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A36102 A discourse of the Holy Spirit his workings and impressions on the souls of men : with large additionals. Sherlock, R. (Richard), 1612-1689. 1656 (1656) Wing D1605; ESTC R203556 193,794 256

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Saviour of the world Gen. 22.18 In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed 16. These and what other revelations soever Abraham received immediately from God were upon this condition delivered to him that he should instruct his family who not immediately by revelation or inspiration from God but by the mediation and ministerial instruction of Abraham were to be taught the knowledge of God and of his holy Lawes upon this very ground God himself affirms himself to have revealed his will unto him Gen. 18.17 c. And God said Shall I hide from Abraham the things that I do c. For I know him that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord. 17. From Abraham Isaac and Jacob the knowledge of God was by tradition transmitted from Patriarch to Patriarch and the Church or people of God now confin'd to the seed of Israel was by the several heads of their respective families instructed in the service of God till turning away after the Idols of Egypt God gave them up to a cruel bondage and slavery under the tyranny of Pharaoh In which great affliction when they besought the Lord he sent redemption to his people by the hands of Moses his servant and Aaron whom he had chosen Psal 105.25 26. 18. Moses the seventh from Abraham was selected and immediately call'd by God as to be the leader and deliverer of his people so his Law-giver also who receiving the minde of God by immediate revelation made it known unto the people The sum whereof was engraven in tables of stone and commanded to be kept as the standing rule of Gods worship and mans obedience to all posterity and the people were herein so far from depending upon immediate revelation that they petition'd to receive the minde of God by the mediation and ministry of Moses Exod. 20.19 Speak thou with us and we will hear but let not God speak with us lest we die 19. The Law of God thus published and standing upon record there was now lesse need of immediate revelation then before the people of God had now a more sure word of prophesie then what formerly 1. By revelation from heaven 2. By tradition from Patriarch to Patriarch was delivered To these sacred writings therefore they were commanded to have recourse by them to be guided and directed and not to swerve from what was contained therein either to the right hand or to the left Josh 1.7 To the Law to the testimony if they speak not according to this word 't is because there is not light in them Isa 8.20 Where all pretence to new lights is cut off and that pronounc't to be no true light which is not grounded on the Lawes of God 20. For the preservation of this law pure and inviolate a ministery or priesthood was ordained and by Gods special command transferr'd from the first born of every Tribe upon the Tribe of Levi. To them belonged the interpretation of the Law and the performance of all the sacred rites therein contained neither were the people either presumptuously to depend upon immediate revelation in respect of the one or sacrilegiously entermeddle with any part of the sacordotal function in the other respect But as to the first 't was ordain'd that the Priests lips should keep knowledge and they i. e. the people should seek the Law at his mouth Mal. 2.7 And as to the second that no stranger that is not of the house of Aaron come neer to offer incense before the Lord that he be not as Corah and his company Numb 16.40 21. But because there is nothing amongst men so well established but through the Devils suggestion and mans corruption 't is liable to depravation and abuse God was pleased the better to restrain both his Priests and people from the violation of his written Law to stir up in every age some choice and select persons whom he enabled more immediately and extraordinarily some to understand and clear the Truth and true meaning of his divine Law when 't was corrupted or obscur'd by mis-interpretations and false glosses others to foretell and pronounce both judgements to come upon the transgressors and mercies upon such as observ'd and kept his commandements whose inspired writings both by way of History and Prophesie Doctrine and Example Praying and Preaching are as so many commentaries of the Divine Law and compleat the Canon of the Old Testament which is reduc't by our Lord himself to these two general heads the Law and the Prophets Mat. 22.40 22. Thus from Adam unto Christ there is no pretence or colour for a people to depend upon immediate revelation the will of God being made known to his people generally and ordinarily by the mediation and ministery of man and but seldome and by a few choice persons and upon extraordinary occasions by immediate revelation The truth whereof will further appear and the weak grounds whereupon immediate revelation depends will be discovered in the succeeding chapters CHAP. II. Of the several manners of extraordinary and more immediate Revelation 1. GOD at sundry times and in diverse manners spake in time past to our fathers Heb. 1. The divers manners of Gods extraordinary revelation of himself to his people of old are reducible to six heads 1. By the ministery of Angels who frequently appeared in humane shape and revealed the minde of God to some of his choice extraordinary servants as Gen. 32.1 2. Zach. 1.9 Mat. 28.2.5 Act. 23.9 and many of those Texts wherein 't is said the Lord appeared unto such and such are to be understood of the appearance of Angels Ob honorem sc mittentis ut plena sit ejus authoritas hoc dr isti qui missus est quod est illi qui misit ut saepius factum est de Angelis Clem. Rec. lib. 2. see for this Exod. 3.2 compar'd with Act. 7.30 where in one place 't is said the Lord appeared unto Moses in the other an Angel of the Lord and Exod. 29.20 ch compar'd with Act. 7.53 and Exod. 23.20 21. Not that any Angel presumed to be called by the name of the Lord or to be worshipped as God but to adde the greater weight and authority to the message he brought from the Lord the messenger was called by the name of the Lord that sent him 2. By Dreams as Numb 12.6 Is there a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream and Job 33.24 c. For God speaketh in a dream in the vision of the night then he openeth the ears of men and sealeth their instruction Quia anima clousis sensibus exterioribus ad recipiendam revelationem magis est apta quia tunc non est per occupationem sensuum exteriorum impedita Lyr. in Mat. 1. And the reason hereof is because when the outward senses are shut the inward soul is more
dares take upon him to raise forces to impose taxes to levie contributions to punish offenders or the like but such only who are designed thereunto and have commission for it And yet in the matters of God in the dispensation of his holy mysteries every man will be a Priest and a Prophet as if it were pardonable only to be disorderly in Religion or as if God would accept a lawless liberty in those things wherein the frailty of man is most apt and too likely to miscarry and wherein also the miscarriage is most fatal and ruinous to the soul for ever In Religion it is true that all have a common interest and so they have in the Lawes also and by the same reason that the one by the same the other also may be dispensed by all men promiscuously without order without distinction which must necessarily end in confusion 'T is true that under the Gospel all true believers are Priests unto the Lord and have spiritual sacrifices to offer 1. Pet. 2.5 9. But it is one thing for a man to be a Priest to himself another thing to be so to the whole Church Revel 1.6 Rom. 12.1 It is one thing to offer up our selves a living sacrifice acceptable unto God another thing to represent the Congregation unto God All ordinary and private devotions may and are to be done by private persons but the solemn ritual and publick Worship of God must be left to the publick Minister There is no good man but wisheth with Moses I would all the Lords people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit upon them Numb 11.29 Numb 11.29 But it is one thing to be qualified as the Prophets of the Lord another thing sacrilegiously to invade their Office Being qualified they may do the Office of Prophets privately to themselves and their family both by prayers for and with them and also by teaching and instructing them But in Gods house and in the presence of the whole Congregation to dispense the sacred mysteries of Salvation is only peculiar to the Stewards of his house nor may others presume to intermeddle therewithall Ac primo quidam a statu ante legem a statu sub lege à statu sub gratia semperenim reperio certa hominum genera fuisse à deo ad hoc officium delecta non autem licuisse cuiquam se obtrudere Zanch in 4. Praec Card. Polus l. 1. ad H. 8. If we search into the state and condition of the Church from the beginning of the world to this very instant of time we shall finde That both before the Law under the Law and under the Gospel also there were ever a certain select chosen sort of men saith the learned Zanchy design'd for the office of the Priesthood and that it was not lawfull for every one that list to thrust himself into the execution of this sacred function The first priest we read of that is so called is Melchisedech of whom the holy Scriptures affirm that he was without father without mother c. Heb. 7.3 His original being unknown by reason of his antiquity And so saith a learned man of the Priesthood The antiquity of this great calling is so great that it cannot be found out nor can we finde its off-spring but with the first rising and being of a Church upon the face of the earth No man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron Heb. 5.4 who was called of God but consecrated by Moses agitatus à Deo consecrationis principe saith Dionysius Exod. 28.1 2. God was the principal Author and Moses the Minister of his Consecration Heb. 5.5 so likewise Christ did not glorifie himself to become High Priest but be was personally chosen and sent or in his own language sealed of the Father Joh. 6.27 and sent into the world that is ordained to be Priest and Prophet of the world The Apostles of Christ received their Commission from him Mat. 28.19 Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 baptizing c. And that we might understand that they had by virtue of this Commission power to Commissionate others to be their successors in all succeeding Generations of the Church it followes And lo I am with you untill the end of the world with you your selves until you have fulfilled your course and served your own Generation and with you in your successors untill the end of the world and more plainly in those other words of their Commission Joh. 20.21 Joh. 20.21 22 23. 22 23. As my Father hath sent me so send I you and when he had said this he breathed on them and saith unto them Receive ye the Holy Ghost whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whose soever sins ye retain they are retained which spiritual power and spiritual gifts communicated to the Apostles was not sure to expire with them except ye will also say all Ecclesiasticall Discipline and Government ended with the Apostles and that all scandals and offences heresies and errors sins and vices are left remediless and without cure or at least without a Physitian to prescribe administer and apply to wounded Consciences and sin-sick souls their proper salve and medicine As my Father hath sent me so send I you and as I have sent you Act. 14.23 Titus 1.5 so you are to send others and this we read they did They ordained Elders in all Churches and gave Commission to whom they ordained to Ordain others The Ordination was theirs but the power was from above and so the Apostles themselves acknowledged in the very first instance of Ordination when they chose Matthias in the room of Judas They prayed saying Thou Lord shew whether of these two thou hast chosen Act 2.24 Act. 2.24 God chooses and man ordains God cals the person to the Office and man instals him therein The power is Originally from God as the Fountain but conveyed through the Ministry of man as the Conduit All power is given unto me Mat. 28.18 19. both in Heaven and in Earth Go ye therefore c. But because there is no man how sacrilegiously soever he invaded the Ministerial Office but will pretend a call and a power from God thereunto and he that is most bold and forward to publish his follies in this kinde is also apt to mistake his boldness for a call from God he may fancy a call from above when it is only a noise in his own head or a deceitful eccho of his own heart therefore we must know this call from God to so high and honourable an Office as to be ordained for men in things pertaining to God is either extraordinary o● ordinary the first beginning of a lasting necessity is extraordinary and 't is made ordinary in succession and by the lasting continuation of a fixed and determinate Ministry as Adam at the first was extraordinarily formed
heresies even that which they call the light within us This say they is the only Judge we must follow the Pilot we must steer by the voice whereunto we must give ear the only Sanctuary to which we must flie for resolution never remembring how this sanctuary is profan'd by continual acts of spiritual fornication or idolatry therein committed whilest in stead and even in opposition to God and Spirit of all truth they enshrine and idolize their own fond vain and lying imaginations which the Lord by his Prophet cals the vanity and deceitfulnesse of their own heart Jer. 14.4 Jer 14.14 The Lord said unto me The Prophets prophesie lies in my Name I have not sent them neither did I command them neither spake I unto them but they prophesie unto you a false vision and divination and vanity and the deceitfulnesse of their own heart 'T is undoubtedly necessary for every man to be perswaded in his own conscience both of the truth of what he believes and of the justice and equity of what he undertakes but yet this perswasion of the conscience or the following the light within us or the dictates of our own spirit is not the first ground and prime rule either of our faith or of our works For the conscience it self must be regulated or else it will often prove a false witness and most especially in the things of God for as conscience is is set betwixt God and us so it must speak from God unto us And our spirit or the light within us must be guided by the light of Gods Spirit shining in his word S. Paul thought verily he ought to do many things against the name of Jesus This perswasion arose from the light within him Act. 16.9 11. and hereupon he made havock of the Church which no man that is not infatuate will say was either fit or lawful to be done 'T was first in the heart of Judas to betray his Master Joh. 13.2 Such was the light within him and according to this light he walked till at last he hanged himself And this delusion of mans own spirit following the deceitfull dictates of his own heart is seldome mentioned in holy Scripture without heavie threats denounced both against such deluders and all that suffer themselves to be deluded by them as you may read Jer. 14.15 16. And again Ezek. 13.3 Wo unto the foolish Prophets Ezek. 13.3 which follow their own spirit and have seen nothing Nothing but what their own foolish spirit dictates to them Such are noted by the Apostle also Col. 2.18 Who intrude into those things which they have not seen Col. 2.18 or which they understand not being vainly puft up by their fleshly minde Closs Sensualitatis non rationis following the dictates of sense rather then of right reason and in this place the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is remarkable for even by that 't is easie to distinguish betwixt the dictates of a mans own carnal and sensual spirit and the impressions of Gods holy Spirit for the guidance of the minde The dictate of the fleshly spirit is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inflatio a puffing up but the impression of the holy Spirit is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 afflatio an inspiration indeed but without inflation or puffing up The heavenly winde of Gods Spirit may fill but it never puffs up or swels the heart but rather humbles and abaseth the Spirit of man which is most conformable to the Spirit of Christ according to his own command Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart Mat. 11.29 the minde that is either puft up with pride vain-glory and false conceited excellency in it self or that swels with malice hatred or envie towards others is not inspired with the celestial Breath or Spirit of the holy Jesus but follows its own carnal and corrupt dictates and conceits being thereunto raised and moved by that grand Impostor the spirit of Delusion Besides mans own carnal spirit there is also A spirit of the World opposing and poysoning the truths of Gods Spirit The Apostle distinguisheth and opposeth these each to other 1 Cor. 2.12 1 Cor. 2.12 Now we have not received the spirit which is of the world but the Spirit which is of God which spirit of the world he cals a little before the wisdome of the world and of the Princes thereof vers 6. and opposeth the same to the wisdome of God vers 7. And what else can be this wisdome of the world but those humane policies so frequent in the world whereby men steer their actions to their worldly ends and interests with this spirit of the world are all such possest who having set up and enshrined the world in their hearts do thereupon ground their Religion and thence deduce all their reasons arguments and religious conclusions so that they can finde in their hearts to be thus far religious and to close with this or that sect society and opinion in Religion as it stands with their worldly profit pleasure credit preferment or the like It was from the dictates of this spirit that Jeroboam the Son of Nebat made Israel to sin pulling down the holy and true Religion established amongst the people by the Lawes of God and erecting two golden Calves at Dan and Bethel which became a snare unto the people who were thereby inveigled into idolatry the cause of their utter ruine and extirpation in the end And what other Spirit was it that moved this wicked Usurper thereunto 1 King 12.28 29. but that of his own worldly respects and interests there was no other way as this worldly spirit dictated to him to uphold his present estate and new gotten Monarchy so we read 1 King 12.26 1 King 12.26 c. And Jeroboam said in his heart Now shall the kingdome return to the house of David c. Rather then the people should return to their obedience to their liege Lord and Soveraign religion must down and the true worship of God be laid in the dust to make way for superstition and idolatry to be set up the Priests of the Lord shall be discarded and the lowest of the people exaltted to that dignity and to make the office more contemptible every one that list may take up the trade and consecrate himself to be a Priest of the high places 2 King 13.33 1 King 13.33 It was this very spirit also that stirred up the High-priests and Pharisees to take counsell against our Saviour to put him to death for say they If we let him alone all men will believe on him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Romans will come and take away our place and Nation Joh. 11.48 It was this spirit also that stirred up Demetrius the Silver-smith with the rest of the Crafts-men of the like occupation against St. Paul and his companions and the holy Christian Religion preached by them his Pretence was Religion such a kinde
saith the Lord Jer. 4.4 Break up the fallow ground of your hearts and sow not amongst thornes be circumcised to the Lord and take away the foreskin of your hearts that is hardnesse of your hearts Deut. 10.16 cald also the circumcision of the Spirit Deut. 10.16 Col. 2.11 Act. 2.29 because it makes way for the Spirit and Col. 2.11 A circumcision made without hands even the putting off the sinful body of the flesh meaning the sinful crop of fleshly lusts which infest and infect the soul of these the soul must be disarayed and devested by repentance and mortification Rom. 8.13 14. Rom. 8.13 14. If ye live after the flesh c. The coherence of which verses imply before we can be led by the Spirit of God we must mortifie the deeds of the flesh the sordid rags of the old man must be put off before the soul can be clothed with the splendid garments of the Spirit of grace In vain is it to pray unto God for any spiritual grace or mercy while we continue in our sins for God heareth not sinners Joh. 9.31 In vain to hear or read the Gospel of grace Eph. 6.15 except our feet be shod with the preparation of repentance whereby we forsake our sins Therefore before the Gospel it self was published this was first proclaimed both by Christ and his forerunner Repent Mat. 3.2 4.17 1 Cor. 11.28 for the kingdome of God is at hand In vain to participate of those mysteries of our salvation the body and bloud of our Lord till first by self-examination we have cast out the venome of our sinful doings by repentance and stedfast purposes of amendment In a word Deus gratiam pollicius qui in extremita●jbus temporum per spiritum suum universo orbi illuminaturus esset prae●re intinctionem poenitentiae jussl● ut quos per gratiam vocaret ad promissionem per poenitentiae subsignationem ante compoueret Tert. de poen c. 2. it is our sins unrepented that make void and ineffectual all the blessed means of Grace and of the Spirit by those it is we quench the Spirit we grieve the Spirit 1 Thess 5.19 Ephes 4.30 we resist the Spirit we provoke the Spirit and poyson the blessed waters of life so that all the conveyances of the Spirit are barren and unfruitful whilest they reflect upon hardened and impenitent hearts See therefore repentance enjoyned as to the receiving of the holy Ghost Act. 2.38 8.19 And I would to God that all who pretend to the holy Spirit of God or to any the fruits and graces of the Spirit would first learn before they make their boast of the Spirit truly to repent them of their sins and to root out of the ground of their hearts all the fruits of the flesh which are adultery fornication uncleannesse lasciviousnesse Gal. 5.19 20 21. idolatry witchcraft hatred variance emulation wrath strife seditions heresies envyings murthers drunkennesse revellings c. When these all of these sinful fruits are extirpated out of the ground of the heart there may be then some hopes that our prayers and other divine acts and offices performed in the sincerity of our souls may prevail with God for the direction and comfort of his Spirit of grace and truth God which hast taught the hearts of thy faithfull people by the sending to them the light of thy holy Spirit grant us by the same Spirit to have a right judgement in all things and evermore to rejoyce in his holy comfort through the merits of Jesus Christ our Saviour who liveth and reigneth with thee in the unity of the same Spirit one God world without end Amen The Introduction and general Heads GOD as he is in himself only knowes himself and consequently those waies of his worship Coeli mystarium me doceat Deus qui condidit non homo quis●ipsum ignoravit Amb. which are holy and acceptable to himself Man who knowes not himself aright cannot of himself know God nor those divine and celestial mysteries which are the waies of Gods service and mans salvation For what man is he that can know the counsel of God Or who can think what the will of the Lord is Wisd 9.13 Veritas Lactant. lib. 1. c. 1. i. e. arcanum summi Dei qui fecit omnia ingenio ac propriis sensibus non potest comprehendi Alioqui c. Truth which is the secret of the most high God who hath formed all things cannot by our own wit and proper senses be comprehended for otherwise there would be little distance betwixt God and man if mans cogitations could dive into the counsels and dispositions of Gods e●ernal Majesty Canst thou by searching finde out God canst thou finde out the Almighty unto perfection it is as high as heaven what canst thou do deeper then hell what canst thou know the measure thereof is longer then the earth and broader then the sea Job 11.7 c. 2. This therefore must be granted as the ground of all divine truth that nothing either of God or of his sacred service is to be believed and received by us but what from God is revealed or by revelation from heaven derived to us Secret things belong to the Lord our God but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever that we may do all the words of this Law Hilar. de Trin. lib. 5. Deut. 29.29 Non potest Deus nisi per Deum intelligi sicut nec honorem à nobis Deus nisi per Deum accipit A Deo discendum est quid de Deo intelligendum sit quia non nisi se authore cognoscitur Id. namque honorandus c. God cannot be known but by himself neither doth he receive honour from us but by himself For that he is to be honour'd we understand not but that himself hath taught and commanded himself to be honoured The honour of God we are taught by God nor may we entertain any such thoughts of God as our own frail humane judgements suggest unto us our nature is not so sublime and piercing as by its own innate force and vertue to be raised up and enrapt with celestial knowledge Wisd 9 15. For the corruptible body presseth down the soul and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the minde that museth upon many things and hardly do we ghesse aright at things that are upon earth and with labour do we finde the things that are before us but the things that are in heaven who hath searched out and thy counsel who hath known except thou give wisdome and send thy holy Spirit from above For so the waies of them that lived upon earth were reformed and men were taught the things that are pleasing unto thee and were saved through wisdome 3. The first and fundamental act of faith then which is to believe this or that Article of holy Religion to be a divine truth and the subject matter of
called Master 1. GReat was the pride and ambition of the Teachers of Israel in the daies of our Saviour both in affecting of the chief Seats or Doctors Chair in their Synagogues and Schools and also the title of Rabbi Master or Father which was the cause of those sharp reproofs Mat. 23.6 c. They love the uppermost rooms at Feasts and the chief seats in the Synagogues and greetings in the markets and to be called of men Rabbi Rabbi whereupon he infers these prohibitions vers 8 c. But be not ye called Rabbi for one is your Master even Christ and call no man Father upon earth for one is your Father which is in heaven and be not ye called Masters for one is your Master even Christ 2. The true meaning of which prohibitions is worthy examination because some weak and unlearned persons falsly conclude from hence that 't is unlawful to be called Master or to mount the pulpit to preach which they call the uppermost room in the Synagogue And the first for the proof of the negative That 't is not unlawful nor a transgression of Christs command in this place to be called Master doth appear 1. Because then 't were unlawfull also to call any man Father for both titles are here prohibited upon the same ground 2. These titles are used by the holy Ghost in other places of Scripture both bodily Fathers Eph. 6.2.4 And ghostly Fathers also or the fathers of our souls 1 Cor. 4.15 2 Cor. 12.14 Both civil Masters Eph. 6.5 and Ecclesiastical Masters Eccl. 12.11 The Disciples of John styled him Rabbi or Master Joh. 3.16 and so they styl'd Christ Joh. 1.38 And 3. 'T is not a fault either to affect the wisdome and learning of a Rabbi or Master in Israel Nor 2. is it a fault being endued with wisdome and abilities of knowledge to be apt and desirous to teach others Neither 3. is it lawfull for this end to mount the pulpit or highest place in the Church for the more convenience of being heard Nor 4. is it a fault to assume the title of Master or Doctor for the gaining of the greater credit and authority to the doctrine delivered If we go no further then this both the uppermost seat in the Synagogue or the Pulpit and the title or Master also are not only lawful Si desid●retur nomen authoritas magisterii ad hoc quòd scientia jam habitâ aliquis melius possit uti non est malum sed bonum qua bonu● Doctor deb●t quae●er● illa quae faciunt ad efficaciam doctrinae sus Gloss ord in loc but in these respects desirable Because 1. Every good and profitable Teacher ought to desire and seek those things which help to make his doctrine effectuall and taking 2. Every Minister of Christ is properly called Master Magistri ex consortio veri magist●i tanquam nuntii ejus pro reverentia ejus à quo mittuntur honorantur Lyr. in loc ex consortio veri magistri c. as the under-master or usher unto Christ and as he is Christs messenger and accordingly to be reverenc'd and respected out of that reverence and respect we owe to that great Master and Doctor of his Church whose minister and messenger he is Desiderare scientiam vel actum docendi non est malum sed desid●rare nommem hoc ●st malum p●ccatum superbiae Ibid. But then in the second place as to the affirmative these commands of Christ are transgressed three waies 1. When out of pride and ambition the place and title of Master or Teacher is affected They love saith the text to be called of men Rabbi where not the title but the love or ambitious affection of it is reprov'd to affect the name more then the thing the place more then the charge the title more then the duty of a Master or Teacher is one way whereby all these divine prohibitions are transgressed 2. To give up our faith and obedience to the sole will and command of any Rabbi or humane Doctor whatsoever any further then the word and doctrine of God the Father doth warrant and direct us is a breach of this particular prohibition Call no man Father upon earth for one is your Father which is in heaven 3. Now that the Messias was exhibited to look upon any other save Christ alone as the great Prophet of the Lord and Doctor of his Church is a transgression of both these particular commands Be n●t ye called Rabbi for one is your Master even Christ Neither be ye called Master for one is your Master even Christ All Masters of Scholars were now become learners of Christ And the Apostles themselves to whom these commands were directed though under Christ they were the greatest Masters or Teachers of all the world neverthelesse were the Disciples or Scholars of Christ and in this respect not to be called Masters i. e. not chiefly primarily and principally but secondarily and instrumentally only CHAP. VII That all Revelation is compleated in Christ and his Apostles 1. WHen amongst the Jewes their latter Prophets Haggai Zachary and Malachy were dead The holy Ghost went up say the Hebrew Doctors and departed from Israel i. e. All extraordinary waies of divine Revelation had an end save only the voice from heaven And this was a prologue or praesignification of the coming of the true voice from heaven or rather of the eternal Word himself in whom all immediate Revelations and voices from heaven were to cease as having in him their perfection and accomplishment 2. All the Law and the Prophets prophesied untill John Mat. 11.13 i. e. The Law and the Prophets spake of Christ to come The Law in types and sigures the Prophets in predictions and promises And this was all the light the Church enjoyed until John came and he more clearly pointed out the Messias already come in the flesh saying This is he Joh. 1.15 and behold the Lamb of God vers 29. The types and figurative services of the Law were as so many dumb shews and the predictions of the Prophets as so many inarticulate sounds of the word Christ But John was vox verbi the very voice of the Word that 's his style Mat. 3.3 The voice of one crying in the wilderness The Law and the Prophets were as dim glimmering tapers but John was a burning and a shining light Joh. 5.35 And this because he was nearest unto Christ the Sun of righteousness and fountain of all divine illuminations from whom all the Prophets derive their light as the Moon and the Stars do from the body of the Sun which is the fountain of light material 3. And as the light of the Moon and of the Stars gives way to the light of the Sun when it arises Moyses Elias significam legis prophetarum oracula in Domino compl●ta Gloss ord so the light of the Law and of the Prophets gave way unto Christ when he who is
shine into our hearts and guide us in the sacred paths of life eternal But as unto every thing of price and value there is art and skill required rightly to make use thereof and also there are means and instruments fitted for the acquiring of this skill so rightly to use this precious jewel of Gods holy Word for the illumination of our souls there is much art and skill required and this skill must be attained in the use of all those instruments and helps which God hath for this end graciously afforded unto us it being most agreeable to the wisdome and goodnesse of God to work upon humane understanding by humane means and helps And according as we are more or lesse industrious in the use of these means God imparts a more or lesse treasure of understanding unto us Not as if the holy Spirit of God could not without means communicate his gifts of wisdome and open our understanding to understand the Scriptures Luk 24.45 But that ordinarily he doth not do this but commands us not lazily to sit still Prov. 2.4 and wait upon his immediate Revelations but to seck for knowledge and search for wisdome as for hid treasures and how shall we seek for it but in the use of those means he hath sitted for this search And these means are either outward or inward The outward and humane helps are the knowledge and understanding of tongues and sciences The inward or divine means are the purity and holiness of the hearts and life The first are necessary as to the formale externum to understand the outward letter of the word in its proper and genuine sense The second as to the formale internum rightly to apply the word according to the minde of the holy Spirit therein And experimentally to feel those sacred truths accomplished in our selves As to the former whereupon this controversie depends the knowledge of tongues and languages arts and sciences herewithall the holy Scripture doth presuppose those men to be furnished that will dive into the secret and hidden mysteries therein contained for all kindes of knowledge have their certain bounds and limits and each of them presupposes many necessary things learned in other sciences before we can know the secrets of this as the Art of Rhetorick presupposeth the understanding of words as the cabinet must be first opened before the jewel therein can be found out There is a threefold knowledge of things natural moral and divine By the first we are guided to live as men By the second as reasonable men and members of a civil society By the third as Christian men and parts of Christs body the Church And each of these presupposes the other as moral wisdome presupposes that which is natural and divine wisdome presupposes both to this end God hath endued us not only 1. With sense to know the things that concern our present life and being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. de Mos And 2. with reason to know what concerns our well being in the peace contentment and happiness of the soul But 3. He hath added also the heavenly revelations of his holy Word whereby what sense and reason could never sinde out as conducible to eternal happiness is made known unto us And as reason doth imply and presuppose a man to be endued with sense so Religion and divine Revelation presupposes as to endued with sense and reason 2. Divinity which is the body of divine Revolation is the Art of arts and comprehends with it what ever other Arts do teach And the holy Scriptures the contents whereof are the precepts of this Art both contains all kindes of knowledge und relates to all sorts of truth both natural Eph. 5.20 Civil Rom. 13.4 Historical 2 Tim. 3.8 Forein Tit. 1.12 And consequently to the understanding thereof the knowledge of such Truths are necessarily subservient to the supernatural and divine assistance Humane Arts are the Handmaids of Religion which they serve and wait upon as their Queen and Soveraign And as great Fersons are not approached unto without the mediation of servants and great Houses have their through-fare before you come to rooms of state and great Cities have their suburbs before you come to the high streets So the great and sacred body of Divinity is not approached unto ordinarily 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 she sits in the height and perfection of understanding but by the mediation of her Handmaids or through the several passages of Tongues and Sciences 3. Though many things in holy Scripture be plain and easie to be understood without the help of much learning or art yet there are also many things obscure dark and mysterious which too many men for want of learning and sobriety do misconster pervert and abuse to their own ruine which is expresly affirmed both of St. Pauls Epistles and of other Scriptures also 2 Pet 3.16 As also in all his Epistles speaking in them of those things in which are some things hard to be understood which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest as they do also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction In which meaning St. Pauls Epistles are somethings hard Non temere a Spiritu Sto. Scripturas esse tectas sed eb id me●imè ne v●leseam exerceant u● pascant Aug. And the holy Ghost hath therefore left Gods word in many places veil'd and obscure saith St. August 1. Novileseat that we might not undervalue it 2. Vt exerceat to keep us in the exercise of prayers and meditations studies and labours for all kinde of knowledge the more hardly it is attained the more we esteem it and the more also it doth feed and nourish the soul as making a deeper impression therein 4. Such is the height and sublime perfection of those holy mysteries in sacred Scripture contained that vulgar and learned men have need of an interpreter as Act. 8.31 Learned Guides therefore God hath in all ages raised up both Priests and Prophets under the Law and under the Gospel whom he hath appointed the treasurers of knowledge and unlearning in the sound and sincere Expasition of holy Scripture and instruction of his people 5. The necessity and honour of humane learning as to the reception and right understanding of divine Revelations doth appear from the antiquity for those first Patriarchs of the world who honoured with immediat Revelation and invested with the sacred office of the Priesthood were all of them learned men either so found or so made by the God of wisdome and knowledge when he spake unto them Adam as the first man so the first to whom God revealed himself and first Priest or Prophet of the Lord was not a ●ovice in Philosophy nor ignorant of any part of what we call humane learning he knew undoubtedly the nature properties vertues effects and workings of all creatures and therefore God permitted him to give them names according to their natures Gen. 2.19.20 And out of the ground the
Lord God formed every beast of the field and every fowl of the air and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them and whatsoever Adam called every living creature that was the name thereof and Adam gave names to all cattell and to the fowl of the air and to every beast of the field Noah the Preacher of righteousnesse was much given to the study of arts and sciences Jos adtiq l. 1. c. 4. both he and his sons And 't is one reason remembred by Josephus why God blessed him and those firster Fathers of the world with so long a life that they might bring to some perfection their studies of moral vertues and invention of profitable sciences as Astronomy Geography c. Abraham the father of the faithful Idem cap. 8. was a wise man and very eloquent and of a piercing Judgement saith the same Author of him He both learned himself and preached to others the knowledge of the true God which he learned by study and contemplation of Gods works by observing the sea and the land the sun the moon and the stars Whereupon the Caldeans conspiring against him being warned of God he came into the land of Canaan Philo cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo de Ab● A man much skil'd in natural Philosophy Moses Deut. 31.10 who of all persons is said to have the nearest and most immediate converse with God and was honoured as Gods instrument for the publication of his own Lawes was learned in all the learning of the Egyptians Act. 7.22 And Philo brings him in exhorting all men to the study of Philosophy who desire to enrich their mindes with true knowledge and wisdome Phi de septenaerio fest Daniel who was greatly beloved of God and honoured with manifold visions and revelations Dan. 1.4.17.20 was bred up and well skil'd in the Loarning and Tongue of the Chaldeans And generally all the Prophets of the Lord both ordinary and extraordinary some few excepted were bred up in the Schooles of the Prophets The Hebrewes themselves say that where the holy Scripture addes to the name of a Prophet the name of his father that such a one was alwaies the son of a Prophet as Isaiah the son of Amos Hosea the son of Buri c. but withall confesse that when the Prophet is named and not his father that such a one was a Prophet but not the son of a Prophet When Samuel had anointed Saul King over Israel and the Lord gave him another heart 1 Sam. 10.9 so that he prophesied according to the word of Samuel amongst the rest of the Prophets vers 10. The people were astonished hereat as a thing unusual and extraordinary that any one should prophesie who was not the son of a Prophet therefore one demanding of another but who is their father vers 12. which being not known it grew into a proverb Is Saul also amongst the Prophets 6. The great necessity of learning and learned men will appear if we will consider how in all ages they have been what Cyril of Alexandria styles them Sanctos mystagagos pulchritudine intelligentiae resplendescentes tanquam propugnacula c. Such as stand against Sects like Bulwarks and are the Rescuers of Truth from the captivity of Hereticks and the bold intrusions of their fallacies and deceits The multitude of the wise is the welfare of the world saith the wisest of men Wisd 6.24 Both Religion and the true use of Reason both Church and Common-wealth Law and Gospel all societies both Civil and Ecclesiastick are upheld and maintained in peace and prosperity by the hands and heads of learned men and power of learning And the more any people or nation are estranged from the knowledge of liberal arts and sciences the further they are off from that dignity whereby men do excell beasts and irrational creatures The end of learning being no other but the rectifying of depraved Reason the strengthning of the weakned judgement and the clearing of that eye of the soul the understanding whereby man is stampt to the image of the most understanding and all knowing God And when the natural light of the soul is thus cleared by learning the lives and manners of men are thereby raised to the perfection of vertue and civility of conversation beyond the rudeness of salvages and beasts Ex quo intelligimus quando doctrina non sucrit in Ecclesius perire pudicitiam castitatem mori omnes abire v●rtutes Hier. in loc Didicisse fidelitèr artes Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros The Prophet Amos threatning a famine of the word ch 8.11 adds vers 13. In that day shall the fair virgins and young men faint for thirst meaning not a corporal but a spiritual thirst The Hebrews saith Hier. interpret the fair virgins to be their Synagogues and Schooles of learning and the young men to be the choice Doctors and Masters of Israel for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both And when these shall faint and fail and learned teaching cease in the Church then chastity purity and integrity shall perish and all vertues shall decay amongst men CHAP. IX Some vulgar Objections against Vniversities and humane learning considered LEarning and knowledge knowes no other enemies but the ignorant and unlearned And 't is ever the nature of Pride and an essential property of Hereticks to decry and seemingly to contemn those gifts whereof themselves are destitute they are thus characterized by S. Jude vers 10. But these speak evil of those things which they know not and for no other reason but to exalt themselves above those who have that knowledge which they want upon this very ground many now a daies cry down Vniversities and humane learning and why only that they may lift up themselves above their brethren upon the fancied wings of counterfeit Revelations who so much flag and fall below them in the gifts of knowledge understanding and wisdome And to support this destructive principle of pride they want not some seemingly probable arguments Object 1 The grand Objection of all ●●thusiasts against Colledges and humane learning and all studying for the knowledge of Gods revealed will in his word is drawn from the examples of Elisha called from the plow and Amos who was an herdman in the Old Testament And the Apostles who were unlearned simple fishermen in the New For Answer whereunto consider Answ 1. That the calling of these persons was not only extraordinary but singular and unusual For usually all the Prophets of the Lord both ordinary and extraordinary were bred up in the Schools of the Prophets as hath been already intimated so that this is no warrant for any Shepheard Ploughman Fisherman or other ordinary person whatsoever to hope or wait for the like call 2. There is a great difference betwixt Elisha the ploughman and Elisha the Prophet betwixt Peter a Fisherman and St. Peter an Apostle every extraordinary calling
from God is both confirmed by miracles and accompanied also with extraordinary gifts to execute the duties of this calling it being as easie with God when he pleases to make men learned as to finde them so And to descend to particulars 1. Elisha though he was at the first called from the plough yet was he so instructed by the Prophet Elijah and upon his prayers so extraordinarily endued with the spiritual gifts of wisdome and knowledge that he became Master of one of the Schools of the Prophets whose Colledge was so full that the Students desired him to have it enlarged 2 King 6.1 And 't was one of his own Colledge no stranger or illiterate person that he sent upon the Lords message to anoint Jehu King over Israel 2 King 9.1 2. Amos indeed professeth of himself Amos 7.14 I was no Prophet neither was I Prophets son but I was an Herdman and gatherer of Sycomore fruits and the Lord said unto me Go and prophesie to this people But then this is noted withall as a thing singular and rare that such a one should be called a Prophet who was not the Son of a prophet nor bred up in their Schools whereby he might be enfitted for so great a calling And undoubtedly the mouth of this Prophet would soon have been stopt and severe punishment inflicted on him for presuming to prophesie in the name of the Lord had he not by miracles or some infallible signs prov'd his calling to be extraordinary and divine And although no miracle be recorded for the confirmation of this Prophets extraordinary calling yet of Elisha who was called from the plough we read that he made Iron to swim raised the dead revealed the secret counsels of the King of Syria being many miles distant And of the Apostles that they spake diverse languages healed all diseases c. If therefore any of these persons who pretend to immediate Revelation and consequently to be extraordinarily called to preach the Gospel can confirm the same by any such miracle 't would be a very great sin against the good Spirit of God to deny that he were in them of a truth but since this they cannot do they speak not with tongues but against them rather they cure no diseases but increase them the more those especially of melancholy frenzy c. you may know their disciples by their pale complexions lean cheeks wilde distorted looks In a word since they pretend to extraordinary matters and yet can by no extraordinary means or miracle confirm the same 't is too evident that their pretended Revelations are the delusions of their own hearts and not the inspirations of the Spirit of truth 3. For the Apostles of Christ though they were but ignorant and unlearned persons when first called yet through the instructions of Christ himself in person for three years together and the extraordinary inspirations of his holy Spirit they were afterwards endued with the gifts of learning both divine and humane whereof the very appearances of the holy Ghost descending upon them may put us in minde 1. In tongues enabling them to understand and speak all languages 2. In cloven Tongues enduing them with i the Art of Rhetorical elocution and Logical Analyse to divide distinguish and resolve Gods word into its proper parts and portions 3. In fiery Tongues that by the knowledge of things both natural and moral they might illustrate clear and make manifest things divine All which parts of learning evidently appear both in their Sermons and Epistles included in the sacred canon of Scripture and those also that stand upon record in other Ecclesiastical writings Such persons then as from the example of the Apostles pretend to the knowledge of Gods will by immediate Revelation must also be assur'd that they have the gifts of learning by immediate inspiration also For Learning and Religion are two inseparable twins no rude and illiterrate Ignoramo's being capable whilest they so continue of the sublime and celestial mysteries of godliness And undoubtedly it had been a very unfitting thing that the Apostles of Christ at first or any of his Ministers since should be an ignorant and illiterate generation Greg. in 1 Kin. Sinoe our Redeemer himself as a Father observes as he is the Word of the eternal Father is the Master of all Arts and Sciences He professes himself to have received the Tongue of the learned Isa 50.4 And therefore 't is not to be neglected by any of his members much lesse of his Ministers And they to whom learning is offensive wherewithall Christ himself was enriched to them Christ is become a stumbling block and a stone of offence For Christ cannot be against himself neither can any true member of Christ either be against what was eminent in him or against those gifts that were bestowed by him He gave the gifts of Tongues and Sciences and he both will own them and does require them For as under the Law a lame and a blinde sacrifice was hateful unto God so both under Law and Gospel he requires that the Priests and Prophets which are the portion of his inheritance should be sound and seeing persons neither lame through negligence nor blinde through ignorance Mal. 2 7. 1 Tim. 5.17 2 Tim. 2.15 2 Tim. 3.17 but such whose lips preserve knowledge and also labour in the Word and Doctrine Such who study to shew themselves approved and are thoroughly furnished unto every good work Object 2 But do not we hear many unlearned men preach the Word expound Scriptures and the most difficult parts of them even hard Prophesies and the mystical Revelation it self and this to the great liking and almost admiration of the hearers Do not we hear them dispute with their Ministers and write books against all that oppose them and shall we yet doubt of their inspiration and the uselesnesse of humane learning since these persons can do all this without it Answ 'T is most true that such like things as these are performed by unlearned men and make a great noise in the world and bear sway with the vulgar very much but when these Sermons discourses and books come to the scanning of judicious ears and such who have the gift of discerning spirits all their preachments prove but unprofitable prattle if not profanations of Gods holy word Their discourses of Religion unreasonable and endlesse brabbles and their books fraught with impertinencies railings and lies For the sin of their mouth and the words of their lips they shall be taken in their pride for why their preaching is of cursing and lies Ps 59.12 Object 3 But do not we hear many good things come from them and many sweet truths to the great contentment and edification of the hearers There are many sentences and sayings in holy Scripture Answ and other good English books which are so plain and convincing that they cannot be wrested or perverted but when these come to be formed into a Sermon or into a
presume to intermeddle with preaching or unfolding the mysteries of the Gospel 'T is recorded of the great St. Basil and Nazianzen that after their long studies in saecular learning Russin Lib. 2. cap. 9. they continued for the space of thirteen yeers together in a monastery giving themselves to the study of holy Scriptures the sense and meaning whereof they fetcht not out of their own heads but out of the writings and authority of the ancients to whom by succession from the Apostles the rule of right understanding the Scriptures was apparently known The order of divine wisdome and providence in the dispensation of holy truths to the world is worth our observation out of 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6. There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit there are diversities of administrations but the same Lord and there are diversities of operations but the same God that worketh all in all From hence it is easie to observe that there must be gifts before administrations i. e. 1. A man must be qualified with gifts fit for every calling before he receive administration or be ordained to that calling 2. There must be administration before operation i. e. A man must be lawfully ordained to a calling before he work or labour therein So in the great calling of the Ministry the gifts of the Spirit must precede or go before before Letters of administration be taken And 2. a lawful ordination must be taken before operation or working therein And he that either 1. assumes this high and sacred function Bish Andr. serm in 1 Cor. 12.14 c. being not qualified with gifts contemns the Spirit from whom they come Or 2. He that labours in the word and Doctrine though he be gifted being not also lawfully ordained contemns the Lord from whom all administrations come and who hath instituted and commanded ordination thereunto Or 3. He that being both gifted and lawfully ordained is not industrious in this calling contemns God the Father of all operations who worketh all in all He that thinks any of these superfluous may as well question whether some one Person of the Trinity be not superfluous also even that Person from whom comes that part of the division which he slights and contemns As it is therefore in the order of the Trinity as the Father begets the Son and from the Father and the Son proceeds the holy Ghost So in this Division the gifts of the Spirit beget the Lords Administration or calling to the Ministry and both together produce the operation or labour therein which is the work of God and as no man comes to Christ but by the holy Ghost so no man comes lawfully to the calling but by the gifts and as no man comes to the Father but by the Son so no man comes to the work but by the calling CHAP. XIII The internal and divine qualifications of the soul as to the understanding of holy Scriptures 1. T Is confessed that all the external parts of humane learning already remembred though they be the gifts and blessings of Gods Spirit and necessary helps to the opening of the Letter and right understanding of the literal and genuine sense of Gods word yet are not in themselves alone sufficient to attain a true and throughly saving knowledge thereof except our souls be enricht as with the outward gifts so with inward graces of the holy Spirit also Truth and Holiness are the two inseparable constituent parts of spiritual wisdome and to understand the truth or true meaning of the Spirit of Truth in the word the Spirit of holiness must necessarily concur And this is most eloquently expressed Job 28. where after a most high and magnificent expression of the praises great price and value of true wisdome a view is taken of all the parts of the world where it might be found gold and silver iron and brasse all useful metals and precious stones have their places though secret designed them but where shall this rich pearl where shall wisdome be found and what is the place of understandings Vers 12. It is not found in the land of the living the depth saith It is not in me and the sea saith It is not in me Vers 14. It is hid from the eyes of all living and kept close from the fowls of the air vers 21. The most Eagly sighted Philosophers and wisemen of the world who have viewed the natures properties and causes of all things not in the earth alone but in the heavens also even the courses influences and operations of the Sun Moon and Stars have not yet attained true wisdome how then shall we finde it out it followes God knoweth the place thereof and he understandeth the way thereof vers 23. And he hath said Behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdome and to depart from evil is understanding briefly describing both the place of wisdome and the way thereunto even the way of piety and obedience And of that piety which is necessarily requisite to the understanding of holy Truth there are several species or particular parts which from the example of holy Bernard may be thus reckoned up Qui ut legeret intelligendi fecit cupiditas ut intelligeret oratio impetravit ut impetraret quid nisi vitae sanctitas promeruit His earnest desire of knowledge made him studious and industrious in reading his fervent prayers obtained the understanding of what he read and his holy life made his prayers effectual for the enlightning of his understanding and thus he must desire thus study thus pray and thus live who will attain that knowledge which shall make him wise to salvation 1. The first divine qualification of the soul requisite unto knowledge is the desire thereof The beginning of wisdome it the desire of instruction Wisd 6.17 Come unto me all ye that be desirious of me and fill your selves with my fruits Ecclesiasticus 24.19 and what is more authentick If thou seekest wisdome as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasure then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God Prov. 2.4 Such desires and studies for wisdome the holy Ghost undoubtedly would never 1. exemplifie 2. exhort unto 3. enkindle in the hearts of men but that they should tend not to vexation and trouble but to satisfaction and accomplishment in the prosecution of them Et hoc modo priùs invenire oportet ut quaeras deinde quaerere ut pleniùs invenias This desire of knowledge must not be only earnest but also sincere Pura erit intentio si in omni actione aut honorem Dei aut militatem proximi aut bonam consci●ntiam conscientiam quaeramus Bern. serm par free from partialities prejudices and prepossessions free from pride covetousnesse ambition emulation and all base carnal and worldly ends and interests denoted by the singleness of the eye Mat. 6.22 which is generally interpreted to be purity of intention in all our studies and endevours
Spirit upon all flesh And your sons and your daughters shall prophesie c. This text must be understood with several limitations otherwise many dangerous and false consequences will ensue and such as are contrary to what in other places of Scripture is affirmed I will pour out of my Spirit not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not my Spirit himself for no flesh not all flesh can contain the Spirit of God Ad dive sa dona respicit non ad minutionem substantiae Gloss ordin in Loc. who filleth all the world and containeth all things Wisd 1. But of my Spirit i. e. of his gifts and graces even as beams from the light as heat from the fire or a● streams from this fountain of Truth 2. I will pour out Denoting indeed the liberal donation of spiritual gifts under the Gospel but yet with restriction to certain times and certain persons for not at all times neither upon all persons is the Spirit of God plentifully poured out when the holy Ghost visibly and miraculously descended upon the Apostles there was a plentiful pouring out so that they were filled with the Spirit vers 4. The gift of Tongues the gift of Prophesie to understand and open all mysteries the gift of healing all diseases the gift of miracles c. these and many other gifts were at this time after such a plentiful manner poured forth that there were some reliques some drops of this full measure remaining in the Church for 400 years after Thus it was then and 't was then necessary because the first publication and planting of the Gospel required extraordinary and more ample gifts and abilities for the effecting thereof But we must not look to see those daies of such extraordinary effusions to return again which is intimated in that they are called the last daies in the text as being the last time we must expect any such miraculous and immediate effusions or Revelations till the last day of all even that great and notable day of the Lord come vers 20. Although therefore this prophesie may in some general respects be extended to all the people of God yet particularly and after an especiall manner 't was fulfilled in the persons of the Apostles themselves and by S. Peter 't is here applyed unto them vers 15 16. And undoubtedly 't is high presumption in any man or sect of men to apply to themselves what was peculiar and proper to the divinely inspired Apostles and their hopes must needs be vain who wait for extraordinary inspirations upon misapplied promises and prophesies long since accomplisht Vpon all flesh Which 1. is not to be understood of all men promiscuously but of all such men of all nations and conditions as give up their names to become my sons and daughters to be called by and to call upon the name of the Lord to the hope of salvation for so the prophesie concludes Whoseever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved and so S. Peter concludes his Sermon upon this prophesie Repent and be baptized vers 38. Not all flesh but such only as are capable of the effusions of the Spirit and this limitation cuts off all Turks Jews Infidels Heretiques and Hypecrites for no such flesh have the Spirit of truth and holiness powred on them but are led by the spirit of error and wickednesse 2. All flesh cannot be meant of all Gods people neither as to the gift of prophesie and full understanding of the mysteries of godliness For so all good Christians men and women whether be they young or old children or servants must turn Prophets And all flesh as the reverend Andrewes must be cut out into Tongues which is a monstrous thing to imagine For if all the body of Christ were a Tongue where were the ears c. If all were Preachers where were the Hearers Such were not an orderly Church but a Babylon of confusion where the one heard not another therefore though it be said all flesh 't is not said all your sons and daughters shall prophesie but some shall do it for all some sons and some servants too i. e. some Jewes and some Gentiles some of all nations God gave some Apostles some Prophets c. And these must be of the male not of the female sex they are prohibited 1 Cor. 14.34 Let your women keep silence in the Churches If you demand how is the Spirit then upon all flesh 'T is upon all holy and good Christians but not upon all to prophesie all Gods people have in some measure the Spirit of grace and truth but that does not authorise them presently to turn speakers and teachers of others But doth not the Apostle say ye may all prophesie one by one 1 Cor. 14.31 1 Cor. 14.31 Ye all that is as many as be prophets but to think that all are so the Apostle holds it very absurd demanding with indignation Are all Apostles are all Prophets 1 Cor. 12.29 not so surely the gift must first be had and then letters of Administration taken before the operation or work of Prophesie be lawfully performed 'T is further alledg'd to the same purpose 1 Cor. 12.7 To every man is given the manifestation of the Spirit to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 whence 't is infer'd that both liberty of prophesying for the profit of our brethren and immediate Revelations or manifestations of the Spirit to that end are given to every man Answ By every man is not meant every particular person but every man that hath those gifts mentioned in the next words viz. The gifts of wisdome knowledge faith tongues c. hath them for this end given that he may profit and edifie the Church and people of God thereby And they are called The manifestations of the Spirit 1. Because they flow from the Spirit either extraordinarily or immediately as in the firster and primitive times of the Church or ordinarily and in the use of means in all ages since 2. Because by the help of these gifts we are enabled to manifest and clear the truth and true meaning of the Spirit in the word Joh. 1.9 That was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world Joh. 1.9 From whence 't is urged That every man hath a light within him displayed from Christ the true light of the world whereunto if he give heed he shall not need any outward illuminations or instructions from men for this is the work of Christ himself and himself hath sufficiently done it Answ 'T is with all reverence and thankfulness acknowledged that Christ is the fountain of every perfect illumination Non quianullus est hominum qui non illuminatur sed quia nisi ab ipso nullus illuminatur Aug. Si●ut nemo à seipso esse sic nemo à seipso sapiens esse potest Beda whether natural spiritual or eternal But yet the words are not so to be understood as if every man
different affections produce divers societies and congregations and these according to their opposite opinions frame opposite forms and waies of divine worship So the Arrian Heresie brought forth a different doxologie in the Church the Orthodox Christians saying Glory be to the Father to the Son and to the holy Ghost And the Arrians Glory to be the Father by the Son in the Spirit 'T is the property of Heretiques as to depart from the faith so from the Congregation also Ex nobis prodierunt sc ab unitate catholica recedentes Gloss interlin These are they that separate themselves Jude 19. So S. John also sets forth the waies of Heretiques They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us c. 1 Joh. 2.19 2. That Schism is the cause of Heresie is also manifest from the example of the Israelites who first were but Schismatiques in breaking communion with the Church of God at Hierusalem but presently after they became guilty of Heresie nay downright Idolatry worshipping the golden calves of Jeroboam Non vobis objicio nisi Schismatis crimen quod etiam haeresin male perseverando fecistis Ad. Don. Epist 164. erected in Dan and Bethel so the Donatists their crime at first was only Schism they separated themselves from the congregation of Christs flock under a pretence of more holinesse then the rest of their brethren but their perseverance in this Schism made them afterwards Heretiques as S. August in one of his Epistles cals them And in our own Church at home 't is too manifest that 't was Schism which first opened the gap whereat all those infectious Heresies which overspread us entred The breach of Communion in the use of publique prayers and participation of the Sacraments Ecclesia unitatem qui non tenet tenere se fidem credit Cyp. de unit eccl and submission to the Apostolical government of Episcopacy being followed with Heresies that subvert all government decency and order and the very Sacraments themselves Nor indeed can we imagine it should be otherwise if we consider it first 1. That Ecclesiastical government and authority discipline and order together with a publique Liturgie or form of prayer whereby all members of the same Church joyn in the worship of the same God as with one heart so with one voice That these I say are the mounds or hedges which keep out the wilde Boars of the Forrest from rooting up the Lords vineyard and the little Foxes from eating up the grapes thereof In respect whereof the Church which is the spouse of Christ is called an inclosed garden Cant. 4.12 As therefore the breaking down of any garden wall laies it common and waste so the breach of these mounds by Schism and disobedience laies waste the Church makes it a wilderness and desert wherein bryers and thornes heresies and iniquities spring up and grow In respect therefore of the first viz. Ecclesiastical government He that will not hear the Church saith the Lord let him be unto thee as an heathen c. Mat. 18.17 And Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your souls viz. To keep you free as from the pollution of sin so from the poyson of Heresie which are the two snares of the Devil wherein he also continually watcheth to entrap and devour the souls of men And in respect of the second A publique known form of Prayer it was ever conceived by the wise and learned Fathers of the Church That liberty for every man to vent in publique his own private conceptions if not first examined and approved did open a gap to all licentiousness in opinion for the proof whereof I shall only mention two testimonies The 1. is the 23. Canon of the third Councel of Carthage in these words Quascunque sibi preces aliquis describet non its utatur nisi prius eas cum instructioribus fratribus contulerit no man may use any prayers which he hath made till first he hath consulted with his more learned brethren concerning them The 2. which is more apposite to our present purpose is the 12. Canon of the Milevitan Councel in these words Placuit ut preces quae probatae fuerint in concilio ab omnibus celebrentur nec alia omnino dicantur in ecclesia nisi quae à prudentioribus traclatae comprobatae in Synodo fuerint ne fortè aliquid contra fidem vel per ignorantiam vel per minus studium sit compositum It was decreed that the prayers which were approved in the Councel should be used by all and that no other should be said in the Church but those that had been weighed by the more prudent and approved in a Synod lest either through ignorance or negligence any thing should be said or framed against the true faith If then the wisdome of the Church determined that approved and set forms of prayer were necessary for the preservation of the true faith it must needs follow that the neglect and contempt hereof hath not been the least cause of so much depravation and corruption of the faith amongst us 2. That Schisms and breaches of publique communion are those gaps whereat Heresies do enter we must need acknowledge if we consider That the Devil who is the author of all Schism and division who is therefore so well known to the vulgar by his cloven foot is serpens lubricus a sly slippery insinuating serpent give him but the inch and he will quickly have the ell suffer him but to make a rent in the garment and he presently assailes the body of Religion if he win ground in the ceremonies and make a Schism there he will not be long from the Sacraments and produce Heresies in them Thus 't was amongst the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11. From their neglect of Ceremonies sitting covered at prayer they grew as irreverent and homely with the Sacrament eating Bishop Andr. serm upon 1 Cor. 1● 16 and drinking as if they had been at home so that the Apostle is fain to tell them vers 22. That they had homes to be homely at The Church the house of God was no place for such irreverent demeanor And the like is obvious to each mans observation amongst us how the decent ceremonies and publique orders of Prayer and of the Sacraments being struck at the substance of both hath not long continued free from that impetuous violence of factious and schismatical spirits 3. This will yet further appear if we consider the nature of contention which is so unruly that it knows no bounds and limits but like waters overflowing the banks which run endwise ever without return so Prov. 17.14 The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out water therefore leave off contention before it be medled with To contend for the true faith is commendable and commanded also Jude 3. but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
and presumptuously affirmed 'T is ever the custome of Heretiques to alledge holy Scriptures in a wrested and perverted sense making those sacred writings like a nose of wax turning and writhing them to this and to that and to every sense that best agrees with their own vain imaginations Aliter Photius aliter Novatianus c. One Heretique understands it this way and another diversly from him and a third distinct from both and all put another sense upon the words of God then ever his holy Spirit intended therein Pro voluntatis sue sensu Hilar. Vinc. Lir. adversus Har. c. 1. Hil de trinitate l. 2. The sense of their own minde and spirit not of Gods Spirit they put upon the Scriptures which occasion'd that complaint plaint of S. Hierome 'T is only the Art of understanding Scriptures which all persons challenge to themselves So●a scripturarum a●s est quam sibi passim omn●s vendicant Hanc gariula avus hanc delirus senex hanc so phista verbesus hanc universi presumunt lacerant docent ante quam discant Hier. ad P●l l. 1. c. 6. This the pratling old wise and the doting old man and the wrangler full of words this all men presume unto and upon presumption of their interest therein they tear and wrest and abuse it at their pleasure presuming to teach the doctrine thereof before they have half learned it As in the natural creation of children too many are the issue of lust and wantonness nor is it considered when they are begotten how they shall be kept even so 't is in the spiritual brood of Heresies pride covetousness and ignorance begets them before the authors know how to maintain them but as children when they are once gotten must be kept though they pinch upon their neighbours so this heretical crew rather then the opinions which are the issue of their pride and vanity should die they will steal the sincere milk of the word to nourish them or in language of another strain rather then they will submit their vain imaginations to the truth and true meaning of Gods word the truth of that must submit to their imaginations And this Videtis id vos ag●re ut omnis scripturarum de medio auferatur authoritas suus cuique animus author sit quid in quaque scriptura probet quid improbet id est non ut authoritati subjiciatur s●ripturarum ad fidem sed ut sibi scripturas ipse subjiciat non ut illi ideo placeat aliquid quia hoc in sublimi authoritate scriptum legitur sed ideo recte scriptum videatur quia hoc illi plac●●t Aug. cont Faust saith the Father is the way to rob the Scripture of its authority whilest every mans own imagination must tell him what it allowes and what it disallowes this is not to be subject to the authority of the Scriptures but to make the Scriptures subject to our imaginations so that therefore this or that is not acceptable unto them because 't is written in the word of God but therefore 't is well said or written there because 't is acceptable unto them The great danger they incur who put another sense upon the holy Scriptures then Gods holy Spirit ever intended therein is represented to us by the strange fire which that rebellious crew under the conduct of Corah Dathan and Abiram offered up unto the Lord there came out a fire from the Lord and devoured the presumptuous sacrificers Numb 16.18 35. So those unlearned and unstable souls which wrest the Scriptures do it to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 As a remedy to prevent so great mischief the ancient Fathers thought it meet to provide saith the reverend Andrewes that they who took upon them to interpret the Scriptures Lat. con● secundum s●ss 11. should put in sureties that the sense they gave of them should be no other then what the Church in former times acknowledged So Vinc. Lirin also By reason of the manifold windings and turnings of the Scriptures Propter tantos tam varii erroris anfractus necesse est ut propheti●ae Apostolicae interpretationis l●nea secundum ecclesiastici catholici sensus normam dirig atu● Vine Lir. advers Haer. c. 2. for the maintenance of several errors 't is necessary to direct the line of prophetical and Apostolical interpretation according to the rule of an Ecclesiastical sense and meanings for Quis unquam Haereses c. saith the same Author Who ever brought in an Haeresie but first he disagreed from the consent of antiquity and of the ancient Catholique Church Et in laqueum sit verbum Dei saith Estius the holy Word of God becomes a snare and a stumbling block to all those who contemning the authority of the Church presume to impose their own private sense upon it And he that obtrudes his private sense of Scripture upon his hearers not only lords it over their faith but over the faith of the universal Church of Christ Estius in Rom. 11.9 nay he makes null and void the authority of holy Scriptures for Scripture is no more Scripture if not rightly interpreted 7. Another general cause of erroneous opinions in Religion is Hypocrisie when men are cold and lukewarm and too negligent in the practise which is the life of Christianity when they receive not the love of the Truth so as readily to obey and practise it then it is just with God to give them up to strong delusions Nay hereby men lay themselves open to the delusions of Heretiques because the excellency of holy Christian truths are not cannot be known but by the practise and experience thereof therefore said our Saviour If ye do his will ye shall know of my doctrine whether it be of God or no Joh. 7.17 So that undoubtedly what ever piety or purity Heretiques may pretend unto yet generally 't is but a meer formal outside a show and shadow of truth but no substantial solid piety or charity having a form of godliness but denying the power 2 Tim. 3.5 For to such who by obedience practise and experience do know and believe the excellency of Truth it is not possible to be seduced and drawn aside therefrom Qu imdiu bona ep●ra sa● imus ipsum lumen ju stitiae ante oculos nosties adaperit veritatem Chrys in Mat. 7. Hom. 19. therefore our Lord cals all false Prophets Woolves in sheeps cloathing Mat. 7.15 that is Nominis Christiani extrinseous superficies meer nominal outside Christians no men so seemingly austere and strict and yet all is but empty appearance of holiness no men assume to themselves more holy titles the Saints the Elect the People of God If they be simple and illiterate persons then they apply to themselves God hath chosen the simple 1 Cor. 1.27 and those that confute them in discourse do it by carnal Reason and the wisdome of the flesh if they be subtil and acute in argumentation and put
to silence some weak adversary then 't is the wisdome of the spirit in them which the wisdome of the flesh cannot resist Tell them of their folly and madness they say Christs own Apostle was accounted mad if they suffer according to law for their enormities then they say they suffer for righteousness sake nay their sins and delinquencies they would make appear to be pieties so subtil are all Hypocrites in the outward and nominal part of Religion that if it were possible they would deceive the very Elect and many thousands are deceived by their appearances of holiness and strictness of life but 't is such only who are somewhat infected with Hypocrisie as well as themselves therefore they are styl'd Wels without water clouds that are carried with a tempest 2 Pet. 2.17 For as empty clouds are most tossed by the winde so men that are religious only in religious names and religious talk and outward shew of Religion being not ballast with sincere devotion towards God and charity towards man such are they that are most apt to be tossed with every winde of doctrine 8. All errors and seditions in the most holy faith are generally thrown upon the grand impostor and father of lies the Devil who no question hath a great influence therein therefore cal'd The doctrines of devils and he and his Angels seducing spirits 1 Tim. 4.1 and all that are seduced the children of the wicked one Mat. 13.38 but yet withall we must know that if the voluntary sins of pride covetousnesse presumption c. did not first infect the minde his tares of Heresie and Schism could never take rooting there 't is of the corruptions of the mindes and manners of men that all Heresies are engendred and like the creatures of putrefaction to which heat and moisture gives a natural being so the filthy moisture or corruption of mens hearts quickned by the incessant operation of the evil spirit gives unto all Heresies their spiritual being and growth in the minde For wickedness saith the wise man doth alter the understanding and the bewitching of naughtiness doth obscure things that are honest Wisd 4.11 Sin saith Chrys doth so blinde the senses of sinners Chrys in Mat. 7. Hom. 19. that seeing not the waies of falshood and error they headlong themselves therein nor could ever any errors prevail ever man if sin had not made the way for first a man is blinded by his sins and then drawn away by the devil and seduced For error saith he begetteth not sins but sins beget and bring forth error CHAP. VI. The ends why God permits Heresies and Schismes ALmighty God as by his powerful word of nothing he hath made all things so doth he still not only uphold all things by the word of his power but most wisely govern order and dispose of all being the Master-wheel of all motions and the original cause of all actions and events whether they be good or evil of the good by his active and of the evil by his permissive providence as Amos 3.6 Shal there be any evil in the city and the Lord hath not done it Terra salutiferas herbas eademque nocentes Nutrit urticae proxima sea●e rosa est And as it is in the greater world all good and useful things have their contrary evils there are fruitful showres and the fatning dew of heaven and there are also harmful storms of hail and corrupt and infectious vapours There are trees of wholsome fruit and herbs for the use and nourishment both of man and beast and there are also both trees and herbs that are unwholsome and poysonous there are living creatures also both tame and wilde both such as are serviceable unto man and such also as are destructive fierce cruel and mischievous so in the lesser world also there is in the field of Gods Church both wheat and tares corn and chaffe both true and false Prophets the one the pillars of sound celestial soul-saying Truth the other the deceitful workers and Patrons of errors heresies and schisms Truth stands ever firm upon its own proper base and being supported by no other but it s own native excellency and vertue ever appears like it self in its own plain simple naked colours But Error being in it self crooked and deformed puts on the shape and ever appears in the likeness of holy truth following her steps to trip up her heels and take possession of her throne The very Philosophy of the Heathens was followed and undermin'd by false Philosophers and amongst the Jewes their circumcision and some other rites and ceremonies were imitated by the Arabians and other nations and yet the one were the worshippers of the true God herein and the others worshipped Idols And in the worship of the true God to that which is sound and sincere is opposed false counterfeit and hypocritical worship to the true and lawful Baptism is opposed unlawful and extraregular dipping to the commandements of God the traditions of men to the Apostles and faithful Ministers of Christ false Apostles and deceitful workers and in a word there is nothing of the most holy fath but by the cunning of the Devil working upon the corruptions of mens hearts something is forged in opposition thereunto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athen. lib. de resur No article of the Christian faith escaping the invasion of Heretiques and the corruption thereof by heretical and false positions the which will easily appear to every man that list to consult Philastrius Epiphanius Augustine Joh. Damscene who out of Ecclesiastical records have given the several catalogues of Heresies and Heretiques The Reasons why God is pleased to permit it should be so may be reduc'd to two general heads viz. 1. In respect of the faith it self 2. In respect of the professors thereof 1. In respect of the faith of Christ 1. The excellency thereof doth appear from the manifold assaults and machinations of the devil there against for were not the stedfast profession of the Christian faith and the conscientious practise thereof the way both of Gods acceptable service and of mans salvation the devil would never be so busie to corrupt and adulterate the same whose inveterate enmity both to God and man incites provokes him perpetually to deprave and falsifie the pure worship of the one and hinder the salvation of the other 2. The holy faith of Christ appears more pure sincere and illustrious by the test and opposition of heretical positions we read Numb 16.36 that the Lord commanded Moses to take the censers of those proud rebels which rose up against Moses and Aaron wherein they offered strange fire before the Lord and to make broad plates for a covering of the Altar for they offered them before the Lord therefore are they hallowed sc sanctificata in mortibus peccatorum Through the death of the offenders they were sanctified to be a memorial to the children of Israel to beware of the like schism insurrection
render all careful and conscientious Christians more diligent in sifting and searching out the truth and more careful also of what they hear and of what they receive for truth according to those several commands given Beware of false Prophets Mat. 7.15 Take heed how ye hear Luk. 8.18 And take heed what ye hear Mark 4.24 Try all things and hold fast that which is good 1 Thess 5.21 And beleeve not every spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God or no 1 Joh. 4.1 Therefore many false Prophets and false spirits there are and heretical assertions are interwoven with the Articles of the true faith that we might not grow dull and stupid and negligent and idle but be industrious vigilant and wary having our senses exercised to discern both good and evil and our understandings polished through the many exercitations and oppositions of untruths ●●m 19. in Mat. 7. Because God would not have his servants without judgement saith Chrys not to be able to discern betwixt light and darkness therefore he sends them temptations and because he would not have them to perish through ignorance and negligence therefore he commands them to beware 3. For the exercise and trial as of our sincerity so of our courage and spiritual fortitude in the opposition and resistance we make against the assaults of Heresies is another end why God permits us to be assaulted by them there is no greater sign of our sincerity in the love and service of God then by being stedfast in his covenant Psal 78.37 one chief and principal part of which covenant is stedfastly to believe all the Articles of the Christian Faith from the which there is no man that loves the Lord with all his heart can be induced to swerve or go astray nor can all the machinations of the Devil or any sinful lusts of the world or of the flesh in this respect prevail against him For he that is verè pius est verè fortis True and sound piety never wants courage to defend the Truth and true courage through divine assistance is ever accompanied with constancy and victory over all temptations This is commanded Deut. 13.1 If there arise a false Prophet thou shalt not hearken to the words of that Prophet And the reason is rendred why such should arise and why thou should not hearken unto them vers 3. For the Lord your God proveth you to know whether you love the Lord your God with all your heart c. q. d. If you truly love the Lord it will appear by the opposition to whatsoever does corrupt or deprave the waies of his worship God sends not temptations that we should hearken and yeeld unto them but that our love to him might appear by our resistance and vanquishment of them And our weapons in this spiritual warfare are fervent importunate prayes arising from a true sincere and sound piety and devotion of soul The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him to all that call upon him in truth He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him he also will hear their cry and will save them Psal 145.28 29. He will save them out of the windings and subtil waies of error and deceit who truly love and fear him and in the sincerity of their souls call upon him For God is faithful and will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will even give the issue with the temptation that they may be able to bear it 1. Cor. 10.13 Vel cadere non sinit vel à casu erigit Gloss in loc either God suffers not the righteous to be moved Psal 55.22 Or if he fall yet shall he rise again for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand Qui tentanti dat licentiam tentato dat misericordiam The same God who suffers the tempter supports the tempted also and against the temptations of false Prophets upholds the true faithful soul that loves the Lord his God with all his heart with all his might 4. As our love to God so our love to our neighbour also is exercised and tryed by the permission of Heresies amongst us And this 1. By our readiness to instruct the ignorant and strengthen the weak that they be not seduced and ensnared by them Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive ye but not to doubtful disputations 2. Before endevours in the use of all possible means to bring into the way of Truth all such as have erred and are deceived proving whether God will give them repentance to the acknowledgement of the truth that they may escape the snare of the Devil of whom they are taken captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.25 26. 3. By your prayers for them that God would open their eyes to understand the truth and relinquish their errors that they may be converted and be healed Jam. 5.16 Praying one for another that ye may be healed 5. For the exercise of our patience and meekness For all Heretiques and Schismatiques whatsoever do generally and for the most part assume to themselves to be the only Church and people of God and all others besides themselves to be reprobates and castawaies whom therefore where they have power they constantly persecute and afflict and where outward power is wanting they shew their inward malice by bitter railings revilings and uncharitable censures and condemnations of them All which God permits for the exercise of our patience meekness and Christian moderation that being reviled we revile not again not rendring evill for evill nor railing for railing but contrariwise blessing and earnestly praying for their conversion who as earnestly wish for our confusion and this both according to the command and example of our blessed Lord and Master Mat. 5.44 But I say unto you love your enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you CHAP. VII Of the danger of Heresie and Shism THE most holy God as he is infinite in mercy so in justice for as well wrath as mercy cometh from him and his indignation resteth upon sinners 't is of his mercy that all things work together for good to them that love him Etians peccata saith the Father ever their sins whilest truly repented do work to their greater Humiliation and more careful conscienciousness of their waies and so their errors also do work both for their trial of and confirmation in the most holy faith 'T is of his justice that evill doth haunt the wicked person to his ruine both the evil of sin and the evil of error leaves not the wicked person till he be ceased with the evill of punish●ent either temporal or eternal hence it comes to pass that Heresie is both profitable and dangerous as S. Chrys observes Chry. Horn. 19. in Mat. 7. 't is useful and profitable in that thereby the truly faithfull are sifted tryed and known from the light giddy
laid in the right understanding and firm adherence to the principles of holy Religion Now the general ground and foundation of all holy and saving Truth is the word of God or the divinely inspired writings of Moses and the Prophets in the old and of Christ and his Apostles in the new Testament Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ himself being the head corner stone Eph. 2.20 But although all things contained in the holy Scriptures be infallibly true and in some respect or other usefull and edifying yet all are not therefore fundamentall Truths Those principles of holy truth contained in the Scriptures which are fundamental are according to the doctrine of the Church reduced to five Heads 1. Repentance 2. Faith Ch. catec 3. Obedience 4. Prayer 5. Sacraments If any winde of doctrine move us from off any of the grounds our souls must needs suffer the shipwrack of holy Truth and be split upon the rocks of false erroneous opinions As to these principles therefore these particular rules must be observed for the avoiding of errors 1. And first for Repentance which is termed the foundation of Christian Doctrine Heb. 6.1 He that will not build but upon what is the foundation of truth must not admit of any opinion whatsoever that shall take him off from the constant confession of his sins with all humility and godly sorrow remembring that there is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not Eccl. 7.20 And the only means left us to recover our selves out of the snares of sin is by Repentance to wash our hearts with the tears of godly sorrow for sin to empty our souls of them by confession and make them clean by more stedfast purposes and strong resistance against all temptations unto sin And this is the first part of that Baptismal vow or of that covenant we made with God when any of us by holy and lawful Baptism were admitted into the bosome of his Church even to forsake the devil and all his works the pomps and vanities of this wicked world and all the sinful lusts of the flesh or manfully to sight under the banner of Christ against the devil the world and the flesh which is no other but to adhere to the doctrine and to continue in the practise of true Repentance 2. As to Faith which is joyned with Repentance as another essential part of the same foundation of Truth Heb. 6.1 't is necessary for the avoiding of Errors to admit of no opinion relating to Religion that is not agreeable to those Articles of the Christian faith summarily exprest in the Apostles Creed which is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or form of sound words in faith Symbolum Ap●slorum est r●gula fidei vestrae brevis grandis braevis num●ro verborum gra●dis pondere sent●nt●arum Aug. de Temp. we are commanded to hold fast 2 Tim. 1.13 That modell of faith once given to Saints we are commanded earnestly to contend for Jud. 3. The Apostles Creed saith S. Aug. is the rule of your faith which is though short yet weighty short in the number of words but weighty in sentences or the several articles thereof The Gospel of Christ is indeed the grand Rule of faith whereof this lesser Rule the Apostles Creed is the sum and Epitome And he that gees besides and not according to the Rule of faith goes not forward in the way but backward from the way of Truth 3. As to Obedience To entertain no opinion that agrees not with that all-perfect rule of Righteousness the Decalogue or ten Commandements of the moral Law for whatsoever shall oppose thwart make void or any way take off our obedience to any of Gods Commandements is to be rejected as false and erroneous Whosoever saith our Lord shall break one of these least Commandements and teach men so to do he shall be called least in the Kingdome of heaven that is saith the Glosse the most despised in the Church of Christ Minimus in r●gno h. c. d●spectissimu● in ecclesia quia decidit à side Lir. in loc and the reason is given because he is saln from the faith he is lapst into error which is expresly asserted by S. John Hereby we are sure we know God if we keep his commandements he that saith he knowes God and keepeth not his commandements is a lyar and the truth is not in him 1 Joh. 2.3 4. And in order to this Rule 't is necessary also to admit of no opinion that tends to the breach of either of those general Rules of Charity which is the fulfilling of the Law viz. To love God above all and thy neighbour as thy self for on these two hang all the Law and the Prophets Mat. 22.37 c. Whatsoever therefore doth not tend either 1. to the inflaming of our souls with the sacred fire of divine love to the advancement of Gods glory and the promoting of his service both inward and outward As also whatsoever 2. tends not to the maintenance of love and unity justice and charity innocence and beneficence towards our neighbors is not to be entertained as a beam shining from the light of holy Truth but as a slash of illusion suggested by the spirit of Error Hereby shall all men know that you are my disciples if ye love one another Joh. 13.35 He omits saith the Father the gift of Miracles Tongues Prophesies Aug. Knowledge to understand all mysteries Faith to remove mountains by none of those but by your charity you shall be known to be my disciples 6 As to the doctrine of Prayer That we admit of no opinion that shall take us off either from the frequent and fervent use of holy Prayers in general or more particularly from the use of the Lords Prayer the which is not only commanded by our Lord to be used when we pray Luk. 11.2 but by the which also we do communicate in our prayers with all holy orthodox Christians there being no time when ever we do use this prayer but many thousands of pious persons are at the same time powring forth their souls unto God in the words of the same prayer To neglect therefore much more to despise the use of this prayer if it be not a piece of disobedience to the plain and positive command of Christ and so a branch of Hecesie yet 't is a depriving our selves of the greatest benefit of the Communions of Saints and so a branch of Schism 7. As to the Sacraments that we reject what ever doth either obstruct the use or deny the efficacy either of Baptism or the Supper of the Lord Mat 26 26 27. c 28 1● Joh. 6.51.53 Act. 2.38 The use thereof being positively commanded and the efficacy thereof as positively asserted by Christ himself These being also the seales of the covenant of grace Baptism the seale of our admission and the Eucharist of our confirmation in the