rom. 4.18 so the Apostle maketh it 2. Cor. 4.6 he that at the beginning called light out of darknes the same hath shined in our hearts c. that as God cals the first time and dead creatures come foorth to life so with no lesse powerfull voyce the Lord cals the second time the heart of man dead in sinne and it is quickened with the life of God Secondly this effectuall calling goes beyond the worke of our creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second and at the same instant power is giuen to beleeue being in time both together though in order faith is first and then ingrafting wherein is not onely a bare priuation as in the creation when God called things that were not as though they were but here is a plaine resistance and rebellion God calling not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be Thus to raise a man out of the blood of Christ is more than to raise Eue out of Adams side to raise a dead soule from the death of sinne farre more glorious and powerfull than to raise a dead bodie from bodily death to raise a man to supernaturall life farre greater than to a naturall onely Thirdly this calling ratifies all our couenants with God Men in their Baptisme enter couenant with God but often start from it and will not stand to it so as the couenant is onely made but when as a man is effectually called the couenant is not onely made but truly accomplished and that on mans part Vse Seeing we are called of God himselfe in the ministerie of the word for Paul calles it Phil. 3.14 an high calling we must labour to ioyne the inward calling with it which is higher than that by hauing first a griefe because we cannot beleeue secondly a readie mind thirdly an endeuour to beleeue fourthly a sorrow because we beleeue no more and faile so much in the seruice
reformed resisteth plainly saying I will not haue this man to rue ouer me I desire none of his waies This loue then comes from grace 1. Ioh. 4.7 Loue commeth from God 1. Tim. 1.5 it hath his beginning from a pure heart true faith and good conscience Which must bee maintained against the Papists who say that nature affoordeth the inclination but grace the practise whereas indeed grace giueth both Thirdly consider the vse of loue It is the instrument and companion of true faith which worketh by loue Galath 5.6 The proper worke of faith is to lay hold on Christ this faith as a hand can of it selfe doe but when it commeth to the practise of morall duties it can no more worke without the grace of loue then a hand which can lay hold alone and of it selfe receiue and retaine can cut any thing without an instrument Whence it appeareth that faith in iustification is alone but in the life of man it worketh by loue and whereas it hath bin taught for many hundred yeeres that loue is the life of faith that is vn●rue for it only testifieth that faith hath life It is alleaged that as the bodie without the spirit is dead euen so faith without workes is dead therfore workes are the soule and giue life to faith But this consequence from this comparison is not good because the soule is not properly the soule of the bodie but of the man and so it proueth not that loue is the soule of faith Again the word Spirit there betokeneth the breath without which the body is dead and thus is the comparison to be returned that as breath maketh not a man liuing but sheweth him to be aliue so loue maketh not faith liuing but testifieth it so to be yea indeed is the fruite and effect of faith as breath is of life More particularly this grace of loue is two-fold first that whereby man loueth God secondly that whereby man loueth man In the former note two points first what it is namely a motion of the heart whereby it is affected to God causing it to be well pleased in God and his workes for himselfe as also to seeke fellowship with God so much as it can Secondly note the measure of this loue which in Scripture is double first that which the law requireth and that is the full measure of loue loue in the highest degree when man loueth God with all his soule with all his strength and all the powers of the whole man so as in man no loue can be aboue it vnto this all men are bound yet no man since the fall can attaine Secondly that which the Gospell describeth standing in an vnfained will and true endeuour to loue God with all the heart all the strength and all the powers which is a smaller measure than the former yea and a qualification and moderation of it yet to none but those that are in Christ. Wherby we come to the right vnderstanding of diuers places of scripture as 2. King 23.25 of Iosiah 2. Chron. 15.15 all Iudah sought the Lord with their whole hart These and such other places must be vnderstood as they are qualified by the Gospell in that they willed and endeuoured by all good meanes to seeke God yea this text also must be vnderstood of this second measure seeing the former being in the highest degree cannot be multiplied no not if men were glorified The second kinde of this loue is that whereby man loueth his neighbour which is a certaine diuine and spirituall motion causing the heart as the former both to be wel pleased in man for God that is because he is Gods image and his owne flesh as also to powre out it selfe and communicate goodnes to his neighbour in wishing speaking and hoping the best of him Wherein by the way obserue a plaine difference betweene faith and loue faith is a hand but to pull Christ to our selues loue is a hand also but opening it selfe and giuing foorth vnto others In this loue of the neighbour consider these three things first the order of it The order that hath been taught for many hundred yeeres is that first wee must loue our selues and then others from this ground Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe for the rule say they must goe before the thing ruled But this is not found seeing worthie then haue been commended in Scriptures for louing others as well yea and better than their owne selues so Dauid loued Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.17 Christ loued his enemies better than himselfe these began not with themselues yea indeed the right beginning of loue is in God and then as a man is a more principall instrument of Gods glorie hee must be for God preferred in our loue aboue our selues Thus euery man is bound to loue and preferre the life of his Prince aboue his owne see the perfect rule of direction herein Ioh. 13.34 Secondly note the manner of it set downe in that precept Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe that is as wee are cheerfull and free to practise the dutie of loue to our selues so must we doe it to others for this precept aimeth at the manner rather than the rule of our loue to man for that is as Christ hath loued vs. Thirdly the kindes of it it is two-fold first single when men loue others but are not repaid with loue againe yea when a man loues his enemie but is not loued again The second is mutuall loue that is when loue is requited with loue called in Scripture brotherly loue see Philip. 2.2 1. Cor. 1.10 when men are of one iudgement like minded speak● one thing and one soule is as it were in many bodies The second point is the multiplication of loue which the Apostle prayeth for vpon good ground because it ioyneth man to God and man to man and so becommeth as it is called the bond of perfection the bond of the Church Common-wealth of al societies 1. Cor. 13. Loue ed●fieth that is it helpeth to build the kingdome of God yea it constraineth men to all good duties in their particular callings Qu. But how shall this loue be multiplied Ans. By certaine meditations and practises The meditations are many first on Gods cōmandement Be seruants one to another in loue Gal. 5.13 Secondly of Gods image which al men should beare in loue 1. Ioh. 3.16 Thirdly of the fellowship of the faithfull hauing all one father one brother one saluation all linked by one spirit Ephes. 4.4 Fourthly of the loue of God Ioh. 13.35 which hereby we shall be assured of 1. Ioh. 3.14 The practises also are diuers first wee must labour to be assured of Gods loue to vs and encreased vpon vs Ephes. 5.2 Secondly the law of nature must teach vs to doe as we would be done vnto Thirdly our care must be more to loue than be loued for to loue is a vertue in our selues to be loued i● the vertue of another Fourthly pray daily for
who hold an absolute God out of the persons Thirdly our common people who pray to such a God in their owne names out of the Sonne and holie Ghost Fourthly the Popish Church which denieth by their doctrine the three persons for hee that denieth the Sonne denieth the Father and holy Ghost 1. Ioh. 2.23 Now they denie the Sonne both in his natures abolishing his Manhood in their doctrine of the Sacrament as also his offices of King Priest and Prophet for which we must vtterly separate from them The sixth ground is That nothing commeth to passe without the special decree will and prouidence of God Matth. 10.23 A sparrow falleth not to the ground without his will Ob. Sinne is against Gods will and therefore commeth to passe without his will Ans. That which is against the will of God is not without his will Quest. How can this be Ans. No sinne commeth to passe but God decreeth the permitting and being of it now to permit sinne and the being of it is neither the causing of sinne nor the doing of it but the not hindring of it to which he is not bound This ground being denied chance will be brought in and God himselfe denied The seuenth ground is That God hath chosen some men before the world was to be partakers of the riches of his mercies and passed by others because it was his will Roman 9.18 He will haue mercie on whom he will Ephes. 1.4 1. Pet. 2.9 Some are a chosen generation and therfore some are not chosen Againe whom he will he hardeneth he hideth the mysteries of the kingdome from some why because his pleasure was such Matth. 11.25 And of this there is good reason for in nature the first cause ordereth the second causes and not the second the first Now Gods will is cause of all causes which therefore must rule all as the supreme and not be ruled by any other That this is a ground appeareth 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure the Lord knoweth who are his and indeede none other can bee the ground of grace and happines vnto vs than the counsaile of God in electing vs called therefore of the Apostle a foundation Aduersaries hereof First our common people that thus abuse this doctrine If I be chosen to saluation I shall be saued therefore I may liue as I list They might as well reason thus The tearme of my life is stinted none can lengthen or shorten it I will therefore neither eate nor drink nor vse Physicke nor other meanes of prolonging my daies which what were it else but to murther the bodie So these from the same ground become murtherers of their soules whereas men chosen to the end will prease after the meanes and conclude otherwise and say I will vse meanes that I may come to life Secondly others more learned are aduersaries to this ground who teach that God for his part hath chosen all men to life and for his part would haue all saued and that Christ for his part hath redeemed all and the holy Ghost giueth or offereth grace to all If wee aske why then are not all saued They answere because God foresawe those who would beleeue whom hee appointed to saluation he foresaw also others who would not beleeue and adiudged them to damnation But by this doctrine shall Gods will hang on the will of man and bee ruled by it seeing hee would haue men saued but man will not and so this ground is in part rased The eighth ground is That God made the heauens and the earth and all things that haue being in them Col. 1.16 By him were created all things which are in heauen and in earth This is a principle for if creatures had no beginning then are they become Gods which would ouerthrow the Godhead But all things were not made besides God For the highest heauen the Throne of God is eternall as God himselfe is Ans. The Throne of God is a creature as well as the rest Heb. 11.10 He looked for a citie hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God In the world are many euils which could not be from God the foundation of all goodnesse Ans. Euill is of three sorts first naturall which commeth by nature corrupted as sicknes diseases plagues and death it selfe Secondly materiall euils as hurtfull beasts poisons in trees plants beasts these are created and the very poison of them is a creature Thirdly morali euils which be trāsgressions against the Morall law and Commandement of God Of the two former God is the author and cause Esai 45.7 I create euill that is naturall and materiall but of the third that is morall euils which be sinne God is no cause Ob. But God is the cause of all things and sinne is some thing Ans. Sin is no creature but the destruction of Gods image which is a creature effected by the creature for though the creature cannot make a creature yet it can destroy a creature The aduersarie to this ground is the Atheist who holdeth the creatures to haue been from euerlasting and so by denying one God hee maketh manie thousands The 9. ground is that God made man according to his owne image Gen. 1.27 For by creation man had three things first the substance of bodie and soule Secondly in them the powers and faculties of minde will affections c. Thirdly an excellent conformitie of all these to the will of God This is the image of God called in the Scripture righteousnes and holinesse This is a ground for the image of God is the substance and body of the law hee therefore that denieth this denieth the law the fall from it and restoring vnto it by Christ. The 10. ground is that by Adam sinne and death entred into the world and in him all meere men sinned Rom. 5.12 To the conceauing of which wee must know that the first sinne of Adam was eating the forbidden fruite the next was the putting out of Gods image in stead of which corruption of heart tooke place so farre as the seede of all sinne being within him he was prone and readie to euery sinne Now Adam being a publike person and hauing receiued whatsoeuer hee had for himselfe and his posteritie either to hold for or lose from both hence is it that both those sinnes are become the two first sinnes in our conception he sinning wee sinned and with him haue the seeds of all sin within vs by nature no sinne excepted no not the sinne against the holy Ghost Yea no otherwise is it with vs than with a noble man practising treason whose whole blood is therby stained Ob. But Christ came of Adam therefore he in Adam sinned Ans. God made this law with Adam that all who came of him by ordinarie generation should be guiltie of his sinne but Christ was extraordinarily conceiued by the holy Ghost and took of Mary Adams
Baptisme yea in it the very action of the Minister is a worship of God and doth confer grace ex opere operat● this was their old doctrine which now they colour with this addition If the partie be well and rightly disposed but besides the vse yea the lawfull and common vse there is by this ground required an holy vse of any thing to make it acceptable to God or rightly profitable to the doer himselfe Secondly their hallowing of Water Bels Palmes Ashes Spettle is a meere mockerie of God seeing they haue neither word nor promise from God that these creatures should thus be hallowed to preserue from euill bodie or soule Thirdly they erre in the foundation of religion diuer● waies euery which such error is blasphemie Fourthly that religion oppugneth the sanctification of Gods name in the vse of a lawfull oath teaching first that the Pope hath power to dispense with an oath Secondly that men may sweare by the Masse and so doing make it a God Thirdly euen the learned among them with one consent hold that a man may sweare ambiguously euen when he knoweth the thing to be otherwise The seuenth ground is Galath 5.14 The whole law is fulfilled in this one word Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe The meaning is not that we should loue our neighbour equally with our selues and with no lesse affection or degree of loue but that with the same cheerefulnes willingnes and truth of heart that we perform duties of loue to our selues ought wee also to reach them out vnto others The weight of this ground appeareth in that not onely Christ saith It is like the great Commandement but also in that it is the summe of the whole law for the first table must be practised in the second and the loue of God testified in loue to men The Aduersaries of this ground bee the Popish Church who thus expound it First loue thy self and then thy neighbour making the loue of our selues the foundation of the loue of others but sometime wee may loue our neighbour aboue our selues as Ionathan loued Dauid more than his own soule and Christ loued his enemies more than his owne life Secondly it teacheth that a man must not loue particularly his particular enemie nor salute him in particular but generally as if hee salute a whole companie together his enemie being there The eighth ground Exod. 20.12 Honour thy father and thy mother c. In the words two things are to be considered first an ordinance of God secondly the meanes to preserue it The ordinance is that all men must not be equall in degree but there must bee orders of men of whom some are to be in higher degree as superiours some in lower condition as inferiours the former are aboue others in regarde of power to command and to punish the latter are in subiection vnder others by whose discretion and will they are to be gouerned This ordinance is described Rom. 13.1 Let euery soule be subiect to the superiour power that is be content to be vnder others which are above him in power so here some must bee as fathers and mothers some must bee subiected vnto them The meanes to preserue this ordinance is the yeelding of honour vnto whom it belongeth which standeth in three things first in reuerence towards the persons of superiours Secondly in obedience to their iust commandements Thirdly in thankefulnes for their paines in gouerning thus is that golden sentence to be expounded Matth. 22. Giue vnto C●sar the things that are Caesars that is giue him reuerence obedience thankfulnes according to that Rom. 13.7 Giue feare vnto whom feare belongeth honour to whom honour tribute to whom tribute The weight of this ground is plaine because without it can be no practise of true religion for first by it stand the three things the Familie the Church and Common-wealth all which are maintained by gouernment and subiection wherefore the Lord set this Commandement the first of the second Table as whereupon he would found all humane societies Secondly gouernour● in any of these societies are the keepers of both Tables without whose helpe and authoritie Gods kingdome could haue no abiding on the earth Aduersaries of this Commandement are the Papists who weaken the authoritie of the Magistrate in exempting their Clergie from all Ciuill power of Magistracie in causes both iudiciall that is matters controuersall and criminall that is matters of trespasse although the Apostle saith Let euery soule be subiect Secondly that Church hath set vp a power to bring into order and subiection all the Kings vpon earth namely the power of the Pope who challengeth to himselfe to ouerrule yea and to depose at his pleasure Kings and Queenes who in their dominions are aboue al and only vnder God Thirdly that religion lesseneth the power of parents for in the Councel of Trent they establish first Mariages and Contracts made by children without consent of parents Secondly Vowes also made by children vnder age and without consent of parents are held lawful and not to be broken The ninth ground is Micha 6.8 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to do iustly to loue mercie to humble thy selfe and to walke with thy God The meaning Three vertues are here required first Iust d●aling secondly Mercie thirdly Humilitie Touching the first wee are commanded to do● iustly and this execution of iustice between man and man hath fiue substantiall parts First to giue honor to whom honor is due Secondly by thought word and deed to preserue the body and soule of our neighbour that is his life spirituall and temporall Thirdly his chastitie which is the honor of bodie and soule in single life and Matrimonie Fourthly his worldly estate Fiftly his good name This is the scope of all the Commandements of the second Table Now because the due execution of iustice must bee tempered with mercie therefore is mercie required of man in the second place which is a readinesse to relieue the miserie of the distressed And thirdly because iustice and mercie without godlinesse are but ciuil vertues we are in the last place commaunded to walke in humilitie with our God which containeth the summe of the first table and standeth in three things first wee must acknowledge our sinnes secondly intreate for pardon thirdly purpose not to offend God any more but endeuour to preuent sinne to come Concerning y● weight of this ground it appeareth in Micha 6.7 where the Lord testifieth himselfe to be more delighted with the practise of loue and mercie than with oblations of thousands of Rammes and tenne thousand riuers of oyle and elsewhere I will haue mercie and not sacrifice Yea Titus 2.12 This is made the end of the appearing of the grace of God that we should liue soberly in regard of our selues iustly in regard of others and godly in regard of God These vertues are so respected of God
wherein wee were inthralled to sin and Satan seeing it were a madnes to returne to such bondage againe If Christ be dead for vs let that grace moue vs to die to sinne if hee being risen againe sit at Gods right hand that wee might sit there with him let that grace mooue vs to walk as those that are risen with him and haue our conuersation in heauen seeking euen while wee are below the things that are aboue and so of the rest Further the Apostle to make those seducers more odious saith not simplie they turne the grace of God but of our God into wantonnes which noteth the indignitie of their fact in which consider three things first by what meanes God becomes our God and that is not by any merit of ours but by meanes of the gratious couenant propounded in the Gospell promising pardon and remission of sin in and by Christ. Iere. 31.31 This is called the new couenant which the Lord contracteth with his people where writing his law in their inward parts he becommeth their God and they his people Secondly what must wee doe to say truly and in assurance that God is our God Ans. Wee must for our parts make a couenant with him vnto which is required a consent on either partie first on Gods part that he will be our God which we shall finde not in any reuelation besides the Scriptures but generally in the word and more specially in the ministerie of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments annexed as seales vnto the Couenant in which God doth as surely couenant with vs as if hee should from heauen speake vnto vs. Secondly on our part is required consent of which there be two degrees first when we make an outward profession of faith heare the word receiue the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper which serue to distinguish vs from Iewes Turkes c. this is somewhat but not sufficient to make God our God seeing it is common to the very hypocrites themselues Secondly seeing hee is not a Iew which is one outwardly but which is a Iew within there is required in our consent a further degree which standeth in an inward consent of the heart whereby a man taketh God for his God which is then begun when first a man acknowledgeth and bewaileth his sinnes Secondly when he endeuoureth to bee reconciled to God Thirdly when he purposeth neuer to sin againe when this couenant is thus concluded by consent of both parties a man may safely and truly say that God is his God Now seeing wee know these things our dutie is to labour to be setled and assured in our conscience that God is our God for first in this assurance is the foundation of all true comfort all the promises of God are hereupon grounded and herein accomplished that God is our God see Isai. 41.10 Be not afraid I am thy God yea Christ being vpon the Crosse hauing the pangs of hel vpon him herein staied himselfe My God my God so Dauid Psalm 22.1 and being readie to be stoned to death comfort●d himselfe in the Lord his God 1. Sam. 30.6 And not onely is it the foundation of all our comfort in this life but of our happines after death it selfe being the ground of those two maine Articles of our faith the resurrection of the bodie and the immortalitie of the soule for by vertue of this Couenant alone shall wee rise againe after death to life glorie and immortalitie as Christ himselfe disputing against the Sadduces from hence prooueth the resurrection in that God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Secondly it is the ground of al obedience Psal. 95.7 the Prophet exhorting men thereunto vseth this as a reason For he is the Lord our God and wee are the people of his hands the preface of the Morall law enforcing obedience laieth the same ground For I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt see also Psal. 50.71 and whosoeuer is truly perswaded that God is his God cannot but obey him The fift propertie of these seducers is That they deny God the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ. Thus are they described by their manners The Translators of this Epistle were as it seemeth of opinion that these words are properly spoken of God the Father and of God the Sonne also but by the tenour of the words in the originall it seemeth that they are all to bee vnderstood of Christ and not of the Father and are thus to be read Which denie that onely Ruler who is God and our Lord Iesus Christ. Again the tenour of the words being borrowed from the Epistle of Peter may thence be rightly expounded now Peter speaking of the same sinne of these seducers applieth it only to be a denial of Christ 2. Pet. 2.1 They denie the Lord that bought them In the words then consider two things first the sinne here condemned namely to denie Iesus Christ. Secondly a description of Christ. For the first To denie Iesus Christ is to renounce and forsake Christ and so much as in a man lieth to make his death voyd and of none effect Now because this deniall presupposeth a redemption as Peter mentioneth they denying the Lord that bought them this question is to be cleered how these men being reprobates can be said to bee redeemed by Christ Answ. Wee must not thinke that they were in Gods decree euer redeemed for then had they been saued he doing whatsoeuer he willeth Psal. 115.3 but it is to be meant in regard of themselues and other men for both in their owne conceit iudgement they were redeemed as also in the iudgement of others who are to bee led by the rule of charitie in passing their iudgement vpon men and to account of them as redeemed leauing all secret iudgements to God Secondly the description of Christ by three things first that he is a Ruler yea an only ruler a Lord and ruler ouer all things in generall in heauen earth and hell and more specially a Lord ouer his elect onely and in that he is said to be an onely ruler it must not bee meant as excluding the Father and holie Ghost but all false gods and false Christs as Ioh. 17.3 the Father is called the onely God for all outward actions of the Trinitie are common to all the persons Secondly that hee is God which is a notable place against all Arrians to prooue the Godhead of Christ. Thirdly he is said to be our Lord Ours in two respects especially first of the free donation of his Father who gaue to him a people to be Lord and King ouer before all worlds Secondly in regard of his worke of redemption which hee wrought for them who were of the Father giuen vnto him Out of that which hath bin here said we may note these two points first how these seducers denie Christ namely not openly and plainly for then the Church should haue espied them neither in word nor
make account of that daye of generall iudgement yet may we well reckon vpon the day of our particular iudgement and the day of our owne death that so wee may be fitted thereto For as this shall leaue vs so that shall finde vs. A necessarie doctrine and dutie to be enforced in these drowsie daies wherein euery man almost putteth off the euill day and maketh league and couenants with death and hell the young man presumeth of length of daies the olde man dreameth he may liue one yeere longer both of them deferre hereupon their repentance in that they both are of one minde namely that their Master will yet deferre his comming Thirdly we must not only carrie within vs a conceit and opinion of this day but also must be inwardly affected with it that we may walke in awe and reuerence before God in regard of it 2. Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terrors of the Lord we perswade men c. Now in the latter part of this verse the attendants of the Lord in his comming are mentioned in these words With thousands of his Saints which must be vnderstood not only of Angels but men also 1. Thess. 3.13 at the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ with all his Saints Qu. How can this be and how shall the Saints come with him Ans. All men shall rise with their owne bodies good bad at the sound of the Trumpet then shall the Saints be taken vp into the clowdes to meete Christ and shall be made a part of his attendance but the wicked shal stand vpō the earth wishing the mountaines and hils to fall vpon them and hide them from the presence of the Iudge Which affoordeth a most speciall comfort vnto all them who know themselues to be the members of Christ they shall not need to be dismaied at that day nor feare the face of the wicked seeing they shall be receiued in the clowdes into fellowship with Christ before the iudgement begin which manner of proceeding the Apostle hauing described concludeth with the same Wherefore comfort your selues one another with these wordes vers 18. Here also may bee noted the power maiestie and omnipotencie of Christ in his second comming although his first comming was base and in the forme of a seruant now he shall come with many millions of Angels and Saints whom all creatures cannot resist let no wicked man thinke then either to absent himselfe or escape his fearefull wrath the only way to auoide it is in thy life time to meete him by repentance Vers. 15. To giue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodlily committed and of all their cruell speakings which wicked sinners haue spoken against him THe second point in the testimonie is the iudgement of the Lorde which together with the cause is in this verse described Concerning the iudgement wee must knowe that it is either generall or speciall both of them here mentioned the former in these wordes To giue iudgement against all men the latter in these words following And to rebuke all the vngodly among them In the generall iudgement it may be asked how Christ can bee said to giue iudgement against all men seeing the Saints shall come with him and hee will passe no sentence against them Ans. The meaning is he will giue iudgement vpon all men for the godly shall receiue and heare a sentence but of absolution and amongst all men he will rebuke the vngodly all persons shall come vnto iudgement without exception of what age sexe or state soeuer they be This vniuersall iudgement teacheth vs first to redresse before this day come whatsoeuer within vs would when it commeth confound vs for euery man must appeare in his owne person no Procter shall be allowed to speake or solicite for any man the secrets of all hearts must bee disclosed and euery man shall receiue accordingly to that he hath done It standeth men therefore in hand to reforme things amisse before hand for they shall appeare nakedly euen as they are Quest. How shall this bee done Ans. 1. Cor. 11.21 Iudge thy selfe before hand and thou shalt not bee iudged of the Lord arraigne examine cast and condemne thy selfe sue for pardon as for life and death and thou shalt escape that fearefull iudgement For hee that confesseth his sinnes and forsaketh them shall finde mercie Prou. 28.13 Thus doe and mercie belongeth vnto thee Vpon the same ground Paul raiseth the same dutie admonishing all men euery where to repent because he hath appointed a day in which hee will iudge the worlde in righteousnes Act. 17.30.31 Secondly seeing there is a day of vniuersall iudgment seeke in the meane time to stop the mouth of thy conscience that it may then stand with thee to excuse and acquite thee and neuer dare to offend againe and wound it for it is a deputie Iudge vnder God which if it condemne thee much more shall God the great Iudge being greater than thy conscience Thirdly hence in all actions our care should be to approoue our hearts vnto God especially in hearing and speaking the word prayer vse of the Sacraments yea and all our endeuours should be to please and obey him who one day will giue an vpright sentence vpon them all Thus the consideration of the iudgement to come made the Apostle Paul endeuour to approoue all the actions of his life vnto God 2. Cor. 5.11 So Peter 2. Epist. 3.11 seeing all these things shall be dissolued what manner of men ought we to be in holy conuersation and godlines looking for the hasting vnto the comming of the day of the Lord The speciall iudgement is laid down in the next words and they containe two things first the persons who shall be iudged All the vngodly among them Secondly the manner of their iudgement in the word rebuke or conuince The persons are set out by their propertie of vngodlinesse which is a sinne directly against God and the vngodly man is he who denieth God the honour due vnto him of whom that we might the better know him the Scripture hath giuen fiue notes or properties as first that he knoweth not or acknowledgeth not the true God aright according to his word Psal. 10.4 All their thoughts be that there is no God that is they acknowledge him not in his presence prouidence iustice or mercie Secondly he subiecteth not his body soule and conscience to the laws of God in al things but taketh libertie to liue as hee list Iob. 21.14 They say to the Almightie Depart from vs we will none of thy waies Psalm 50.16 They hate to be reformed Thirdly in heart and life he dependeth not himselfe vpon the will power prouidence and good pleasure of God but on something out of God in himself or some other creature Abac. 2.4 whereas the iust man liueth by faith the wicked man exalteth himselfe and is puffed vp as bearing himself vpon
not hauing the spirit of God then euery one hath power to receiue the spirit of God Ans. This is no good reason but is all one as if because a bankrout is blamed for not discharging his debts to his creditors another man should conclude that surely he is therefore able to pay them But these wicked men were blamed here first because they professed Christ but yet had not his spirit secondly because that in Adam they were the causes that they were borne without the spirit of God and so made themselues vnfit to receiue him Secondly if naturall men bee iustly condemned much more those that are worse than they as Atheists prophane persons those which contemne the assemblies and neglect the meanes of their saluation and yet looke for saluation as wel as others The Gentiles who were without the law doe the things of the law by nature Rom. 2.24 and yet many that professe the name of Christ and liue vnder the Gospell goe not so farre as those naturall men in doing the things of the law so as euen those Heathens and naturall men shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne many a professor of Christ of whom euen many come short of the Diuell himselfe who beleeueth and trembleth and yet not a few professors neither know what the Diuell beleeues neither through h●rdnes of heart can tremble at the iudgements of God as he can doe Thirdly those come farre short that think themselues in state good enough because they liue ciuilly and deale iustly and neighbourly as they say for the naturall man can doe this and yet shall be condemned no plea shall stand at the great day of the Lord but that which assureth of the pardon of sinne sealed vp with the blood of Christ. Let a mans outward and ciuill righteousnes be neuer so great yea if it could be equall to the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which for outward appearance was without all exception yet if hee bring not a righteousnes exceeding that he can neuer be saued Fourthly in that the naturall man is blamed for being a naturall man this ouerthroweth all merits of congruitie which the Papists boast of because a mans person not being accepted before God all his works are sinnes the worke neuer pleaseth God till the worker first please him Fifthly euery professor of Christ must strip the naturall man and become a spirituall person that is such as the spirit of God dwelleth in for first as the Father worketh our saluation by giuing Christ and his merits so must the holie Ghost by applying the same vnto vs else can we looke for no saluation Secondly as the soule giueth life to the bodie which else were dead so the spirit of God is the soule of our soules and quickneth them with new life being dead in sinne Thirdly wee can neuer know that wee are in Christ or belong vnto him but by the presence of the spirit in our hearts 1. Ioh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit that he hath giuen vs. Quest. But how shall a man know whether hee hath the spirit or no Ans. Let him examine himselfe first whether he inwardly loue and feare God in his word of promise and threatning secondly whether he subiect his heart and life vnto him thirdly whether his heart be continually lift vp in inuocation and thanksgiuing All these are the workes of the spirit of God and they which 〈◊〉 of the spirit thus sauour and ●ffect the things of the spirit Rom. 8. Quest. But I feare I haue not the spirit how shall I obtaine it Ans. By vsing the meanes of reading the Word meditation and prayer especially Luk. 11.13 Your heauenly father giueth the holy Ghost to th●● that desire him Psal. 143.5.6 I meditate in all thy workes and stretch foorth my hands vnto thee Vers. 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holie faith praying in the holy Ghost IN this verse vnto the end of the 23. are set downe some meanes whereby all beleeuers may be fitted to the maintenance of the faith and true religion vnto the which the Apostle hath in the former part of the Epistle perswaded These meanes are contained in fiue rules here prescribed first concerning Faith secondly Loue thirdly Hope fourthly Meekenes fifthly Christian seueritie the first of which is contained in this twentith verse which is that they should build themselues vpon their faith which is not barely propounded but inforced and vrged first by a motiue in this word most holy faith secondly by the meanes of it which is prayer praying in the holy Ghost In the rule note two things first that faith is a foundation secondly that the dutie of beleeuers is to build vp themselues vpon this foundation Concerning the former first is may be demanded what is here meant by faith Ans. Here by faith is not so much meant the gift of faith as the matter of it namely the doctrine of faith and religion comprised in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in which sense it is said that the Ephesians were built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is vpon their doctrine Ephes. 2. The same was the rocke confessed by Peter vpon which Christ promised to build his Church and yet in the second place we must not exclude the gift it selfe for although the doctrine be a foundation in it selfe yet it is not so to vs vnlesse we beleeue it and applie it to our selues by this gift If any man aske what doctrine is this I answer the summe of it may be reduced to three heads the first whereof concerneth mans miserie by his sinne originall and actuall as also the dangerous fruits thereof The second the redemption of man from this miserie and his freedome by Christ. The third the thankefulnes which man oweth for this deliuerance and ought to testifie and expresse in newnes of life Hence learne first what is the infallible marke of the true Church whereby it may be discerned from the false and Apostaticall Church and that is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for this being the very foundation of the Church where it is there the Church must needes bee and this note of it selfe is sufficient to point out the true Church wheresoeuer Secondly seeing faith is the foundation of the Church and not the Church the foundation of faith beware hence of a damnable doctrine of the Popish Church which teacheth that there can be no certainty of the points of religion no nor of the Scriptures themselues but onely by the iudgement of the present Church of Rome and that Church must giue what sense soeuer she pleaseth to the Scriptures else hath it none wherein they play the part of preposterous builders laying the foundation in the top of the building Thirdly it may be demaunded how any doctrine becommeth a foundation vnto the saluation of men Answ. Properly to speake God and Christ is our foundation and
the Sonne of God suffring although it was not for halfe a day it was as much as if all men had died for euer so infinite and endlesse it was though not in time yet in merit and efficacie 2. Vse Seeing Christ hath such an absolute wisedome distinctly knowing all things wee are taught to feare tremble before him doing all things as in his presence he beholdeth vs with all our actions there is not a word in our tongue but hee knoweth it wholy yea he vnderstandeth our thoughts and that a farre off See Psal. 139.2.3 3. Vse Such as are in distresse resting themselues vpon Gods mercie in Christ may herein stay and vphold themselues with this comfort that Christ is God and able to relieue them yea hee is the only wise God and therefore hee knoweth all their miseries distinctly he knoweth how farre foorth it is good for them to suffer how to turne their suffering to the best vnto them as also the best and fittest time when to deliuer them seasonably out of their trouble and therefore patiently commit thy selfe into his hand and reli● thy selfe vpon him as on a mercifull redeemer 4. Vse If Christ bee only wise then we must take counsell of him and learne wisedome of him Learne of me If it be asked how shal we learne of him seeing he is in heauen I answere hee hath left his word with vs in the Scriptures there we may learne his wisedom there we may haue his directions If it bee asked what is the summe of that counsell there contained I answere it standeth in the hearing and doing of his Commandements to which three things are required first to beleeue on him and depend vpon him alone for saluation Secondly to turne vnfainedly withall our hearts vnto him Thirdly to obey him in our liues and conuersations This is the right wisedome for the teaching of which Wisedome her selfe vttereth her voyce and calleth to the children of men Prouerbs 8. vers 4. The third reason is taken from the worke of our redemption in the words Our Sauiour The which reason that we may rightly vnderstand foure points are to be propounded First what kind of Sauiour Christ is Ans. He must bee conceiued first a perfect Sauiour sauing perfectly all that are saued Heb. 7.25 He is able to saue perfectly all that come vnto him yea hee perfectly saueth by himself and not by any other creature whosoeuer attaine to saluation for this also is required vnto his perfection Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set out to be a reconciliation through faith in his blood Hebr. 1.3 By himselfe hee hath purged our sinnes Where note an error in the Church of Rome which teacheth that Christ did by his death merit that we might by our owne works merit saluation but this is false Christ saueth not man by man or by any creature but by himselfe yea he should not so be a Sauiour but an instrument by whom we must saue our selues Secondly hēce wee learne to acknowledge him an alone Sauiour without any fellow partner or deputie Acts 2. There is no other name vnder heauen giuen to saue vs but the name of Christ and if hee haue any partner he is but halfe a Sauiour Hence wee see that the Romane Religion although in word it honour Christ yet in deede it denieth him in ioyning to Christs all-sufficient satisfaction others satisfactions and so likewise they ioyne to his sacrifice vpon the Crosse their sacrifices in their Masse to his meritorious intercession the intercession of the Virgin Mary and other Saints and that not by way of request but of the merit of their intercession Thus they set vp many Sauiours in stead of this our perfect and alone Sauiour The second point is from what danger doth he saue vs Ans. Saluation euer implieth perdition so saluation by Christ implieth endlesse destruction which is the thing from which he doth saue vs. In which endlesse perditiō note first the foundation of it that is our sins noted in the exposition of his name Mat. 1. He shall saue his people from their sinnes Secondly the degrees which are three first in this life a subiection to all kindes of miseries inward and outward in soule bodie goods name in our selues and others Secondly in the end of this life death being in it self a curse and an entrance into hell Thirdly after the first the second death which is euerlasting destruction in hell fire for euer Now Christ is a Sauiour to saue and free vs both from this foundation our sins themselues as also from the degrees from the bondage to Satan by sinne secondly from the first death so far forth as it is a curse thirdly from the second death and euerlasting destruction The third point is How doth Christ saue men Ans. According to that order which God hath set downe in the couenant not of workes but of grace wherein God promiseth to giue Christ with all his merits and graces to euery beleeuer Now according to the tenour of this couenant first Christ with his merits is giuen vnto the beleeuer hee againe is giuen vnto Christ by vertue of which donation a man may say Christ is mine his benefits are mine also as truly and as surely as my land is my owne Hereupon to make this mutuall donation effectuall followeth a second thing which is the vnion of vs with him by the bond of the spirit and this is a mysticall but a true vnion whereby he that is giuen vnto Christ is made one with him After this commeth a third thing which is a communication of Christ himselfe and all his benefits vnto beleeuers This is done two waies first by way of imputation which is an accounting and accepting of his obedience and sufferings as ours for the discharge of our sinnes and acquiting vs from them Secondly by a kinde of propagation whereby grace is deriued from his grace and infused into those that are set into him For as many candles receiue light from one great Torch or light and as many streames flow from one fountain or head spring and as from one roote proceed many branches euen so al his members drink of his fountaines are enriched by his treasures of wisedome and knowledge yea indeed liue by no other life than that which by his spirit hee inspireth into the faces of their soules and hereby he sheweth himselfe to bee a roote euen that roote of Iesse and that second Adam conueying vnto all his branches righteousnes and life as the first Adam being a roote also deriued corruption from himself to al his posteritie springing and arising from him so is that place 1. Cor. 1.30 to be vnderstood He is made of God to vs wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption because he is the root and fountaine of all these graces vnto vs of whose fulnes wee receiue them The fourth point is Of whom is Christ a Sauiour Answ. Our Sauiour that is a Sauiour of the Catholique Church
duties of Christian religion to the performing of which two things are to be done first wee must beare the crosse in obedience as Christ did who most willingly abased himselfe to the death euen the death of the crosse in obedience to his Fathers will Qu. But wherein stood this obedience of Christ Ans. In the practise of three speciall vertues first Meekenes he opened not his mouth hee reuiled not being reuiled reuenged not when hee might Secondly Patience he grudged not to suffer those bitter torments for his very enemies Thirdly Loue he prayed for those that pierced him and shed his heart blood in all which it is our part to imitate him Secondly wee must be conformable vnto Christ being our head which conformitie consisteth in crucifying our body of corruption euen as he was crucified vpon his crosse We must arme our selues with Peters exhortation 1. Pet. 4.1 to suffer in the flesh as Christ suffered in the flesh Which whosoeuer doth he ceaseth from sinne he liueth not henceforth after the lusts of men but after the will of God vers 2. The learning of this dutie helpeth forward our obedience vnder the crosse which many cannot attaine vnto who in the time of their peace are in some sort obedient because they beare not about in their bodies the dyings of Christ daily 2. Cor. 4. The second point The moment and weight of this ground appeareth Luk. 9 24. He that will saue his life shall lose it that is that will not take vp his crosse to follow Christ shall neuer be saued Againe Baptisme is a maine ground Heb. 6.1 namely as it is ioyned with inward baptisme for els outward baptisme may be wanting so it be without contempt but both together are a maine ground especially in regard of that stipulation we make and that profession which wee receiue vpon vs thereby of forsaking euen our selues and following of Christ without which can bee no saluation which being the matter and substance of this ground sheweth euidently the importance of it The third point Aduersaries of this ground are first among our selues such as are content to make Christ a Sauiour and Redeemer but not a patterne and example of imitation in his vertues but Christ will not be made a packhorse only to beare sinnes seeing hee hath propounded himselfe a president to be followed of those who looke for saluation by his sufferings they must first bee his Disciples before he be their Redeemer Secondly a more wicked enemie withstanding this doctrine is the Church of Rome In exalting nature and extenuating the grace of God as first holding that all sinnes deserue not not death but may bee done away with a little knocking on the breast or such light sorrow Secondly that by nature a man hath free will in his conuersion and being helped by the holy Ghost can moue himselfe vnto saluation Thirdly that after iustification there is nothing in a man that God can hate Fourthly that a man may merit life and performe workes of satisfaction to God which diuellish doctrines what else doe they but make the heart swell with pride so as it can neuer be brought to the deniall of it selfe The third ground is taken from the Morall law Thou s●alt haue no other God before my face The scope and meaning of which law is to direct vs in chusing the true God onely to bee our God which is done first when we know and acknowledge him as hee hath reuealed himselfe in his word secondly when wee giue our hearts vnto him according to that precept My sonne giue me thy heart Now the heart is giuen to God when he is loued and feared aboue all when he is alone trusted in relied on in danger when we ascribe all power vnto him beleeue in him subiect our selues vnto him in our very conscience for whatsoeuer hath these is become our God Secondly that this is a ground cannot bee doubted for whosoeuer taketh not the true God for his God is out of all way to saluation seeing there is no couenant betweene God and him and being out of the couenant can haue no part not inheritance in Gods kingdome Thirdly Aduersaries of this ground are first the Romish doctrine which committeth high treason against God in giuing his honour to other things as to Saints and dead men whom they make Gods by teaching inuocation to bee due vnto them and so attributing an infinite power wisedome or presence vnto them which are Gods proprieties Secondly in teaching that men can merit they make them Gods For if Christ himselfe had bin a meere man he could not haue merited Thirdly in ascribing to dead creatures the vertue of the holie Ghost as to water the power of sanctification driuing away diuels and washing a●ay sinnes Fourthly in setting vp the woodden Crosse for a God which must be worshipped with the same worship and affection as God himselfe is The Virgin Mary they make a Goddesse and Queen of heauen whom they pray to commaund her sonne And lastly the Pope to whom they giue power to pardon sinne properly and to make lawes to binde conscience as properly as Gods lawes doe The second aduersarie is the comm●● Protestant who carrieth an outward profession of Christ but in his heart setteth vp many Gods as the belly wealth pleasure yea the Diuell is the god of many men as Phil. 3.19 2. Cor. 4.4 others set all their hearts and studie for the accomplishment of their sinnes now sin hauing the hold in their hearts is become their God Yea and it is a common practise of many Protestants i● their crosses to put off their confidence in God and betake themselues to cunning men and Southsayers so leauing the liuing God and trust for thei● helpe in the diuell himselfe The fourth ground of practise concerneth the worship of God Exod. 20.5 Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any 〈◊〉 image c. The first point The meaning This Commandement hath two parts the former forbidding the making of Images the latter the worshipping of them The former in these words Thou shalt not make vnto thy selfe c. In which is not simply forbidden the making of Images as if they bee for politicall or historicall vse ●ut the making of them in way of religion or conscience to put vs in remembrance of God or to worship God in by or at the same The latter in these words Thou shalt not bow downe c. That is thou shalt not so much as bow downe thy bodie before such an Image made by others neither to worship it no● the true God in it which exposition because it is oppugned by a great part of the world I will prooue by some reasons First that which was the sinne of the Israelites in making Images is here forbidden but their common sinne in the vse of Images was to make them representations of the true God and to worship the true God in them as appeareth Exod. 32.4.5 The Israelites hauing
in other Churches but are daungerous enemies wheresoeuer both to the grace of God and good of man for where the Ciuill sword doth cease there can no societie stand in safetie Thirdly another kind of Libertines are the Papists and the Popish Church with the whole Romane Religion themselues being open enemies vnto the grace of God and their whole religion turning it into wantonnes and libertie of sinning and that diuers waies First God hauing of his grace giuen vnto the Church a power of the keyes to open and shut heauen that religion hath turned it into an instrument first of prophanenesse in setting vp an new Priesthood to absolue and lose men sins properly in offering a sacrifice for the quicke and the dead so abolishing the sacrifice of Christ. Secondly of iniustice for by it they depose Kings and Princes they free subiects from their alleageance they stirre them vp and encourage them to conspiracies rebellions and maintaine in other states factions ciuill warres and seditions and al by vertue of their power Thirdly of horrible couetousnes for by it they sell pardons for thousands of yeeres the which sales haue brought to the Church of Rome the third part of the reuenewes of al Europe which one practise if there were no moe prooueth plainly that that Church turneth the grace of God to the libertie of sinne Secondly their whole Religion is a corrupted Religion and maketh the receiuers of it the children of Satan more than before for first it maketh men hypocrites requiring nothing but an externall bodily and ceremoniall worship without any inward power of it as in fasting it requireth onely a shew of it as to abstaine from flesh and white meates but they may vse most delicate fishes the strongest wines and sweetest spices and in other parts of their religion is no lesse hypocriticall Secondly it maketh men proud and arrogant teaching the freedome of will vnto good if the holie Ghost doe but a little help it that a man can merit by his workes that hee can satisfie Gods iustice by suffering for sin yea that hee can performe some workes of supererrogation who can hold these points and be humble Thirdly it maketh men secure teaching that they may haue full pardon of all their sins by the power of their keyes for mony and that though they haue no merits of their owne they may buy the merits of other men yea although in their death they faile of repentance yet for some mony they may be eased in Purgatorie What shall any rich man now care how he liue or die seeing all shall be well with him for a little mony Fourthly it maketh men in their distresse desperate teaching that no man can be assured of his saluation without some reuelation Fiftly it reuiueth the old sinne of these seducers teaching that diuers men and women may not marrie that were adulterie and yet openly tolerating stues and vncleannes Which what is it else but to maintaine wantonnes whereby the chiefe teachers of that Church witnesse themselues the right successors not of the Apostles as they pretend but of these seducers and other wicked heretikes old and new The fourth sort of Libertines are carnall and formall Protestants who first turne the counsell of Gods election into wantonnes by reasoning thus If I be elected to saluation I shall be saued let me liue as I will or if not I cannot be saued doe what I will or can because Gods counsels are vnchangeable and thus conclude to spend their daies in all wantonnes Secondly they turne the mercie of God into wantonnes thus reasoning in their hearts Because God is mercifull therefore I will deferre my repentance as yet for at what time soeuer a sinner repenteth God will put away all his sins out of his remembrance what yong Saints old Diuels Thus the timely acceptance of Gods mercie offered is become a reproch besides many moe who because the Lord deferreth punishment set their hearts to doe euill Thirdly others vnder pretence of brotherly loue mispend all that they haue in wantonnes riot excesse companie keeping gaming to the beggering of themselues and vndoing of their owne families vnto which they ought to shew their loue in the first place Fourthly others vnder pretext that the Iewish Sabbath is abrogated and that Christ hath brought such libertie as hath abolished distinctions of times take libertie to keepe no Sabbath at all whence many tradesmen will do what they list on this day and dispatch those businesses which they can finde no time for in the weeke daies Fiftly some because they would humble themselues commit diuers sins and continue in others these say in themselues Let vs continue in sinne that grace may abound all these sortes of men turne the grace of God into wantonnes and practise the vice here condemned The 2. thing to be considered is the contrary vertue and y● is to make a godly holy vse of the grace of God and to applie it to the right end for which God vouchsafeth it vnto vs to wit that wee might be thankful vnto him and testifie the same in obedience to all his lawes Which appeareth first by testimonie of Scripture Luk. 1.74.75 We are deliuered 〈◊〉 of the hands of our spirituall enemies to serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse Rom. 6.16 We are vnder grace therefore let vs giue vp the members of our bodies weapons of righteousnesse Tit. 2.11 The grace of God hath appeared teaching vs to denie vngodlines Secondly the end of all Gods graces is that wee should be furthered in holinesse of life we are elected that wee might be holy the end of our calling is that we may be Saints Iustification freeth from punishment of sinne Sanctification from corruption and sinne it selfe Faith purifieth the heart Loue containeth vs in obedience he that hath hope purgeth himselfe and so of all other graces Thirdly Christ is a Mediatour two waies first by merit to procure life and worke our saluation secondly by efficacie that is whereby his death is powerfull to cause vs to die to sinne and his resurrection to raise vs from the graue of sinne to a new life and he is no Mediatour by his merit to those who are destitute of this efficacie Vse We haue in this land been many yeeres partakers of this grace of God our dutie then is to make a holie vse of it and walke thankfully before God Rom. 12.1 I beseech you by the mercies of God which he had in the former chapter mentioned that ye giue vp your selues a holie sacrifice to God no more forcible argument can be vrged to stirre vp men to thankfull obedience than this for if Gods mercie in Christ cannot mooue what will Let this then perswade vs likewise If we beleeue God to bee our Father that is a great grace Let this grace moue vs to walke as children before him let the grace of our redemption mooue vs to walke as redeemed ones rescued out of such captiuitie
three things first the Magistracie hath a power in it selfe whereby the Ciuill Magistrate may commaund in his own name The Ministrie hath power onely to pronounce what God commandeth and that in his name Secondly the authoritie of the Ciuill Magistrate is in himselfe the authoritie of the Minister not in himselfe but in Christ so as the Ciuill Magistrate may command obedience to himselfe but the Minister commandeth it to God Thirdly the Ciuill gouernment hath an absolute power to compell and enforce the outward man but the Ministrie hath power only to counsell perswade exhort Secondly this power of the Sword is added to distinguish it from all priuate power as in Schooles families which haue a power of commanding but not of the Sword Lastly I adde for the common good of mankind Rom. 13.4 The Magistrate is the minister of God for thy wealth that is procuring the welfare of soule and body which standeth in two things first true Religion secondly ciuill iustice both which are by Magistracie maintained It may be here demanded 〈…〉 Church appeareth in that the 〈…〉 preparation and performance of the same 2. Chron. 35. and 〈…〉 here two differences in this authoritie must be marked First that ciuill 〈◊〉 doth not after the same 〈◊〉 order causes ecclesiasticall as 〈…〉 in ciuill causes is ord●●th all and 〈◊〉 all likewise but in ecclesiasticall it hath power to order all but not 〈◊〉 execute them The Magistrate indeed ordereth and prescribeth in all but the Minister is ●e that executeth in ecclesiasticall causes Secondly that ciuill authoritie hath power ouer all the things of men but not ouer the things of 〈◊〉 as the Wo●d and Sacrament● faith conscience the graces of God in 〈◊〉 Ci●ill power hath no rule ouer these concerning which Christ comm●nded to giue vnto God the things of God and vnto Caesar Caesars Secondly this authoritie extendeth it selfe to all persons as well Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill but so as it stretcheth onely vnto the 〈◊〉 man to the bodie life 〈◊〉 and outward things but not to the soule and conscience of which God is the onely Lord and gouernour 〈…〉 asked what are the kinds of this power I answere it is of three sort● first in one person man or woman which is a Monarchie secondly in moe when the gouernment is in a few states and 〈◊〉 thirdly in the bodie of the people which is a popular gouernment by one of these three is euery Common-wealth gouerned These are the Gouernment● despised by these seducers The second point followeth 〈◊〉 vpon what grounds they despised gouernment Ans. Their grounds may be knowne by the Heretikes of th●● time the Anabaptists who are giuen vp to the same 〈◊〉 and they 〈◊〉 be 〈◊〉 to these foure heads First subiection say they came in with sinne and therefore Christ hauing taken away sinne hath taken away subiection also The former part they prooue out of Gen. 1.26 Man in innocencie was to rule ouer the fish of the sea the fowles of heauen ouer the beasts the earth and all creeping things but not ouer man but after the fall Eue is put vnder subiection to Adam Genes 3. Ans. There bee two kindes of subiection the first Seruile the second Ciuill The former is the subiection of a slaue or vassall who is onely to seeke the proper good of his Lord and Master The latter whereby one man is subiect to another for the common good The former came in by sinne the latter was before sinne in innocencie Eue was subiect to Adam in innocencie thus the Apostle reasoneth 1. Tim. 2.12 Let the woman be subiect to the man for she was taken out of the man Againe in innocencie it was said Increase and multiplie and therefore in the light of nature is a plaine distinction betweene the father and sonne and an inequalitie The first place is misalleaged Genes ● 26 because it was spoken not of man alone but of all mankinde euen women as well as men who haue also dominion giuen ouer the vnreasonable creatures As for the second place Gen. 3.15 He shall rule and thou shalt be subiect It is not spoken because the ordinance of God simply considered in it selfe was not before the fall but because now the subiection was ioyned with feare griefe and sorrow which it wanted in innocencie for then it was a pleasure and this makes subiection a curse in some respect but is not so no not since the fall in it selfe considered Secondly they reason thus Euery beleeuer is in the kingdom of heauen euen in this life Now in heauen there is no King but God and therefore no beleeuer is to bee subiect to any but God and Christ. Ans. There bee two kindes of gouernments vpon earth one is spirituall and inward this is the kingdome of heauen and of Christ within man standing in peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost in regard of which regiment of Christ there is no distinction of persons no difference of bond or free Master seruant father sonne but all are one in Christ. The other is a ciuill regiment wherein orders and distinctions of men must be maintained as some must bee Princes some subiects some fathers some children some Masters some seruants Whence it is that euery man susteines vpon him two persons and is to be considered first as a beleeuer and as a member of the kingdome of Christ thus is he equall to any beleeuer and any beleeuer equall to him Secondly as a member of the Common-wealth wherein he liueth thus he is either a superiour or inferiour Their reason were somewhat if euery beleeuer were onely in the kingdome of heauen but euery of them liuing here in earth is also a member of some Common-wealth Thirdly Ciuill gouernment is full of crueltie which hauing the power of the sword destroyeth the bodies and soules of offenders in not giuing them time of repentance and therefore is intolerable among Christians Ans. Moses and the Leuites by Gods commandement flew 3000. of the Israelites for worshipping their golden Calfe and neuer gaue them space to repent Secondly the malefactor that is not moued to repentance at the sentence of present death there is little hope that euer hee would repent after if hee had longer time Thirdly Gods wisedome and commaundement must take place of mans reason he commaundeth that the Malefactor should die and thereby that the euill be taken away better it is that one should bee destroied than an vnitie better that one bee remoued than a multitude by the contagion of his example infected Fourthly they plead liberty by some places and testimonies of Scripture Gal. 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherein Christ hath set you free Ans. The libertie which Christ hath procured vs is libertie of conscience freedome from the power of sin Satan death hell and condemnation and therefore spirituall but not from temporall and ciuill subiection Ob. Rom. 13.8 Owe nothing to any man but
off him he was neuer at it he neuer saw it and yet is truly the Lord of it and may say of it it is his owne by vertue of the donation Euen so God in his word giueth Christ and his merits to the beleeuer who as he hath receiued him by faith so he retaineth him by grace by vertue of which donation and acceptation a man may as truly say Christ is his as though he were now in heauen alreadie with him yea so firme and certaine is this ingrafting that it once being made can neuer be dissolued but is euerlasting for the root liuing and abiding for euer so also doe the branches being set into the same and that by the hand of the good husbandman God himselfe The second thing required in a tree of righteousnes is life which is not the naturall life of other plants but spirituall and eternall for eternall life beginneth euen in this life Galath 2.20 Now I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in me and this life is by the faith in the Son of God and then wrought in vs when the same minde which was in Christ whilest hee was vpon earth is also in vs Philip. 2.5 for hee conueyeth his owne disposition into his members in part who are daily made conformable vnto him of which conformitie the Apostle maketh two parts Rom. 5.6 First a conformitie vnto him in his death that looke as he died for sinne so ought his members vnto sin and as he by his death subdued sinne and obtained victorie ouer it so ought they daily to be nibling in the abolishing and mortifying of that sinne which presseth them downe and hangeth so fast vpon them vntill the day of their full conquest and finall deliuerance Secondly a conformitie vnto him in his Resurrection that as he rose againe from the graue so should they from the graue of their sinnes and as hee rose to liue for euer so ought they by vertue of his resurrection to liue to God in newnes of life as those that looke to liue foreuer with him Thirdly the tree of righteousnesse must bring foorth fruites to testifie the life of it called Galath 5.22 fruites of the spirit and there reckoned vp Loue peace ioy long suffering gentlenes goodnes faith meekenes temperance Phil. 1.11 Paul prayeth that the Philippians might be filled with the fruites of righteousnes that is the duties of the Morall law contained in the first and second Table Fourthly a tree of righteousnes must bring foorth good fruites such as are pleasing vnto God Quest. How shall a Christian bring forth good fruits Ans. First good fruit must come from a good heart an heart penitent and truly turned to God Mat. 3. Bring foorth fruites worthie amendement of life 1. Timot. 1.5 Loue out of a pure heart Secondly it must be brought forth with intention will purpose and endeuour to obey God in his commandements which the heart must respect Thirdly the end of this fruite must be the glorie of God not seeking our selues but Gods honour In Leuit. 19.23 God requireth that the trees should bee circumcised which was thus performed The three first yeeres the fruite was to be cast or fall away the fourth it was to bee dedicated to the Lord and the fifth yeere the Israelites might eate of the fruite euen so wee must first cast away in respect of our selues our fruites and dedicate them vnto the Lord so he shall taste of them with delight and not before Fourthly it must bee brought foorth to the good of others as trees beare fruites not for themselues but for men so our fruites must bee intended not so much for our priuate good as the common good of the Church and Common-wealth Doct. 2. Seeing the faithfull are not such corrupt trees but of Gods owne planting they haue here first a ground of comfort in the middest of sorrow sicknes yea and death it selfe for being ingrafted into Christ the whole man is preserued safe found in him yea the dying bodie nay the dead bodie and that which is rotting in the graue is planted into him and is to liue againe in him who alwaies liueth and will raise it to life eternall at the last day Trees in winter are dead to mans sense yet because the rootes of them liue and haue in them sappe and moysture in the spring they shall bud blossome and beare fruite againe euen so the rotten body at the time of refreshing shall reuiue againe and become a glorious plant putting off mortalitie and corruption no more to be subiected thereunto againe than the roote into which they are set who hath for his members chased them away Secondly seeing we must be planted and cannot attaine this growth by nature we must detest and abhorre our selues in dust and ashes renounce and bewaile our naturall condition and be at no rest till wee feele our selues set into Christ by liuing the life of the Sonne of God For know we not that Christ liueth in vs except we be reprobates Thirdly our Church hath herein resembled Iudah hauing been for many yeres a plant of Gods delight who hath hedged and fenced it by his fauourable protection but many yea the most branches are barren bearing no fruite others beare lesse fruite than they haue done being withered and fallen back what will be thinke we the end hereof Surely the axe being alreadie laid to the roote of the tree shall cut downe whatsoeuer branches beare not foorth good fruite and they shall be cast into the fire It standeth vs then in hand to become more fruitfull before we be cut downe Fourthly hence let euery man learne subiection vnto God in all his crosses and afflictions wee are trees or branches at least of the Vine the Father is the husbandman and looke a● the husbandman loppeth cutteth 〈◊〉 pruneth yea and almost cutteth downe his trees to make them more fruitfull so dealeth the Lord with his children who therein are to rest well contented for he chasteneth them for their good that although no chastisement seemeth ioyous for the present yet it bringeth afterward the pleasant fruite of righteousnes to those that are exercised thereby Twice dead and plucked vp Some hence gather this that wee are once dead in Adam by originall sinne and secondly after regeneration or ingrafting into Christ by some grieuous sinne wounding the conscience to death and hence conclude that a man regenerate may die againe and fall from grace vrging for their purpose that in Rom. 11.20 Through vnbeleefe they were broken off and thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare But this cannot be so vnderstood for by twice dead is meant dead certainly or dead twice once in Adam by originall sinne and the second time dead by their owne actuall sinne As for that place in Rom. 11. I answere there are two kindes of planting first outward secondly inward The outward is when God giueth the word vnto a people with other his ordinances and