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

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nature and a finite nature or the third reason which is only opened in the word of God whereby the divine essence is incomprehensible to wit by communication whereas the whole is in such sort common to the three persons of the Divinity as not only it is in them as it is in the creatures but also is their very substance and yet neverthelesse remaineth in number one and the same Now that it is proper to the Deity alone Infinity or immensity proper to God not imparted to any creature for 4. causes nor imparted or communicated to any creature to be infinite or immense or to be every where at the same time or to be the same in divers places is apparant by these reasons 1. Because it is impossible that any creature should be or be made equall to the Creatour as hath been often said Lord who is like unto thee 2. Because God himself by this mark distinguisheth and discerneth himselfe from the creatures for in saying Jerem. 23.14 that he is he who filleth heaven and earth he signifieth that there is no other such besides him 3. Because Christ sheweth his divinity by this argument in that when he was in body on earth John 3.13 yet he affirmeth himself to be in heaven 4. The godly Doctors of the ancient Church defended the divinity of the holy Ghost by this self same argument Lib. 1. cap. 1. as Dydimus in his Treatise of the holy Ghost The holy Ghost himselfe if hee were one of the creatures should have at least wise a substance limited as all things which were made for although invisible creatures are not limited and circumscribed by place yet are they limited by the property of their substance But the holy Ghost being in many hath not a limited and finite substance How God is most perfect in himself Most perfect in himselfe God is moreover most perfect in himself 1. Because hee only hath all things which may be desired unto perfect felicity and glory so that no way any thing may be added unto him to make him more glorious or happy and all the creatures have but only some parts and degrees of blessings distributed unto them convenient for their nature and place which the Creator assigneth and giveth to every one 2. Because he receiveth no part of this most absolute felicity from any other but hath all things in himself and of himself and is alone sufficient to himself for all things and therefore needeth no mans labour or aid or presence but was alike blessed from everlasting before any creature was as he is now after the creation of the world But contrariwise all the creatures stand so in need of the goodnesse and presence of God that without it they cannot only not any way be well and in good state but not so much as be at all the space of one moment 3. Because he is not for himself only but for the creating also preserving guiding and furnishing of all and every creature so sufficient that he alone doth give to all of them all good things necessary and meet for them as well eternall and heavenly as terrene and temporall neither yet for all that doth the least jot depart either from his power or from his happinesse Now all the creatures not only cannot at all profit one another more then God worketh by them as the instruments of his goodnesse but neither they themselves which are as it were conduits can have the least good in themselves but what they have drawn from God alone as the only fountain and wel-spring of goodnesse and felicity Now he alone is sufficient for all and bestoweth all things because there must needs be some one first cause in nature of all good things and he hath all things in his power because except he had them he could not give them to others and except he had them of himself he could not be the first head and fountain of all good things Prov. 16.4 Object 1. He is said to have made all things for himselfe Ans Not for the aiding or increasing of himself How God is said to have made all things for himselfe as if hee needed any thing but rather for to communicate and shew himself unto his creatures he made them because this is the nature of that which is good not only to preserve it self but also to communicate it self to others Object 2. He useth the creatures in accomplishing his works Answ This he doth not as constrained thereto by any necessity of impotency but of his most free will and goodnesse to shew that he is able both wayes both without them and with them to do whatsoever he will that he is Lord of all things both by right and by his power and can use all things at his pleasure and that he also doth vouchsafe his creatures this great and free honour as to make them the instruments of his bountifulnesse and fellowes and disposers as S. Paul speaketh of his divine works ● Cor. 4. ● Object 3. We are willed to performe exhibit and offer obedience worship honour sacrifices to God and to give him that which is his Answ Thereby is taught not what good cometh more to God but what good ought to be in us for as disobedience and despight against God maketh not God but the creature more miserable so obedience towards God which is a conformity and agreement with Gods law and mind is the good and blessednesse not of God but of the reasonable creature and this is said to be given or taken from God not that God needeth it or is profited thereby but because men ought by order of justice to perform and yeeld it unto God Psal 50.8 Luke 17.10 as I will take no bullock out of thy house nor hee-goats out of thy folds And when ye have done all those things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable servants And if any man reply That glory neverthelesse tendeth to his happinesse and perfection unto whom it is given we must know That the glory of God signifieth Two things signified by Gods glory 1. The foundation of glory to wit the attributes or vertues which are in God himselfe and his divine works and the beholding and approbation of them in God and in this sense can no man give him glory neither can it be diminished or augmented but it was and remaineth the same in him for ever John 17.5 according as it is said Glorifie mee O Father with the glory which I had with thee before the world was 2. The agnizing and magnifying of the goodnesse and works of God The gl●ty which 〈…〉 God is 〈◊〉 lable ●●r 〈◊〉 happinesse 〈◊〉 neither d●th ●or can make God more happy which is not in God but in creatures indued with reason and therefore may be made lesse or greater and being amplified or diminished it increaseth or diminisheth the goodnesse happinesse and perfection not of God but
not only is still unknowne to the wiseest and most sharp-witted of men Angels in part ignorant of the Gospel till they were informed by the word of Christ unlesse they be taught by the voice of the Church and efficacy of the Spirit but also in a great part was unknown to the Angels themselves before it was disclosed by the Son from the secret bosome of his eternall Father Which to unfold and praise if men and Angels should bend all the strength of wit and eloquence 1 Pet 1.12 yet were they never able to speak of it according to the due compasse and worth of the thing Whiles therefore I think with my self how much I might sinke under this charge I had rather it were committed to another who at least might somewhat better and more successively undergoe the same But when I well weigh the nature of mine office I perceive I ought with all cheerefulnesse both to help forward your salvation and obey God that calls me to so honourable an imployment especially he promising mee assistance with which whosoever are assisted may despaire in nothing for God will be effectuall by weak and abject meanes according to that of the Psalmist Out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength Psal 8.2 The word there used signifieth a child which beginneth to understand and speak There are that are commonly called children not onely in regard of age but also in regard of ability of understanding Two sorts of children or performance of any action Infants though such in age are sufficient witnesses of the divine goodnesse and providence being cleare evidences of Gods presence in the wonderfull propagation conservation and education of humane off-spring Humane off-spring an argument a gainst Atheists denying God abundantly confuting Divels and all Atheists that deny either God to be God or to be such a God as hee hath said himselfe 〈…〉 Our Saviour interpreteth that saying of the Psalmist of confession Acts 17.27 28 29. Mat. 21.16 In which kind it agreeth unto us all who do meditate or speak any thing concerning God For we are all infants in understanding and utterance In some kind wee are all infants touching all matters divine In this life we attain but some small beginnings of those things as the Emperour Gratian in his confession to Ambrose piously and truely writes We speak saith hee of God not what we ought but what we are able yea the Prophets and the Apostles themselves confesse the same thing 1 Cor. 13.9 For we know in part and we prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be done away And in v. 12. Now we see through a glasse darkely but then face to face But notwithstanding the beginnings wee learne are small and also the voice of the ministery be proportioned to our capacity therein God himself speaking with us as with babes and permitteth us like babes to speak to him yet so would the Lord have the doctrine touching himselfe to be known No hope of life to come but by knowing the things revealed concerning God as that he gives us no hope of another life by any other means Yea those beginnings whatsoever they are doe with so great a distance surpasse all humane wisedome that there is no comparison between it and them for these rudimennts which to reason are hidden wisdome are both necessary and sufficient to everlasting salvation Let us therefore not onely acknowledge our infancy but desire also to be of the number of sucking babes For as the babe growes not to ripenesse of man-hood unlesse he be fed with the mothers milk or convenient food so we likewise that we may not fail of our hoped perfection 1 Pet. 1.1 2. ought not to refuse the milk of the Word whereby we are nourished and suckled to eternall life This is that spirituall infancy well pleasing to the Lord as Christ witnesseth rebuking the Pharisees disdain of the childrens cry in the Temple Hosanna to the Son of David These are those infants in whose voice the Lord will be effectuall By whose mouthes as the Psalmist addeth hee perfecteth strength Psal 8.2 Mollerus upon the 8. Psal v. 2. A description of the kingdom of Christ or as they translate who weigh the originall foundeth a kingdome Hee speaketh of the strength or kingdome which is seen in this life called the kingdome of Christ which is the Son of God instituting and preserving of a ministery thereby gathering a Church quickning beleevers by the sound of the Gospel and sanctifying them by the holy Spirit to eternall life defending the Church in this life against the kingdome of the Divell and after this life raising them up holy to eternall life that in them may reign the Godhead evidently and not covertly by the ministery The foundation of Christs kingdome is Christ and how many waies That which is the foundation of this kingdome St. Paul declares 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ Christ is the foundation first in his proper person Because all the members of his kingdom namely the Saints being conjoyned and inserted into him doth he carry about him keeping and holding them together as the foundation doth the other parts of the building as the vine doth its branches Then again by his doctrine For as good laws are the sinews of a politicall-kingdom so this kingdom is gathered kept and governed by the doctrine concerning Christ And as without a foundation the building cannot consist Phil. 3.8 so unlesse we hold to Christ and what he is and what he hath done for us whatsoever else may seem to be piety or comfort it 's fading it 's 〈…〉 nothing This foundation is laid in the mouths of infants when they beleeving this same doctrine upon their hearing of it do by the incitement of the holy Spirit learne and imbrace the same and thereby are ingraffed and grow into one with Christ In this businesse of maine importance God useth our infancy to illustrate his glory The greatnes of the work Why God useth weake means for the conversion of them and weaknes of the instrument plainly proving that so great a matter is not effected or dependent by and on our but Gods effectuall power Also to the end it might blunt the insolencie of his adversaries when as their lofty power is subdued under our weaknes and our seeming folly evinceth that nothing is more foolish than their wisdom As it is said In silence and hope shall be your strength For the Son of God destroyeth the works of the Divel snatching from him them that beleeve remitting their sin and taking it away and beginning in them eternall life defending the Church accusing and laying open the malice of the enemies repressing and punishing them both in this present life and at the full deliverance of the Church from all
which they never learned He can make the earth fruitfull and bring forth fruit without the help of husbandmen He can sustain the nature of man without food as Moses and Christ forty dayes Therefore it s not a necessary labour that is undertaken or any cause of the thing we hope and expect whiles Schollars ply their bookes and studies Teachers goe to their schooles Husbandmen to their ploughes entring their shares harrowes and engines into the ground and each man spends his life time to maintaine life You see upon what rockes of blinde madnesse the Divell doth split unhappy men which having neither learned the grounds of Piety or the more excellent Arts nor list to take the paines of learning them are forward notwithstanding to seeme what they least of all be and dare exalt themselves against the knowledge of God and bring the eternall wisdome under their censure And they have as little wit as modesty when as for their opinion they alledge the example of them that were converted by miracle as Paul or those indued with extraordinary gifts as the Apostles at the Pentecost or the multitude of them that heard the Gospel and did not beleeve or the Scriptures which speake of the office of the holy Ghost We know and acknowledge that by the blessing of God God can without the labour of teaching or learning convert those that he will And this to be the end of miracles The end of miracles that it may appeare that the order whereby God is effectuall in nature is made and freely preserved by him We so certainly know that conversion is the gift of God alone as that by how much it is a greater and more wonderfull worke to restore lost man to salvation than to make him not having any being by so much the more were it impudency and madnes Conversion greater than Creation to attribute this conversion more than that creation to the efficacy of mans voice But withall we know this too for a certain that it pleaseth God by the foolishnes of preaching to save them that beleeve Why it pleaseth God so to do there is no necessity he should give us an account yet he lets us understand some reasons of that his counsell but he propounds not the same reasons to the godly and godlesse To the godlesse he gives this reason Reasons why God converts by mans ministry 1. In regard of godlesse 2. In regard of godly Because by this meanes hee would before the whole Church and their consciences also being witnesse more manifest his justice in condemning the malice of those that oppugne the word revealed But other kinde of reasons take place in our consideration namely such as make for our instruction and consolation viz. Whereas the voice of the ministry and all our thoughts of God are darksome through which we now see God and his will the Lord admonisheth us of the greatnesse of our fall whereby it cometh to passe that wee no longer now injoy the very sight of God but he speaketh to us at a distance and as by an Interpreter and so exciting us that we aspire to that celestiall Schoole in which we shall immediately see God who shall be all in all Besides the Lord would not have the searching meditation and profession of the doctrine concerning him and his will even in this life to lye secret onely in the mindes of men but would have it audibly to sound and to be set forth in the assemblies And therefore tyed us with all possible necessity unto this doctrine promising thereby to recover us againe to salvation And so when God would make men to be co-workers with him in the most excellent divine work giving us to his only begotten Sonne for that purpose how could he have more manifested his great esteem of our miserable nature We averre therefore that the reading hearing knowing of this doctrine is a necessary meanes of our conversion Necessary not in regard of God but in regard of us not as if God could not any other way convert as a Carpenter cannot build an house without his tooles but because God will not convert any other wav It is true it is true indeed that true faith is nones but Gods gift and worke alone but such a gift and worke as the holy Spirit workes in us by hearing of the Word 1. Cor. 3.6 Paul planteth Apollo watereth but God giveth the increase To the same effect also Paul calleth the Gospel by him preached the power of God to salvation Rom 1.16 Ephes 4.11 the Apostle saith He hath given some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministry and the edification of the body of Christ Can a more glorious speech be uttered touching the office of teaching Let us not therefore take upon us to be wiser than God neither let us so much regard the pride contumacy and mischiefe of those that contemne the voice of the Gospel as thereby the lesse to love and respect the fruit and efficacy of the divine ordination in the meanes of mercy Nor let the sluggishnesse and obstinacy of some Schoolemen prove impediments of all good proceedings and goodnes who perswade others that instruction study and doctrines to get or increase vertue are unnecessary things but rather with obedient thankfull mindes let us injoy that sweetest consolation whereby we are assured that neither our endeavours are unpleasing to God nor undertaken in vaine according to that Eccles 11.1 Cast thy bread upon the waters for after many daies thou shalt finde it And 1 Cor. 15.58 Your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. Matthew 18.20 Where two or three are gathered together in my Name I am in the midst of them Unlesse these promises were known to be certain amidst so great outrages of Sathan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and miseries of mankinde of which its too truly spoken The most are naught the best teacher or the greatest lover of the common good should be in the unhappiest condition hardly sitting fast in his own place For mine owne part I feele my selfe to be so affected that mee thinkes my sorrow permits me not to stand in this Pulpit but shuts up my speech within my bowels and jawes but that I know for certain that in this our assembly there are whose hearts entertaine the t●e and saving doctrine are inflamed with the holy Spirit in a due manner knowing calling upon God being lively temples of him shall hereafter praise him in the celestial Quire We speak not this to that end as if we did expect equal knowledge understanding or the same gifts of the holy Spirit in all men For the Apostle commands us Rom. 12.3 To think soberly of our selves according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith But all them that will be saved must of necessity hold the same foundation that is that
they know and beleeve what a one Christ is and what he hath done for each of them as it is said Iohn 17.3 This is life eternall that they know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent And Iohn 3.36 He that beleeveth in the Son hath eternall life By these and the like sayings we perceive that to be a truth which Dionysius which is falsly named the Areopagite but is thought rather to be a Corinthian ascribes to Bartholomew the Apostle That the Gospel is brief and large The Gospel it a briefe largenesse Briefe It s brevity is apparently more curt than the Law of Moses ought to be and is fixed in the minds and hearts of men and therfore is the summe of the Gospel so oft delivered and repeated in the Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles and comprised in the Creed But much lesse can ever the wisdome of the Gospel be exhausted than that of the Law But forasmuch as its certain Large that in this mortall life that which is eternall is but begun 2 Cor. 5 2 3 4. For we shall be cloathed upon with that if so be we are not found naked This is the nature of true conversion A true godly man growes in godlinesse that it suffers not those that are converted unto God to stay in their race but kindles in them a perpetuall study and desire of further profiting Therefore is it commanded 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ And Eph. 2.19 20 21. it is said Yo are no more strangers and forrainers but fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God And are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone In whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord. And Marke 9.24 The man prayed Lord I beleeve help mine unbeliefe And Luke 17.5 The Disciples cried Lord increase our faith Saints then are commanded and commended and are petitioners to be such as goe forward Therefore they are not of the number of them that have no minde of proceeding onward Comforts and promises for a tender heart and wounded conscience Yet let none be out of heart because they finding in themselves lesse life and vigour and acknowledging their weaknesse and corruptions doe with a true sorrow of minde bewail the same For thus saith the everlasting Father concerning his Son Esay 42.3 A bruised reed shall he not breake and the smoaking flax shall he not quench Againe the Son saith of the Father Mat. 18.14 It is not the will of your Father which is in heaven that one of these little ones should perish And the Son saith of himself Iohn 6.37 All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me And him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out Wheresoever piety is not dissembled it is and is cherished of God and together with it Beneficia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the everlasting and unchangeable benefits of the Gospel are tyed with the indissoluble bond of divine truth For unlesse the certainty of our faith and salvation did depend upon the alone free mercy of God whereby he receiveth all that beleeve and not upon the degrees of our renovation there would be no stability at all in our comfort Hence therefore may be drawn three things which may be as grounds to judge of a Christian 1. The laying hold of the foundation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. the criticall markes to discerne a true godly man 2. An earnest endeavour of increasing which two include each godly man within the general promise of eternal salvation and 3. Acomfort that notwithstanding our inequality of gifts and degrees to some others we shall not perish which consolation is to be opposed against the cogitation of our owne unworthinesse These three as inseparables hath Saint Paul comprised in those words 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ Now if any one build upon this foundation gold silver precious stones wood hay stuble every ones worke shall be made manifest for the day shall declare c. but hee himselfe shall be saved so as by fire By that therefore which hitherto hath been said it 's apparent that both the Lords injunction and our own salvation doe exhort and bind all men and among these the youth being to wit a great part and also the Nursery of the Church to learne as soone as by age they are capable the grounds of Christian Religion Therefore doth this most earnestly and seriously admonish them to whom the charge of nurturing the younger in yeares doth belong to be carefull of this their dutie 3. Motive the preservation and propagation of the Gospel For we that are teachers and learners ought to have a diligent and earnest care of godlines not only for our own sakes but for their sakes also that are ours and our succeeding posterity For we finde by experience how easily in processe of time an oblivion and manifold depravation of that doctrine creeps in the summe whereof is not concisely and perspicuously couched together and known repeated inculcated and divulged abroad Besides we know Horat. Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem Testa di● that of what liquor a new vessell is first seasoned with be it good or bad it longest savours There is none in his right minde but will confesse seeing the evill that we learn doth so constantly stick by us that when the youth is not instructed in and inured to religion it doth threaten the leaving to the ensuing times an age of monsters contemning God and all religion and that being we are hardly by the greatest endeavours and longest care made pliable to that which is good the ground-work of the most difficult businesse should be laid in the first age 4. Motive the weake capacity of youth the more ignorant Catecheticall instruction therefore is necessary not only for the preservation of the purity and soundness of religion to us and our posterity but also for the capacities of younger age to whom we have shewed this doctrine must be taught For if it be said of the teaching youth the other arts Quicquid praecipies esto brevis ut cito dicta Percipiant animi dociles teneantque fideles Short precepts shalt thou give which being briefly told Apt wits may soon conceive and faithfull long may hold how much more in this heavenly wisdome which is a stranger to humane wit should we seek out for and apply our selves to breifness and plainness especially seeing divine testimony approves our experience in this as Heb. 5.13 Every one that useth milk is unskilfull in the word of righteousnesse for he is a babe but strong meat is of those that are of full age And therefore when Saint Paul speaketh of his manner of
to and fro to seek the word of the Lord and shall not finde it We now see the nation of the Jewes which the Lord honoured with so many excellent titles and priviledges with so great successe and miracles exalted it far above all other mortall men now to be more abject than the meanest of all men and so grosly strangely grown blind amidst the noone-day-light of the Prophets preaching that the example thereof duly considereed may not to say move laughter or anger strike a terrour into us The cause of this so great an evill we heare the words of the Prophets and of Christ himself to averre to have bin their contempt and neglect of the sound doctrine concerning God our salvation Joh. 5.43 I come in my Fathers name and yee receive me not If another shall come in his own name him will ye receive I forbeare the recitall of other examples only one will I touch which is of the kingdom of England which a little before was most flourishing and happy Englands Manian persecution and that not only because it is a very sad example but also because there is not one in this our assembly that is such a youth but that it fell out in his daies For in this our age the knowledge of the divine truth was given to England and in the reigne of Edward the sixt the Church and Schooles were excellently constituted in a flourishing estate And when the King was seventeen yeare old hee was beautified with piety vertue and learning far above the modell of that age so that nothing in the most glorious kingdome was more glorious than the King so that this kingdome came behind no part of the whole world in happines But on a suddain this Edward a Prince of great hope being taken out of this life the Papal tyranny soon again surprised his kingdom the most glorious Churches were cruelly wasted with imprisonments banishments fire sword and men of eminent learning holines without any respect of age sexe or dignity some of them haled to the fire and other most cruell punishments and others cast out into all corners of the world It was now onward in the fift yeare whiles these calamities continued there But I rather acknowledge and bewaile our owne sins than take upon me the judging of others The cries of the English banished which I heard with these eares are not out of my hearing wherewith they complained of the unthankfulnesse security and surfeit of the Gospel that had seized upon their Nation But doe wee looke to it better to manage our condition would God we did When Pilate mingled the bloud of the Galileans with their sacrifices saith Christ Luke 13.3 Vnlesse yee repent yee shall all likewise perish The tumults and ruines of Empires by which the Church is shaken are before our eyes threatning us the theevish Turkes gape after us endeavouring with might and main to take Christ from us and to obtrude upon us their Mahomet and we heare that daily they prey upon our neer bloud drawing away Christian youths to their filthy and blasphemous society and to make a breach in upon us The abomination of the kingdome of Antichrist curseth us and crieth out that we are to be destroyed And there are more heresies and depravations of the truth hatched and increased within without the Church like Hydraes heads than can be numbred Isay 1.2 Rom. 9.10 And now verily is that fulfilled that unless the Lord preserve unto us a seed we shal be like to Sodom Gommorrah nothing of us remaining Let us not be now so stupid or such haters of our selvs as not to be moved with these things Let us seek the Lord whiles he may be found Isay 55.6 Let every one enter into a serious consideration of his own salvation to hold fast in our hearts those things which we collect and are fitted pertinently unto the same that if the world broken to peeces should fail yet the ruines thereof should not affright us These things we have spoken of do concern al men but chiefly our order of Scholars For all that ever instructed or governed schooles or have bin imployed in those things or would have others to be imployed have agreeed upon this That they that are brought up in the schools should be not only more learned but also more godly Which being so let men acknowledge that a school is a company according to Gods ordinance Scholars should have learned godlinesse or godly learning teaching and learning the doctrine necessary for mankind concerning God and other good things that the knowledge of God among men may not be extinguished but the Church may be preserved 8. Motive that doctrine 〈◊〉 be the ma●k of the Church chiefly of the Schooles many may be made heirs of eternall life discipline may be upheld and men may have other honest benefits by the arts Therefore we swerve far from too far from our scope or marke unlesse we be setled in this purpose that we ought to be busily imployed in these Ant-hils and Bee-hives of Christ not only to be more skilled in learning but also more adorned with a good and holy conversation that we may be more acceptable to God and men And it is apparent in the Church that all instruction without the doctrine of godlines is nothing else but an erring and a withdrawing from God from true good true righteousnes true salvation For whatsoever we do not to the glory of God whatsoever we do not in the name of Christ Jesus whatsoever we do not of faith the holy spirit pronounceth as sinfull vile and condemned of God When therefore this doctrine is put out of the Schooles of the Church then not only nothing can be taught concerning true perfect vertue such as God requires but also those other few and obscure doctrines left behind of bad would make us far worse not by reason of their being amongst us but the want of those things without which nothing is holy and sound And although the consent of all men of sound judgement should satisfie us in this matter yet the divine Commandement John 5.35 2 Tim. 2.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commanding us to search the Scriptures to attend to reading and rightly to divide the Word of God should be of more weight unto us And because none can orderly and plainly distinguish and lay open the speeches of the Prophets and Apostles and the parts of Religion without the instructions and exercises of the Schooles who doth not see with how neere a tye the study of godlines is knit unto the Schooles That therefore which is the chiefe work amongst men and cannot be performed of us without the help of the Schooles we judge to be chief in the Schooles namely the understanding interpretation of the Prophets Apostles And seeing there is afforded unto us Scholars more ability and opportunity of more exact knowledge of Religion than
3 Why this comfort alone is sound and good THat this comfort alone is sound and true it is apparent 1. Because it alone faileth us not no not in death For whether we live or dye we are the Lords And Rom. 14.8 Rom. 8.35 who shall separate us from the love of Christ Neither death nor life c. 2. Because it alone standeth impregnable and invincible it alone sustaineth and assoileth us against all the assaults and attempts of Sathan For Sathan thus giveth the on-set 1. Thou art a sinner Comfort makes answer But Christ hath satisfied for my sin and hath redeemed me by his precious bloud that now I am no longer mine own The temptation● of Sathan with their remedies out of this only consolation but belong unto him 2. Sathan againe assaileth thee Thou art a child of wrath and an enemy of God Ans I am so by nature and before reconcilement but I am reconciled by God through Christ and received into grace and favour with him 3. Againe he casteth in thy teeth But thou must dye the death Answ Christ hath delivered me from the power of death and I know that by Christ I shall escape out of the hands of death into life eternall 4. Hee urgeth further But in the meane time many miseries happen unto the godly Answ Our Lord and Master guardeth and defendeth us in them and effecteth that they work for our good 5. He yet replieth But how if thou lose the grace of Christ For thou mayest fall and perish because it is a long steep way to heaven Answ Christ hath not onely merited his benefits for me but also bestoweth them and perpetually preserveth them in mee and giveth me perseverance that I faint not and fall from grace 6. He persisteth What if grace pertaine not unto thee and thou be not of the number of them who are the Lords Answ I know that grace pertaineth unto mee and that I am truly Christs 1. Because the holy Spirit testifieth unto my spirit that I am the child of God 2. Because I have true faith and the promise is generall pertaining to all that beleeve 7. He presseth neerer What if thou have not a true faith Ans I know that I have a true faith by the effects thereof because I have a conscience stedfastly relying on God and an earnest will and fervent desire to beleeve and obey God 8. He assayeth yet once more Thy faith is weake and thy conversation or repentance imperfect Answ True But yet it is entire and unfeigned And I know Luke 19.26 Mar. 9.24 that to him which hath shall be given Lord I beleeve help my unbeliefe In this great and dangerous conflict whereof all the children of God have experience Christian consolation standeth fixed and immoveable and at length concludeth Therefore Christ with all his benefits appertaineth unto me 4 Why this comfort is necessary BY that which hath been spoken it appeareth that this comfort is very necessary for us 1. For our salvation that we faint not nor despaire in temptation and wrestling of conscience 2. For the worshipping of God For that wee may worship God in this life and in the life to come to which end we were created we must come out of sin and death not rush into desperation but be sustained with sure comfort unto the end 5 How many things are required for the attaining unto this comfort THis is resolved in the Catechisme question here immediately following Quest 2. How many things are necessary for thee to know that thou enjoying this comfort mayst live and dye happily Answ Three a Mat. 11.28 29 30. Ephes 5.8 9. The first what is the greatnesse of my sinne and misery b John 9.41 Mat. 9.12 Rom. 3.11 1 John 1.9 10. The second how I am delivered from all sinne and misery c John 17.3 Acts 4.12 c. 10.43 The third what thankes I owe unto God for this delivery d Ephes 5.10 Psal 50.14 Matth. 5.16 1 Pet 1.12 Rom. 6.13 2 Tim. 2.15 The Explication THese three are the whole matter and severall parts of this Catechisme which jump in with that division of Scripture into the Law and the Gospel and are sutable with the differences of those parts as before hath been delivered 1 The knowledge of our misery is necessary for our comfort not that of it self it ministreth any comfort or is it self any part thereof Why the knowledge of our misery is necessary for of it self and in it own nature it terrifieth rather then comforteth us But it is necessary for our comfort To stirre up in us a desire of delivery thence 1. Because it stirreth up in us a desire of delivery as the knowledge of his disease kindleth a desire of remedy in the sick man whereas on the other side if we have no knowledge of our misery we affect not our delivery as the sicke man when he hath no sense nor feeling of his disease consulteth not the Physician Now if we desire not delivery we do not seek it if we seek it not we obtaine it not because God giveth delivery only to those that seek it it is opened only to him that knocketh as it is said in Scripture Mat. 5.6 7.9 Mat. 11.28 I●a 37.15 To him that knocketh it shall be opened Aske and it shall be given you Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Come unto mee all ye which labour I dwell in a contrite spirit So then That which is necessary to stir up in us a desire of deliverance that is also necessary for our comfort But the knowledge of our misery is necessary for the desire of salvation or deliverance Therefore the knowledge of our misery is necessary for the obtaining of our comfort necessary I say not as a cause working and effecting comfort but as a motive inducing us to pursue after it for of it selfe it breedeth terrour but this terrour is good for us when faith accompanieth it 2. That thereby we may be the more thankefull for our delivery To work in us thankfulnesse for our delivery For we should waxe ungratefull if we understood not out of how great miseries we were delivered because we should never judge aright of the greatnesse of the benefit and so should not attaine unto our delivery whereas that is performed onely to the thankfull 3. Because we can be no fit hearers of the Gospel To prepare and make us fit hearers of the Gospel without the knowledge of our sin and wretchednesse For unlesse by the preaching of the Law concerning sin and the wrath of God there be a preparation made to the preaching of grace there followeth carnall security and our comfort is made unstable because sound retired comfort and carnall security cannot stand together Hereof it appeareth that we are to begin from the preaching of the Law after the example of the Prophets and Apostles that thereby men may be cast
misery is his wretched estate since the fall consisting of two great evils 1. That mans nature through sin is corrupted and averted from God 2. That for this corruption it is guilty of an eternall malediction and rejected of God 2 Whence our misery is known Rom. 3.20 Deut. 27.26 We have a knowledge of this misery out of the Law of God By the Law cometh the knowledge of sin saith Saint Paul And it is the voice of the Law Cursed is he that fulfilleth not all the words of this Law Now by what meanes the Law yeeldeth us the knowledge of our misery the two next Questions which follow in order shall declare Quest 4. What doth the Law of God require of us Answ That doth Christ summarily teach us Matth. 23. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule with all thy mind and with all thy strength This is the first and the great Commandement and the second is like unto this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe On these two Commandements hangeth the whole Law and the Prophets a Deut. 6.5 Levit. 19.18 Mar. 12.30 Luk. 10.27 The Explication THis summe of the Law Christ rehearseth Mat. 22.37 and Luke 10. out of Deut. 6.5 Levit. 19.18 And he expresseth what is meant by that Cursed is he that fulfilleth not the whole Law that is to say who loveth not God with all his heart with all his soul with all his mind and with all his strength and his neighbour as himselfe The which severall clauses are particularly to be unfolded more at large Thou shalt love the Lord thy God To love God with all the heart c. is on due acknowledgement of his infinite goodnesse reverently to regard him and to account him our principall and chiefest blisse and for this cause to love him above all things to rejoyce in him to relye on him to preferre his glory before all things that there be not found in us not so much as the least thought inclination or appetite of any thing that may displease him and rather to part from that which is dearest unto us and partake of any grievous calamity whatsoever then suffer our selves to be separated from communion with him or any way offend him Lastly to direct all our actions to this end that he alone may be glorified by us The Lord thy God As if hee should say Thou shalt love that God who is the Lord and thy God who is revealed unto thee who conferreth his manifold benefits upon thee and whom thou art bound to serve It is therefore an Antithesis or opposition of the true God against false gods With all thy heart By the Heart in this place is understood all the affections inclinations and appetites or desires Whereas then God requireth our whole heart his meaning is that he will have himselfe alone to be acknowledged and reckoned our soveraign and supreme God and to be loved above all things that our whole heart rest on him and not part thereof to be yeelded unto him and part unto another Nay his will is that we match and compare nothing with him much lesse preferre and admit to share or partake one jot in his love This the Scripture calleth to walk before God with a perfect heart whose contrary is Not to walk before God with a perfect heart to wit to halt and yeeld himself by halfes unto God Object God alone is to be loved therefore we ought not to love our neighbours parents and kinsfolkes Answ It is a Sophisme which Logicians call a fallacy of accident when we argue from the deniall of the manner of any thing to the simple and absolute deniall of the thing it selfe As in this present example God is chiefly to be loved and above all things that is in such manner that there be nothing at all which we either prefer or equall with him and which for his sake we are not ready presently to forgo We ought to love our neighbour our parents and other things also but not chiefly not above God not so that we rather chuse to offend God then our parents but after God and for God With all thy soule By the Soule he comprehendeth that part which is willing to any thing or the motions of the will therefore he meaneth with thy whole will and purpose With all thy cogitations By the Cogitations he understandeth the mind and understanding as if he should say So much as thou knowest of God so much also shalt thou love him But thou shalt bend all thy cogitations and thoughts to know God perfectly and aright and so shalt thou love him For so much as we know of God so much also doe we love him Now we love him imperfectly 1 Cor. 13.10 because we know him but in part in the life to come we shall know him perfectly therefore wee shall love him perfectly and that which is in part shall be abolished With all thy strength He meaneth all actions both inward and outward that they be agreeable to the Law of God Why the love of God is called the first Commandement This is the first and greatest Commandement The love of God is called the first Commandement because it is the spring and fountaine of all the rest that is the impulsive efficient and finall cause of obedience in all the rest For we therefore love our neighbour because we love God and that we may declare in the love of our neighbour that we love God In like manner it is called the greatest Commandement 1. Because the object which it immediately respecteth and considereth is the greatest object Why it is called the greatest Commandement even God himselfe 2. Because it is the end whereunto all the other Commandements are directed For our whole obedience hath this onely end that we shew our love towards God and honour his name 3. Because that is the principall worship of God whereunto the ceremoniall worship was to yeeld and give place For the Pharisees extolled the Ceremoniall law above the Morall Contrariwise Christ calleth love the greatest Commandement and preferreth the Morall law before the Ceremoniall because Ceremonies were appointed for love and are to vaile and submit themselves unto it Object Love is the greatest Commandement therefore love is greater then faith therefore love justifieth rather then faith Answ Love is here taken in generall for our whole obedience which we owe unto God A distinction of love and faith under which Faith is comprehended which faith justifieth not of it selfe as it is a vertue in man but with relation and reference to her object I meane the merit of Christ as it appeareth and applieth to it selfe that merit But that love which in speciall is properly called love is not the same with faith neither justifieth it because Christs justice is applied unto us nor by love but by faith alone The second is like unto this Thou shalt love thy neighbour
they are sins For all sinnes of what quality soever they be are punished either with eternall pain as in the Reprobate or with equivalent paine to eternall as in the Son of God This death doth begin in the Reprobate even in this world that is anxiety and torment of conscience which we also should feele except we were delivered by the grace of God Now by the name of eternall death is not understood the destruction of the soule or body or the separation of them but the abandoning and banishing of the soule and body living from the face of God a continuall horrour and torment and a feeling and flying of Gods wrath and judgement a horrible murmuring against God taking vengeance of their sins If they object That the sinnes of those who beleeve in Christ are not punished with eternall death We answer that those were punished in Christ with a punishment which both for the grievousnesse of the punishment and for the dignity of the person who suffered it is equivalent to those eternall punishments which were to be inflicted upon us for our sins As it is said Isa 53.6 He hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all Against that which we affirm That eternall death is the effect of all sins yea even of the least some thus dispute Ob. Like is not to be given to things unlike but sins are not like Therefore all ought not to be punished with eternall death Answ There is more in the conclusion of this reason The regenerate though they sin are not punished with this death because Christ hath suffered an equivalent punishment for them Why the during of punishment ought to be alike to all sins but not the degree of punishment Luke 12.47 Mat. 11.24 All sins are not equall then was in the premisses for only this followeth to be concluded Therefore all sins ought not to be punished with like punishment For all sinnes even the least deserve eternall punishment because all sins offend against the eternall and infinite good Wherefore as concerning the durance and lasting of the punishment all sins are punished with like punishment but not as concerning the degrees of punishment All sins are punished with eternall torments yet so as not with equall torments The servant who knoweth the will of his Master and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes It shall be easier for them of the land of Sodome in the day of judgement then for thee Greater sins shall be punished with more grievous torments and lesser sins with lighter but both for ever Here the Stoicks object That all sins or vices are joyned with any one vice and therefore all are like and equall But neither is this consequence of force whereas also things unlike unequall may be joyned together neither is the Antecedent granted that seemeth to be proved by the saying of James He that faileth in one Jam. 2.10 is guilty of all But James saith not that all sins or vices concurre and are joyned with one but first that in the breach of one point the whole Law is violated as the whole body is said to be hurt when one part is harmed Then that there concurreth with every sin the fountain or cause of all other sins that is the contempt of God And this evill being seated in the heart doth violate the love of God and so all other parts of our obedience towards God For no worke which proceedeth not from the perfect love dread reverence of God can agree with the Law of God or please God And yet have we experience that this hindreth not but that which is infected with one vice may be propense and prone to some sins more and to some lesse especially since vices themselves also are one opposite to another by the one of which contraries and not by both at one time every man violateth vertue Neither are those principles also of the Stoicall Philosophers to be granted That how farre soever thou goe in sinning after thou hast once past the line or middle which is vertue it is not materiall for the increasing or augmenting the fault of passing beyond the line and that all vertues are alike and equall one to another so that no man is stronger then a strong man For whereas sin is a swerving from the middle it is manifest that how much greater the swerving is so much is the sin more grievous And that vertues are both in the same and in divers men other-whiles greater other-whiles lesser even as much as the qualities of the body are different in degrees experience doth witnesse Wherefore in the judgement of God also there are degrees put as well of punishments as of sins The use of this doctrine of sin in the Church It is requisite that this doctrine be knowne in the Church 1. That knowing how great an evill sin is we may yeeld the praise of justice unto God who doth most severely punish it 2. That we may abhorre all sins with our whole heart and desire the more earnestly to be fenced and defended of God against all sin 3. That by extenuating or lessning any wee flatter not our selves in a conceit of our owne righteousnesse or in hope of escaping 4. That measuring our sin by the Law of God neither esteeming evill for good or good evill we loose not our consciences when God bindeth them nor bind them when God looseth them and acknowledging the remnant of sin in us and our manifold fallings wee should not despaire of pardon flying to God the Mediatour with boldnesse 5. That also wee may be able to discerne our selves from the wicked and profane men in whom sin reigneth and from all those that sin against the holy Ghost and that wee may conceive in our mind hope and confidence of Gods mercy 6. That wee lay not the cause or fault of our sins and destruction on God but remember that it is to be sought in our selves 7. That knowing there are degrees of punishments and sins we adde not sins to sins but consider that lesser sins shall be punished with lesser punishments and greater with greater 8. That remembring the sins of Parents are punished also in their posterity we spare not only our selves but our posterity also in avoiding sins 9. That we may give and render thankes unto God for this benefit that he for his owne glory and the gathering and salvation of his Church doth maintain and continue also amongst the wicked some order of vertue and discipline 10. That true and perpetuall thankfulnesse may be kindled in us towards God and his Son our Lord Jesus Christ in that he hath delivered us from these great evils sin and the paines and punishment of sin Quest 8. Are wee so corrupt that wee are not all apt to doe well and are prone to all vice Answ Indeed we are a Gen. 8.19 and 6.5 Job 14.4 and 15.14 16 35. John 3.6 Isa 53.6 except we be regenerated by the
which he commanded 2. Except man who is commanded covet that impotency and unability and of his own accord hath purchased it unto himselfe 3. Except the commandement which is impossible be a spur unto him who is commanded of acknowledging and bewailing his insufficiency But God by creating man after his Image gave him possibility that is a power of performing that obedience which in right hee requireth of him Wherefore if man by his owne fault and folly lost and cast away this his good ability and procured unto himselfe this unability of obeying God God hath not therefore lost his right to require due obedience of him Nay rather because wee have rejected this good by transgressing Gods commandement and because God threatned punishment to the transgressors therefore he justly punisheth us Repl. But not wee but Adam drew on us this sin Answ Our first Parents being fallen lost this ability both unto themselves and to their posterity like as they received it for themselves and their posterity If a Prince give unto a noble man a Lordship and he traiterously rebell against him he loseth his Lordship not only from himself but also from his posterity neither doth the Prince any injury to his children if hee restore no● unto them the Lordship lost by their fathers fault and disobedience and if he doe restore it he doth it of free grace and mercy Repl. He that commandeth things impossible God commanding things impossible doth yet command them for good causes and to good ends both in the godly and ungodly In the godly doth in vaine command them but God commandeth things impossible to be performed by man now after his fall Therefore in vaine he commandeth them Answ 1. In this reason there is a fallacy from that which is spoken and verified but in part as God doth not in vain command though wee performe not that which hee commandeth because there are other ends besides of the commandement both in the godly and ungodly For the commandement requireth of the godly 1. That they acknowledge their owne weaknesse and impotency By the Law cometh the knowledge of sin Rom. 3.20 2. That they know what they were before the fall 3. That they know what they ought chiefly to ask of God to wit the renewing of their nature 4. That they understand and conceive what Christ hath performed on their behalf I mean that he hath satisfied for us and regenerateth us 5. That a new kind of obedience be begun in us because it teacheth us how wee ought to behave and carry our selves towards God in lieu of this benefit of freedome or what God requireth again on our part In the ungodly Again the ungodly are commanded obedience 1. That the justice of God in condemning them may be made manifest and conspicuous because they know what they ought to do Whereas then they doe it not they are justly condemned Luk. 12.47 That servant that knew his Masters will and did it not c. 2. That at least outward order and discipline might be observed amongst them 3. That such amongst them as are to be converted may be converted Ans 2. We answer to the Major of this syllogisme thus distinguishing In vaine he commandeth who commandeth things impossible if withall he give not the possibility But God commanding the elect the performance of these things giveth them also power of obeying beginning it now by the doctrine of the Gospel and in the end perfecting it Augustine Give De bona persever cap. 20. Lord what thou commandest and command what thou wilt and thou shalt not in vaine command it Therefore this impossible exigent is the greatest benefit because it is the high-way to attaine possibility Quest 10. Doth God leave this stubbornnesse and falling away of man unpunished Answ No but is angry in most dreadfull manner a Gen. 2.27 Rom. 5.12 as well for the sins wherein we are borne as also for those which our selves commit and in most just judgement punisheth them with temporall and eternall punishments b Psal 20. and 21. and 5.6 Nah. 1.2 Exod. 20.5 and 34.7 Rom. 1.18 Ephes 5.6 as himselfe pronounceth Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to doe them c Deut. 25.26 Gal. 3.10 The Explication IN this question is handled the other part of mans misery even the evill of paine and punishment and it is said that God doth most grievously most justly and most certainly punish sin Most grievously that is with present and eternall paines for the greatnesse of sin because the infinite good is offended thereby Most justly because every even the least sin violateth Gods Law and therefore by the order of Gods justice meriteth eternall punishment and abjection Most certainly because God is true and never changeth his sentence denounced in the Law Cursed is hee that continueth not in all c. Object But the wicked flourish here Galat. 3.10 and carry many things cleere without punishment Therefore all sins are not punished Ans Yea but they shall at length be paid home for them yea How the wicked are punished in this life and in this life they are punished 1. In conscience with whose gnawings the wicked are tortured 2. In those good things which they use with greatest pleasure and verily so much the more how much the lesse they know and acknowledge themselves to be punished For it is a most grievous punishment not to receive Gods gifts in respect of Gods promise not to know the right use of them neither with his gifts to receive a will and ability also to use them well For if these things concurre not in the fruition of good things mens sins and punishment must needs be the more increased and exasperated and thereby except there come conversion eternall destruction or death is certainly purchased 3. They are afflicted with other punishments also most grievous oftentimes yet with more grievous in the life to come where it shall be a continuall death not to be dead Object 2. God made not evill and death Therefore hee will not so grievously punish sin with them Answ He made them not in the beginning yet when sin was committed he in his just judgement inflicted death as a punishment on sinners according to his commination Thou shalt die the death Gen. 2.17 Amos 3.6 Whence it is also said Shall there be evill in a City and the Lord hath not done it Obj. 3. If God punish sin with present and everlasting punishments he punisheth the same twice and is unjust but he is not unjust neither punisheth he the same offence twice Therefore he will not punish sin with temporall and eternall paines Ans The Major is denied For the punishment which God inflicteth on the wicked in this life and in the life to come is but one punishment but hath severall parts For present punishments are but the beginning● of everlasting neither are they a distinct or entire
required therefore that our Mediatour should pay a sufficient punishment for us and in regard hereof be armed with the power of the God-head for the divels themselves are not able to sustain the weight of Gods wrath against sin much lesse should man be able to do it Repl. But all the divels and wicked men bear and sustain and are constrained to bear and sustain the everlasting wrath of God Ans They indeed bear the immeasurable wrath of God Wicked men and divels satisfie in never satisfying but so that they never satisfie Gods justice neither recover out of punishment for their punishment is extended to all eternity But it beseemed the Mediatour so to bear the burthen of Gods wrath that after he had satisfied for our sins he might shake off that burthen and take it away both from himself and from us Because of revealing Gods will unto us Our Mediatour must be God That he might reveal and make known unto us the secret will of God concerning the redemption of mankind whereof except he were God he could have no knowledge For no creature could at any time have searched out the bottomlesse depth thereof and conceived so intricate a mystery had not the Son of God displayed and laid it open unto us No man hath seen God at any time John 1.18 the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Because of giving the Spirit Our Mediatour must be God That he may give the holy Ghost by whom he may gather in one his Church be present with it in the world and bestow on us maintain and perfect in us the benefits purchased by his death remission of sins righteousnesse new obedience and life everlasting For it is not sufficient for our Mediatour to be made a sacrifice for us to break the bonds of death and make intercession with God for us but it is necessary also that he promise on our behalf that we shall imbrace the decree concerning our redemption by our Mediatour and cease at length to offend God through our sins which is the other part of the Covenant made between God and us and is performed by us that the Covenant may remain firme and ratified But this by reason of our corruption could be promised of no man in our behalfe except he have the power also of giving the holy Ghost by whom he might work in us to assent and to be more and more conformed to the image of God Now to give the holy Ghost and by him to regenerate our hearts and work forcibly in us faith conversion and salvation belongeth to God alone whose also is the Spirit Whom I will send you from the Father John 15.26 For only the Lord of nature is able to reforme nature Jerem. 23.6 Lastly it behooved the Messias to be the Lord our righteousnesse Object The party offended cannot be Mediatour Christ is the Mediatour Therefore he cannot be the party offended that is God Ans The Major proposition is true if the party offended be such a one as in whom there are not more persons But a most cleer testimony whereby are taught in few words those three former to wit that the mediatour is both true man Acts 20.28 and perfectly just and true God is extant when it is said God hath purchased the Church with his bloud for he is true man who sheddeth his own bloud Hee is perfectly just who sheddeth it for the redemption of others Hee is true God to whom both the name and properties of true God are given which is to be a Redeemer both by his merit and also by his efficacy and power and that of the Church that is the elect and chosen Quest 18. And who is that Mediatour which is together both very God a 1 Joh. 5.20 Rom. 9.5 Gal. 4.4 Isa 9.6 Jer. 23.6 Mal. 3.1 and a very b Luke 1.24 2.6 7. Rom. 1.3 9.5 Phil. 2.7 Heb. 2.14 16 17. 4.15 perfectly just man c Isa 53.9 11. Jer. 23.5 Luke 1.35 Joh. 8.46 Heb. 4.15 7.26 1 Pet. 1.19 2.22 3.18 Ans Even our Lord Jesus Christ d 1 Tim. 2.5 3.16 Ma●th 1.23 Heb. 2.9 Luke 2.11 who is made to us of God wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption e 1 Cor. 1.30 The Explication WHat kind of Mediatour is necessary for us hath already been declared The Mediatour was to be God yet not the Father nor the H. Ghost but the Son only Eight reasons hereof Now the question is of the person who is such a Mediatour This Mediatour therefore is Jesus Christ alone the Sonne of God manifested in the flesh which position is proved by these reasons 1. Our Mediatour must be true God as heretofore hath been evidently shewed But God the Father could not be Mediatour because he worketh not by himsefe and immediatly but mediatly by the Son and the holy Ghost Neither is he the messenger because he is sent of none but he sendeth the Mediatour Neither yet could God the holy Ghost be Mediatour because he was to be sent of the Mediatour into the hearts of the elect therefore necessarily the Son and he only was to be our Mediator 2. That which our Mediatour should impart unto us he must needs first have it himself But it belonged unto him to confer and bestow on us the right and title of the sons of God whence we were fallen that is to work that through him we might be adopted of God to be his sons because this was in his power alone sith he alone had the sole claim and interest herein For the holy Ghost had it not because he is not the Son neither had God the Father it because he also is not the Son and was to adopt us by his Son to be his sons The Word therefore only which is that naturall Son of God is our Mediatour in whom as in the first begotten of God we are adopted to be the sons of God John S. 36. John 1.12 as it is said If the Son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed As many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God Who hath predestinate to be adopted through Jesus Christ unto himselfe Ephes 1.5 6. With his grace he hath made us accepted in his beloved 3. The Son alone is the Word his Fathers embassador and delegate and that person which is sent unto mankind by whom the Father openeth his will by whom he worketh and giveth his holy Spirit by whom also is made the second creation for by the Son we are made new creatures Therefore the Scripture joyneth every where the first creation with the second John 1.3.2 Cor. 5.17 Gal. 6.15 Ephes 2.10 Col. 1.16 Heb. 1.10 because the second creation was to be made by the same party by whom the first was wrought By the Son were made all things But this was
fornication That every one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour c. Levit. 18.24 Ye shall not defile your selves in any of these things for in all these the nations are defiled Mercifull 1. In that hee will that all be saved 2. For that hee deferreth punishment and inviteth all to repentance 3. In that he applyeth himself to our infirmity 4. In that hee delivereth the elect 5. In that hee gave his Son to die for them 6. In that he promiseth and performeth all these things of his own free goodnesse 7. In that he doth good unto the unworthy and his very enemies Object 1. Mercy is a kind of griefe or sorrow Ans It is so in men but not in God Ob. 2. He rejoyceth in revenge Isa 1.24 27.11 Ans As far forth as it is an execution of his justice Ob. 3. He denieth mercy to the wicked Ans to the unrepentant Object 4. He saveth not all when he may Ans To wit that with his mercy he may declare his justice Ob. 5. He receiveth none to mercy without satisfaction Ans No verily but yet of his free mercy bestoweth his Sons satisfaction on us Bountifull 1. Because he createth and governeth all things 2. Because he doth good unto all 3. Yea to the wicked 4. Of his free love towards all creatures 5. But especially towards man 6. And amongst men chiefly to his Church 7. And herein also towards his chosen giving them eternall life and glory Object 1. He is angry Ans True with the corruption of the creature not with the creature it self and the nature and substance thereof Object 2. He afflicteth men Ans Namely the impenitent Most free 1. Free from all fault misery bond subjection constraint 2. In that hee doth will and execute all things most freely and justly when as much and in what manner he will Object 1. Second causes work necessarily and yet work not without God Ans They work by a necessity of consequent and only conditionall Object 2. God is necessarily good Ans Questionlesse but yet by a necessity of unchangeablenesse not of constraint Object 3. What hee hath once decreed hee necessarily willeth Answ He necessarily willeth it because he will not alter his decree not by constraint Obj. 4. His will is not done sometimes as How often would I and thou wouldst not Matth. 23.37 Ans He would that is in his will apparent to the conceit and judgment of man not in his determinate secret counsell Angry with sin Horribly detesting and punishing all sin with temporall and eternall pain 3. Whence it may appear that there is but one God Whence first sprang the multitude of gods ALbeit God in the beginning did as certainly declare unto mankind that he is but one only as what he is yet the world by the guile and deceit of the divell going about to spoile God of his honour and to bear and vaunt himself for God and to destroy mankind for the hatred hee beareth unto God and through their own blindnesse and malice revolting from Gods divine manifestations and from the doctrine of our first fathers have in horrible madnesse forged a multitude of gods yeelding divine honours partly to creatures partly to imaginary gods and forgetting the true God or desiring to joyn and couple other gods with him And whereas there is no greater bond then whereby the creature is bound to honour the Creatour and therefore no more grievous sin then to obscure the glory due unto God or to conveigh it over to any other God that he might meet with this sacriledge hath often testified and witnessed in his word That there is but one God not many that is that there is but one divine Essence eternall of infinite power wisdome and goodnesse Creatour Preserver and Ruler of all things And this is proved 1. By testimonies of Scripture-Deut 6.4 32.39 Isa 44.6 1 Cor. 8.4 Ephes 4.5 1 Tim. 2.5 first by expresse testimonies of Scripture Hear O Israel the Lord our God is Lord only Behold now for I am he and there is no god with me I am the first and I am the last and without me there is no God Wee know that an idol is nothing in the world and that there is no other God but one One Lord one faith one God and Father of all One God one Mediatour between God and man which is the man Christ Jesus The like proofes hereof may be read Deut. 4.35 Psalm 18.31 Isa 37.16 45.21 Hos 13.4 Mal. 2.10 Mat. 12.32 Rom. 3.30 Gal. 3.20 2. By arguments Secondly it is confirmed by reason and argument 1. There is but one only God whom the Church also worshippeth who is manifested unto the world by infallible and undoubted restimonies From the manner of revealing himselfe Isa 44.7 Psal 86.8 namely such miracles prophesies and other works as cannot be done but by an omnipotent nature Who is like mee that shall call that which is past and shall declare it and set it in order c. Among the gods there is none like unto thee O Lord there is not one that can do as thou dost 2 He who alone reigneth over all and alone governeth all things and therefore hath sole supreme soveraignty and majesty can be but one But the majesty of God only is supreme From the natur and kinde of his majestie Isa 42.8 1 Tim. 1.17 Revel 4.11 and so great that no greater can either be or be imagined I am the Lord this is my name and my glory will I not give to another Unto God only wise be honour c. Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory honour and power for thou hast created all things 3. That which hath greatest perfection can be but one for he who hath the whole From his degree of perfection and all alone is absolutely perfect Now God is most perfect seeing he is the cause of all that is good in nature Therefore nothing is more absurd then to imagine any thing to be God which is not most great and most perfect Lord who is like unto thee Psal 89.7 4. There is but one thing omnipotent for were there many they should have power to hinder one the other and for this cause should become not omnipotent From his omnipotency By this argument the Monarchy of the world is in Daniel restrained unto one God when it is said Dan. 4.35 None can stay his hand or resist his will 5. If we suppose and put moe gods either each of them wil be too weak to rule all and so imperfect and not worthy the name and title of divinity More gods would be either unperfect or superfluous or one will suffice for the guiding of the whole world and so the rest shall be idle superfluous and needlesse But it is absurd to imagine God to be such a one as sufficeth not for the wielding and
Father or the Son c. Now were it not that Hereticks cannot away with this doctrine they would easily admit of the phrases of speech But they therefore abandon the terms because they abhor the things and doctrine intimated and signified by them Hence we easily answer this their objection Obj. Words not extant in Scripture are not to be used in the Church But these names namely Essence Person and Trinity occurre not in Scripture therefore they may not be used in the Church Ans We expound the Major thus That which is not in Scripture neither concerning the bare words nor concerning the sense is be omitted But the names themselves of Essence Person and Trinity as concerning the things lively insinuated by them are extant in Scripture as hath been proved Again Terms not extant in Scripture are to be omitted if by sparing them the substance of the things themselves be not endangered But the drift and purpose of hereticks is no other but with the terms to abolish or at least deprave the doctrine of the Church Therefore they are to be retained to prevent their attempts Repl. But they breed contentions Answ This happeneth by accident by reason of contentious hereticks 6. How many persons there be of the Divinity or God-head Three persons are one God and one God is three persons IN one divine Essence are subsisting three Persons and those truly distinct one from another by their properties namely the Father the Son and the holy Ghost each of which three persons notwithstanding are one and the same God eternall infinite and most perfect in himselfe And these persons are consubstantiall co-eternall without any confounding of their properties and respects as also without any disparagement or inequality between them And That there are three persons each of which are that one true God Creatour of all things is proved 1. By testimonies of Scripture which are taken partly out of the old Testament and partly out of the new The old Testament yeeldeth us many testimonies Gen. 1.2 3. Exod. 3.2 The Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters Then God said Let there be light The Lord is said to have appeared unto Moses in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush Acts 7.30 Steven calleth him The Angel of the Lord which is Christ the Son of God even that Angel of the great counsell The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me Isa 61.1 therefore hath he anointed me he hath sent mee to preach good tidings unto the poor to binde up the broken hearted Here the Spirit is discerned both from him that anointeth and from him that is anointed Hee is discerned also by his gifts because hee saith Upon mee that is dwelling in me sanctifying mee Therefore these be three diverse persons subsisting But yet there are both moe and more cleer testimonies in the new Testament Mat. 28.19 Teach all nations baptising them in the Name of the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost The Comforter which is the holy Ghost John 14.26 John 15.27 whom the Father will send in my name When the Comforter shall come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth of the Father The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 13.13 and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all In this saying of the Apostle invocation is joyned with an application and distinction of the three persons By grace he meaneth the benefits of Christ by love the acceptation whereby God for his Sons sake doth receive us into favour by the communion of the holy Ghost his gifts which are common unto the godly There are three in heaven which beare record God saved us by the washing of the new birth 1 John 5.7 T●t 3.5 6. and by the renewing of the holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Here he maketh three authours of our salvation Ephes 2.18 Gal. 4.6 Through him wee have an entrance unto the Father by one Spirit God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Therefore it is one Spirit which the Father and the Son sendeth 2. The same is proved by those places of Scripture which give unto these three the Father the Son and the holy Ghost the name of Jehovah and the true God In like manner those places wherein those things which are spoken of Jehovah in the old Testament are in the new referred expresly and most plainly to the Son and the holy Ghost 3. Those places which attribute the same whole divine essence to the three and shew that the Son is the proper Son of the Father most truly begotten of him and the holy Ghost is the Spirit of the Father and the Son and that so proper and peculiar as that he is and proceedeth of God which is the Father and the Son The Son therefore and holy Ghost have the same and that whole essence of the Deity which the Father hath the Son hath it communicated of the Father by being born of him and the holy Ghost of the Father and the Son by proceeding from them 4. Those places which give unto the three the same attributes or properties and perfections of the divine nature namely eternity immensity omnipotency c. 5. Those places which attribute to the three the same effects or works proper unto the Deity namely creation preservation and government of the world as also miracles and the salvation of the Church 6. Those places which yeeld to the three equall honour and worship and such as agreeth to the true God alone By this consent therefore of the old and new Testament it is confirmed that one God is three persons truly distinct and those three persons are one God By this also we understand that it is truely said that the Father is other from the Son and the holy Ghost and the holy Ghost other from both but not truly that the Father is another thing from the Son and the Son another thing and the holy Ghost another thing for to be another thing betokeneth a diversity of essence to be other a diverse manner of existing or a distinction of persons Now the three distinct persons have not a diverse Deity but one and the same in number It followeth that we should demonstrate of each severall person of the Deity that they are true Subsistents against Samosatenus and Servetus that they are distinct against Arrius Eunomius and Macedonius lastly that they are of the same and not of only like essence against the same hereticks But of the person of the Father there is no controversie and these scruples and doubts touching the persons of the Son and holy Ghost shall more conveniently hereafter in their proper place be cleared 7. How the three persons of the God-head are distinguished HEre we are first to observe and consider Attributes common to
God is chiefly said to be in heaven and the palace and seat of God another thing which is not God In like manner the body is the seat of the soule but it followeth not hereof that the body is a spirituall intelligent immortall essence because the soul is Secondly Heaven is the seat of God not properly nor necessarily because God as being an infinite essence is in all things and without all things And Aristotle himselfe witnesseth that he is without heaven therefore he can be though heaven be not neither needeth he this tabernacle But he is said to dwell in heaven though he fill all things with his essence and power 1. Because he is above all things and the Lord and ruler of all 2. Because he exhibiteth there his glory majesty and grace more cleerly and fully to be beheld and injoyed of the blessed Angels and men then here on earth Against the first answer Ubiquitaries reply in Aristotles behalfe on this manner The blessednesse of God is not without God but is God himselfe Heaven is the blessednesse of God not any place Heaven is the place of the blessednesse of the elect but not God himself or blessednesse Therefore heaven is God himself Ans 1. Not onely Aristotle but the sacred Scripture also doth every where distinguish heaven from God as the thing made from the maker thereof and also opposeth heaven to earth so that it affirmeth earth to be below and heaven above us where God communicateth himselfe and his blessednesse unto the elect more cleerly and fully then on earth Heaven saith God himselfe is my seat Isa 66.1 and earth my foot-stoole Wherefore although heaven were somewhere taken for heavenly blessednesse yet might it not be hereof inferred that heaven properly is not a place wherein the elect enjoy and shall for ever enjoy that blessednesse for also hell sometimes signifieth hellish pains yet so that it excludeth not the place where the wicked being truly severed from the godly shall suffer those pains and torments 2. The Minor is false if heaven be taken for that blessednesse which is God himselfe being sufficient unto himselfe in all things for heaven is a thing created and finite that blessednesse is uncreate and immense And if it be understood of a created blessednesse which is in us communicated from God there are four terms in the Syllogisme for the Major proposition speaketh of an uncreated blessednesse which is the very essence of God neither is communicated at any time to any creature The externall respects and relations of God are not the mutation o● perfection of God but of the creature Object 7. Hee that is Lord in possession is happier then hee which is Lord only in possibility But God before the creation was onely in possibility Lord Therefore hee is made happier by the creation But this is absurd Therefore the world was from everlasting Answ He is happier that is Lord in possession true if by the actuall dominion and government there arise any more good unto him then hee had before But unto God by reason of his exceeding great perfection simplenesse and immutability there could or can nothing at all come by his creation and dominion over his creatures For The respects and appellations of Creatour Lord Saviour Redeemer Father of mankind and the like which God in time assumeth unto him doe not appertain to Gods essence but signifie the beginnings and mutations of creatures that is God is termed Creatour not of any new action or form that is in him but of the creatures which once began to be from him when they were not at all before Wherefore These respects creation dominion and the rest are in the creatures reall relations but in God respects only of our consideration and therefore the Creatour and creatures are relatives not mutually as the Schoolmen well speak and judge because not both of them but one only dependeth of the other and is referred thereto really and formally that is the creature for in the Creatour is nothing at all depending of the creature For if the Creator and the creature were relatives mutuall then these absurdities necessarily follow 1. That God is not most perfect in himself 2. That from everlasting both the Creatour was as hee is Creatour and the creature 3. Or some reall thing to have come in time to the divine essence 4. And therefore the divine essence to be mutable and compound Wherefore relations in God do not make mutation but are attributed to God in respect of the creatures 2. How God made the world The world created Of God the Father by the Sonne and holy Ghost John 1.3 Genes 1.2 Job 33.4 THe world was created of God the Father by the Son and the holy Ghost Of the Son it is said All things were made by the Word of the holy Ghost The Spirit of God moved upon the waters The Spirit of God hath made me Most freely without constraint God created the world and all things therein most freely without any constraint not by any absolute necessity but by necessity of consequence that is by the decree of his will which decree though it were eternall and unchangeable yet was it most free For neither was God tied to the creatures and sustaining of things neither if hee had not at all created the world or did annihilate it being created and bring it to nothing were hee therefore lesse good or lesse happy Without motion God made the world with his beck only word or will without labour wearisomenesse motion or any change of himself that is not by any new action of his but by his forcible will only which from everlasting would that things should on a sudden exist and be at such a time as he had freely appointed and decreed Isa 40.28 The Lord hath created the ends of the earth hee neither fainteth nor is weary Now to work any thing with his beck and word only and without labour is the highest and chiefest manner of working For there are five kinds of operations and agents Five sorts of Agents Naturall A naturall agent Agents with an appetite as brute beasts That which worketh with an appetite Men and Divels working with reason but corruptly Men and divels The blessed Angels working with reason also but not corruptly and ever directed by a higher power Angels God working most perfectly directed by none but by himselfe God which three latter sorts are voluntary agents The first therefore is of things which work according to the quality and force of their own nature not being guided by any proper understanding or will of their own such is the operation of fire water medicinable herbs precious stones The actions and operations of these are subject to the rule of those which are voluntary agents and are by them moved and directed to certain uses and to the performing of certain works The second is of those
be conformed and like to God as it is said He saw all that he had made and loe it was very good Gen. 1.31 Psalme 103.20 And of the good Angels it is said Ye his Angels that excell in strength and do his commandements in obeying the voice of his word Their Angels alwayes behold the face of my Father which is in heaven Mat. 18.10 22.30 Luke 9.25 Esa 6.2 The elect shall be in the resurrection as the Angels of God in heaven They are called holy Likewise Seraphin that is flaming or shining namely with purity and divine wisdome and with the love of God But of the bad Angels it is said Hee abode not in the truth The Angels which kept not their first estate John 8.44 Jude 6. but left their own habitation c. 5. And confirmed therein Now as these former to be spirits infinite created by God of nothing and created good and holy are in the Scripture delivered as common both to good and bad Angels So also the Scripture delivereth those things whereby a huge and exceeding difference appeareth between them For the good Angels by the especial grace of their Creatour were so confirmed and established in that sanctity and blessednesse wherein they were created that albeit they serve their Creatour with an exceeding and most free will yet can they never revolt from him or fall from that state of righteousnes and felicity wherein they stand 1 Tim. 5.2 Wherefore they are called elect Angels they are said alwayes to behold the face of the Father Mat. 18.10 22.30 Of those who are elected to everlasting life it is said that they shall be like Angels And this perseverance in their state they have Job 4.18 not by the peculiar excellency and vertue of their nature as it is said He found no stedfastnesse in his servants and laid folly upon his Angels but of the meer and free bountifulnesse of God towards them by the Son of God keeping and guiding them that they may be joined to him as to their head and remain together with elect men the everlasting Church and Temple of God magnifying and praising God for ever All things consist in him It hath pleased the Father to gather together in one all things Col. 1.17 Ephes 1.10 both which are in heaven and which are in earth in Christ. The good Angels were both created confirmed 1. Everlastingly to know and magnifie God for his goodnesse and bounty towards them and mankind 6. To worship and magnifie God Praise the Lord all ye his hosts Psal 103.21 Isa 6.3 Luke 2 13. 7. To be the ministers of God for the saving of the chosen They cry Holy holy holy the Lord of hosts the whole earth is full of his glory And they laud and praise God for the manifestation of the Messias 2. To be the ministers of God for the accomplishment and maintaining of the safety and salvation of the chosen when as God by them declareth his will delivereth the godly out of dangers defendeth them against the divels and wicked men Or also to punish the wicked who oppugn the Church Ps 34.7 91.11 John 5.4 They serve also for the wicked The Angel of the Lord pitcheth round about them that fear him and delivereth them He shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy wayes Now although the wicked also and reprobate are defended by the Angels and receive other benefits not seldome at the hands of God as when after the waters of Bethesda had been troubled by an Angel whosoever then first stepped in was made whole of his disease yet these benefits stretch no farther then the commodities of this life and as other things which befall unto the wicked in this life whether good or bad are turned to their destruction but serve for the defence and delivery of the chosen for whose sakes God oftentimes like as he punisheth the wicked They are the ministers of the elect by Christ so also he enricheth them with his benefits The ministery then and guard of Angels properly belongeth to the saints and chosen unto whom that being lost by sin is restored by the merit and benefit of Christ for he is the head of the Church which consisteth of Angels and men restoring that good will and conjunction which is between the members of the same body between men and Angels and using at his good pleasure the ministery of Angels to safeguard and defend his Ephes 1.10 Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.4 Matt. 23.49 Heb. 12.22 That he might gather together in one all things which are in heaven and in earth in Christ Let all the Angels of God worship him He shall send his Angels Yee are come unto the mount Sion and to the citie of the living God the celestiall Jerusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels Jacob saw a ladder which reached from earth to heaven on which the Lord stood and the Angels went up and down by it Gen. 28. ●2 which signifieth God and man the Mediatour Ye shall see heaven open John 1.51 and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Why God useth the ministery of Angels being able to ●r●ng what he will to passe without them Now God doth many things by Angels and sometimes by many together which he could as well do either without them or by any one of them Partly in favour and regard of our infirmity which unlesse it see it self invironed with many succours defences and instruments of his divine power and bountifulnesse falleth presently of doubting of the providence safeguard and presence of God as it is manifest by the example of Elisha's servant 2 King 6 1● and by those consolations and incouragements which promise unto the Church the aid of Angels Partly to shew his power also over his Angels who useth their labour and ministery at his pleasure Why the Angels are called 1. Powers 2 Thes 1.7 2. Principalities Ephes 1.21 Col. 1.16 3. The host of the Lord and the host of heaven Psalm 103.21 148.2 1 King 22.19 Rev. 19.14 4. Cherubins Hereof the Angels are called the powers of the Lord Jesus when he shall shew himself from heaven that is by whom he exerciseth his power Likewise they are called principalities might powers dominions created by the Son of God subject unto him being exalted at the right hand of God because by them hee sheweth and exerciseth his principality or rule might power and dominion Likewise The host of the Lord and the host of heaven because both the number of them is huge and great and God ruleth over all of them as a Captain over his souldiers and doth by them whatsoever he will Hereof also are they called Cherubins that is flying or winged because they perform and execute with all readinesse and celerity the hests and commandements of God and do each their own parts and
aid and assistance of God then by mans reason and counsell Heroicall instincts The vertues and singular gifts or heroicall instincts and the excellency of Artificers which God bestoweth for the universall good and preservation of mans society And these things are far greater then that they can proceed from a thing meerly sensible without understanding and more excellent then that they should be given of nothing or gotten by men nay rather when God will do things for the preserving of mans society hee giveth us men indued with heroicall and noble vertues inventers of arts and sciences Princes valiant good and wise and other the like fit and able instruments and contrary when he will punish us for our deserts he taketh away again such profitable and preserving instruments from us Therefore there is some disposer of these good things and so the governour of humane affairs The Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus Esdras 1.1 Isa 3.2 Dan. 2.21 The Lord taketh away the strong man and the man of war the judge and the prophets He giveth wisdome to the wise and understanding to those that understand Fore-telling of things to come The prediction and signification of events or of things to come and the excecution or accomplishment thereof He that of himself doth fore-shew certainly unto men things to come doth not only fore-see those things but also causeth them and hath the whole nature of things so in his power that nothing can be done without his will and pleasure But God alone doth of himself certainly fore-shew things to come Therefore he doth not only fore-see them but also causeth them either by his own proper effecting them or permitting them to be effected by others and therefore governeth humane affairs ●m 23.19 De Divinat Hath he said and shall he not do it And Tully saith Are there gods and do they not signifie or fore-tell things The ends or finall causes of all things All things in the whole world both great and small are not onely ordained but are also done and tend to their certain and appointed ends Therefore it is God who by his wisdome and power as hee destineth all things to their ends so also doth bring them thereunto Matth. 4.4 Man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Reasons drawn from the properties or nature of God 1. Because there is a God THere is a God Therefore there is providence For that God should not rule and govern the world created by him hath flat repugnancy with the nature of God for the world can no more consist without God then be created without him and they who deny providence deny God to be God and take away all religion From his omnipotency He is omnipotent who hath all things so in his own power that with every thing he may do what he will and without his wil nothing can be done But God is omnipotent Therefore he hath the whole nature of things in his power and effectually moveth and governeth all things at his own pleasure From his infinite wisdome It is the property of a wise governour to let nothing of that which hee hath in his power to be done without his will and counsell God is most wise and hath all things in his power and is present with them Nothing therefore is done in the world without Gods providence From his exceeding justice God is most just and Judge of the world Therefore hee in ruling the world giveth rewards unto the good and inflicteth punishments upon the wicked From his perfect goodnesse God is most good But that which is most good is most communicable Therefore as God of his infinite goodnesse created the world to the end he might communicate himselfe unto it so by the same his goodnesse doth hee preserve administer and rule the world created Because hee is the authour of all good Every positive thing and all good is from God as the first cause and chief good and not only substances but all their motions and actions are a certain positive thing and good Therefore all motions also have God their first cause and are done by his will Because he is the maker and disposer of the meanes which bring to every end He that willeth the end or consequent of any event willeth also the mean or event which goeth before But God willeth the ends of all things which are done Therefore he willeth also all precedent events either simply and absolutely or in some sort and respect Because hee is the first cause God is the first cause of all things Therefore all things depend on him From his unchangeable fore-knowledge of all things An unchangeable prescience or fore-knowledge dependeth of an unchangeable cause God fore-knoweth all things unchangeably from everlasting Therefore this his fore-knowledge must depend of an unchangeable cause But there is no unchangeable cause beside the will of God Therefore all things depend and are governed of the will of God The summe of all is this God is almighty most wise most just and most good Therefore he ordained and created nothing without some especiall end and purpose neither ceaseth he to guide and direct his works unto those ends for which he hath appointed them neither suffereth he those things to be wrought by chance which he hath made and ordained to the manifestation of his glory These things hast thou done and I held my tongue Psa 50 21. 77.9 and thou thoughtest wickedly that I am even such a one as thy selfe c. Hath God forgotten to be gracious My counsell shall stand and I will doe whatsoever I will Isa 46. 10. 2. What the Providence of God is PRescience or fore-knowledge and providence and predestination differ each from other Prescience is the knowledge of God whereby he fore-saw from all eternity not only what himselfe would doe but also what other his creatures by his permission would also do as namely that they would sin Providence and predestination although they both concern the things which God himselfe would work and accomplish yet herein they vary in that providence extendeth it self unto all the works and creatures of God but predestination properly respecteth reasonable creatures For What predestination is Predestination is the most wise eternall and unchangeable decree of God whereby he deputed and destined every man before he was created to his certain use and end as hereafter in its due place shall be more copiously declared But providence is the eternall most free unchangeable What providence is most just wise and good counsell of God whereby he worketh all good things whatsoever are found in all creatures and permitteth also evill things to be done and directeth all things both evill and good to his glory and the safety of his chosen 1. Counsell Psal 33.11 Isa 46.10 Heb. 6 17. Isa 14.26 19.17 28.29
Neverthelesse yet except wee will deny 1. The trials and chastisements of the godly or 2. The punishments of the wicked which are done by the wicked both to be just and to proceed from the will power and efficacy of God as also 3. The vertues and such actions and deeds of the wicked as have been for the safety of mankinde to be the gifts and blessings of God that is except wee will deny that God is a just Judge of the world and powerfull in operation and the efficient of all good things we must needs doubtlesse confesse that God doth also execute and accomplish his just and holy works and judgments by evill and sinfull instruments Gen. 37 28. Num 23.8 Deut. 13.3 1 Sam. 16.14 2 Sam 15.12 16.12 So God sendeth Joseph into Egypt by his wicked brethren and the Midianites blesseth Israel by Balaam tempteth the people by false prophets vexeth Saul by Sathan punisheth David by Absalom and by the curses of Shemei Salomon by rebellious Jeroboam Roboam by the traiterous people of Israel trieth Job by Sathan and the Chaldees 1 King 11.31 22.15 Job 1. 2. 1 Chron. 6.15 carrieth away into captivity Judah and Jerusalem by the hand of Nebuchadnezzar All good things done by the will of God He worketh all good things Even in all creatures both great and small he worketh good things So that not only he doth ingender and preserve in them a generall power and force of working but doth also effectually move them so that without his will being effectuall and working that power and force never in any thing sheweth forth it self or is brought into act that is not only all force of working but also the act and operation it self is in all creatures from God as the efficient thereof and directer For by the name of good are understood What things are said to be good 1. The substances and natures of things 2. Their quantities and qualities forces or powers or inclinations 3. Habits and faculties of the mind conformed to the will of God 4. Motions actions and events as they are motions and agree with the law of God 5. Punishments as they are the execution of Gods justice are inflicted by God the most just and righteous Judge of the world All these sith they are either things created of God or something ordained by him and agreeing with his divine law and justice they must needs partake both of the nature of good and proceed from their efficient and by his providence continue and be directed God permitteth evill things 9. He permitteth also evill things to be done Evill is twofold the one of crime or offence which is sin the other of pain or punishment which is every destruction or affliction or forsaking of the reasonable creature inflicted by God for sin Example of each signification and meaning is If this nation Jerem. 18.8 against whom I have pronounced turn from their wickednesse I will repent of the plague that I thought to bring upon them But now because the evill of pain or punishment The evill of punishment is a morall good and is done by God for three causes being the execution of the law and declaration of Gods justice is indeed naturally evill as it is a destruction of the creature but is in a consideration a morall good as it is agreeing with the order of Gods justice this sort of evils also not onely as it is an action or motion but also as it is a destruction or affliction of sinners is to be ascribed to God as authour and efficient thereof 1. Because hee is the first cause and efficient of all good things Now all evill of punishment or pain as it is a punishment doth partake of the nature of morall good because the law and order of Gods justice requireth the punishment of sin and they are the execution or declaration of Gods justice Therefore God is the authour of punishments 2. Because it is the part of a Judge to punish sin and because God is Judge of the world and will be acknowledged the maintainer of his justice and glory 2 Chron. 19.6 Yee execute not the judgments of man but of the Lord. 3. Because the whole Scripture with great consent referreth both the punishments of the wicked and the chastisements and exercises and martyrdomes of the godly as also the passion and death of the Son of God himselfe which is a sacrifice for the sinnes of men to the effectuall and forcible working of the will of God As There is no evill to wit Amos 3.6 of punishment in the city which the Lord hath not done I the Lord make peace and create evill Isa 45.7 Wherefore wee account in the number of good things the punishments of the wicked and Gods judgments which God not onely by his unchangeable decree will have done but also doth them by his effectuall power and will For although the destruction be evill in respect of the creature who suffereth it yet it is good in respect of the law and order of divine justice exacting it and in respect of God most justly inflicting it and executing as it were the proper and peculiar work of the Judge of the world Object 1. God made not death Answ True not before sin Wisd 1.13 when he created all things Object 2. Thy destruction is of thy selfe Israel Ans True Hos 13.9 as concerning the desert but as concerning the effecting or inflicting of their punishments it is from God Object 3. He will not death Ans Ezek. 18.13 33.11 God will and will not death He will not death with a desire of destroying or that hee delighteth in the destruction vexation or perdition of his creature neither would hee it or would effect or cause it if it were nothing else but a destruction and perdition But he willeth it and worketh it and delighteth in it as it is the punishment of sin and the execution of his justice Isa 1.24 Psalm 2.4 Prov. 1.26 or the delivery of his Church or a chastisement or tryall or martyrdome or ransome Obj. 4. He will that all men shall be saved 1 Tim. 2.2 4. 2 Pet. 3.9 Ans All men that is all sorts of men For out of all sorts of men he chuseth his chosen Now Evill of crime as it is such God doth only permit and not will James 1.13 Of evill of crime or offence there is another consideration For These as they are sins or evils of crime are not considered as good And Saint James saith of them Let no man when hee is tempted that is when hee is solicited to evill say that hee is tempted of God Therefore God neither intendeth them in his counsell and purpose neither alloweth nor worketh nor furthereth but only suffereth or permitteth them to be done of divels and men that is doth not hinder them from being done when yet he could hinder them partly to shew in
punishing them his justice and partly to shew in pardoning them his mercy Gal. 3.22 Rom. 9.17 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin c. For the same purpose have I stirred thee up c. But in the mean season the forsaking of his creature or depriving him of divine light and rightnesse and the action it selfe which divels and men sinning doe against the law and will of God hee notwithstanding by his generall providence and efficacy willeth and moveth but to such an end as doth best agree with his nature law justice and goodnesse whether it be known or unknown to us Therefore sins are truly said to be done not by the will or working but by the permission of God The word permission in this place is to be retained because both it and others of the same force are sometimes found in the Scripture Gen. 20.6 31.7 Judg. 3.1 Psam 105.14 Acts 14.16 as Therefore suffered I thee not to touch her God suffered him not to hurt mee He suffered no man to do them wrong These now are the nations which the Lord left that hee might prove Israel by them Who in times past suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their own wayes But yet wee must expound it aright out of the Scriptures lest wee detract from God a great part of the government of the world and humance affairs For God neither willeth nor willeth not sins simply but in some respect hee willeth and in some respect he willeth not but only permitteth them Which that it may the better be understood Sin is alwayes both in a good subject and to a good end directed by God we must know that in every sin or evill of crime are two things namely The materiall or subject and the formall that is the corruption it selfe or defect of rightnesse sticking and inherent in the subject The subject is a thing positive or a thing in nature as an inclination action and therefore doth it partake of the nature of good and is wrought and moved by God But corruption is not wrought by God but came unto the subject by the will of divels and men forsaking God Wherefore no sin can be or be imagined which is not in some good thing and had adjoyned unto it some consideration and respect of good Otherwise God for his infinite goodnesse would not suffer it to be done neither should it be desired of any neither should at all be so that it is truly said That there cannot be put any thing which is the chief and extreme evill that is such as doth take away good wholly for it should not be desired but under some shew and apparency that it had of good neither should it have a subject wherein to be and so should destroy it self But albeit evill is alwayes joyned with good Sin alwayes is to be discerned from good and doth concurre with it in the same actions or inclinations yet these two things are diligently to be severed and discerned neither is the work of the Creatour to be confounded with the work of the creature sinning lest either God thereby be made the cause of sin or the greatest part of the government of the world and humane affairs be taken from him In sin God effectually willeth Hereby may we understand How far forth God willeth sin and how hee willeth not but permitteth it The subject or matter He willeth therefore sins As concerning their matter that is the actions themselves of men sinning motions and inclinations to objects as they are only such God willeth worketh and directeth them for both they partake of the nature of good and if God simply would them not they should not at all be done The ends As concerning the ends whereunto God destineth those actions which are sins that is he willeth the actions of sinners as they are the punishments of the wicked or chastisements or tryals or martyrdomes of the godly or the sacrifice of the Son of God for the sins of men But these ends are most good and most agreeing with the nature justice and goodnesse of God Therefore God the first cause of all good willeth intendeth and worketh these in the sins or actions of the wicked and by a consequent also the actions themselves which the wicked doe in sinning and by which as means God attaineth to those ends The forsaking of his creatures As concerning the withdrawing of his grace that is his divine light and rightnesse This withdrawing is an action proper to God namely his eternall and forcible working will destining whom it will to be forsaken It is also just and holy because God is bound to none and because it is either the exploration tryall of the creature or the punishment of sinne And this withdrawing once being put the inclinations motions and actions of the creature cannot but erre and swerve from the law of God and be sins Now as the inclinations The corruption of the action or inclination God will not but permitteth motions and actions of sinners are sins that is are repugnant to order and nature and swerve from the law of God because they are done without the knowledge of Gods will purpose of obeying him so God neither willeth nor ordaineth nor alloweth nor commandeth nor worketh nor furthereth them but forbiddeth condemneth punisheth and suffereth them to be committed of his creatures and to concurre with his most just decrees judgments and works thereby to shew how necessary and needfull for the creature is the grace of the holy Ghost to flye sin and to manifest his justice and power in punishing sin Wherefore the permission of sin is no idle permission or a cessation ceasing of Gods providence and working in the actions of the wicked as if they did depend only upon the will of the creature but this permission is of efficacy and worketh It is permission as concerning the formall cause of sin that is corruption it selfe which the creature hath of it selfe not by any affection or working of God but it is of efficacy and working as concerning the motion and actions of the creature sinning which God effectually willeth and moveth as also concerning the withdrawing of his grace and the ends whereunto he destineth directeth and bringeth the actions of them that sin Three causes why God is said to permit sinne God then is said to permit sin 1. Because his will whereby he will have some one worke done by a reasonable creature hee doth not make knowne unto him 2. Because he doth not correct and incline the will of the creature to obey in that worke his divine will that is to doe it to that end which God will by either generall or speciall commandement These two are signified when God is said to withdraw from his creature his grace or speciall working to forsake him to deprive him of light or rightnesse or of conformity with the law to leave him in naturall blindnesse
intercession Answ There is an ambiguity both in the word Prayer and in the word Intercession God will that one pray and make intercession for another but this they must doe not standing on the worthinesse of their own intercession and merits but on the worthinesse of the intercession and merits of the only Mediatour Christ Christ maketh intercession for us because he prayeth willeth and obtaineth and effectuateth it himself that for his own sacrifice and prayers we may be received of God the Father into favour and be reformed according to his Image Christ therefore maketh intercession for us by the vigour and vertue of his owne proper worthinesse and merits for his owne worthinesse hee is heard and obtaineth what hee desireth After this sort doe not the Saints make intercession one for another Wherefore seeing the Papists feigne that the Saints doe by their owne merits and prayers obtaine for others grace and certaine good things at Gods hands they manifestly derogate from the glory of Christ and deny him to be the only Saviour ON THE 12. SABBATH Quest 31. Why is he called Christ that is Annointed Answ Because he was ordained of the Father and annointed of the holy Ghost a Psal 45.8 Heb. 1.9 Esay 61.1 Luke 4.18 the chiefe Prophet and Doctor b Deut. 8.15 Acts 3.22 7.37 Esay 55.4 who hath opened unto us the secret counsell and all the will of his Father concerning our Redemption c John 1.18 15.15 and the high Priest d Psal 110.4 who with that one only sacrifice of his body hath redeemed us e Heb. 9.12 14 28. 10.12 14. and doth continually make intercession to his Father for us f Rom. 5.9 10. 8.34 Heb. 9.24 1 Joh. 2.1 and a King who ruleth us by his word and spirit and defendeth and maintaineth that salvation which he hath purchased for us g Psal 2.6 Zach. 9.9 Matth. 21.5 28.18 Luk. 1 33. Joh. 10.28 Revel 10. 12. 16. The Explication What is signified by the name of Christ THe name of Jesus doth rather summarily than expresly note the office of the Mediatour and is as it were a proper name designing rather a certain person But the word Messias or Christ or Annointed is properly an Epitheton of the office which being adjoyned to the former doth more significantly declare the proper and certaine office of the Mediatour For it expresseth metonymically the three parts thereof namely to be a Prophet a Priest and a King For these three were wont to be annointed and so to be designed to these functions Object But it may be that Christ was annointed but to one of these functions only Ans Hee is called in the Scripture a Prophet a King and a Priest And further Christ was signified by annointed persons whereof those three sorts were in the Old Testament And hence it cometh to passe that these two names Jesus Christ are often joyned For it is not enough to beleeve that there is a Saviour and that he is exhibited but wee must further also certainly be perswaded that this Jesus born of the Virgin Mary is that Saviour and Christ promised in the Old Testament Furthermore concerning the office of the Mediatour as it is designed by his name Christ which signifieth Annointed foure things especially offer themselves to be considered 1. What the Vnction or Annointing of Christ is or in what sense he is called Annointed 2. What is Christs Propheticall function 3. What his Priesthood 4. What his Kingdome 1. What Christs Vnction or Annointing is ANnointing in the Old Testament was a Ceremony whereby according to Gods ordinance Prophets Priests and Kings were annointed either with some speciall or common oyle that it might stand for a testimony to those who were rightly annointed that they were called of God to the administring of one of these functions and that they should be furnished from God with gifts necessary for the performing of that whereunto they were called For annointing signified 1. The calling and ordaining of any to the office either of a Prophet or of a Priest or of a King 2. It signified the promise and bestowing of gifts necessary thereto For to whom God committed any office and whom he caused to be annointed to these also he subministred the gifts of the holy Ghost necessary for the discharging of it as knowledge wisedome strength fortitude industry authority and such others 3. It signifieth the fragrantnesse or sweet savour of the labours imployed in that vocation that is it was a testimony that the labours were gratefull and acceptable to God and that hee would prosper such labours as the Annointed should with a true faith and cheerfully undergo in executing the function committed unto them of God We are unto God the sweet savour of Christ in them that are saved 2 Cor. 2.15 ● Cor. 15 5● The analogie or proportion between the signe and the thing signified Your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Further the out ward annointing did as a signe represent the inward that is the gifts of the holy Ghost as the things signified by reason of a correspondent Analogy and proportion For as oyle maketh the dry parts being annointed therewith lively agill and able or fit to do their duty and besides to send forth a sweet savour So the holy Ghost furnishing them with necessary gifts which are ordained to a function giveth them strength and power whereby they being of themselves unfit to doe any good are made fit and able to work and accomplish things gratefull unto God that is the holy Ghost causeth them to dispatch readily and with dexterity the parts of that duty which is injoyned them and to doe things acceptable to God and availeable for the preservation of the Church Now the anncinting of Jesus Christ is 1. The ordaining of the Son of God to the office of the chiefe Propher Priest and King of the Church 2. The speciall communicating of the gifts of the holy Ghost necessary for his office 3. Gods approbation and prospering of this office The Lord would breake him Esay 53.10 and make him subject to infirmities when he shall make his soule an offering for sinne be shall see his seed and shall prolong his daies and the will of the Lord shall prosper in hid hand Hee shall see of the travell of his soule and shall be satisfied by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for hee shall beare their iniquities Therefore will I give him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoyle Jesus then the Son of God and Mary Two causes why Jesus was also called Christ that is Annointed is called Messias or Christ or Annointed 1. Because hee was appointed of his Father from everlasting the Mediatour that is the chiefe Prophet Priest and King of the Church This is confirmed by this reason Hee that is to be a Prophet a Priest and a King
and is called Annointed hee is in respect of those three called Annointed But the Mediatour which was called Messias or Annointed was to be the chiefe Prophet Priest and King of the Church Therefore hee is in respect of those three called Annointed or Christ Againe the same is shewed by many places of Scripture Joh. 7.28 6.38 I came not of my selfe c. I came down from heaven not to doe mine own will Heb. 5.5 but his will which hath sent me Christ took not to himselfe this honour to be made the High Priest but hee that said unto him Thou art my Son this day begate I thee c. The Lord swore Psal 11.4 Heb. 13.8 Rev. 13.8 1 Cor. 1.30 thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck Jesus Christ yesterday and to day the same is also for ever The Lambe slain from the beginning of the world Christ is made of God unto us wisedome and righteousnes and sanctification and redemption So he is often called the Angel of the covenant sent of old unto the Church 2. He is called Annointed in respect of the gifts of the holy Ghost which were poured on him thick abundantly and most perfectly that is all the gifts and graces whatsoever are in all the blessed Angels and Men and those in the most excellent and high degree that he might be sufficient for the restoring ruling preserving of his Church and for administring of the government of the whole world and for the directing thereof to the safety and salvation of his Church God giveth him not the spirit by measure Wherefore God John 3.34 Heb. 2.9 Esay 61.1 thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee Therefore hath the Lord annointed mee The annointing therefore is of the whole person yet with this difference That it is so applied to both natures as it signifieth the ordaining of them to the Mediatourship For he is Mediatour according to both natures who was alwaies present with his Church Christ is annointed in respect of his humanity not of his Godhead in respect whereof he is annointer even before the flesh was born But as his annointing designeth the communicating of the gifts of the holy Ghost so his humane nature only is meant to be annointed For his Godhead because it is alwaies in it selfe goodnesse most perfect and passing measure is not annointed but annointeth and filleth with gifts and graces both his owne humanity which his Godhead doth personally inhabit as also the Elect and chosen Wherefore one and the same Christ in respect of his divers natures is both annointed and annointer as raiser and raised For the Father annointeth with the holy Ghost but by the Lord So that Irenaeus saith pretily Lib. 3. cap. 20. That by the name of annointing was comprised and understood the three persons of the Godhead The annointer the Father the annointed the Son and the annointing which is the holy Ghost Ob. But it is nowhere read Christ annointed spiritually that Christ was annointed Ans Christ was not annointed typically ceremonially or sacramentally but really and spiritually that is hee received the thing it self which was prefigured and signified by the ceremoniall annointing which was the holy Ghost as it is said Wherefore God thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes Psal 45.8 Heb. 1.9 Esay 61.1 The spirit of the Lord is upon me Therefore hath the Lord annointed me As therefore it was meet that Christ should be a Prophet a priest and a King not typicall but the very signified and true that is the great and high Prophet Priest and King so it was necessary that he should be annointed not with typicall oyle but with the signified and true oyle which was the holy Ghost For such as the office was such should the annointing be But the office was not typicall but the very thing it selfe Therefore such also shold the annointing be Hence we learne and understand these two things 1. That Christ hath his name not from the ceremoniall annointing Christ hath his name not from the ceremoniall annointing but from the thing thereby signified but from the thing it selfe which was thereby signified because hee is that chiefe and high Prophet Priest and King whom as types the Prophets Priests and Kings of the Old Testament which were wont to be annointed with externall oyle did represent The name therefore of the signe or type that is annointed is transferred to the thing it selfe even to the High Priest Prophet and King Jesus 2. That there is a great difference betweene this Jesus Annnointed and the Annointed of the Old Testament Three differences between Christ annointed and the annointed of the Old Testament For 1. They were onely certaine types and shadowes of this only chiefe and true Christ that is of this King Prophet and Priest Wherefore necessary was it that they should yeeld and give place to him being once exhibited For the thing it selfe being come and exhibited the types cease 2. The annointing that is the communicating of the gifts of the holy Ghost in the typicall Annointed was imperfect and weake But in Jesus Christ it is perfect and exceeding great For in him dwelleth the fulnesse of the Godhead personally so that hee is both the Annointed Colos 2.9 and Annointer 3. Hee onely hath received all the gifts of the holy Ghost and those many waies more excellent than they are found in all the Angels and Men because he had them in the highest both number and degree Of his fulnesse have all we received John 1.16 1 Cor. 12.11 Ephes 4.7 But the Annointed of the Old Testament received neither all the gifts neither in the highest degree but divided and according to the measure of the gift of Christ some more some fewer and some greater gifts than some much lesse were they able by their own power and vertue to work the same in others Object God cannot be annointed Christ is God Therefore hee could not be annointed no not with the prefigured or signified oyle Answ In some respect wee grant this whole reason Why God cannot be said to be annointed For Christ as touching his Godhead cannot be annointed with the gifts of the holy Ghost 1. Because not one jot of the gifts of the holy Ghost can be added to the Godhead because of the exceeding perfection thereof 2. Because the holy Ghost by whom the annointing is immediately administred is the proper spirit of Christ no lesse proceeding from him than from the Father Wherefore he as he is God hath not any thing from the holy Ghost neither doth he receive him which is already his owne from any other but giveth him unto others whom it pleaseth him As also no man can give thee thy spirit which is in thee because that which thou already hast cannot be given unto thee Repl. According
workes of both creations Whatsoever things the Father doth the same things doth the Son also The Father sheweth him all things whatsoever hee himselfe doth Therefore not only the workes of the second creation but also of the first creation preservation and administration of the world In the same place it is said As the Father quickneth so the Son quickneth whom he will But the Father was from the very beginning the giver of corporall and spirituall life By him were all things created which are in heaven and which are on earth things visible and invisible whether they be thrones Co● 1.16 17. or dominions or principalities or powers all things were created by him and for him And he is before all things and in him all things consist Thus far of the first creation that which followeth speaketh of the second creation Repl. 1. All these speake of the instauration of the Church Ans No Because that comprehendeth also the Angels Repl. 2. The Angels also were restored by Christ and joyned to their head Ans But the new creation is called a restoring from sinnes and death to righteousnesse and life this agreeth not to the Angels Repl. 3. By whom also hee made the worlds Heb. 1.2 The worlds that is the new Church Ans 1. God made the old also by him because it is one Church having one head and foundation 2. The Greek word ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is used in that place signifieth in Scripture the world not the Church And further when it is there added Bearing up all things by his mighty word those words speake of the preservation not onely of the Church but of all things And moreover hee rendreth a cause why hee is the heire not onely of the Church but of all creatures namely because he is the Creator and Preserver of all things Thou Lord in the beginning hast established the earth and the heavens are the worke of thine hands Repl. In these wordes hee converteth his speech to the Father to prove that hee was able by his power to lift up the Sonne to divine majesty Answ This is an impudent shift and elusion 1. Because it is said before But unto the Son which appertaineth to both places of the Psalme cited by the Apostle 2. Because the Psalme doth intreat of Christs kingdom and therefore those words which there are spoken of the Lord are to be understood next and immediatly of his person secondarily and mediately of the Father Repl. 1. If hee made all things then the Father made them not by him John 5. ●9 Ans Both he made them and they were made by him Whatsoever things the Father doth the same doth the Sonne also And yet the Father doth them by him Repl. 2. The Creatour cannot be compared with the creatures But Christ is there compared with the Angels Therefore creation of things is not attributed unto Christ Answ Hee is not compared with the creatures in any proportion but without proportion This the place it selfe of the Psalme proveth The heavens shall perish but thou dost remanine Repl. 3. If hee were Creatour and equall with the Father hee could not sit at his right hand Ans Wee may invert this and say of the contrary rather if he were not equall he could not sit at his right hand Because none but the omnipotent and true God is able to administer the kingdome of heaven and earth Who being in the forme of God Phil. 2.6 Esay 45.23 Rom. 14.11 Esay 41.12 Rev. 1.18 22.23 thought it no robbery to be equall with God Thus saith the Lord that created heaven Every knee shall bow unto mee This is said of Christ Againe I am I am the first and I am the last My hand hath laid the foundation of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the heavens when I call them they stand up together These words Christ applyeth unto himselfe In it was life and the life was the light of men Wee interpret that the Sonne of God is by himselfe the life In the Word was life as is the Father and the fountaine giver and maintainer of all life as well corporall and temporall as spirituall and eternall in all from the very beginning of the world John 5.26 Hee hath given to the Sonne to have life in himselfe as the Father hath life in himselfe They construe it That the man Jesus is the quickner and giver of life because in him is the life of all that no man without him and all by him are saved These are their words Unto which we reply If hee give eternall life to all so that no man hath it without him Therefore either no man was quickned before he was born of Mary which were absurd or he was the quickner and giver of life from the beginning Even as John affirmeth this of him as being verified in him also before he was made flesh Neither can this be understood only of his merit whereby he deserveth this life for men For that life is in him signifieth that he is John 5.21 10.26 by his efficacy and effectuall working the quickner and reviver as himself expoundeth it and the adversaries themselves confesse So are we also to understand his illightning of men that is the knowledge of God the authour whereof he was in all even from the beginning as himselfe saith No man knoweth the Father but the Son and hee to whom the Son will reveale him And John Baptist saith Mat. 11.27 John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the Son hath declared him The light shineth in darknesse And the light shined in the darknesse and the darknesse comprehended it not Wee interpret it That this word even from the beginning hath both by naturall light and by the voice of heavenly doctrine shewed God unto men but those who were not regenerated by his Spirit have not knowne this light They say That he shined not before hee began to preach Ans 1. If so then should he not have been the true light that is the authour of light and the knowledge of God but only a minister thereof as was John Baptist but the Evangelist in this respect maketh John Baptist diverse from Christ 2. He should not have been the illumina●or of all men which yet themselves are faine to confesse Christ himselfe saith of himselfe and Saint John here of him Hee lighteth every man that cometh into the world that is either with naturall light or spirituall Hee was in the world and the world was made by him and the world knew him not Wee as touching the time hereof say He was in the world it was from the beginning of the world unto his incarnation all which time the Son of God hath in the world which was created by him shewed God unto men but is not knowne of men They construe it of the time of his preaching when he was not heard but despised and persecuted Ans
Why God would have us certaine of the last judgement 11. Why he would not have us certain of the time 12. Why God deferreth that judgement 13. Whether it is to be wished for 1. Whether there shall be any judgement THis Question is necessary For the Scripture also hath fore-told that there shall come in the later times mockers who shall account this Article for a fable Where is the promise of his coming For since the Fathers dyed 2 Pet. 3.4 all things continue alike from the beginning of the Creation The last judgement cannot indeed be demonstrated out of Philosophy but neither is there any thing in Philosophy against it But the whole certainty thereof is grounded on divine Prophecies The certainty of the last judgement is not to be sought in Philosophy but in Divinity or on the Doctrine of the Church For although the Philosopher perhaps would say somewhat as seeing a little through a mist as That it should goe well with the good and ill with the evill and That it is not likely that man was born to this misery yet by reason that man hath lost the knowledge of the righteousnesse goodnesse and truth of God wee cannot know out of Philosophy that any judgement shall be much lesse with what circumstances it shall be The arguments which Philosophy yieldeth are forcible indeed in themselves but are not made knowne but in Divinity and therefore the arguments themselves are only made forcible and of strength in Divinity Wherefore wee will draw reasons and proofes out of Divinity or the Doctrine of the Gospel by which it may appeare that there is a last judgement Six proofes of the last judgement The first proofe is drawne from expresse and plaine testimonies of sacred Scriptures As out of the Prophecy of Daniel As I beheld in visions by night behold Dan. 7.13 one like the Sonne of Man came in the clouds of heaven and approached unto the Ancient of dayes and they brought him before him And hee gave him dominion and honour and a kingdome that all people nations and languages should serve him his dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall never be taken away and his kingdome shall never be destroyed And againe a little before The Ancient of dayes did sit whose garment was white as snow and the haire of his head like the pure wooll Vers 9 10. his throne was like the fiery flame and his wheeles as burning fire A fiery flame issued and came forth before him thousands ministred unto him and ten thousands stood before him the judgement was set and the books opened The beast was slaine and his body destroyed and given to the burning fire Likewise out of the prophecy of Enoch alledged by the Apostle Jude Jude 14 15. Behold the Lord cometh with thousands of his Saints to give judgement against all men Moreover out of the sermons of Christ especially in Mat. 24.25 Likewise out of the sermons of the Apostles Acts 19 31. 1 Thess 4.16 He hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousnes by that man whom he hath appointed whereof he hath given assurance to all men in that hee hath raised him from the dead The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout and with the voice of the Arch angel and with the trumpet of God It is appointed unto men that they shall once die Heb. 9.27 and after that cometh the judgement And I saw a great white throne Rev. 20.11 12. and one sate on it c. And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged of those things which were written in the books according to their workes Neither is the certainty of the last Judgement apparent only by these and the like plaine testimonies of Scripture but is deduced also out of other places by good consequence and hence are made those forcible arguments which the Philosophers saw but by a glimpse The second proof is drawn from the end whereunto mankinde was created God necessarily obtaineth his end but to this end did he create mankinde that man should be the image of God and the everlasting temple of God wherein he should be worshipped to whom he would communicate himselfe perfect wisedome righteousnesse and goodnesse and would impart his blessednesse which whereas it is now performed unto us and seeing it cannot be that God should create so most excellent a creature to perpetuall misery wee necessarily inferre that there shall be a change For God will obtaine his end and will not suffer the temple of the holy Ghost to be utterly consumed of rottennesse This blessednesse is a part of Gods image according to which man was made but this the Divel hath destroyed therefore God shall restore it who is mightier than the Divel And although the end for which man was created is hindered divers waies in this life yet God will at some time obtain it Wherefore it is not only as the Philosphers reason likely and probable that man was not made for these miseries but it is also most certain that the most excellent of all creatures was made to a better end Wherefore there must needs be at length a change By this argument is confirmed the happinesse of our bodies according to that of Saint Paul Know you not that your body is the temple of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.19 which is in you The third proof is taken from the justice goodnesse and truth of God which requireth that it may goe full well with the good and with the evill full ill Philosophy knoweth not that God is so just good and true that hee will have the righteous to enjoy full and perfect blessednesse But this cometh not to passe in this life nay rather it goeth well with the wicked and evill in this life Therefore there must remaine another life wherein this shall be The holy Scripture useth this argument as in S. Paul 2 Thess 1.4 6. It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you Remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy pleasure and likewise Lazarus paines Luke 16.25 now therefore is he comforted and thou art tormented The fourth is taken from Gods decree whereby he ordained and purposed with himselfe from everlasting to raise the dead Wherefore God being unchangeable will not cancell and revoke this his decree A register and copy thereof we reade in Ezekiel and presidents or examples we have Enoch Chap. 3. ● Elias and Christ The fifth is taken from Gods omnipotency whereby he is able to effectuate and accomplish things contrary to reason This argument Christ useth against the Pharisees Mat. 22.29 Ye erre not knowing the Scripture nor the power of God The sixth is taken from the glory of God sith God created man
covenant not to the impeachment of the Church or them that communicate with them but of themselves for they procure unto themselves damnation Neverthelesse it is the duty of the Church to observe diligently what manner of men it admitteth and the Minister of the Church is there excused where excommunication is not authorised yet so that hee give not willingly the Sacrament to the abusers thereof but be instant in warning and reproving them and wish them to take heed of and avoid their abuses For Matth. 5.6 Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse But the sin shall lie on others even on them who commit the abuse and on them who wink with both their eyes thereat OF THE PASSEOVER SEeing it is aforesaid that the Lords Supper succeeded the Passeover it shall not be impertinent to declare here in brief the doctrine of the Passeover The Questions concerning the Passeover are these 1. What it was 2. What were the ends and uses thereof 3. What are the allegories or resemblances of the rites of the Paschall lamb 4. Whether it be now abrogated and what succeeded in place thereof 1. What the Passeover was THe Passeover was a solemn eating of a Lamb enjoyned the Israelites by God that this ceremony being yeerly performed throughout every house might be a memoriall unto them of their deliverance out of Egypt but should especially signifie unto the faithfull their sparituall freedome from sin and death by Christ which was to be sacrificed or slain on the crosse and to be eaten by faith Or It was a Sacrament of the ancient Church which by Gods commandeme●t was to be celebrated with the yeerly slaying and eating in every family of the Jewes a lambe of a yeer old to be a remembrance unto hem of the benefits of their delivery out of Egypt and a seale of the promise of grace touching remission of sins for the sacrifice of the Messias Pascha the Greek word cometh from the Hebrew Pesach a Passeover derived of Pasach which signifieth To passe over This Sacrament and whole solemnity had his name from the passing over of the Angel who seeing the bloud of the Lamb on the Israelites upper door-posts passed over and spared their first-born when he slew all the first-born of the Egyptians The history of the institution of the Passeover is extant Exod. 12. God commanded that the killing of the Lamb should be executed with certain and divers ceremonies The rites and ceremonies of the passeover For A lamb of a yeer old a male without blemish was to be separated from the flocke the tenth day of the first moneth called Nisan or Abib according to the number of the families for every houshold a lamb and was to be slain four dayes after that is the fourteenth day at even and the posts and lintels or upper cheeks of the doors of their houses were to be sprinkled with his bloud then was hee to be rosted and eaten whole and in haste with unleavened bread and sowre herbs and they that did eat it stood with their loins girt their shooes on their feet and their staves in their hands Exod. 12 11 23. Of this ceremony saith God It is the Lords Passeover The bloud shall be a token for you upon the houses where ye are that when I see the bloud I may passe over you This feast God would have to be yeerly that is once every yeer seven whole dayes celebrated with great solemnity Exod. 12.14 15. And this day shall be unto you as a remembrance and ye shall keep it an holy feast unto the Lord throughout your generations yee shall keep it an holy ordinance for ever Seven dayes shall yee eat unleavened bread c. Look Exod. 23.15 Levit. 15.5 Deut. 16.1 2. What the ends and uses of the Passeover were FIve ends of the institution of the passeover are specified Exod. 12. To be a confirmation of the promise of the Angels passeover and of the saving of the Israelites first-born That the bloud of the lamb sprinkled on the posts might be a signe of the Angel-which should passe over the Israelites and save their first-born as it is said ver 13. And the bloud shall be a token for you upon the houses where you are that when I see the bloud I may passe over you This end after the first performance of the rite and execution of the passeover ceased forthwith although the analogie thereof remain for ever For God both heretofore spared and now spareth the faithfull for Christs bloud shed that is for it remitteth their sins as in the second end is declared To be a type of Christ That it might be a figure of the Messias his sacrifice to come or a sign of the deliverance to be performed by Christ and of Gods grace towards his Church this was the principall end of the yeerly passeover Exod. 12.45 John 19.36 This is thus proved It is said Ye shall not break a bone thereof This figure John saith was then fulfilled when Christs bones were not broken on the crosse therefore the lamb was a type of Christ and of his sacrifice Againe Christ our passeover is sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 Therefore the paschall lamb signified Christ and the sacrificing thereof represented the sacrificing of Christ Besides the Church understood the significations of other sacrifices that they were types of the sacrifices of the Messias for the Fathers of the old Church were not so brutish as to hope for remission of sins by the bloud of buls much more therefore did they by faith behold the Messias and his sacrifice in the Paschall lamb Finally John calleth Christ The Lamb of God Revel 13.8 and the Lamb which was slain from the beginning of the world to wit because he was prefigured by that lamb which was slain to be the passeover For a remembrance of their delivery out of Egypt Exod. 12.15 Deut 16.3 To be a memoriall of the first passeover and of the delivery out of Egypt For God would that the memory of so great a benefit should be preserved among his people lest their posterity should wexe unthankfull Seven dayes shalt thou eat unleavened bread even the bread of tribulation for thou camest out of the land of Egypt in haste that thou mayest remember the day when thou camest out of the land of Egypt all the dayes of thy life To be an occasion of publick concourse to praise God for this benefit Exod. 12.16 That it might be a bond of publick assemblies and maintenance of ecclesiasticall Ministery In the first day shall be an holy assembly To distinguish Israel from other people Exod. 12.43 48. That it might be a Sacrament whereby to distinguish Gods people from other nations No stranger shall eat thereof But if a stranger dwell with thee and will observe the passeover of the Lord let him circumcise all the males that belong unto him and then let
him 8. Now when Christ saith This that is This bread is my body and This cup is my bloud the speech is sacramentall or metonymicall because the name of the thing signified is attributed to the signe it self that is it is meant that the bread it the sacrament or signe of his body and doth represent him and doth testifie that Christs body is offered for us on the crosse and is given to us to be food of eternall life and therefore is the instrument of the holy Ghost to maintain and increase this food in us 1 Cor. 10. as S. Paul saith The bread is the communion of the body of Christ that is it is that thing by which we are made partakers of Christs body And else-where he saith We have been all made to drink into one Spirit The same is the meaning also when it is said that the bread is called Christs body for a similitude which the thing signified hath with the signe namely that Christs body nourisheth the spirituall life as bread doth the corporall life and for that assured and certain joint-receiving of the thing and the signe in the right use of the sacrament And this is the sacramentall union of the bread which is shewed by a sacramentall kind of speaking but no such locall conjunction as is by some imagined 9. As therefore the body of Christ signifieth both his proper and naturall body and his sacramentall body which is the bread of the Eucharist so the eating of Christs body is of two sorts one sacramentall of the signe to wit the externall and corporall receiving of the bread and wine the other reall or spirituall which is the receiving of Christs very body it self And to beleeve in Christ dwelling in us by faith is by the vertue and operation of the holy Ghost to be ingraffed into his body as members to the head and branches into the vine and so to be made partakers of the fruit of the death and life of Christ Whence it is apparent that they are falsly accused who thus teach as if they made either the bare signes only to be in the Lords Supper or a participation of Christs death only or of his benef●●s or of the holy Ghost excluding the true reall and spirituall communion of the very body of Christ it self 10. Now the right use of the Supper is when the faithfull observe this rite instituted by Christ in remembrance of Christ that is to the stirring and raising up of their faith and thankfulnesse 11. As in this right use the body of Christ is sacramentally taken so also without this use as by unbeleevers and hypocrites it is eaten sacramentally indeed but not really that is the sacramentall symboles or signes bread and wine are received but not the things themselves of the sacrament to wit the body and bloud of Christ 12. This doctrine of the Supper of the Lord is grounded upon very many and those most sound and firm reasons All those places of Scripture confirm it which speak of the Lords Supper and Christ calling not any invisible thing in the bread but the very visible and broken bread it selfe his body delivered or broken for us which whereas it cannot be meant properly himselfe addeth an exposition that that bread is truly received in remembrance of him which is as if he had said That the bread is a sacrament of his body So likewise he saith The Supper is the new testament which is spirituall one and everlasting And Paul saith It is the communion of the body and bloud of Christ because all the faithfull are one body in Christ who cannot stand together with the communion of the divels Likewise he maketh one and the same ingraffing into Christs body by one spirit to be both in baptism and in the Lords supper Moreover the whole doctrine and nature of Sacraments confirm the same all which represent to the eyes the same spirituall communion of Christ to be received by faith which the word or promise of the Gospel declareth unto the ears Therefore they are called by the names of the things signified and in their right use have the receiving of the things adjoined unto them The articles also of our faith confirm it which teach that Christs body is a true humane body not present at once in many places as being now received into heaven and there to remain untill the Lord return to Judgement and further that the communion of saints with Christ is wrought by the holy Ghost not by any entrance of Christs body into the bodies of men Wherefore this sentence and doctrine is of all the purer antiquity of the Church with most great and manifest consent held and professed 13. The Supper of the Lord differeth from Baptism 1. In the rite and manner of signifying because the dipping into the water or washing signifyeth a remission and purging out of sin by the bloud and spirit of Christ and our society and fellowship with Christ in his afflictions and glorification But the distributing of the bread and wine signifieth the death of Christ to be imputed unto us unto remission of sins and our selves ingraffed into Christ to become his members 2. They differ in their speciall use because Baptism is the testimony of our regeneration and of the covenant made between us and God and of our receiving into the Church But the Lords Supper testifieth that we are ever to be nourished by Christ remaining in us and that the covenant made between God and us shall ever be established and ratified unto us and that we for ever shall abide in the Church and body of Christ 3. They differ in the persons to whom they are to be given Baptism is given to all those who are to be accounted for members of the Church whether they be of yeers and understanding or infants The Lords Supper is to be given to them only who are able to understand and celebrate the benefits of Christ and to examine themselves 4. They differ in the often celebrating of them Baptism is to be received but once only because the covenant of God being once made is alwayes firm and of force to the penitent But the Supper is often to be received because an often renewing and recalling of that covenant to our remembrance is necessary for our faith 5. They differ in the order which is to be observed in the use of them Because Baptism is to be given before the Supper and the Supper may not be given unto any except he be first baptised 14. They come worthily to the Lords Supper who examine themselves that is are endued with true faith and repentance They who find not this in themselves ought neither to come without it lest they eat and drink their own judgement not to defer repentance wherewith they should come lest they draw upon themselves hardnesse of heart and eternall pains 15. The Church ought to admit all those unto it who professe themselves to imbrace the
the righteousnesse of faith instructeth us how we are not righteous of our selves neither are made righteous but by some perfect satisfaction which the Law requireth as also because by faith a restauration or renewing of obedience unto the Law is accomplished in us The briefe summe then of the whole doctrine touching the abrogation of the Law is this The Ceremoniall and Civill Law of Moses are quite cancelled by Christs coming as touching both their bond and obedience but the Morall Law as touching obedience to be performed thereunto is not abrogated but only as concerning the curse justifying and constraint thereof The Objections of Antinomists Libertines and such like who averre that the Morall Law appertaineth nothing at all unto Christians and is not to be taught in the Church of Christ you may finde them resolved at the 115. Question of this Catechisme where the use of the Law is handled 4. In what the Morall Law differeth from the Gospel THe declaration of this Question is many waies necessary as by the difference of the Law and Gospel may appeare The doubt ariseth especially from the definition of the Law where it is said that the Law promiseth rewards to such as performe perfect obedience and it promiseth them freely because no obedience can be meritorious in the sight of God In like maner also the Gospel promiseth everlasting life freely so that the Law and Gospel seeme not to differ How beit there is a great diversity in them The Law differeth from the Gospel In the manifestation In the manner of their manifestation The Law is known by nature the Gospel was after mans fall manifested from above In doctrine In their matter or doctrine The Law propoundeth Gods meere justice the Gospel propoundeth it joyntly with mercy Again the Law teacheth what we ought to be that we may be saved and what to performe the Gospel teacheth how we may be such as the Law requireth namely in Christ In promises In their promises The Law promiseth eternall life and all good things with a condition of our own proper and perfect righteousnesse and obedience remaining in us the Gospel promiseth the same with a condition of faith and beliefe in Christ whereby wee imbrace anothers obedience performed for us to wit the obedience of Christ Now with this condition of faith is joyned by an indissoluble knot and bond the condition of new obedience In effects Rom. 4.15 2 Cor. 3.7 In effects The Law causeth wrath and is the ministration of death The Gospel is the ministration of life and of the spirit Quest 93. How are the Commandements divided Answ Into two Tables a Deut. 4.13 Exod. 34.28 Deut. 10.3 14. whereof the former delivereth in foure commandements how we ought to behave our selves towards God the latter delivereth in six commandements what duties we owe unto our neighbour b Ma●th 22.37 38 39. The Explication Three causes why the division of the Decalogue is to be observed THe question concerning the division of the Decalogue is necessary and profitable and therefore to be observed 1. Because God himself hath expressed and set down a certain number of the Tables and Commandements of the Decalogue 2. Because Christ divideth the summe of the whole Law into two Commandements or into two kindes of commandements 3. Because the right division of the Decalogue maketh to the understanding of the commandements themselves For it advertiseth us of the degrees of obedience and sheweth that the worship of the first Table is the chief and principall Now the Decalogue is divided after a three-fold manner The first division of the Decalogue into two Tables 1. The Decalogue is divided by Moses and Christ into two Tables the former whereof compriseth our duties towards God immediately the latter our duties towards God mediately Or the former teacheth us how we are to demeane and behave our selves towards God the latter what duties wee owe to our neighbour This division is grounded on the expresse Word of God Deut. 10.1 ● Hew thee two Tables of stone It is also grounded on this that Christ and Paul referre the whole Law to the love of God and our neighbour Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart with all thy soule Exod. 32.15 Deut. 4.13 Mat. 22.37 38 39. Two canses of this division and with all thy minde this is the first and great commandement and the second is like to this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe This division hath these uses Two canses of this division 1. That wee may better conceive the sense and scope of the whole Law and understand what is the perfection of obedience 2. That we observe the common rule namely that the commandements of the second Table yeeld to the commandements of the first in the same kinde of worship That is that the love and glory of God is to be preferred before the love and safety of all creatures Acts 5.29 according to that saying Wee ought rather to obey God than men The second division of the Decalogue into ten commandements 2. The Decalogue is divided into tenne Commandements whereof foure are ascribed unto the first and the six other unto the second Table Now God numbred out these ten commandements or lawes not that he was delighted with this number more than any other but because the titles and arguments of the things themselves to wit the duties were so many in number For in these ten laws all that we owe unto God and our neighbour is so comprehended that nothing is omitted and nothing is superfluous So that the foure commandements of the first Table containe all duties which wee owe unto God immediately and the six commandements of the second Table have in them whatsoever pertaineth to the leading of this life in felicity and happinesse Howbeit there is much dissention about the number of the Commandements For some reckon three some five and some foure Commandements in the first Table and that that division which so ascribeth foure Commandements to the first Table that the first proceedeth of not admitting other gods the second of not making any graven Images the third of not taking the name of God in vaine the fourth of hallowing the Sabbath and referreth the other sixe unto the second Table that this division I say is the truest these reasons declare 1. Those are distinct Commandements The proofe of this second division by foure arguments which are distinguished in the matter which they deliver or whose matter and meaning is distinct and diverse for doubtlesse God when he divided the Decalogue into ten Commandements would that each Commandement should differ ●rom the rest in matter or meaning so that those Commandements which differ in sense are diverse and they which differ not in sense or meaning are not diverse Commandements but one Commandement But the Commandement of not having strange gods and the Commandement of not making
observation of them necessary except the omitting of them breed offence So it is no worship of God but a thing indifferent and not binding mens consciences to use this or that forme of prayer to pray standing or kneeling to pray at this or that time at this or that houre in this or that place to reade or interpret this or that Text of Scripture to eat or not to eat flesh c. Neither hath the Church only this right and power to constitute or abrogate or alter by her own authority these ordinances as she judgeth it to be most expedient for her common edification but the consciences also of particular men retain this liberty so that they may either omit these or do otherwise without any offence against God if there arise no scandall or offence thereby amongst men that is if they do it neither of contempt or neglect of the Ministery nor of wantonnesse or ambition or of a desire of contention and novelty nor with the offending of weak ones The reason is because then lawes are rightly observed when they are observed according to the mind and purpose of the Law-giver But the Church ought to will that such ordinances and statutes as are made concerning things indifferent be observed not in respect of our owne authority or commandement but only for the maintenance of order and comelinesse and for the avoiding of scandals and offences Wherefore as long as comelinesse or order is not violated neither offence given it leaveth every mans conscience free to himself For not in respect of the Churches or Ministers commandement but in respect of the just causes of commanding things indifferent are necessary sometimes to be done or ●o be omitted and the conscience is hurt not by the neglect of any humane commandement as in Civill matters but by the neglect of the causes for which they are commanded Hither belongeth the precept of S. Paul If any of them which beleeve not call you unto a feast 1 Cor. 10.27 and if●e will go whatsoever is set before you eat asking no question for conscience sake But if any man say unto you This is sacrificed unto Idols eate it not because of him that shewed it and for the conscience for the earth is the Lords and all that therein is and the conscience I say not thine but of that other for why should my liberty be condemned of another mans conscience For if I through Gods benefit be partaker why am I evill spoken of Acts 15. for that wherefore I give thanks Likewise the decree of the Councell of the Apostles 1 Cor. 11. of things sacrificed to Idols of bloud and that which was strangled Likewise the precept given concerning women to be covered Likewise the Lords day substituted by the Church in place of the Sabbath for the exercise of the Ministery c. Object If the Edicts of Magistrates binde mens consciences why then do not the traditions of the Church binde them also A difference between Civill and Ecclesiasticall Laws Answ There is a difference in these examples God gave this power and authority of making Civill Laws unto the Magistrate and hath strengthned it with this band in that he threatneth and denounceth his anger against them which breake these Laws but unto the Church and to his Ministers he hath not given any such authority but yet notwithstanding he would have these Laws and constitutions to be observed which the Ministers and the Church of their own authority command not for any necessity that there is of obeying these Laws commanded by the Church but according to the rule of charity that is for a desire of avoiding offence Mat. 20.25 This answer is delivered in these places of Scripture Ye know that the Lords of the Gentiles have dominion over them and they that are great exercise authority over them But it shall not be so among you but whosoever will be great among you let him be your servant Not as if yee were lords over Gods heritage but that yee may be ensamples to the slock 1 Pet. 5.3 Co●os 2.16 Gal. 5.1 Two causes of this difference Let no man condemne you in meate you in meate and drink or in respect of an Holy-day or of the new Moone or of the Sabbath dayes Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free Neither are the causes obscure or hard to come by for which God made this difference namely 1. That there might be an evident difference between the Civill Magistrate unto whom it belongeth to beare rule over his subjects and to constraine by corporall force such as obey not and the Ministers of the Church unto whom no such rule and power is granted but unto them is committed the charge and office of teaching and instructing men concerning the will of God 2. Because of the breach of Ecclesiasticall Laws if it be done without giving offence the first Table of the Decalogue for which they are to serve is not broken but by the breach of Civil Laws albeit no offence be given thereby the second Table is broken inasmuch as either some thing is taken from the Common-wealth Rep● or some occasion is given of injuring it Neither is this reply of force That unto the greater and worthier office greater obedience is due and therefore the constitutions of the Ministers of the Church are no lesse necessary to be kept then the Laws of the Civill Magistrates Answ For unto the worthier greater obedience is due in those things which are properly belonging unto his office Now the proper office of the Civill Magistrate is to make Laws which are for the commandement it selfe to be observed but the proper office of the Ministery of the Church is to sound forth Gods Commandements and the proper office of the Church is to ordaine ceremoniall decrees which must be kept not for the commandement of man but for avoiding of offences 4. Humane ordinances 4. Wicked ordinances of men Acts 5.29 Mat. 15.3 which are repugnant unto the ordinances of God These God forbiddeth us to obey whether the Civill Magistrate command them or the Church or the Ministers of the Church We ought rather to obey God then men Why transgresse you the Commandement of God by your tradition Object Answ Having now considered these foure kinds of ordinances delivered by men it is easie to make answer unto that first objection God commandeth us to obey the commandements of men He doth so 1. Such as be good that is not repugnant unto the word 2. Such as he himselfe hath commanded by men that worship may be given him 3. Civill ordinances which depend on the authority of men not obeying them for divine worship but for conscience sake 4. Ecclesiasticall or ceremoniall ordinances obeying them but not respecting therein any divine worship or conscience neither of which they import but only the avoiding of offence Object 2. What things the Church commandeth by the
attributing of some proprietie unto one person of the God-head to the removing of the same from another person of the God-head The words God and Father sometimes taken essentially sometimes personally Why Father is here taken essentially Esay 6.9 Againe the name of Father as also the name of God when it is opposed to all the creatures is taken essentially not personally but when it is put with another person of the God-head it is taken personally Wherefore in this place the name of Father is taken essentially and the reasons hereof are manifest 1. Because the name of Father is not here put with another person of the Godhead but with the creature of whom he is invocated So also by the Prophet Isaiah Christ is called The everlasting Father 2. The invocating of one person doth not exclude the others when mention is made of their externall and outward workes 3. Wee cannot consider God the Father but in the Son the Mediatour And the Son hath made us sons by the holy Ghost who is therefore called the Spirit of adoption 4. Christ teacheth us that wee must invocate him also John 16.23 saying Verily verily I say unto you whatsoever yee shall aske of the Father in my Name hee shall give you 5. Christ giveth the holy Ghost therefore it is he himself of whom we aske him Object 2. Christ is called and is our brother Therefore he is not our Father Ans He is our brother in respect of his humane nature but he is our Father in respect of his divine nature Object 3. If he be called the Father who hath received us into favour for Christs sake then is not Christ understood by the name of Father because hee that receiveth us into favour for Christs sake is not Christ himselfe But the Father whom wee here so call receiveth us into favour for Christs sake Wherefore hee is not Christ Ans Hee that receiveth us into favour for Christs sake is not Christ himselfe that is in the same sense and respect Christ as he is our Mediatour is hee through whom wee are received but as hee is God hee is he that receiveth us Two causes why we say Our Father Our Christ willeth us to call God our Father not my Father Confidence Thereby to raise in us a confidence and full perswasion that wee shall be heard For because we pray not alone but with us the whole Church doth with one consent pray to him he doth not reject her but heareth her prayers according to this promise of our Lord Where two or three are gathered c. Object But oftentimes thou prayest at home the Church not being privy thereunto Ans The godly and the whole Church pray for themselves and all the members with an affection and desire Love and desire is an habituall quality of the soule remaining also when thou sleepest it is not a passion quickly fleeting or passing away Therefore when thou prayest alone at home in words the whole Church prayeth with thee in affection And this also maketh much for the engendering of confidence in us because as hath been said God doth not reject the whole Church Mutuall love Two causes why Christ admonisheth us of mutuall love doth hee by this word To admonish us of mutuall love wherewith Christians being endued must pray one for another And therefore doth hee by this word in the very Proeme and entrance of the prayer admonish us of mutuall love wherewith we must be affected towards our neighbour 1. Because there is no praying without the true love of our neighbour 1 John 4.20 neither can wee be perswaded that God heareth us For if wee approach unto God not accounting the sons of God for our brethren neither will he then account us for his sons 2. Because without the love of our neighbour there is no true faith and without faith there is no true prayer For whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Object It is the part of a Father to deny nothing to his children but God denyeth many things to us therefore hee is not our Father Ans It is the part of a Father to deny nothing unto his children that is which is necessary and wholesome for them but it is the part of a Father to deny to his children things unnecessary unprofitable and harmefull Thus God dealeth with us giving us all spirituall and corporall blessings that are necessary profitable and wholesome for us Quest 121. Why is that added Which art in heaven Ans That we conceive not basely or terrenely of Gods heavenly Majesty a Jere. 23.24 Acts 17.24 25 27. and also that we look for and expect from his omnipotency whatsoever things are necessary for our soul and body b Rom. 10.12 The Explication THe second part of the Proeme is Which art in heaven that is heavenly Heaven here signifieth the habitation of God and the holy Angels and blessed men whereof God saith heaven is my throne and Christ saith In my Fathers house are many mansions Esay 66. v. 1. John 14.2 God indeed by his immense essence is every-where but hee is said To be in heaven and To dwell there because there God is more glorious than in this world and doth also there immediatly shew and manifest himself Now the Lord willeth us to call him Eight causes why wee are to call God Our Father in heaven our Father which is in heaven To distinguish him from earthly Fathers 1. Thereby to shew the opposition and contrariety of earthly Fathers and this Father that so wee should thinke that God reigneth in heavenly glory and majesty and is a Father not earthly but heavenly even hee 1. Who sitteth in heaven 2. Who ruleth every-where with heavenly glory and majesty hath soveraignty over all things and governeth by his providence the whole world by him created 3. Who is void of all corruption and change 4. Who also doth there especially manifest himself before the Angels and doth there shew what a Father he is how good and how mighty and rich To worke in us confidence of being heard 2. To raise up in us a confidence that God heareth us For if hee be our Father and one that is endued with exceeding goodnesse which hee especially manifesteth and declareth in heaven then will hee also give us all things necessary to salvation and if this our Father be Lord in heaven and so omnipotent whereby hee is able to help us then is hee able most easily to give us those things which wee aske of him To worke in us reverence of him 3. To raise a reverence of him in us Seeing this our Father is so great a Lord that is heavenly who reigneth every-where who is able to cast both body and soul into hell fire let us then reverence such a Lord and approach unto him with exceeding submission both of minde and body 4. That wee call on him in fervency of
neighbour is 614. Justification The signification of the word 384. How we are justified by grace how by Christs merit how by faith 385. Three causes why faith onely justifieth 386. Foure reasons of our maintenance of this doctrine against Papists ibid. Ten causes why we cannot be justified by works 387. That this doctrine doth not make men either carelesse or profane 389.390 With what difference faith and works are required in them that are to be justified 390. Vide Faith Works K KEy What the power of the Keyes of Gods Kingdome is and why called a key 481.482 Two parts of the power of these keyes 483. To whom the power of these keyes is committed 485. How the power of the keyes differeth from the civill power 488.489 Kill How the Letter is said to kill 23. King Christians are Kings 237. Kingdome What Christs kingdome is 233. what is the kingdome of Christians 237. Foure differences between Christs kingdome and ours 237. How the kingdome of heaven is opened 480. 481. The power of the keyes of this kingdome and what those keyes are 481. 482. Of Gods universall and speciall kingdome 634. The parts of Gods kingdome ibid. c. How manifold ibid. Who is king and head in this kingdome 635. Of the Citizens and Laws of this kingdome 635. 636. Its enemies and laws 636. How it is said to come ibid. Why we are to desire that it might come 637. L LAW The differences betweene the Law and the Gospel are two pag. 2. What it requireth of us 36. A distinction of Law and faith 38. Why the love of our neighbour is called the second commandement 38. What it is to examine our selves by the law and how we do apply the curse of the law to our selves 39. What the law is in generall 516. Its parts 517. How far abrogated and not abrogated by Christ 519. 520. 522. By faith the Law is three waies established 523. In what the Morall law differeth from the Gospell 523. 524. A difference between civill and ecclesiasticall laws 544. Foure uses of the ceremoniall law 617. Two of the Judiciall and Morall law ibid. Seven uses of the Morall law in nature restored 618. Why we are to desire the perfect fulfilling of the law by us in this life ibid. c. How the law is the Letter and how the Gospel is the Spirit 621. Christ in himselfe fulfilled the law two waies 621. And in us two waies ibid. The law is said to increase sin two waies ibid. Letter What is meant by the word Letter in holy Writ 23. How the Letter is said to kill ibid. Liberality What. 608. The affinity between liberality and parsimony 609. Life Eternall life what 375. Who giveth it 376. To whom for what cause how 377 When. 378. Whether in this life we may be assured of everlasting life 378. Lord. Why Christ is called Lord why Our Lord and how many waies 268. 269. Lost Five meanes by which the Spirit is lost 346. Love Why the love of God is called the first and greatest commandement in the law 37. The law and feare of God how they differ 537. Lust What. 602. Three kinds of it 602. 603. Lying What with distinctions 611. M MAgicke What. 534. Magistrates Foure duties which they owe. 592. Man What maner of creature he was made by God pag. 40. The end of his creation ibid. What the image of God is in man 42. How far forth lost and how repaired in man 43. 44. It was necessary that man should have free power either to stand or fall 71. No other creature could sat is fie for man but man 113. How the parts of mans body are attributed to God 152. Marriage What. 613. Its causes 604. Eight conditions of lawfull marriage 604. Whether it be a thing indifferent or no. 605. The duties of married persons ibidem Masse The originall of the word 456. 457. the difference betweene the Lords Supper and it 456. 457. 458. Nine causes for which the Masse is to be abolished 460. Meanes It must be used for three causes 217. Mediatour Our Mediatour must be very man pag. 114. 115. He must be very God 116. Reasons 116. 117. Eight reasons why the Sonne not the Father nor the holy Ghost should be Mediatour 118. 119. What a Mediator is and what need man hath of one 120. The office of a Mediatour 121. What our Mediatour doth for us with the benefit of his Mediatourship 122. Three things in the person of a Mediatour 123. There can be but one Mediatour 123. Christ Mediatour according to both natures 229. Whether there be two natures in Christ our Mediatour 273. The office and properties of Christs Mediatourship 285. 286. 287. Member What it is to be a member of Christ 243. Mercy Arguments of the mercy of God in preserving his creatures 163. Merits No good work of the creature meriteth reward 217. The efficacy of Christs merits performeth three things unto us 223. Whether our good works can merit 514. 515. Ministers Ministry What. 587. It s end degrees and duties 587. 588. Vnto whom it is to be committed 588. Miracles How true miracles are discerned from false 9. Misery Why the knowledge of our misery is necessary 34. Whence knowne 36. It s name and nature ibid. Known two waies 39. Modesty What. 594. Murther Why internall murther is forbidden 596. N NAme Foure significations of distinctions of Gods name 556. The parts and vertues of the right and lawful usage of the name of God 558. What the name of God signifieth 632. Nature Whence the wickednesse of mans nature ariseth 45. Why Nature cannot throughly shew what God is 150. Whether there be two natures in Christ our Mediatour 273. The truth of Christs humane nature proved 273. Sin is not of the nature of mans flesh but an accident only thereof 275. The union of the two natures in Christ 278. A rule touching the properties of both natures in Christ 281. 282. c. Whether Christ suffered according to both natures 293. Neighbour Why the love of our neighbour is called the second commandement 39. O OAthes Vide. Swearing pag. 569. c. Whether all oaths are to be kept 573. why the Israelites kept their oath made with the Gibeonites 574. Omnipotency Three things signified by Gods omnipotency 159. Two differences betweene the Church of God and Philosophy in conceiving of Gods omnipotency ibid. Order A double liberty of the Church in matter of order 18. There is order in the most disordered things 208. P PArents Foure reasons why parents rather then other Governours are to bee obeyed 590. Foure duties of Parents 591. Passeover What it was 467. 468. Its ends and uses 468. 469. Passion Vide Suffering What we beleeve concerning Christs passion 290. What is meant by the name of Christs passion 291. Three differences betweene Christs passion and mens sufferings 292. The causes impellent of Christs passion 294. the ends of it ibidem Passions Humane passions attributed to God for two reasons
every day more and more deviate from that primitive simplicity But why do I wonder 2 Thes 2.1 Hom. 3. in Rom. Hom. 3. in Tit. 3. seeing God punisheth the world by sending upon it strong delusions in that it loves not the truth But because as Chrysostome saith Errour is various and intricate and hath a restlesse and unstable quality it is no strange thing that of one errour many do arise and that out of one Controversie ten doe proceed At the first the onely Controversie was about the tenth Article concerning Christs body lurking under the bread as also of the orall manducation in the Lords Supper which Controversie was long in agitation amongst the Lutherans but in all the other Articles here set downe by us there was a full consent as the Acts of the Conference at Marpurge Anno 1529. do witnesse yea Divines began to agree in the doctrine of the Lords Supper Anno 1536. but this agreement was quickly broke because after Luthers death some could not handsomely maintainer their opinion of Christs corporall presence in the Bread seeing none of the Evangelists did utter these words of Christ This is my body after this manner This bread is my body or under the bread or under the species of bread lurks my body Besides Christ whom they include in the Wafer or Host according to our Catholick beliefe is not now upon the earth but in heaven sitting at the right hand of God from whence he will come to judge the quick and the dead they were in good hope to shelter their opinion under some other Articles of faith and chiefly under that of the personall union of the two natures in Christ Hence they went about to establish his Ubiquity and Omnipotency hitherto unheard of in the world using this shift If Christs body be every-where it will be also in every Host if it be in every Host then it will be every-where Then they fondly imagined the Article of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father to be the same with that of the personall union of the two natures as if you would say Christs humanity with the Sonne of God which is that very right hand of God every-where present is personally united and filleth heaven and earth Thirdly because they saw that the Article of Christs Ascension did overthrow the Ubiquity and corporall presence in the Bread by an unheard of and Allegoricall way they expounded Christs Ascension to be meant of nothing else but of his vanishing into the aire of his advancing unto the Divinity and of his Ubiquity To these new monsters of opinions as well the Pontifician Doctors as those of our profession besides divers of the Lutherans did stoutly oppose themselves defending the ancient simplicity and truth of these Articles of our faith which the new Artists of Ubiquity perceiving and finding that they failed here of their purpose they found out new engines and began to accuse those whom they stile Calvinists of other errours to provoke them to Conference and Disputation not onely about the Person of Christ but also about the other Articles of Christianity bragging they could convince them of many fundamentall errours taught in the Reformed Churches Concerning Predestination That all men were not elected but that many were called and few elected Concerning the merit of Christs death That the wicked and incredulous so long as they remained such were not partakers thereof but onely the Elect that beleeved That the promises of the Gospel were universall in respect of the faithful but not of unbeleevers and Epicures Concerning faith That it is the singular gift of God That it is given onely to the Elect in whom onely it is rooted and permanent That the same can never be finally lost because it proceeds of the incorruptible seed of Gods word Concerning the Ministery That Ministers were onely outward dispensers of the word but God wrought inwardly by his Spirit Concerning Sacraments That Christ was yesterday to day and the same for ever and that therefore he was the matter or subject of all Sacraments both of the Old and New Testament Besides that no man either by the word or Sacraments could be partaker of Christ without faith Concerning Baptisme That there was a two-fold washing one outward of water by which the filth of the body is washed away the other inward of the bloud and Spirit of Christ which is the Covenant of a good conscience with God That the Minister baptised onely with water but Christ in the true administration of Baptisme did baptise with the holy Spirit Also that Infidels were not regenerated by Baptisme Also that the children of Christians were children of the promise and of the Covenant even before Baptisme and that for this cause they were to be baptised This doctrine since the yeare 1586. hath beene not onely condemned as Calvinisticall and Hereticall but also reproached and accursed by them who glory in the name of Lutherans And when among the ignorant Vulgar they traduce these Articles as errours of Calvinisme they thinke they have bravely maintained their Cause in defending their fictions of Ubiquity and of a carnall presence in the Lords Supper which now we leave for a while committing our whole cause of God But it is certaine that they have so farre relapsed into the sinke of Pelagianisme and Popery that it is to be feared they will overwhelme the Lutheran Churches with greater darkenesse then ever heretofore and yet alas they stick not to call this the true Evangelicall doctrine and that of the Augustan Confession teaching concerning predestination that in God is no election but that he did promiscuously choose all men Concerning Christs death that he by his death redeemed all men and reconciled them to God that he hath sanctified them and hath received them into favour whether they beleeve or not Concerning remission of sins that a generall pardon is given to all men both faithfull and Infidels Concerning the promises of the Gospell that they belong to all both faithfull and Infidell Concerning Faith that it is the cause of Election that God did first foresee who were to beleeve and persevere that faith is not in our power that notwithstanding it is a worke which God promotes in us and that it may be lost and may be in hypocrites Concerning the Ministery that Ministers may by their preaching conferre divine efficacy and that they are dispensators both outwardly and inwardly Concerning Sacraments that the Sacraments of the Old Testament were onely shadows without Christ the body Concerning Baptisme that there is a mysticall efficacy in the water to wash away sinne and to regenerate that the holy Ghost and his efficacy are annexed to the water that the water and Spirit have the same effect that hypocrites and Infidels in Baptisme are regenerated by the holy Ghost that the Minister doth not onely baptise with water but conferres also the holy Ghost that Christian Infants before Baptisme belong no more to
Whether God hath bestowed his Son upon all the world that is on all and every man to be a Saviour even to the ends of the earth of all them that embrace him by faith whereas we do both know and ●each the same thing from the mouth of Christ But Puccius and Huberus on the contrary cry out That Christ is given as a Saviour to all men absolutely and hath saved all men effectually whether they beleeve or not It is well then that Osiander fights for us and refutes his owne brethren himselfe ARTICLE III. Of Christs ascension into Heaven I. WE beleeve that properly and without any trope Christ ascended from earth into a heaven by a true and locall motion of his body by his divine power in the presence of his Disciples and that he is for our sakes in b heaven untill he returne to judge the quick and the c dead Testimonies of Scripture a Acts 1.9 10 11. And when he had spoken these things while they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight And while they looked stedfastly towards heaven as he went up behold two men stood by them in white apparell Which also said Ye men of Galilee Why stand ye gazing up into heaven This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven b Heb. 8.4 If Christ we upon earth he were not a Priest Heb. 9.24 Christ is not entred into a sanctuary made with hands c. but into heaven it selfe that he may appeare in the presence of God for us Col. 3.1 Seeke the things which are above where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God Acts 3.21 The heavens must containe Christ untill the time of restitution of all things which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy Prophets since the world began c Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven Mat. 24.30 Then shall appeare the signe of the Son of man in heaven and they shall see him come in the clouds of heaven with power ●nd great glory Mat. 25.31 But when the Son of man shall come in glory and all his holy Angels with him then he shall sit downe upon the throne of his glory 1 Thes 4.16 For the Lord himselfe shall come downe from heaven with a great shout with the voice of an Arch-angel and with the trumpet of God Phil. 3.20 From whence we expect our Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ II. What heaven that is and what place it is unto which Christ ascended we will not inquire but leave it to those that are curious seeing it is written Isai 64.4 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him Notwithstanding we beleeve piously and with the Scripture that it a is a place not on this b earth nor c below nor every-where but above and without this visible d world the heaven of e heavens the habitation and throne f of God in light g inaccessible the house of h our Father the City of the living i God the Saints native k country where Christ is l now at the right hand of God interceding m for us and preparing a place n for us from whence we expect he will o returne downeward into the p clouds that he may receive us unto q himselfe Testimonies of Scripture a 1 King 8.30 Heare the supplications of thy servant and of thy people Israel which shall pray in this place heare thou from the place of thy habitation that is from heaven heare and spare John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions if it were not so I would have told you I go to prepare a place for you Phil. 3.20 From whence we expect our Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ b Jer. 31.37 Thus saith the Lord If the heavens above can be measured and the foundations of the earth beneath c Luke 16.26 Besides all this betweene us and you there is a great gulfe fixed so that they which would passe from hence to you cannot neither can they passe to us that would come from thence d Ephes 4.10 He that descended is he also that ascended far above all heavens that he might fulfill all things Heb. 4.14 Having therefore our High-Priest Jesus Christ who hath entred into the heavens e 1 King 8.27 The Heaven and heaven of heavens do not containe thee Psal 115.16 The heaven is the Lords but the earth he hath given to the sons of men f 1 King 8.45 Heare from heaven from the place of thy habitation their prayers 1 Tim. 6.15 The King of kings and Lord of lords inhabits light inaccessible g John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you h Heb. 11.10 Abraham did looke for a City having a foundation whose builder was God i Heb. 12.32 You are come to mount Sion to the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels k Heb. 11.14 For they that say such things declare plainly that they seeke a countrey l Heb. 9.24 Not into the sanctuary made with hands is Christ entred but into heaven it selfe that he might appeare now for us in the presence of God m Rom. 8.34 Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us n John 14.2 I go to prepare a place for you o Phil. 3.20 For our conversation is in heaven from whence we looke for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ p Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seene him go into heaven 1 Thes 4.16 17. The Lord himselfe shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the trump of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then we which are alive and remaine shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall we ever be with the Lord. q John 14.3 I will come againe and will receive you unto my selfe that where I am there you may be also John 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me III. Thither not often but a once not in his mothers womb but the fortieth day after his b resurrection not every-where but on mount c Olivet not apparently but by the true motion of d his body not invisibly but his Disciples looking on and accompanying him with their eyes not with their feet he e ascended and left the f world by a corporall departure entring
by true repentance stirre the same up againe which is done before death lest they perish Wherefore totally they never fall from the grace of God but God is so angry with them for sinne that notwithstanding he hates them not being his sons he so corrects them that yet he doth not totally reject b them Even as an earthly father will not presently thrust his son out of doores when he offends him much lesse will he shake off his fatherly affection although he may severely reprove and correct him Testimonies of Scripture a John 3.9 Whosoever is borne of God sinneth not because his seed is in him nor can he sin because he is borne of God b Psal 37.24 Though he fall he shall not be cast off for the Lord helpeth him with his hand 2 Sam. 7.14 15. I will be his father and he shall be my son whom when he offendeth I will visit with the rod of men and with the stripes of the sons of men but my mercy shall not depart from him VII With this comfort David erected himself when hee fell Cast mee not away from thy presence and take not thine holy spirit from me Psal 51.11 If the righteous man fall he shall not be cast off for the Lord puts his hand under him VIII This maine comfort the Saints have in their spirituall conflicts that they know they doe beleeve and by Gods grace will more and more beleeve and that their faith shall not totally faile them as to be damned because by the Gospel they are taught that it is sustained by Gods immutable a election and Christs most effectuall merit and b intercession and that it is preserved by the power of c God Testimonies of Scripture a Ephes 1.4 He hath elected us in Christ before the foundation of the world was laid Rom. 8.39 Whom he predestinated these he hath called and whom he hath called these he hath justified whom he justified these he hath glorified 2 Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God standeth sure having this seale The Lord knoweth who are his b Rom 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth Who shall condemn It is Christ that is dead yea rather that is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for us John 17.15 I desire that thou shouldst keep them from the evill Luke 22.31 Simon Simon Sathan hath sought to winnow thee as wheat but I have prayed to my Father that thy faith may not faile c 1 Pet. 1.5 Who by the help of Gods power are preserved through faith to salvation IX To these may be added other express assurances out of Scripture of this * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fulnesse of faith That it is impossible for the elect to be a seduced for Christs sheep to be taken out of his b hands for the faithfull to be separated from the love of God in c Christ That vocation and the gifts of God are without d repentance * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That an inheritance incorruptible undefiled unfading is reserved for us in e heaven That by the power of God through faith we are preserved to f salvation That God is faithfull who will not suffer us to be tempted above our strength but with the tentation giveth an issue that we may g beare it Testimonies of Scripture a Matth. 24.24 It is impossible for the elect to be seduced b John 10.28 My sheep shall never perish nor shall any man take them out of mine hand c Rom. 8.39 Nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. d Rom. 11.29 These gifts and calling of God are such as are not to be repented of e 1 Pet. 1.4 5. Christ hath againe begotten us to an inheritance which cannot perish nor be defiled nor wither reserved for us in heaven f Ibid. Who by the help of Gods power are preserved through faith to salvation which is ready to be revealed in the last time g 1 Corinth 10.13 God is faithfull who will not suffer you to be tempted above your strength but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to beare it X. But they who doubt of perseverance beleeve not life eternall yea they slight faith and all hope seeing that is an assured confidence of Gods mercie both present and to come this a certain expectation of life eternall which maketh not ashamed Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given to us Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen Hebr. 11.1 But doubting confoundeth Jam. 1.6 XI Neither is this a doctrine of securitie except of a spirituall for with the certaintie of perseverance in the Saints there remaines alwaies a purpose to avoid sin or to repent for b sin God working all this immutably according to his eternall purpose in them nor withdrawing his mercie utterly from them lest they c perish Testimonies of Scripture a Rom. 8.38 For I am perswaded that neither life nor death nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor any other creature can be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. 1 John 5.10 He that beleeveth in the Son of God hath the witnesse in himselfe 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that he is able to keep what I have committed to him against that day b Rom. 7.15 For what I would doe I doe not but what I hate that I doe if I doe that which I would not I consent to the law that it is good c Ephes 1.11 In whom we have obtained an inheritance when we were predestinated according to his purpose who doth all things according to the counsell of his will 2 Sam. 7.14 and Psal 89.30 I will keep my mercy for him for ever and my covenant shall stand fast to him XII We reject the opinions of Puccius Huberus and others who have been bred in the schoole of Pelagius as being contrary to this most comfortable doctrine 1. That faith now in the state of grace is naturall that it is Gods gift common to all as the Sun by Gods bountie shines on the good and bad 2. That faith hath its increase from God but not its beginning 3. That it is our work to beleeve that is to suffer God to help us 4. That we may doubt of our perseverance to the end 5. That the certaintie of Gods gifts which wee brag of out of the Apostle Rom. 11.29 is vaine So Huberus thes 777. 6. That the Saints as soon as they sin mortally utterly fall off from grace utterly cast off the holy Ghost and altogether lose their faith and so many of the elect are damned and perish ARTICLE VII Of the ministery of the Church I. COncerning the ministery of
the Church in the New Testament we beleeve and teach that it is the office of publick teaching and governing the Church by the voice of the Prophets and Apostles instituted by Christ for finishing the salvation of the a elect Testimonies of Scripture a Matth. 28.19 Goe and teach all nations baptising them in the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost Mark 16.16 Preach the Gospel to all creatures he that beleeveth and is baptised shall be saved but he that beleeveth not shall be condemned Ephes 2.20 You are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Ephes 4.11 He gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists and some to be pastors and doctors II. And that it is an effectuall meanes by which the holy Ghost stirs up confirmes and a operates faith and conversion in the hearts of the elect Testimonies of Scripture a Rom. 1.16 The Gospel is the power of God to salvation to every one that beleeveth Rom. 1.17 Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Acts 10.44 While Peter yet spake these words the holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard this speech Acts 16.14 A certaine woman named Lydia who sold purple in the city of the Thyatirians fearing God did heare us whose heart the Lord opened that she should heare what was said by Paul 2 Tim. 3.16 17. The whole Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect and perfectly furnished for every good worke III. Yet that internall power and efficacie by which we are sanctified is not the Ministers nor is it tied to or shut up with in their words actions but it is the holy a Ghosts The externall ministry is b mans which the Spirit of God makes use of for moving the minds and hearts of the elect when and how he c pleaseth Not as if he could not doe otherwise but because it pleased his divine wisdome by the foolish preaching of the Crosse to save such as d beleeve Testimonies of Scripture a Esay 43.25 I I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions John 3.8 The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but thou knowest not whence it cometh or wither it goeth so it is with every one that is born of the spirit 1 Cor. 12.11 All these things are done by one and the same spirit distributing to every one apart as he pleaseth b Matth. 3.11 I indeed baptise you with water to repentance but he who cometh after me is stronger then I he will baptise you with fire and with the holy Ghost John 1.23 33. I am the voice of him that crieth in the desart But he that sent mee to baptise with water he it is who baptiseth with the holy Ghost c 1 Cor. 3.5 6. Who then is Paul who is Apollo but ministers by whom you have beleeved and as God hath given to every man I plant Apollo waters but God giveth the increase Therefore neither is he that planteth any thing nor he that watereth but God who giveth the increase d John 3.8 The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but thou knowest not whence it cometh nor whither it goeth so is every one that is borne of the spirit 1 Cor. 12.11 But all these things are done by one and the same spirit distributing to every one apart as he pleaseth 1 Cor. 1.21 But after that in the wisdome of God the world by that wisdome knew not God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to save beleevers IV. But these Tenents are partly impious and partly too hyperbolicall 1. That God immediately doth infuse faith and conversion 2. That the ministerie is a dead letter but the exercise only of the outward man 3. That the faith which we have by hearing of the word is not justifying but historicall onely 4. That saving power is in the voice and under the voice of the ministerie and that Christs part is internall but ministers partly externall partly internall ARTICLE VIII Of the Sacraments in generall I. WE judge the generall doctrine of the Sacraments to be both profitable and needfull for without this we cannot know why Baptisme and the Lords Supper are Sacraments besides it gives a great light to the particular doctrine of each Sacrament by which we may avoid divers errours lest by giving them too little we esteeme them but bare Ceremonies and by giving them too much we transforme them into Idols which will necessarily be if we do not carefully observe what Sacraments are and why instituted by God and what is their use and end for Ecclesiasticall stories tell us that the Pope could not establish Transubstantiation untill he had overthrowne the nature efficacy and use of Sacraments II. Sacraments are signes of the Covenant or of the promise of a grace instituted by God for the confirmation of our b faith Testimonies of Scripture a Gen. 17.11 And you shall circumcise the flesh of your fore-skin and it shall be a signe of the Covenant betweene me and you b Rom. 4.11 And he received the signe of Circumcision the seale of righteousnesse by faith in his fore-skin Sacraments are not onely notes of profession betweene men as some imagine but they are rather signes and testimonies of Gods will towards us by which God moveth the heart to beleeve as it is in the Apology of the Augustan Confession Tit. De usu Sacramenti III. Sacraments consist of the Element and a Word or of externall signes and the promises of spirituall grace which grace in the Word and in all Sacraments is one to wit Christ with all his b benefits for there is one Christ yesterday to day and for c ever and there is one communion of Saints from the beginning of the world to the d end which is that spirituall union that is betweene Christ and the Saints and of the Saints among themselves to the same love by the holy Spirit in Christ as the Head and in us as his members in whom he dwels although this one communion according to the diversity of signes is diversly called and represented in diverse Sacraments Testimonies of Scripture and of others a Apologia August Confes Tit. De usu Sacramenti c. Sacraments are signes of Gods will towards us and not only signes of men among themselves And they define Sacraments rightly in the New Testament to be signes of grace And because two things are in Sacraments the Signe and the Word the Word in the New Testament is the promise of the remission of sins b Ibidem The same is the effect of the Word and Sacrament as it is excellently said by Austine The Sacrament is the visible Word because the ceremony is received by the eye and is as it were the picture of the Word signifying the same thing that the Word doth wherefore the effect of both is the same c Heb.
Scriptures are very obscure Lib. 1. de Verb. cap. 1. 2. both in the things that are set down and in the manner of setting them downe But what can be more false or more contumelious against God and his holy Prophets and Apostles seeing the word of God and of the Prophets but much more of the Apostles Psal 119.105 is called a lanterne to our feet and a light to our paths shining in a dark place 2 Pet. 1.19 This indeed the Jesuite whispered but afterward shamelesly denied it As though forsooth this were not the common stile of Poperie That no man can be the Interpreter of Scripture or Judge of the true meaning thereof but the Church that is the Pope either with or without a Councell And that in the Pope as in the head of the Catholick Church all power of interpreting resides Is not this to tell us that the Scriptures can be understood by none without the Popes interpretation See Bellarmine Lib. 3. de verb. cap. 3. where he strives to prove that the meaning of Scripture depends upon one Judge which is the Pope 18. It makes the Pope supreme Judge of all questions concerning faith in which it behoveth faith to stay at last even in those things that are in controversie between the Pope and Protestants The Assertion Whereas there be three members in this Position the first and third as being known to every one are by the Jesnite swallowed down in silence The Pope makes himself supreme Judge of all questions of faith but by what right It is a question of faith If there be a God if there be a Trinitie in unitie if hee made the world if Christ be God and man if he died for us if he rose againe if there be heaven and hell c. Shall then Christians Jewes Turkes and Atheists repaire to the Pope as the supreme Judge for resolution of these What greater madnesse can be The question is If the Pope be head of the Church if Christs Viceroy if the Monarch of Christendome if the Lord of Kings and Emperors if the supreme Interpreter Censor Judge of Scripture of all questions of faith Or if he be not rather that man of perdition sitting in the Temple of God as God the Beast the Whore sitting in the great Citie upon seven hills Finally Antichrist What shall the Protestants who are at controversie with the Jesuits about these questions repaire to the Pope as supreme Judge what 's more foolish what more unjust The middle member the Jesuite calls a lie to wit that our faith must at last stay upon the Pope Truly what he sayes is a lye but that Poperie teacheth this is no lye except it be a lye also that the Pope is supreme Judge of all questions of faith for it is only he on whom the faith of all questions doth at last stay Or that we may speak more cleerly from whom there is no appealing to a superiour But an appeale may be made from the Pope to the Scriptures or to God as to a Superiour and the Jesuite himselfe confessing Christian faith is resolved into this first veritie which is beleeved for it selfe therefore this Position stands firme in all its members and the proofe of the assumption Furthermore who ought to be supreme Judge of faith interpretations and controversies of faith whether the Pope or not and whether the Scripture alone be the rule of faith and controversies or traditions also Or whether the Scriptures alone can be both a Rule and a Judge which the Jesuite barks out with a dogs not with a mans mouth that we may pay him home in his own language whole books of Protestants are extant concerning these nor do they belong to the argument of our secular Theme 19. It accuseth the Scripture of imperfection as if it were neither sufficient to beget faith and pietie nor to attain to salvation except it be supplied by traditions 20. Hence it calls traditions The unwritten word of God as certaine in fallible canonicall and as necessarie to salvation as the written word of God and to be received with the like affection of pietie and reverence The Assertion Whereas our adversarie conceales both these Positions they need no defence It is the common stile of Poperie thus to speak of both and it is unspeakable how witty eloquent and earnest they are at this day all of them in aggravating the imperfection and defects of the Bibles or Scriptures which are among Christians And on the contrary in extolling the divinitie and necessitie of their traditions In stead of all see Bellarmine lib. 4. of the unwritten word throughout all the book But how contumelious it is against God to defile with the blemish of imperfection his written word which as it testifieth of it self is able to make the man of God perfect for every good work And to give life eternall to them that beleeve On the contrary what arrogance vanitie and how full of danger it is not only to equall to but to extoll above and more religiously to reverence humane traditions with which God whatsoever men lie to the contrarie is worshipped in vaine I say to extoll these above Gods sacred word is not now our purpose to speak many words seeing all good men doe easily understand this point and it hath been often demonstrated by our Writers 21. It blasphemously calls the Scripture a Nose of waxe a doubtfull and dead letter written with inke which needed the Churches confirmation Like a sheath receiving any blade whether it be of steele lead wood or brasse The Assertion The Jesuite silently acknowledgeth these blasphemies worthy of Anathema yet he is willing to wash them away with a lye as if injuriously they were imputed to Poperie but indeed here is no fiction yet too little hath been said for Lindanus doth openly professe In Panoplia that the holy Scripture in Poperie is commonly accounted a Nose of waxe an ambiguous word and such as may be turned which way you will and that it is rightly so esteemed For hee adviseth Papists not to dispute with Hereticks he meanes Protestants out of the holy Scriptures hereafter Because saith hee as commonly you may see it is easily bent to what opinion you will therefore it is compared and very fitly too to a Nose of waxe Thus he approves excuses defends that reproach which the Jesuite calls a lie Costerus one of their chiefe Jesuites deviseth a three-fold holy Scripture One spirituall inspired by the holy Ghost in the minds of the Church and Pope The other left by the Apostles to the Church written with inke in paper and parchment books The third grounded on the Pontificiall Decrees and generall Councels Of the paper Scriptures for so this paper-brawler disgracefully calls the Propheticall and Apostolicall books speaking These former saith hee needed the confirmation of that for these are a dead letter written with inke in parchment or paper which can feele
question in their Conference they plainly take it away yet nor without buskin-phrases but such as bring in the same inconveniencies which before they did so that either they betray themselves to be equivocating disturbers or entangle themselves with contradictions which thus appeare In the appendix or addition they say But whether they who by true faith are inserted into Jesus Christ and therefore partakers of his quickning Spirit may not forsake the beginning of their being in Christ fall away from faith lose grace is to be more exactly considered out of Scripture before they can teach it with confidence that is they doubt whether it be true But if before they speak the truth they cannot doubt of this For if they who by true faith are inserted into Christ have sufficient strength to obtaine the victory over sin Satan c. and Christ in all tentations is present with them and reacheth out his hand that they cannot be seduced or taken out of Christs hand by any cunning or strength of Satan how I pray can it be doubted but that such by reason of the helps given to them by Christ and by reason of his assistance and of his confirming and aiding of them in all tentations but chiefly of defection can never forsake the beginning of their being in Christ can never fall away from faith and can never be robbed of their grace In questioning then that which before they asserted and that indeed most truly doe not they fight against themselves They except that their assertion is not categoricall but conditionall that Christ by his Spirit is present with them that hee stretcheth out his hand to them and confirmes them that are inserted into him by true faith if so be they are ready for the fight and beg his help nor be wanting in performance of their duty c. But that this condition is not placed or performed by many and that therefore no conflict followes But I pray what kind of God doe they feigne here whom secretly they exclude What kind of Christ What kind of Spirit To wit such an one who indeed furnisheth those who by true faith are engraffed into Christ with the meanes of resistible grace but doth not fit them for the combate in their tentations suffers them so to snort that they seek not for his help that they are wanting in the performance of their dutie but Gods promises and asseverations doe teach far otherwise for albeit the condition of the combate of prayers and vigilancie which they require be altogether necessary for perseverance yet that this is not so much proposed by the faithfull which is all these men would have as effected by the Spirit of God in the faithfull is cleere by these and such like testimonies Deut. 30.6 Jer. 32.40 De bono persev c. 2. Ezech. 36.27 Isa 59.21 The Lord thy God shall circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed that thou maist love the Lord thy God with all thine heart I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from mee Which words Austin citing for the good of perseverance thus explaines So great shall my feare be which I will put in their hearts that they shall adhere to me continually I will put my Spirit in the midst of you and I will make that you shall walke in my precepts and keep my judgements and doe them This shall be my covenant with them saith the Lord My Spirit which is in thee and my words which I have put in thee shall not depart from thy mouth I will poure upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem Zach. 13.10 1 Cor. 1.8 Phil. 1.6 1 Pet. 1.5 the spirit of grace and supplication and they shall look on mee whom they have pierced c. God will strengthen you even to the end He that hath begun in you a good worke will perfect it untill the day of the Lord Jesus who by the power of God are kept by faith to salvation c. Either these are vaine promises which God forbid or the assumption is false that the condition is not proposed or performed by many who are not engraffed into Christ by true faith Cavilling to the contrary will not availe That these promises are not absolute but to be understood with a condition to be performed by the faithfull that being strictly understood they exclude the least offences of the Saints that a condition is commanded not promised c. which are vaine shifts For the promises speak plainly concerning the very condition of faith prayers perseverance in the faithfull to be wrought by the holy Ghost Nor will it follow that the working of perseverance is not promised because it is commanded and required of the faithfull For it is commanded also that they feare God that they walke in the commandements of God c. and yet God promiseth I will put my feare c. I will make them to walk in my precepts Now this is commanded not because they can but because they should do what is required and De grat lib. arb c. 16. For this cause saith Austin God commands some things which we cannot doe that we may know what to beg of him Hearing then the command they aske for that which is commanded saying with Austin Give me what thou commandest and command what thou wilt De d●no persev c. 20. Which words of mine saith he Pelagius at Rome could not endure when they were rehearsed by a certaine brother a fellow Bishop of mine in his presence and in an angry way contradicting him he had almost fallen foule with him that did repeat them The orthodox men at this day are in the like condition with them and yet these promises do not exclude the faillings of the Saints whether their sinnes be great or small but they lift up those that are fallen from their fall for these promises are sometimes also directed to just men that fall Psal 37.24 Psal 89.34 If the righteous fall he shall not be bruised because the Lord supporteth him If his sons shall forsake my Law c. I will visit with the rod their transgressions but my mercy I will not take from him If then this Article in the three former members is true and certaine as it is most true and certaine it cannot by the condition inserted be excused from this manifest conflict and contradiction of the adversative addition thus All ingraffed into Christ by true faith and therefore partakers of his quickning Spirit are so confirmed by Christ that by no deceit of Satan or by any force can they be seduced or taken out of Christs hand this is true and certaine and All ingraffed into Christ by true faith are so confirmed that they cannot be seduced nor taken from Christ this is not true and certaine but doubtfull and uncertaine and more exactly to be weighed according to Scripture This conflict againe is a manifest argument of an
is the most proper effect of predestination so that without perseverance predestination cannot be fulfilled 4. Because Christ prayed Coll. p. 344. and doth pray for the perseverance not of Peter alone but of all who were to beleeve by the Apostles preaching but the Father alwayes heares the Son Luke 22.32 Joh. 17.20 John 11.42 c. 5. Because they that are ingraffed into Christ by true faith Coll. p. 344. pray incessantly for their owne perseverance but whatsoever they aske of God by faith they obtaine it And this was Austines second Argument for the good of perseverance 6. Because they that are ingraffed by faith into Christ truly Coll. p. 345. are by the power of God faithfully preserved in faith persevering to the end Coll. p. 345. 1 Pet. 1.5 7. Because they that are by true faith ingraffed into Christ have their salvation sealed in their hearts by the earnest of the holy Ghost and consequently their faith and perseverance are sealed too Coll. p. 346. 2 Cor. 1.21 Ephes 1.13 c. 8. Because true beleevers are like a tree that doth not wither the wise man that built upon the rock the seed cast into the good ground c. according to Scripture Coll. p. 346. 9. Because true beleevers are distinguished from temporary back-sliders by reason the faith of those is rooted in their hearts but the faith of these hath no roote 10. Because the Scripture expresly confirmes Coll. p. 347. that the true beleevers can or shall never utterly fall away Rom. 6.2 8 9 10 11. 1 Joh 3.9 1 Joh. 5.4 Against these points all that with much verbosity are handled by the Novelists in the Conference from page 414. to page 459. come to this one point of the condition required in the faithfull which exception wee have already shewed both to be weake and also to be overthrowne by the promises themselves now all are reduced to this one solid and unanswerable demonstration from the position of sufficient causes to the position of the effect thus To whom God hath promised to give certainly perseverance in faith and who are kept by the power of God in faith to the end and for whose perseverance Christ hath prayed and doth pray and who pray themselves incessantly for the same and whose perseverance is grounded in Gods eternall predestination their perseverance in true faith unto the end is not doubtfull but sure according to the Scripture All ingraffed into Christ by true faith are such to whom God hath promised to give perseverance Jer. 32.40 Psal 25.1 c. and who by the power of God are preserved by faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 and for whose perseverance Christ did and doth pray John 17.20 Rom. 8.34 and who daylie in the Lords Prayer call upon God for the same whose perseverance at length is founded in Gods eternall predestination Mat. 24.24 Rom. 8.30 Ephes 1.11 14. 1 Thes 2.13 14. c. Therefore the perseverance of all those who are inserted by true faith into Christ is not doubtfull but certaine according to Scripture No lesse firme a demonstration doth the proximate cause yeeld which begets true faith alwayes remaining in the Elect out of two sayings in Scripture joyned together 1 Pet. 1.23 You are renewed not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God which abideth foe ever And 1 John 3.9 He that is borne of God sinneth not because the seed of God remaineth in him nor can he sin because he is borne of God Hence we reason thus They who are borne of the immortall seed of Gods word and in whom this immortall seed notwithstanding their infirmities doth remaine in them also faith abides nor doth it finally faile and consequently perseverance which is faith it selfe not failing but remaining and persevering the reason of this is the individuall knitting of the cause and the effect because the immortall seed of Gods word remaineth not in whom it doth remaine but by faith All that are ingraffed into Christ by true faith are borne againe of the immortall seed of Gods word as Peter the Apostle witnesseth and in them abideth this immortall seed not withstanding their infirmities witnesse John the Apostle In all then that are by true faith ingraffed into Christ faith remaines neither doth it ever utterly faile and consequently perseverance c. What need many words If the perseverance of the Saints be doubtfull then is it not given certainly by God to all them that aske it daylie praying with all their heart Hallowed by thy Name thy Kingdome come thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven Leade us not into tentation Cyp. de Orat. Aug. de bono persev c. 2.3.6 but deliver us from evill c. In which Petitions Cyprian and Austine learnedly and religiously teach that perseverance is begged of God then 2. this promise of God besides others will be vaine Heare O house of Jacob who have beene carried by me from the wombe even to your old age I am with you and till you be hairy I will carry you Isaiah 46.3 Phil. 1.6 I have made I will beare I will also carry and will deliver 3. In vaine will the Apostles most hearty perswasion confidence and promise be I am perswaded that he who hath begun a good worke in you will perfect it Rom. 8.33 1 Cor. 1.8 untill the day of Jesus Christ For I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus God will confirme you to the end unblamable untill the day of our Lord Jesus Christ 4. In vaine will be the prayer and confidence of the Saints praying with David O God forsake me not in mine old age and when my head groweth gray Thou hast shewed me many and great afflictions but thou hast returned and quickned me 5. Justifying faith will be in vain or the assurance of the remission of sins for the time present for he that doubteth of Gods promise for the time to come feignes that he beleeves the promise of the time present Isai 46.3 Isai 43.25 for these are conjoyned I did beare you I will beare you till your old age I I am he who blot out thine iniquities c. and will not remember thy sins any more 6. In vaine finally is the faith of eternall life and salvation because he that doubts of his perseverance in faith without which life eternall is not obtained how can he be confident of life eternall for he that doubts if he shall live till the morrow how can he be assured he shall live eternally so instead of faith a fallacious opinion shall take place in mens consciences hesitation doubting feare anxiety undermining and overthrowing all Christian comfort and confidence will domineere These are the fruits which the deniall of perseverance will bring forth all which are false impious blasphemous against which the perseverance of the Saints stands as a strong
eternall Father who from everlasting begot the Son according to his owne image and the Son who is the coeternall image of the Father and the holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Son even as it hath been manifested from above certaine word thereof being delivered by the Prophets Christ and the Apostles and by divine testimonies That the eternall Father together with the Son and the holy Ghost hath created heaven and earth and all creatures in them and is alwayes at hand with them to preserve guide and governe them by his providence and worketh all good things in all and that in mankinde made after his image hee hath chosen unto himselfe and gathered a Church by and for the Sonne that by his Church this one and true Deity may be according to the word delivered from above acknowledged celebrated and adored in this life and in the life to come and lastly that hee is the Judge of the just and unjust In what the former descriptions differ This Theologicall description of God which the Church delivereth differeth from the Philosophicall description 1 In perfectnesse because the Church in her description addeth many parts by nature unknown unto men as of the Trinity of Election and of the gathering together of the Church by the Son c. 2 In the understanding and declaration of those parts which being known by nature are common to both for the Theologicall description declareth them more certainly and fully 3 In the effect or fruit because by Philosophy or the light of nature men are not able to be brought to the true knowledge of God Two causes why men cannot by the light of nature attaine unto the true knowledge of God both 1. Because it is so maimed and false by mens corruption that we can suck thence no true and sufficient notice of God as also 2. Because when wee know every part parcel and particle thereof it doth not stirre up our minds unto godlinesse that is the love and fear of God The same Theologicall description teacheth us how the true God which the Church worshippeth differeth from the false counterfeit gods three wayes A threefold difference of the true God from false idols 1. In attributes or properties 2. In the persons 3. In the works whereby the persons are revealed for God hath declared himselfe by his works that his nature is such as his attributes import Moreover How in conceiving of the whole nature of God he that is instructed by the Spirit goeth beyond him whom nature informeth he sheweth that there are three distinct persons in one essence of the Deity sith according to the works either of Creation or Redemption or Sanctification hee receiveth diverse names and titles and every person hath his proper appellation God therefore differeth from idols In attributes Mercy In his attributes because they who are not of the Church understand aright and fully no one property of God they understand not what his mercy is because his Son is unknown unto them or at least the doctrine concerning him shamefully corrupted they conceive not what his justice is Justice because the impious and wicked ones beleeve not that God is so grievously offended and angry with sin that we stood in need of satisfaction for it and redemption from thence by the death of his Son neither what his wisdom is Wisdome because the chief part thereof is expounded in his word which the Gentiles have not neither what his truth is because they are utterly ignorant of his promises Truth The like may be truly averred of all the rest Contrariwise the Church attributeth and ascribeth to God all truth justice goodnesse mercy loving affection and kindnesse towards men which properties of God other Sects are either utterly ignorant of or having a glimpse of them they wholly corrupt and deface them God differeth from idols In persons In persons because Ethnicks and other Sects either know not or acknowledge not three persons in one divine essence But the true Church acknowledgeth and maketh invocation to the Father Son and holy Ghost one God consisting of three persons according as he hath manifested himself in his word In works In works because they which are without the Church do not wholly acknowledge or professe the works of Creation and the government of all things for they do not think all things to have been created of nothing by the word of God only they deny that all generally and each in particular even the least are administred powerfully by the omnipotency of God but ascribe very many to chance fortune and humane wisdome Much more are they altogether ignorant of the works of the Churches salvation namely the reconciliation of men with God justification sanctification and full delivery from all sin and misery by the Son and the holy Ghost So then by these means God is discerned from idols and the knowledge of God revealed to his Church in his word is distinguished from that which Ethnicks have derived from nature An Explication of the description of God delivered by the Church GOd is an essence That is a thing which 1. hath his being from none but from himselfe 2. is preserved or sustained of none but subsisteth by himselfe 3. is necessarily 4. is the only cause unto all other things of their being wherefore he is called Jehovah as if you would say being by himself and causing other things to be to wit according to his nature and promises Spirituall 1. Because he is incorporeall as being infinite and indivisible and most excellent 2. Insensible For 1. experience teacheth this 2. God is without sensible qualities which are the objects of the senses and 3. He is immense The eyes perceive onely things finite and which are within a certain compasse 4. He is spirituall because himself both liveth and is the authour of all life both corporall and spirituall Object 1. Against this opinion many places of Scripture have been heretofore by some alledged in which it is written That God and Angels did appear and were seen thereby to prove that their nature is corporeall and visible But wee are to know that not the very substance of God and Angels How God Angels appeared unto men but created shapes and bodies were beheld of men made carried and moved by the will and vertue of God or Angels that by them they might make known their presence and use their ministry and service in instructing men of those things which seemed good unto them And these were sometimes by imagination represented unto the interiour senses of men which also somewhere may and somewhere cannot be gathered out of the circumstances of the histories as the Angels appearing to Abrabam and Lot were invested with true bodies as which might be touched and handled whether Micha before Achab saw with the eyes of his body or of his mind the Lord and his Angels is a matter of doubt But that those
visible shapes were not the very substance of God is hereby manifest for that the Scripture with great consent reacheth that God is seen of no man neither can be seen and incomprehensible and unchangeable But those visible shapes were not alwayes the same Object 2. To these they add that which is said Gen. 32.30 Ex●d 33.11 Deut 34.10 Deut 5.24 2. Cot. 13.13 How God is said 〈◊〉 seen face 〈◊〉 ●ace that God was seen of Jacob face to face and of Moses and of all the people and that all of us shall see God face to face in the life to come By which Metaphor or borrowed speech is signified a cleer and conspicuous manifestation and knowledge of God which is perceived not-with the eyes of the body but of the mind either by means as by the word by his works and outward tokens and such as run into the senses whence the minde may gather somewhat of God or without means by inward revelation And albeit in the life to come shall be a farte more bright knowledge of God then now yet to know God most perfectly is proper to God onely as it is said Not that any man hath seen the Father save he which is of God 〈◊〉 c. 46. hee hath seen the Father So far is it that the invisible infinite and everlasting Deity may ever be conceived by bodily eyes whose nature is not to perceive any objects but such as are finite and limited Object 3. They have alledged also those sayings wherein the parts of mans body are attributed to God But these also are not properly H●w the parts of 〈◊〉 ●odva●e attri●●●ed unto God but by a Metaphor spoken of God whereby is signified to us a power in God working after an incomprehensible manner his works a certain shadow whereof are those actions which men doe by the ministery and help of their bodily parts as the eyes and ears signifie the wisdome of God whereby hee understandeth all things the mouth the publishing of his word the face the declaration tokens and feeling of his divine goodnesse and grace or severity and anger the heart his love the hands and armes his power the feet his presence Object 4. They have affirmed also because man was made according to the image of God that therefore God hath an humane shape The image of God in man doth not argue a bodily shape in God Ephes 4.24 Not marking that the image of God consisteth not in the shape and figure of the body but in the minde and integrity of nature in wisdome righteousnesse and true holinesse As for Tertullian whereas he reasoneth that God is a body that he speaketh improperly therein and abuseth the word body in stead of substance not only Augustine witnesseth in his Epistle to Quod vult Deus but this is also an argument and proof thereof because he termeth also the souls and Angels oftentimes bodies Wherefore let us know that therefore we are taught the nature of God to bee spirituall Why wee must know God to be spirituall that we may not conceive of God any thing which is grosse terrene carnall and unworthy his divine Majesty neither should deem that he can be perceived by our bodily senses or in thought imagined but should consider his nature by his word and works that wee should not dare to represent him by any bodily shape and in a word that wee should remember that he is to be worshipped not with the gestures or other things of the body but with the minde and spirituall motion of the heart Lastly seeing he alone inspireth into us temporall and everlasting life we should acknowledge the gift of both to come from him out of this fountain only we should seek it and endeavour to referre it wholly to his glory Two reasons why God is to be intelligent Intelligent 1. Because he is the cause both of the mind of man and of the notions shining in it and also of that order which is in the nature of things and Common-weals 2. Because all intelligence or understanding of the creature cometh from him both in respect of the faculty as also in respect of the operation For neither can the efficient and preserving cause of intelligent natures and of the understanding it selfe and order in nature be but intelligent and understanding And therefore the holy Scripture also reasoneth on this wise He that planted the ear shall he not hear Psal 94.9 or hee that made the eye shall he not see Now this wee are to hold against those who setting Nature in the place of God imagine the world and the variety and order of things in it to arise from the matter and the inclination thereof to this forme when as notwithstanding these things could not have their being from a cause not intelligent We are to hold it also thereby to acknowledge not only true knowledge it selfe but also all ability of understanding and the sagacity and capability of the senses and minde to perceive to be the gift of God Eternall That is such an eternity which can have neither beginning The eternity of God without beginning or end Psal 30.2 nor any end of being agreeth to God alone both nature sheweth forasmuch as hee is the first cause of all things and of infinite perfection and power and the Scripture also recounteth as Before the mountains were brought forth or ever the earth and the world were made thou art God from everlasting and world without end But we are to observe that not therefore only the eternity of God is so often inculcated in the Scriptures that in regard hereof hee may be discerned from things created but also Because hee will impart eternity unto us that is he hath purposed and promised that he will give us of his eternall goodnesse and providence eternall blessings and will have continuall care of us through all eternity and will have a kingdom in Angels and men whereof shall be no end Therefore we are given to understand God eternall unto us that God is eternall to us That we may oppose the certain hope of eternall blessednesse grounded upon his eternity against the shortnesse of mortall life and against the frailty of mans condition For seeing hee is eternall he can and seeing he promiseth he will for ever preserve us with his protection For this God is our God for ever and ever And Psal 48.11 Psal 111.9 He hath commanded his covenant for ever Wherefore being upheld with this consolation let us neither refuse to suffer the short misery of this life neither preferre the short felicity thereof before eternall blessings and seeing God will be not only bountifull towards the godly but judge also of the ungodly eternally let the cogitation of the eternall wrath of God keep and hold us in the fear of God that we may not desire to buy the fading shew of whatsoever good with eternall misery God other and diverse from all