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A16736 The doctrine of the Gospel By a plaine and familiar interpretation of the particular points or articles thereof: with the promises, comforts, and duties, seuerally belonging to the same. VVhereunto is added, a declaration of the danger of not knowing, not beleeuing, or not obeying any one of them. Likewise, a rehearsal of the manifold heresies, wherein many haue erred contrary to them all. Diuided into three bookes. The first whereof, is of beliefe in God the Father ... Allen, Robert, fl. 1596-1612. 1606 (1606) STC 364; ESTC S106811 1,499,180 1,052

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wife of one William Mauldon as hee writeth dwelling at a Towne sixe miles from London called Waltam-Stow taught young children to reade which was about the yeare of our Lord 1563. and the fourth yeere of Queene Elizabeths reigne Vnto this Schoole among other children came one Benefields daughter named Dennis about the age of twelue yeeres As these children sat talking together they happened among other talke as the nature of children is to be busie with many things to fall into communication of God and to reason among themselues after their childish discretion what hee should be Wherevnto some answered one thing some another Among whom when one of the children had said that he was a good olde Father the foresaid Dennis Bennifild casting out impious words of horrible blasphemie what he said she he is an old doting foole What wretched and blasphemous words were these ye heare Now marke what followed When William Mauldon heard of these abominable wordes of the Girle he willed his wife to correct her for the same Which was appointed the next day to be done But when the next morning came her mother would needs send her to the market to London the wench greatly intreating her mother she might not goe being maruellously vnwilling thervnto Howbeit through her mothers compulsion she was forced to goe and went And what happened Her busines being done at London as she was returning againe homeward and being a little past Hackney suddenly the Girle was so striken that all the one side of her was blacke Wherevpon immediately she was carried backe to Hackney and there the same night was buried Witnesse of the same Storie William Mauldon and his wife also Bennif●ld her Father and her mother A terrible example no doubte both to olde and yonge what it is for children to blaspheme the Lorde their God And what it is for parents to suffer their yong ones to grow vp in such blasphemous blindenes and not to nourture them betimes in the rudiments of the Christian Cathechisme to know first their creation and then their redemption in Christ Iesus our Lord and Sauiour to feare the most holy name of God and to reuerence his Maiestie For els what do they deserue but to be taken away by death which contemptuouslie despise him of whom they take the benefit of life And therefore let all yong maides boyes and yong men take example by this wretched sillie wench not onelie not to blaspheme the most Sacred Maiestie of the omnipotent God their Creator but also not once to take his name in vaine according as they are taught in his commandements Secondlie let all Fathers Godfathers and Godmothers take this for a warning to see to the instruction and Catechising of their children for whom they haue bound themselues in promise both to God and his Church Which if the Father and Godfather the Mother and Godmothers had done to this yong Gyrle verilie it may be thought that this destruction had not fallen vppon her Thirdlie let all blinde Atheists Epicures Mammonists Belly-Gods of this world and sonnes of Belial hypocrites infidells mockers of religion which say in their hearts Ther is no God learne also hereby not onely what God is what he is able to doe but also in this miserable creature here punished in the worlde to behold what shall likewise fall vpon them in the world to come vnlesse they will be warned betimes by such examples as the Lorde God doth giue them Fourthlie and lastly here may also be a spectacle for all them which be blasphemous and abominable swearers or rather tearers of God abusing his glorious name in such contemptuous despitefull sort as they vse to do Whom if neither the word cōmandement of God nor the calling of the Preachers nor remorse of conscience nor rule of reason nor their withering age nor hoarie haires will admonish yet let these terrible exāples of Gods district iudgement somewhat moue them to take heed to thē selues For if this yong maiden who was not fu ly 12. yeres old for her vnreuerend speaking of God that but at one time did not escape the stroake of Gods terrible hand what then haue they to looke for which being men growen in yeares stricken in age being so often warned and preached vnto yet cease not continuallie with their blasphemous oaths not onely to abuse his name but also most contumeliouslie despitefully to teare him as it were and all his partes in peeces Thus farre M. Foxe admonisheth all sortes both yong and olde to beware of all blasphemie against the Lord our God Now let vs proceede Finallie that faith in the creation of God may iustly teach vs true humilitie● Read Iob chapt 38. And chapt 39. c. It is the argument whereby God himselfe teacheth Iob to humble himselfe Read also Ier 5.21.22 HEtherto of the Duties more generallie Wee come nowe to the particulars Wherefore touching the more particular Duties First and foremost which are they that belong to this comfort of Faith that God our heauenlie Father hath created the most glorious and inuisible heauens to the ende they may be our euerlasting habitation with the rest of his faithfull seruants together with his holie and elect Angels after this transitorie life once past and ended Question Which I say are the Duties which ought to arise from this comfort Answere In that the Lord God our heauenlie Father hath created inuisible creatures not onely the heauens which wee see not but also the holie Angels farre more glorious and excelient then anie of the visible are which our eyes doe see First it is our duetie to conceiue more highly and gloriouslie of the most high and excellent Maiestie of God then all outward creatures can throughlie expresse vnto vs. Secondlie insomuch as it hath pleased God our heauenly Father to create the most glorious heauens to be our euerlasting home and most blessed and comfortable dwelling place Answere wee are admonished thereby to take heede that wee doe not addict our mindes to these earthlie creatures and present vaine and transitorie worlde but that wee doe wholly set our hearts to seeke after heauen and heauenly things and in comparison therof to esteeme lightly of the greatest riches and pleasures or of the highest preferments and honours of this life But most of all wee are hereby admonished to take heede that wee continue not in the f●●the of our sinnes which would vtterly barre vs from the kingdome of heauen Explication and proofe Touching the first part of this answere let vs first of all consider that the Angels themselues cannot comprehend nor behold the full brightnes of the excellent glory and Maiestie of God in which respect they are described with wings couering their faces Isai chapter 6. verse 2. And therfore much lesse are wee able to conceiue how these creatures which wee see should fullie represent the same vnto vs. Let vs consider also that the children of Israell could not look
least of those that be the Lords which he taketh in like ill part as if hee were neglected or molested himselfe Matth. 25. verses 45. It ought to suffice yea to be ouer much in our iudgement that the Lord hath once drunke vinegre and euery way the most bitter potion of Gods wrath for our cause though we doe neuer make him nor any of his any vnkinde offer of it againe Thus much concerning this short speech I thirst for declaration of that duty which ought to be yeelded from the comfort of it NOw we are come to the next like short speech of our Sauiour which was his Question It is finished What duty ought to arise from the comfort of faith herein Answere It is most cleare and manifest from hence that we ought not in any wise to looke to any other sacrifices or satisfactions or merits either in the whole or in part for our red●mption and iustification in the sight of God but to this of our Sauiour alone neither that wee are to feare the popish dreame of any other purgatory then the blood of our Sauiour Christ to the washing away and remouing of all sinnes out of the sight of God Explication and proofe This is very cleare and manifest indeed For seeing we haue our warrant from our Sauiour himselfe that all was finished yea euen to the very point of death when he spake these words and that immediately after this he tooke his death which was the sealing vp of all therefore we may yea we ought iustly to be out of doubt that all doctrines of any further addition for satisfaction or merit before God are false and Antichristian And for th● same cause to be vtterly reiected of all true christians who cannot bu● looke onely to Christ for their perfit redemption and saluation according to the expresse doctrine of the holy Scriptures THe duties which doe belong to that comfort of faith which ariseth from the consideration of the last words of our S●uiour vpon the Crosse they are yet behinde Answer Which ought those duties to be Question We ought from the example of our Sauiour Christ who at his death commended his spirit int● the hand of his Father to esteeme alwaies of our soules as of a chiefe treasure and to be carefull ouer them aboue all earthly things Yea more then of our corruptible bo●ies against the time of our death whensoeuer it shall come Secondly it is our dutie to make choise of God as of the onely worthy feoffie of trust as one wou d say to whose custody wee may safely commend them from day to day And thirdly it is likewise our bounden dutie comfortably to beleeue that if we shall faithfully commit our soules vnto him hee will for our Sauiours sake keepe them most charity and tenderly in his owne hands alwaies and at the end of our liues receiue them and reserue them in a blessed estate vntill the resurrection of our bodies and then also wil● ioyne them againe to our bodies like as our Sauiour returned to his bodie the third day and thenceforth will blesse vs with glorie and happinesse in them both for euermore Explication proofe Vnto these duties no doubt doe the wordes of our Sauiour Christ leade all true beleeuers according to that notable imitation of Stephen Act. 7.59 Lord Iesus receiue my Spirit And according to the practise of S. Paul 2. Tim. 1.12 saying I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day Yea and hee beleeued likewise no doubt that God was as willing to doe it as he was able according to that in the 8. verse of the 4. chap. of the same Epistle in that he saith Henceforth is laide vp for me the crowne of righteousnes which the Lord the righteous Iudge will giue me at that day and not to mee onely but vnto all them also which loue his appearing The same thing therefore ought we to beleeue at this day which they did then according to the practise of our most blessed Sauiour And the rather because as we may perceiue both by the words of Stephen and also of the Apostle Paul that our Sauiour hath the ioint care of our soules together with the Father according to that he saith None shall take them out of my hand Iohn 10. verses 27.28 29 30. My sheepe heare my voice and I know them and they follow me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand My Father who gaue them to me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand I and my Father am one So that well saith M. Beza The hands of our Sauiour are not now held fastened to the Crosse after the manner as our painters doe paint him for then hee could not embrace vs but he hath them at full libertie euen from heauen to embrace the soules of those that dye in h●m the which hee cherisheth in his bosome vnto the time that they shall be restored to their bodies to the enioying of an euerlasting spirituall life and vntill that hee doe come in the cloudes of heauen to meete vs and that wee for our parts be taken vp into the aire to meete the Lord to enioy together with him that blessed estate which is prepared for vs for euer 1. Thes 4.14 Goe to therefore as saith that comfortable and faithfull Preacher Let vs be of good cheare and lay these things to heart euen these so great and notable comforts for our necessary reliefe specially against the last combate God as we knowe doth earnestly require trustie fidelitie in one man toward another euen concerning the least thinges that are committed to anie mans trust that they should be forth-comming and therfore inioineth a penaltie to be laide by the Magistrate vpon all such as shall be found to deale vntrustily as we reade Exod. chap. 22. verses 7.8 c. to the 13. How therefore can we thinke but that the Lord who requireth fidelitie in men as a principall point of his lawe as our Sauiour also declareth Matth. chap. 23. verse 23. will assuredly approue himselfe most faithfull aboue all men to euerie one that accounting him faithfull shall commit themselues to his trust Thus much of the comfortable duties of faith concerning the comfortable manner of our Sauiour Christes dying Question NOw what may our duty be in regard of the death it selfe which the same our Sauiour died Answer First of all as his death was in the manner of it farre differing from the death of all other so are we to know that the endes and fruites of his death are most singular aboue the death of any or all other creatures Explicatiō proofe It is very true as the endes and fruites themselues rehearsed in the Comforts doe euidently declare So that as K. Dauid was not affected after a
is as was said euen to incourage those whom it did chiefly concerne to goe chearfully about that other kind of fishing of men by casting forth that draw-net of the kingdome of God which our Sa told them of in the 13. of Mat And wheras these things might chiefly discourage Want of maintenance or outward prouision and feare of ill successe our Sa doth by one worke of his diuine power yea by a double threefold work of like miracle giue incouragement against either of these doubts or feares yea against al doubts feares which might any way dismay them For to this end whereas they were in present want see how presently he doth furnish thē with aboundāce he causes a multitude of great fishes to come together into the net he strengtheneth a weak net to hold them all without breaking any maske he prepareth vpon the land both fire fish a●d bread for them to refresh them withall shewing thereby that all things both by sea and by land are at his commandement appointment So that how vnprouided or weake soeuer they may seeme to themselues to be and likewise how weake soeuer the net of the Gospel might seeme to be to catch men who are as shie of the word as the fish is of the net yet our Sauiour giueth to vnderstand that as he was with them when hee sent them forth for a little while to preach the Gospel in Israel so that though they tooke no prouision with them nor scrip nor bag for prouision as he commanded them Mark 6.7.13 Luk. 9.1.6 and chap. 22.35 yet they wanted nothing neither wanted their ministery good successe and effectuall blessing so hee would be with them yea much more powerfully when they should performe their office of generall Apostleship to all Nations wherevnto he had already set them apart This I doubt not but is the summe of all And so the Euangelist Luke saith expresly Act. 1.3 that our Sauiour after his resurrection spake to his Disciples by the space of forty daies of those things which appertaine to the kingdome of God But let vs consider of the words of the text that is of the diuine speeches of our Sauiour of the effects thereof somewhat more particularly These speeches of our Sauiour together with the effects of them are as was touched in the answer either such as were spoken and effected before dinner was ended or after that the Disciples had dined with our Sauiour And of the former two speeches of our Sauiour the first Sirs haue ye any meate And thus vpon the answer of the Disciples that they had gotten neuer a fish the second being this Cast out the net on the right side of the shippe and yee shall finde we haue spoken before Onely let vs obserue this one point further that our Sauiour did not aske that question as being ignorant of that which hee asked but to stirre them vp the rather to consider the miracle which hee minded to worke immediately after And therefore also when he saith Cast out the net c. and yee shall find hee doth not speake by coniecture or by any experimentall signe c. though as was saide it might seeme so to those fishermen but hee speaketh by diuine authoritie and vpon his al seeing knowledge in that hee was God yea he worketh a work of his diuine prouidence and power in commanding the fishes to come and attend as it were the casting forth of the net Now let vs come to the effectes which followed vpon these wordes of our Sauiour and so to the rest of his speeches and actions before dinner The effects of this speech of our Sauiour Cast out the net c they were foure The first was that the net had taken a multitude of great fishes so that they were not able to drawe it Secondly that Iohn vpon this miraculous effect discerned that it was our Sauiour who had spoken before to giue them that direction and commandement to cast out their net Thirdly Peter being imboldened hereby feareth not to swimme to the shore that he might shewe the zeale of his loue to our Sauiour and peraduenture also that he might so much the more commodiously helpe to drawe the net to land Fourthly the other Disciples continuing in the ship doe what they can to rowe that they may helpe the ship and hale the net with fishes to the shore These were the effects but let vs heare them from the report of the holy Euangelist Question What saith he for the first Answer So they cast out saith the Euangelist himselfe being one of them and they were not able at all to drawe it for the multitude of fishes verse 6. Question What saith he for the second Answer Therefore said the Disciple whom Iesus loued vnto Peter it is the Lord verse 7. in the beginning of it Explication This Disciple whom Iesus loued was this Iohn the Euangelist so that it is as much as if he had written thus Iohn saide to Peter And in that which Iohn saith to Peter he reasoneth well from the diuine worke which followed vpon the speech of our Sauiour that it was the Lord seeing no creature could by humane knowledge haue giuen them that certaine and effectuall direction For whom might he thinke it to be rather then our Sauiour who had before appeared vnto them with like manifestation of his diuine power Now therefore what saith he for the third effect Question When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord he girded his coate to him for he was naked to wit Answer to his shirt as it were and cast himselfe into the sea as it followeth in the 7. verse Explicatiō This no doubt was a further effect vpon the apprehension of Peter from the words of Iohn yea rather frō the work it self which our Sauiour wrought that it was the Lord. For hereby as was saide before he himselfe tooke boldnes to doe that he did as one nothing doubting of good successe seeing the Lord himselfe had begun this gratious and mightie worke For this is indeede the propertie of God to finish that good worke which he beginneth And it is said concerning our Sauiour that whom he loued to the end he loued them And therefore also there was iust cause that Peter should for his part loue him againe with a most earnest loue The which no doubt was a chiefe cause of this his hasting to the shore Neuertheles it may well be a question whether Peter presuming of his skill to swimme yea though thus farre also being well aduised that he girded his clothes about him lest by the losenes of them they might be a hindrance vnto him whether I say he might not haue beene better aduised before he had done so namely to haue staied till hee had knowen the will of our Sauiour as he did once before when he attempted to walke toward our S●uiour comming to their shippe walking on the sea And herevnto seemeth our Sauiour
regard of the stabilitie of the whole church and euery true member thereof according to that of the same Apostle 2. Tim 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his And thus as it is written Heb 6.18.19 The stablenes of the counsell of God afordeth vs strong consolation vpon the which the ancre of our soules that is the hope which is set before vs may bee sure and steadfast in heauen against all the stormes and tempests which we shall meete withall while we sayle as it were in the discomfortable and dangerous Sea of this wicked troublesome world Read also Mat 16.18 The gates of hell shall not ouercome the Church There be likewise many comfortable testimonies in the holy Prophets As Psal 46.5 c. God is in the midest of it therfore shall it not be moued And Ps 125 1. They that trust in the Lord shall be as mount Sion c. Isai 54.17 All the weapons that are made against thee shal not prosper c Ioel 2 32. In mount Sion and in Ierusalem shal be deliuerance And chap 3 20. Likewise Obad verse 17. And Micah 7.20 God will performe his truth to Iaakob and mercie to Abraham c. But to the end we may haue our part in this so singular a comfort How may we be assured Question that wee are in the number of the elect of God and consequently true members of the holy catholike Church of God Hereby may we knowe that we are the elect of God Answer if so be we haue receiued his Spirit of adoption and sanctification Explicatiō proofe We may doe so indeede For so saith the Apostle Iohn 1 Ep ch 4 13. Hereby we knowe that we dwell in God and God in vs because hee hath giuen vs of his Spirit The which Spirit also as wee haue seene before is as the earnest or seale of our election to salution And therefore it beareth the name of the Spirit of adoption c. Question But that we faile not nor be deceiued in this our comfort how may we know that God hath giuen vs of his Spirit and that wee are sealed thereby vnto redemption and saluation Answer We may know it certainly by the inward effects which the holy Spirit of God worketh in vs and by the outward effects of holines which the same Spirit inableth vs to performe and causeth our Spirits to take delight and pleasure therein from a pure heart with a good conscience and through faith vnfeined Explicatiō proofe You answer truly and well For so doth the Apostle Iohn mentioned euen now teach vs 1 Ep ch 2 v. 3. Hereby we are sure that we knowe him if we keepe his commandements And ch 3 23.24 This is his commandement that we beleeue in the name of his Sonne Iesus Christ and loue one another as he gaue commandement For he that keepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him hereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the Spirit which he hath giuen vs. Now this Spirit leadeth vs into the obedience of Gods commandements whereby also it is discerned to be in vs. Prouided alwaies that our obedience be as was answered out of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith vnfained According to that of the Apostle Paul 1 Tim 1 5. Moreouer the fruits of the Spirit whereby his abiding in vs may be assured vnto vs are in many particulars reckoned vp by the Apostle Paule Gal 5 22 23 And Eph 5. v. 9 in many other places Wherein if we take delight with care to practise them in our liues we may assure our selues that God hath giuen vs his Spirit And namely The Duties if we shall be carefull to acquaint our selues with prayer and supplication to God for the increase of these his good gifts and graces For this is a speciall propertie of the Spirit of adoption and sanctification as the same Apostle teacheth vs Rom 8 15. Whereby and by the other fruites of sanctification before mentioned the Apostle doth in the same place verses 14 and 16.17 assure vs that we are such as belong to God and to whom the inheritance of the kingdome of God doth belong For saith he as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sonnes of God For ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but yee haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God If wee be children we are also heires euen heires annexed with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that ●ee may also be glorified with him And marke this well that among many other things the holy Apostle sheweth vs that our willing suffering with Christ that is while wee walke in the holy waies of God is a sure token that wee are in the number of the elect children of God For as he saith further verse 29. of the same chapter Those whom God knewe before he also predestinated to be made like to the image of his Sonne to wit euen in the induring of afflictions c. And to the same purpose of comforting and incouraging of all such that they are the vndoubted children of God tendeth all that which followeth euen to the end of that most comfortable chapter Whervnto also the testimonie of the Apostle Peter serueth notably in the first chapter of his 2. Epistle verses 5 6 7 8.9 10 11. Therefore giue all diligence therevnto ioyne moreouer vertue with your faith and with vertue knowledge And with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlines and with godlines brotherly kindnes and with brotherly kindnes loue c. For as the Apostle saith hereby we shall make our calling and election sure And he assureth vs in the name of the Lord that if we doe these things we shall neuer fall but that an enterance shall bee ministred vnto vs aboundantly into the euerlasting kingdome of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Read also Ps 15. where the Spirit of God by his holy Prophet maketh the same conclusion from a rehearsall of sundrie like vertues in the former part of the Psalme And thus we see that the comfort of faith cōcerning the Article of the holy catholike Church of God is very great and manifold in respect both of the vniuersalitie and holines of it and chiefly in regard of the holy election of God Hetherto therefore of the vse of the doctrine of this Article for the comfort of faith WE are now to inquire likewise after the vse of it touching the fruites of obedience and that in the same order wherein we haue inquired of the Comforts Question First therefore what is the dutie belonging to the comfort of faith concerning the vniuersalitie of the Church Answer Insomuch as there is but one Church of God and that without it here
receiue saith our Sauiour Christ c. Nowe this wee knowe is a speciall petition which wee are to aske of God that it would please him to increase our Faith as wee haue the example of the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ Thus much for the explanation and proofe of this answere NExt to this it is not as I suppose amisse that you shew after what manner I meane in what course and order the holie Ghost doth work this worke of our regeneration and newe birth with the increases thereof in the seuerall parts or branches of it so farre as for the present wee can discerne Question What is the order of this his working Answere First hee sheweth euery one of the Elect children of God his owne ignorant sinnefull and damnable estate yea hee subdueth their soules to an acknowledgement of the iust deserued damnation which is due thervnto and accordinglie to feare and tremble at the curse of the Lawe Secondly hee inlighteneth the minde to see the Saluation of God with hope to bee a partaker thereof Thirdlie hee stirreth vp the affection of the heart to a longing desire after it and therewithall to mourne for sinne which might iustly separate betwixt vs and it Yet so as hee causeth the heart to long with patience in waiting for the comfort and assurance of attaining vnto it Fourthlie he powreth into the soule and conscience a feeling and ioyous tast of Gods loue and of his gratious readinesse to shew mercie yea hee giueth such a certificat of their particular Adoption to bee the children of God that they reioyce more therein then if they had wonne the whole world Finallie the holy Ghost doth not cease to stirre vp euerie true beleeuer to an earnest care and indeuour of daylie profiting by all holy meanes both in Knowledge and Faith and also in Repentance and obedience of the Gospell comforting and strengthening them also against all such lettes and discouragementes as they doe meete withall For the first of these read Iohn ch 16.9.10.11.12 The holie Ghost as our Sauiour Christ hath taught vs reprooueth the world of Sinne and of Righteousnesse and of Iudgment Of sinne saith our Sauiour because they beleeue not in mee c. Wherby it is euident that not to beleeue in Christ is a very great and a grieuous sinne For the second read Ephes 1.17.18 where the holie Ghost is called the Spirit of wisedome and Reuelation inlightening the eyes of our vnderstanding to know the hope of the calling of God c. Read also 1. Cor 2.9.10 The things which the eye hath not seene c. God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit For the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God And for the comfort of Hope see Rom 8.24 Wee are saued by Hope Thirdly for that desire and longing after Saluation which the holy Ghost worketh read in the same chapt the 23. verse and also verses 26.27 Wee which haue the first fruits of the Spirit doe euen sigh in our selues waiting for the Adoption euen the redemption of our bodies Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for wee knowe not what to pray as wee ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed c. And the children of God are noted by this property that they loue the saluation of God Psal 40.16 And which is in effect all one they are said to be such as loue the appearing of the Lord. 2. Tim. 4.8 And therefore they pray Come Lord Iesu come quickly Reuel 22 20. And Psal 119.41 Let thy louing kindnes come vnto me ó Lord and thy saluation according to thy promise Neuerthelesse they wayte with patience according to that of the Patriarke Iaacob Gen 49.18 O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation And as Simeon vppon whom was the holy Ghost as the Euangelist testifieth waited for the consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 And as we read Rom 8.25 If we hope for that we see not we doe with patience abide for it According also to that in the 123. Psal Behold as the eyes of seruants looke to the hand of their Maisters and as the eyes of a maiden to the hand of her Mistres so our eyes waite vpon the Lord our God vntill he haue mercie vpon vs. And that the holy Ghost causeth the children of God to mourne for their sinnes it hath beene shewed before in which respect they are said to be such as mourne in Sion Isai 61.3 The which mourning also ministreth hope of Gods mercy Lamen chap 5.19.20.21 Ezek chap. 9. For the proofe of the fourth branch read Rom 5.5 The loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. And chap 8.15.16 Ye haue receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby wee crie Abba Father The same Spirit beareth witnesse with our Spirit that wee are the children of God Herein as the Apostle Peter teacheth wee haue cause to reioice with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Ep 1.8 And in comparison heereof all is but dung as the Apostle Paul truly estimateth Phil 3.8 Finally touching the care of further profitting both in knowledge faith and repentance which the holy Ghost worketh it may be proued from that wee read Philip 1.7 God will performe the good worke which hee hath begun And the prayer of the same Apostle warranteth the same 2. Thessa 1.11 God will fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnes and the worke of faith with power Hee will leade from knowledge to knowledge from faith to faith and from glory to glory according to the image of God Rom 1.17 2. Corinth 3.18 Read also Prouerb 4.18 The way of the righteous shineth as the light which shineth more and more vnto the perfit day And for proceeding in knowledge consider of that 2. Cor 5.16 Henceforth know wee no man after the flesh yea though we had knowne Christ after the flesh that is not so purely as we ought looking too much to his abasement c. Yet henceforth know we him so no more A figuratiue concession like to that 1. Corinth 4. ● Consider also of the similitude which the same Apostle vseth in the 13. chap of the same Epistle verse 11. When I was a childe I spake as a childe I vnderstoode as a childe I thought as a childe but when I became a man I put away childish things So it is in the spirituall age as it were of Christ not onely in comparison of our estate heere with that it shall be in the Kingdome of glory but also in respect of that differing measure of grace heere in the Kingdome of grace which now wee speake of For as in the worke of nature all the parts and powers are not perfect at once but they growe in the wombe first Ecclesiast 11.5 and after by the milke of the mothers breast c so is it in the worke of grace Wee are borne of the Spirit wee must growe vp still by the
And then the Euangelist Philip baptized him The same was the ordinarie manner of the Ministers of the Gospell in the primitiue Church to require a particular profession of the faith of such as were from time to time conuerted from Paganisme and admitted to be Baptized for members of the Church of Christ Yea it was the verie cause why this forme of profession was collected and set downe in this particular manner Touching the second pointe reade 1. Pet. 3.15.16 Be yee readie alwaies to giue an answere to euerie man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you And that with meekenes and reuerence hauing a good conscience c. And Reuelat Chapt 2.17 Where the assurance of euerlasting life and the care of newnes and godlines of life here either of them springing from faith they are fitlie compared to the Manna that is hidden and to a white Stone wherein a newe N●me is written which no man knoweth sauing hee that receiueth it Wee may indeed yea wee ought charitablie and that with good hope and trust tow●rd God conceiue of su●h as are fruitfull in good workes that they are the true elect of God speciallie if they are in speciall manner fruitfull as the Apostle Paul was verie well perswaded of the Thessalonians 1. Epi 1.3.4 2. Ep● 1.3.4 And of the Philipp chapt 1.6.7 But the certaine yea the onely vndoubted certaintie is principallie to be found of euery man in the perswasion of his owne heart confirmed vnto him by the testimonie of the Spirite of G●d Thirdly that euery man liueth by his owne faith and not by the faith of an other Reade Hab Chapt 2.4 The iust shall liue by his Faith Yea by that faith whereby hee is assured that Christ liueth in him according to th●t of the Apostle Paul Galat 2.20 I liue saith hee yet not I nowe but CHRIST liueth in mee and in that I nowe liue in the fleshe I liue by Faith in the Sonne of GOD who hath loued mee and giuen himselfe for mee And Rom 8 3● ●● 39 Hee teacheth that euery Christian ought to bee so perswaded that hee may comfort himselfe that neither death nor life nor any thing else s●all bee able to separate him from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lorde For the last pointe reade 1. Cor 11.28 and 2. Cor 13.5 Prooue your selues whether you are in the faith examine your selues knowe yee not your owne selues how that Iesus Christ is in you except yee be reprobates That is no better then such as for the present haue no grounde to thinke better of themselues then of such as bee counterfetted Christians and no true members of Christ c. So then by all these reasons it is manifest that the articles of our faith and the faith and beleefe of them doth belong to euery true Christian that none may put them off from himselfe as that the common sort of Christians should say these thinges containe such high mysteries that they belong onely to learned men or that any of the learned should say these are so cōmon matters that they are rather for children then for vs. No no they are both for children which be of yeeres of discretion and for growne men too they are for the learned to studie a more exact and full knowledge of them and also for the most simple Christian to labour to vnderstand and beleeue them in some measure whosoeuer doe minde vnfainedly the way of their eternall saluation It is not enough for any to say I beleeue as the Church beleeueth vnlesse he do know that the Church beleeueth as it ought to do Nay rather it is the duty of euery Christian to seeke after such a measure of knowledge that he may be able to discerne betwixt the true Church of Christ and euerie false or Antichristian Church betwixt the true faith of the one and the erroneous faith of the other c. according to that we reade 1. Iohn 4.1 Dearely beloued saith the Apostle beleeue not euery Spirit but try the Spirits whether they are of God c. And Math 7 15. Beware saith our Sauiour Christ of false Prophets that is of such as teach false doctrine c. Otherwise wee shall indanger our selues to the wrath of God and to be partakers of those plagues which GOD will cast vpon them Reuelation chapter 14.9 10.11 12. Let euery true Christian therefore not onely say I beleeue but let vs euerie one be carefull to vnderstand and beleeue those high mysteries which we doe commonly professe euery day better then other For this wee may be sure of that none can beleeue them in any measure but such as doe vnderstand them in some measure Question But that wee stay not too long in one thing Why doth euerie one of vs say I beleeue in God and doe not content our selues to say I beleeue God Answere In the vse of our language when wee say I beleeue in God it is a more significant phrase of speach to expresse that particular apprehension and application of Gods mercie and goodnes as belonging particularly to euery one then if euery one should onely say I beleeue God Explicatiō proofe It is so in deede For a man may be saide to beleeue God to wit that hee is true though hee be interressed in no part of the benefit of the iustification and saluation of God And besides this phrase of speech is very fit and commodious to put a difference betwixt our faith toward GOD and that which wee beleeue concerning the Church of GOD. For albeit we doe beleeue that God hath his catholike Church consisting of Iewes and Gentiles that thereis a communion of Saints c yet we may not say without great caution that wee beleeue in the Church no not in the true Church of God It sufficeth that wee beleeue that God hath his catholike and inuisible Church in the which there is certainely a sweete communion of Saints and that to the true members thereof forgiuenes of sinnes belongeth and also the resurrection of the bodie and euerlasting life though wee doe not beleeue in it The most that wee may beleeue concerning the true Church of God is that it is a faithfull witnesse of Gods holy truth to vphold it against all Infidels and Athiests that denie it and against all heretikes which seeke to depraue it to the end it may remaine inuiolable to the posteritie and ages to come according to that of the Apostle Paul 1 Timoth. 3 15. The house of God which is the Church of God it is the pillar and ground of truth But of this more afterward There is a like good vse also of the difference which learned Interpreters put betwixt the diuerse phrases of the Latine speach * To beleeue that God is 2 To giue some credi● to God as true 3 To repose su●e trust in God as most gratious and mercifull to a ma●s selfe truly beleeuing in him
Credere Deum sc esse Credere Deo and Credere in Deum For as touching the former two the wicked may doe them the last onelie is proper to the children of God And although in the holy Scriptures as they are written in the Hebrewe and Greeke languages there is not so exact a difference put betweene these kinde of phrases yet they must be diuerslie vnderstoode and interpreted according as they are referred either to GOD or to man For although the preposition Beth in the Hebrewe be ioyned with the word of beleeuing when it is referred to men as well as to GOD as wee finde it Exodus 14.31 and 2. Chronicles chap. 20 verse 20. As though wee should in our language reade it thus Beleeue ye in the Lord and in his Prophets yet of necessitie must wee vse a differing interpretation because GOD onely is simply and for himselfe to be beleeued in but no creature no not the holy Prophets are to be beleeued but for the Lords sake and according to the Lord as they are faithfull witnesses of his vndoubted truth And againe although sometime the Preposition Beth which is in the Hebrewe as Genesis 15.6 is left out in the Greeke allegation as Romanes 4 3. yet wee are to vnderstand Paul as well as Moses to speake of one and the same true and vndoubted iustifying faith For both of them speake of one and the same faith of Abraham who most faithfully and firmely beleeued in God The same is to bee saide of diuers other places of the newe Testament that the word of beleeuing vsed without a preposition as Acts 27.25 and 2. Timothie 1.12 Acts 8.37 Romans 10 9. doth note the true Christian faith as well as where the preposition is added as Iohn 6.29 and 1. Ep 5.10 Rom. 4.5 and 1 Tim 1.16 Finally sometimes though the preposition be added as Iohn 2.23 and chapters 12 42 yet the word of beleeuing so vsed doth not note a true and vndoubted faith in some of those that are saide to beleeue in Christ But of this enough though not vnprofitable as I trust Hetherto of the meaning of this article of our faith I beleeue in God NOwe let vs come to the fourth point of our inquirie touching the same Question What are the comfortable fruites and benefites which belong to that gratious promise which GOD of his mercie hath made to all and euerie one of those that shall beleeue in him that hee will assuredly bee their God Answer To speake generally It is our whole blessednes and our onely true glorie and reioycing that wee haue the onely true GOD for our GOD. For our safetie and whole welfare vnder his protection and gouernment in the way of his true worship and seruice yea euen in the manifolde afflictions and trials of this life it is infinitely to be preferred aboue all worldly riches honour and pleasure whatsoeuer might be enioyed vnder the most flourishing gouernment and defence of the richest mightiest and bountifullest Monarch of the whole world Explicatiō and proofe It is verily so according as the Lord our GOD is of infinite wisedome and power and of vnmeasurable riches and mercie c. aboue all the Potentates and Rulers in the whole world For the proofe whereof wee shall not reade in vaine Psalm 33 12. and Psalme 89.15.16 c. and 144.15 and 146 5. Wee may see the confirmation heereof further if wee reade Psalme 84.4 5 9 10 11 12. and Psal 141.4.5 And seeing as hath beene alreadie shewed GOD is all onely goodnes perfectly good and the alone fountaine thereof it must needes bee that it is the onely happinesse and as wee may say the summum bonum the perfect blisse of the whole Church and of euerie member thereof to haue God to bee their God and to participate of that goodnes The Comforts and benefits which is infinite in him Reade Genesis 17.7 8. I will establish my couenant saith the Lord to Abraham betweene mee and thee and thy seede after thee in their generations for an euerlasting couenant to bee GOD vnto thee and to thy seede after thee c. It is the couenant of all mercie not onely concerning the blessings of this life but also concerning the happinesse of the life to come as our Sauiour Christ interpreteth it Matthew 22.31.32 Luke 20.35.36.36.37.38 Reade also Ezek. 36 26.27.28 c. 37 38. And Hebr 8 10. And chap. 11.13 14 15 16. Verily there is no doubt but if wee doe truly beleeue in our onely true God wee may assuredly perswade our selues that according to his manifold and most gratious promises hee will vse his diuine wisedome power mercie iustice faithfulnes and truth to our vnspeakeable benefit aboue all that wee can aske or thinke For what comfort and securitie can be greater nay what can be equall to this to haue the most gratious promises of him who is most faithfull made vnto vs Psal 36.5 and 89.2 and 146.5.6 To haue the most readie aide of him that is the strongest Rom. 8.31 To bee guided by the counsell of him that is the wisest Psal 16 7. and 73.24 Who knoweth how to deliuer those that be his out of their greatest perils dangers 2. Pet. 2 9. in so much as to him belong the issues of death Psal 68.20 and 1. Cor 13 13. Finally what comfort can be like to the comfort of a great offender such as wee are all before God to stand at the mercie of him that is most pittifull and mercifull to all such as attend vpon his mercie and craue it of him Psal 86.15 and 147.11 Micah 7 18. c. in so much as it shall neuer be in vaine to call vpon him Psal 17 6 7 8. Behold therefore how all things are in all perfection in the diuine nature of God whatsoeuer may be required to the grounding and establishing of vndoubting beliefe in him If hee did onely perfectly knowe how to doe vs good and were not able to performe it Or if beeing wise and able hee were not willing Or beeing both wise and able and willing if hee were not faithfull and constant to confirme and establish his goodnes toward vs there might be some occasion of doubting But seeing the Lord our God is both perfectly wise and sufficiently able and readily willing and constantly bent to doe vs good yea to make vs for euer partakers of all his mercie and goodnes there is no place left why wee should bee in any the least doubt thereof These comfortable fruites and prerogatiues of faith haue heeretofore caused the Church of GOD to place all faith and trust onely in GOD and so ought they to doe still Yea notwithstanding wee should haue at anie time if so it were possible as valiant and mightie Captaines and Rulers and as tender and vigilant Foster-fathers vnto vs as Moses Ioshua Dauid and other were to them yet must our faith and trust bee fixed onely in the liuing GOD who alone maketh all meanes of
the Sonnes sake according as the holie Ghost both from the Father and the Sonne beareth a most effectuall witnesse to our soules and spirites And this is vnto vs as the face of God most comfortablie shining vpon vs. To this ende also let vs diligently obserue that God is not called a Father only in way of comparison to signifie his loue toward vs as tender and deare as the loue of a naturall Father here on earth toward his naturall childe But hee is a heauenlie Father in respect of his eternall Sonne most naturallie and in all perfection of truth And accordingly the Sonne of God is the naturall and onely Sonne of the Father And the holy Ghost likewise is naturallie and in all perfection of truth and substance the Spirit of them both farre aboue and beyond all that wee or any Angell of heauen can throughlie conceiue So then whatsoeuer similitude wee doe alledge one way or other to expresse this singular and pierelesse Mysterie wee must of necessitie acknowledge that there is in the things themselues an infinite dissimilitude also so that the similitude can but onely in some respecte shadowe out that which the holie Ghost alone must cause vs to vnderstand so farre as it is meet for vs to vnderstand euen farre aboue that which any similitude of it selfe can teach vs. If wee might beholde in any outward representation the nature of God whether should we rather cast our eyes then vpon the sweet face of the Sonne of God INCARNATE in whom GOD hath reuealed his glorie as it were with open face as wee read 2. Cor 3.18 And yet as experience hath shewed the naturall face or outward Person of our Sauiour Christ if we may so speake could not suffice to the manifesting heereof no not to those who were daylie conuersant with him For manie looked vpon him bodilie while hee was here on earth who by that outward viewe knewe God neuer the more spirituallie It was his holie Doctrine and his most gratious and Diuine workes and his excellent vertues which caused the face glorie of God to shine forth from him vnto those onelie who had the eyes of their mindes opened so to behold him And this was that which mooued the Apostle Paul to say Hence forth know wee no man after the fleshe yea though wee had knowen Christ after the flesh yet now hence forth know we him no more And much rather would the Apostle refuse to knowe Christ and the holie Trinitie by anie bodilie and deade pictures or images of them by Crucifixe or any other way And as for similitudes borowed from any spirituall thing the soule of man made in the image of God may seeme of all other things that wee haue occasion to be best acquainted withall to be most like in that it beeing a spirituall substance is onely one though it haue diuerse distinct properties vnderstanding and reason memorie will and affection yet how infinite oddes there is it is easie to vnderstand For the soule of man though it be spirituall and immortall yet it is a created substance And the qualities thereof are created qualities in the soule and not the soule it selfe either anie one or all of them together What then Wee must of necessitie content our selues and our soules so to knowe both the nature of God and the Persons of the Godhead perfitlie distinct in the same that wee may as the truth it selfe requireth acknowledge that in the full perfection of it the Diuine nature is infinitelie aboue the weake capacitie or vnderstanding eyther of vs or of anie other creature Wherefore wee most humblie and thankfullie acknowledging the vnspeakable mercie of God for that measure of the reuelation of this most high incōprehensible Mysterie which it hath pleased him to reueale vnto vs in his holie Scriptures and holding our selues fast and Religiouslie to them Let vs in like humble manner beseeche our most good and gratious God to vouchsafe to giue vs of his grace that wee soberlie captiuating all similitudes yea and reason it selfe to the obedience of Faith whose nature is to beleeue that which is aboue all naturall sense and reason whatsoeuer hath witnesse and warrant from the word of God let vs I say as on the one hand cast away all ignorance and neglect of due search after the due knowledge hereof so on the other hande let vs in like manner beware of all presumptuous and vaine curiositie lest preassing too farre wee be confounded and ouerwhelmed of the brightnesse and glorie of it For like as our bodilie eyes are not able to looke directlie vpon the seate or as it were centre of brightnesse which is in the Sunne no more nay much lesse are wee able with the eyes of our mindes to behold the infinite brightnesse and most glorious Maiestie of the Lorde God the Father of all Light as hee is in himselfe whether wee looke to the vnitie of his Diuine nature or to the distinction of the Persons in the same According as it is said No man can so see God and liue Exod● 33.20 1. Timoth 6.16 Read also Genes 16.23 Trem interpret And Iudges chap 13.22 where it is recorded that the Parents of Samson were afraide they should die as if they had seene God aboue that had bene meete for sinfull creatures to see him God who set bownds for the people which they might not passe toward the mountaine at the giuing of the law Exod 19.12.13 Neither would haue the arke of the Testimonie commonlie looked vpon vncouered Numb 4. verse 5. c. 20. and 1. Sam 6.19 The same our God no doubt cannot like that anie should vnreuerendlie prye into this most holie secreat concerning his owne Maiestie and Diuine nature with a minde to see further into it then it hath pleased himselfe to reueale the same Wee may most iustlie saye of this knowledge of the Diuine nature of God and of the manner or order of the Beeing thereof as touching the Existence of them internallie or ad intra as the learned speake to witte how the Father is of himselfe and of no other eternally without all beginng the Sonne eternallie begotten of the Father before all time and the holie Ghost proceeding from them both and yet neuerthelesse beeing alwaies Essentiallie present in and with them both wee may I say iustlie determine of this knowledge according to that wee read Psal 139.6 It is too wonderfull for vs it is so high that wee cannot attaine vnto it Wee knowe not the way of the winde or as some translate of the Spirit to witte how it commeth into man nor howe the bones doe growe in the wombe of her that is with childe Eccles 11.5 nor how the soule of man dead through sinne is againe regenerated and renewed within him Iohn 3.7 much lesse can wee vnderstand what the eternall generation of the Sonne of God or the eternall proceeding of the holy Ghost do meane Neuerthelesse as touching the manner of the working
three men of Israel there mentioned who professed that they would not worship King Nebuchadnezzars Idoll though God should not see it meete for them or for his owne glorie to deliuer them Finallie for the proofe of the last branch Reade Rom. 8.31 For seeing the Almightie God is our Father wee may boldely comforte our selues with the words of the Apostle there saying If God be on our side who can be against vs And so forth as it followeth in a most comfortable triumph of Faith described to the end of the chapter Read also Hebr 6 17 18 19 20. Where the Apostle teacheth vs that the promise and oath of God beeing both of them immutable do minister vnto vs strong cōsolation a most sure refuge to hold fast the hope that is set before vs. Read also 1. Pet 1.5 Wee are kept by the power of God through faith vnto saluation Herevnto also belongeth the comfort of the resurrection of our bodies and of the renewing of all the creatures to a farre more excellent state and condition then they were created in at the first For all these are effects of the almightie power of God For by the same power wherwith God made the worlde and after destroyed it by water and restored it againe and shall at the last day destroye it yet againe with fire by the same power I say shal he restore it at the last of all and set all things in a more comfortable estate then at anie time before According to that which wee read Rom 8 19 20. and 1. Corinth 6.14 and 2. Thessalon 1 9 10 11 12. And as wee read further 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12 13. and Reuelat chap 21.1 c. These are the comforts and we cannot but to the glorie of God acknowledge that they are verie gratious and great Question NOwe which are the duties which the faith of these so great comforts ought to yeelde in obedience to God in regarde of the same his almightie and most gratious and Fatherlie power extended towardes vs Answere First it is the dutie of a true and liuely faith in the allmightie power of God our heauenlie Father to acknowledge and ascribe all power to God as belonging onely to him and according●ie to giue the whole praise and glorie therof to his Name alone Secondly it is our duty to praye vnto God that he would to the further glorie of his name make his power more more manifest in toward his whole church euery one of vs his weak and fraile children specially that power which he hath made knowne by his Gospell through his Sonne our Lorde Ie us Christ to the crucifying of sinne and to the quickening of vs to newenesse of life with mightie increases against all naturall strength of corruption and against the supernaturall power of the Diuell Thirdly it is our duetie beleeuing in the almighty power of God so to tremble at his iudgements that wee doe make his feare as a bridle to holde vs backe from sinne Fourthlie it is our dutie from the same comfort of Faith to animate and incourage our selues and one to incourage and imbolden another against our owne timorousnes or distrustfulnes and against euerie terrour whereby eyther the Diuell or any of his instruments would goe about to discourage and dismay vs from doing of our duties in our seuerall places and callings Finallie it is our dutie in all things yea euen in the dooing ef our best duties eyther to God or man to humble our selues vnder the mightie hand of God Explication and proofe That these are dueties belonging to the comfort of faith in the Almightie power of God First Reade Psalm 62.11 God hath spoken once yea twise that is often haue I heard the same that power belongeth to God And Rom 13.1 Ther is no power but of God Read also Iohn 19.11 It followeth therfore according to that wee read Psalm 68.34 that wee are to ascribe All power to God for his Maiestie is vppon Israel and his strength in the clowdes O God saith the Psalmist in the next verse thou art terrible out of thy holy places The God of Israel is hee that giueth strength and power vnto the people praised bee God See the practise 1. Chronicles 29.10.11.12.13 c. and Psalme 44.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8 Reade also Psalme 21.13 Bee thou exalted O Lord in thy strength so will wee sing and praise thy power And Psalme 28.7.8 The Lord is my strength and my shield my heart trusted in him and I was helped therefore mine heart shall reioice and with my song will I praise him The Lord is their strength and he is the strength of the deliuerances of his Anointed And then in the same place the last verse of the Psalme there followeth a prayer according to the second branch of your answere Saue thy people and blesse thine inheritance feede them also and exalt them for euer Reade also the next Psalme which celebrateth the power of God c. But more neare to the purpose of this second point lay the Answere of GOD to the prayer of the Apostle Paul 2. Corinthians 12.8.9 My grace saith the Lord to Paul is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weakenes Most of all consider to this purpose the earnest and as hee professeth the often prayer of the same Apostle for the Ephesians chap. 1. of that Epistle verses 16. c 19.20 c. For the third point reade Hebrues 10.30.31 Wee knowe him that hath saide Vengeance belongeth to mee and I will recompence saith the Lord. And againe The Lord will iudge his people It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God And 1. Corinthians 10.21 Doe wee prouoke the Lord to anger Are wee stronger then he And Psalme 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thy wrath For according to thy feare is thine anger That is No man can feare more then there is iust cause The anger of the mightie God scareth vs not in vaine Worthily therefore saith the Prophet Ier. chap. 10.6.7 In so much as there is none like vnto thee O Lord seeing thou art great and thy name is great in power who would not feare thee O King of Nations for to thee appertained the dominion or power c. For the fourth point concerning incouragement to well doing against all distrust and against euerie timorous and seruile feare c. Reade Matthew 10.18 c. Feare ye not them which kill the bodie but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in Hell In which wordes our Sauiour Christ incourageth his M●nisters to preach the Gospell boldly without feare of any man Reade also 2. Corinthians 5.11 and Ieremie chap. 1.17 Trusse vp thy loynes saith the Lord to his Prophet and arise and speake vnto them all that I command thee Bee not afraide of their faces lest I destroy thee before them But not onely the Ministers of the word but also euery faithfull seruant of
nation yea but of one kind in one litle countrey yea but as they are now in the decayed withering estate of the world who is able and who hath the wisedome throughly to obserue the wonder of Gods creation in these things And finally who duelie considering the power and goodnes of God in this part of his creation can otherwise choose but he must needs acknowledge it to be an easie thing with the Lord to turne the greatest dearth that can be into the greatest plentie c were it not that our sinnes doe as it were strengthen Gods iustice to the weakening of his mercie towards vs although in it selfe ther is no weakenes Read Psal 107.33.34.35 Mal chapt 3.10 WHerfore setting it downe with our selues to indeuor more and more to ponder the goodnes of God in this third fruitefull dayes worke of the Lord Let vs proceede to the consideration of the fourth day the which was that which wee call the Wedensday Question In what wordes doth the Prophet Moses commende the workes thereof vnto vs Answere It foloweth from the beginning of the 14. verse to the end of the 19. In these words 14 Afterward God said Let there be lights in the Firmament of the heauen to wit aboue the clowdes to seperate the daye from the night and let them bee for signes both for the seasons to wit of the yeare and also for dayes and yeares themselues 15 Yea let them be for lights in the firmament of the heauen to giue light vpon the earth and it was so 16 Thus as Moses saith God made two great lights the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night and he made also the Starres 17 And God set them in the firmament of the heauen to shine vpon the earth 18 And to rule the Day and the Night and to seperate betwixte the Light and the Darkenes and God saw that it was good 19 So the euening and the morning were the fourth day Explication and proo●e The fourth dayes worke is likewise a gratious and glorious work of God For notwithstanding God had shewed before that hee stood in neede of no instruments to giue light and to make the distinction betwixt the day and the night for he had done this alreadie before ther was any Sunne or Moone or any one Starre yet for the beautifying of his work and for a further help and comfort to man for such singular good vses as Moses rehearseth both naturall and ciuill to wit that they might be as it were a generall clocke or dyall of time to determine the yeares and passages thereof and euery season of the yeare Sommer and Winter seede time and haruest yea and the dayes and nights of the yeare eyther shorter or longer as the Sunne should come nearer or goe further from the Equinoctiall point c and for the historicall memoriall of things in respect both of ciuill pollicie and also of Religion therefore it pleased the Lord to create thi● his excellent creature of the Sunne The like vse is of the Moone for the nights of the moneths The Starres also are both for singular ornament and for light in the night and for assistance to that gouernmen● which God hath honoured the Sunne and the Moone withall Read Iob chap 9 verse 9. God maketh the Starres Arcturus Orion and Pleiades and those also of the Climate of the South And chapt 38. verses 31.32.33 Canst thou restraine the pleasures of the Pleiades that is the pleasant spring which cometh with them Or canst thou loosen the bandes of Orion a starre which vseth to come with colde and tempest Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in their time that is the starres of the South Canst thou guide Ar●turus with his sonnes that is the Northerne starres Knowest thou the course of the heauens c And Amos chapt 5. verse 8. God maketh Ple●ades and Orion that is hee o●dereth them acccording as at the first hee made them and appointed them their courses And Psalme 147.4 God alone counteth the number of the starres and calleth them all by their names They are vnto vs innumerable Genes 15. ● God hath placed them all in their seates and hee continueth them as his seruants therein according to the most holie and Diuine pleasure of his owne will Psalm 119. verses 89.90.91 The Sunne and the Moone are iustly called the greater lights because they are so vnto vs both to sight and also to vse And therfore let Astronomers curiouslie dispute of the greatnes of any starre aboue these wee will rest in this holie Philosophie which Moses teacheth vs as most fit both to expresse vnto vs the great goodnes and mercie of God and also to stirre vs vp to be thankfull vnto him for the same Thus then this fourth dayes worke is very glorious and therefore iustly is the Lord to be glorified and praised of vs therin according to the profession and practise of the Church of God Psalme 8.3.4 and Psalm 19.1.2 3.4.5.6 LEt vs nowe proceede to the workes of the fifte daye as the Lord created them Question Which are they Answere The Prophet Moses sheweth which they were from the beginning of the 20. verse to the ende of the 23. as it followeth in our Text thus 20 Afterward God said Let the waters bring forth in aboundance euery creeping thing that hath life or as we may reade euery liuing creature that creepeth and let the fowles flie aboue the earth toward the face of the firmament of heauen To wit that parte of the firmament of heauen which is vnder the clowdes next to vs. 21 Thus saith Moses God created the great Whales all liuing creatures that creepe Heb Fowles that haue wings the which the waters brought forth in aboundance according to their kindes and all feathered fowles according to their kindes and God saw that it was good 22 And God blessed them saying Bring forth fruite and multiplie and fill yea the waters in the Seas and let the fowles multiplie in the earth 23 So the euening and the morning were the fifte day Explicatiō proofe This fifte daye was that which according to the custome among vs is called Thursday In it as the Prophet Moses by the Spirit of God reporteth were twoo verie mightie and gratious workes of Gods Creation perfected The first was the creation of the Fishes of the Sea in their great and vnknowen varietie from the huge Whale to the little minnome that is from the greatest to the least of them in their seuerall kindes Of the which it is thus written to the celebration of the gift of God in this respect Psalm 104.24.25.26 O Lord howe manifold are thy workes in wisedome hast thou made them all the earth is full of thy riches or as the Hebrew worde Quinianécha signifieth of that which is thy possession So is the Sea great and wine for therein are thinges creeping innumerable both small beasts and great There goe the Shippes yea
and of all their qualities and operations whatsoeuer to their proper vses and endes euen as his creating of them was the execution of his purpose and decree to giue them their seuerall qualities natures and beeings themselues So then wee must vnderstand the Prouidence of God to bee as large as his creation that is to say that it doth vniuersally extend it selfe to the continuall ruling ordering and gouerning of euery creature which hee hath once made and that euen by the same almightie power wisedome iustice and mercie by the which hee at the first made them As Nehem. cha 9. ver 6. Thou Lord preseruest them all But that wee may vnderstand the better what is meant by the Prouidence of God there are certaine thinges to bee inquired into for the more full opening of that which you haue already answered And first concerning the word Prouidence wee are to inquire how it may be saide to containe all that you haue set downe in your answere for the description of it in so much as in the literall or strict signification of it as a man may saye Prouidence is no more then a fore-seeing of thinges to come Question First of all therefore what is to be said to this Answere The fore-seeing of God is no idle or impotent and weake fore-sight but as it is essentiallie ioyned with preordination and fore appointment and decree so it cannot be but it must needes take due effect with euery ordinance and decree thereof in the proper times and seasons of the same Explicatiō proofe It is very true And therefore it is that in the holy Scriptures Prognosis Pronoia ioined with Proorismos the fore-appointment or predestination of God is ioyned most nearely with his fore-knowledge or fore-sight as Acts 2.23 deliuered by the determinate counsell and fore-knowledge and prouidence of God And Rom 8 29. Those whom hee knew before hee also predestinated c. And 1 Peter 1.2 Elect according to fore-knowledge And that the effectuall gouernement of God is noted by his fore-sight read Gen 22.14 In the mount the Lord will see or prouide And Psalm 34.15 The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous And Zech. cha 3 9. and cha 4.10 The seuen eyes of the Lord goe throughout the world It is true that the Lord fore-seeth and fore-knoweth more then commeth to passe for he doth of purpose frustrate many counsels and purposes which hee knoweth to bee intended of the wicked so that they cannot take effect But as touching all his owne most holy counsels and purposes for all time to come hee doth so knowe them before hand that according to his foreknowledge hee doth alwaies most certainely guide them to take their full effect so as nothing is able to hinder the same To this purpose read Psalm 94.11 And 1. Corinth 3.20 The Lord knoweth that the thoughts of the wise bee vaine And 2. Kings 19.27.28 I know thy dwelling c. I will put my hooke in thy nostrils c. Reade also Psalme 1.6 The Lord knoweth that is he alloweth blesseth the way of the righteous and the way of the wicked shall perish Likewise Psalm 37.18 Deut. 2.7 and Amos 3.2 Thus we see that the actuall gouernement of God is noted by his seeing or fore-seeing by his knowledge or fore-knowledge of all things the effect being implied by the cause or rule and ground of it Now a second thing to be likewise considered concerning your former description of Gods holy Prouidence is the reason why you make mention of the restraining and correcting of euill things c in so much as wee haue seene in the former doctrine of the Creation that the Lord made all thinges very good Question What therefore is the reason of this Answere Because shortly after the creation a great multitude of the Angels fell away from God and of themselues most wickedlie peruerted themselues Mankinde also both Adam and Eue were verie soone drawne away from God by the wicked suggestion of the Diuel whence hath followed a wonderfull disorder and corruption of all things through the continuall rebellion of the wicked Angels and of all wicked men against the Lord our God This is indeede a sufficient reason of it the ground and proofe whereof we shall see anone In the meane while there is yet a third thing remaining for the further clearing of the former description of the holy Prouidence of God to wit concerning those most holy vses and endes the which God hath in his owne eternall counsell and decree propounded to himselfe in his prouident supporting ruling and gouerning of all his creatures Question Which are they Answere The most holy endes of Gods vniuersall prouidence are the eternall happinesse of all his elect Angels and the like eternall happinesse and saluation of all his elect children from among the rest of the lost posteritie of mankinde And on the contrarie the frustrating of all the wicked and rebellious counsels and enterprises of all the reprobate both Angels and men to their euerlasting confusion and condemnation All to the glorie of God in the declaration both of the bountifulnes of his most free grace and mercie and also of the deserued seueritie of his most holy and perfit iustice Explicatiō and proofe These are in deede the principall endes of the most holy prouidence of God In respect whereof it is saide Prouerb chapter 19.21 Many deuises are in mans heart but the counsell of the Lord shall stand And Psalme 33.10.11 The Lord breaketh the counsell of the heathen and bringeth to nought the deuises of the people The counsell of the Lord shall stand for euer and the thoughts of his heart throughout all ages And Isai chapter 46.9.10 Remember the former thinges of olde for I am God and there is no other God c. My counsell shall stand and I will doe whatsoeuer I will And therefore iustly doth the Lord by the same his holy Prophet in the beginning of the 30. chapter pronounce a woe against them that take counsell but not of him And thus farre also well saith Gamaliel Act 5.38.39 If this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to nought But if it be of God ye cannot destroy it lest ye be found euen fighters against God The like is to be saide concerning all the craftie counsels and enterprises of the Diuel in that hee inciteth the wicked to rebell against the Lord God and practiseth the same himselfe For they shall not preuaile as will further appeare afterward But whereas wee ascribe counsell to the Lord the which is as one may say the maturitie and ripenesse of former thoughts or as it were the choise flower flote or distillation of them wee are to vnderstand this ascription of counsell to GOD as spoken to our capacitie after the manner of men For if we shall consider exactly of the nature of God whose wisedome is infinite and most perfectly present at euery instant and so abideth for
not seldome giue vnto the wicked whose portion is in this life onelie more speedie and also longer continued outward prosperitie then hee doth to his owne children as in this point euen Caine and his posteritie may from the beginning be examples or instances in that they flourished and ruffled in the worlde while Adam and Eue were without posteritie from any other childe and no doubt grieued to behold the wickednes of Caine vnto the hundred and thirtith yeere of their age before God gaue them Sheth to succeede in stead of godly Abell And the same is euident from the examples of Ishmael and Esau who had eyther of them a long starte before Iaakob as touching the wealth and glorie of this present euill world Gen chapt 36.31 And herewithall also for expeditions sake let vs take the same for examples how God giueth this outward prosperitie and aduancement not onely to particular persones in their priuate estate but also to whole publike states and kingdomes though they be wicked and vngodly as it is further euident by the rising of all the chiefest Monarchies of the worlde among the Assyrians Babilonians Medes and Persians and among the Romans Yet so as their falling and dissolution is likewise determined and ordered by the Sacred prouidence of God as well as their rising according as the holy Prophesies giuen forth therof by holie inspiration from God doe plainly euict Of the which read a speciall instance Dan chap 5.25 God hath numbred thy kingdome and hath finished it saith the Prophet to king Belshazzar And generally it is most certainly determined by the Lord that not onely particular persons but also that whole Families States and Kingdoms that will not serue the Lord shall perish at the last through the iust displeasure and iudgement of God when once their day is come and the measure of their sinne is at the full As Prou 2.22 And 3.33 and 14.11 Isai 54.15 c. Ier 25.15 Zech 14.17 c. Psalme 75.4.5.6 c. God manifesteth his prouidence by his iudgements vpon the wicked from day to day in all places as we might see if we would diligently mark them He bringeth secrete sinnes many times to light verie strangelie euen before men and how much more then may wee iustlie perswade our selues that all things are naked and manifest before himselfe Thus the prouidence of God ruleth all the wicked of the earth as touching their persons and outward estate both particularlie and generallie and also priuatelie and publikelie Question But may the same also be truely affirmed concerning their soules wherein is seated the fountaine of their wickednes that they are likewise gouerned by the holie prouidence of the Lord Yea there is no doubt but it may be truly affirmed and accordingly The groūd and meaning of it it ought to be so acknowledged and beleeued of euery true beleeuer Question In what sense may it be truly affirmed and ought also to be beleeued that it is so Answere Whereas the wicked through selfe-loue and pride in themselues and of wilfull malice and despite against others they following therein the suggestion of the diuell doe endeuour by all meanes to abuse that wit and strength which they haue naturally howsoeuer God doth not vsually take away from them their wit and strength neither doth bereaue them of all meanes in such sort that they cannot neither deuise nor practise great and mischieuous enterprises yet by his ouer-reaching wisedome together with his most holie and euer-ruling power he turneth their deepest deuises and mightiest designements whatsoeuer to serue his owne most soueraigne counsell and purpose to the glorie of his owne name and the finall benefit and comfort of his Church and people Explicatiō proofe This is notably to be seene in the violent practise of the Sabeans and Caldeans against Iob if wee compare the first and the last chapters of that booke together Likewise in the subtile practise of the wicked Iewes against our Sauiour Christ according to that Act 2.23 And in the practise of the brethren of Ioseph against him Gene. 37.27 c. For as Ioseph saith vpon comfortable experience chap 45.5 God sent me before ye for your preseruation And chapter 50.21 When yee thought euill against me God disposed it to good c. Reade also Isai chap 10 5 6 7 c. O Ashur the rod of my wrath c. But hee thinketh not so neither doth his heart esteeme it so but he imagineth to destroy and cut off not a few nations c. But when the Lord hath accomplished all his worke vppon Mount Sion and Ierusalem I will visite the fruit of the prowd heart of the King of Ashur and his glorious and prowd lookes And chap. 37. ●8 29. Because thou ragest against me saith the Lord and thy tumult is come vp into mine eares therefore will I put my hooke into thy nostrills and my bridle in thy lippes c. And verses 36 37 38. The Angell of the Lord went out and smote in the Campe of Ashur an hundred fourescore and fiue thousand c. Yea so doth the Lord ouer-rule the counsells purposes and enterprises of the wicked that whereas they in their wilfulnesse say in themselues and of themselues that they will doe this or that euill and mischiefe God also saith in his iustice euen so often as he seeth it meete to permit and leaue them to their owne will that they shall doe it Yea God himselfe doth it by them we meane the action or thing that is done as it is a iust punishment any way eyther vpon themselues or vpon any other by them but not in respect of the euill quality nor according to the euill ends which the wicked propound to themselues in their vngodly enterprises And thus God aboue that which the wicked intend seruing his one holy counsell by them he doth neuerthelesse by that light of nature which is in them and by the rebukes of his owne spirit in such sort conuince their consciences of their wickednesse euen before they doe commit it that they stand iustly condemned in themselues for euery wicked thing which at any time they eyther minde or doe This is manifest by the examples before alledged as also by that which the Lord saith concerning the hardening of Pharaohs heart Ex. 7.3 and ch 9.12 16. and ch 10.1 20. and ch 14.4 And likewise concerning the open defiling of King Dauids wiues 2. Sa. 12.10 11 12. And according to that which the same King saith of railing Shimei that the Lord had bidden him curse Dauid ch 16.10 According also as the Lord is said to put a lying spirit in the mouth of Ahabs false Prophets to the end he might by their euill counsell bring euill vpon the wicked King as the Prophet Michaiah told him as we reade 1. King 22.23 Neuerthelesse GOD doth many times as pleaseth him take the wise and snarle them so in their owne crafts that he doth not onely ouerthrow their
comfort how then may they be thought any way to impeach his Fatherlie pouidence Let vs therefore to so good a purpose make our diligent inquirie into this pointe also Question And first concerning the fearfull iudgements of God against the wicked howe may the execution of them redounde to the benefite and profite of the children of God Answere First because they daunte them for a time yea those of them that are of the most wicked and reprobate or desperate minde so that by the terror of the iudgements of God vpon them they are discouraged and driuen from the pursute of many their most dangerous and mischieuous enterprises against the Church of God Secondly they are hereby humbled though not of any heartie good will but rather of a seruile minde and dissemblinglie to doe some good to the faithfull seruants of God yea sometime to become vassalls and seruants vnto them Thirdly God doth by his fearfull iudgementes executed vppon the wicked make his diuine Prouidence and souereigne iustice to be for the time famouslie knowne and after a sorte acknowledged in all the world but specially of the faithful in the church of God to the more setteled confirmation of their faith Finallie by the fearful iudgements of God cast downe vpon the heads of the wicked they are conuicted in their owne heartes to acknowledge against themselues that the children of God notwithstanding all their outward afflictions are in better estate then themselues Explicatiō and proofe These and if there be any such like they are indeed the notable effects of Gods fearfull iudgements against the wicked euen to the benefit of the childrē of God according to the thanksgiuing of the Church of God Psalme 136. Which celebrateth the praise of the iudgements of God against the wicked as a fruit of his euerlasting and constant mercie toward his owne Churche and people The first branch of the Answere may be exemplified from the Egiptians who by the plagues wherewith God visited them were not onely stated from their vnreasonable proceedings against the Israelites but they were also ouercome at the last to do all the good they could vnto them euen to the inriching and adorning of them with their iewells so far forth that they did leaue themselues as it were naked and bare And which I pray you of all those that were ouer-whelmed in the red Sea while they pursued the Israelites after they had let them go out of their captiuitie would not likewise haue wished themselues to haue ben rather in their estate then in their owne when they saw the Seas violently returning vpon them And haue not wee our selues had a notable experience in our owne age of our singular benefit by that famous iudgement which Almighty God cast vppon the inuincible and proude nauie of our late chiefe enemies and their confederates Anno. 1●88 No doubt but the heauie hand of God being then as it were palpablie perceiued and leste euen in their own iudgements vpon themselues it made them the lesse bolde to renew the like attempt against vs nay contrariwise the more willing to be at a kinde of peace with vs. And doubtlesse it shall be as a plentifull streame of water still to quench that fierie malice and ambition at the least as touching that high degree of scorching heate wherewith they were at that time inflamed vnlesse which God of his infinite mercie staye and forbidde the extremitie of our sinnes and intollerable vnthankfulnes for so glorious a deliuerance doe as it were with much wood and brimstone through the iudgement of God against vs set on fire altogether inflame their rage and giue them power to burne vs vp as stubble Secondly as touching the seruile submission of the wicked caused by the iudgements of God consider it from the 44 and 45. verses of the 18. Psalm Where after that King Dauid hath reported how his sword which was the sword of the Lords battels had preuailed against his enemies who were also the enemies of all the Lords people As soone saith hee as they heare they shall obey me strangers shall be in subiection vnto me though lyingly as the Hebrew verbe Iechahhashu there vsed signifieth strangers shall shrinke away and feare in their priuie chambers Yea alreadie they had done thus For the King sheweth what the Lord had formerly done for him in that behalfe And it may well be also a prophesie of the continuance of the same hand of God still for the benefit of his Church frō time to time euen so often as he in his wisdome shal see it so meete There is also a notable historie to this purpose concerning the Gibeonites in the 9. chap. of the booke of Iudges Read also 1. Kin. 20.31 c. The seruants of the King of Aram submit themselues with halters about their necks to the King of Israel Yea though Ahab was a wicked King yet thus wrought the Lord for his owne names sake and for the remnant of the people And 2. Chron. 32.22 23. After that God had executed that his memorable iudgement against the King of Ashur and his prowd Armie Many are said to bring offerings to Ierusalem and presents to Hezekiah King of Iudah so that he was magnified of all the Nations frō thence-forth And Act. ch 12. By the feareful iudgment of God against Herod the Lord made way for his word to grow and multiply There are many such like examples to be obserued Thirdly concerning the manifestation of Gods most holy iustice and soueraigne prouidence by his iudgements against the wicked to the euicting of them and to the strengthening of the faith of his people reade Psalm 58.10 11. The righteous man shall reioyce when he seeth the vengance he shall wash his feete in the blood of the wicked And men shall say verily there is a fruit for the righteous doubtles there is a God that iudgeth the earth Reade also Psalm 83.17.18 Let them saith the Psalmist that is let thine enemies be confounded O God c. That they may know that thou who art called Iehouah art alone euen the most high ouer all the earth And Psalm 9.16 The Lord is knowne by executing iudgement And Psalm 126.2.3 When the Lord brought againe the captiuitie of Sion to wit after the Babilonians were subdued c. then said they among the heathen The Lord hath done great things for them And therefore much rather doth the Church it selfe in the same place acknowledge it saying The Lord hath done great things for vs whereof we doe reioyce Read also Ps 33 1● 11 12. and 119.52 I remembred thy iudgements of old and haue bene comforted Thus the iudgments of God being to the terror of the wicked they are contrariwise a ioy cōfort to the godly Finally concerning the last branch let it be considered that as Balaam the foolish Prophet saw euen in his prosperitie the blessed estate of the people of God to be so great that hee wished that hee himselfe might
high excellencie of his Person in that beeing the naturall Sonne of God hee cannot but be verie God of the same substance and God-head with the Father Beliefe in God the Sunn● who is the onely Sonne of God our Lord It sheweth also the excellencie of his humane nature by reason of the personall vnion therof with his Diuine nature not onely infinitely aboue any the most excellent men but also euen aboue all the holie Angells of heauen Finallie it doth most clearely shewe vs the reason why the obedience sufferings of our Sauiour are of most infinit merit before God for vs and the whole Church Explicatiō and proofe It is verie true and euen of it selfe most cleare to such as haue in them any light of the Spirit of God to discerne of spirituall and heauenlie things spiritually For what excellencie may be compared to the excellencie of the Sonne of God Yea of him that is the naturall Sonne of God according to the excellent declaration in the first ch of the Epistle to the Hebrews euen from the beginning to the end And againe ch 2.5 c. And ch 3.6 ch 12.34 25. c. But this hath beene sufficientlie confirmed in the proofes of the Deitie of the Sonne of God collected and set downe before Question Nowe in the last place what is the meaning of this that Iesus Christ the onely Sonne of God is called our Lord Answere This noteth the absolute soueraignety of his diuine autoritie ouer all creatures in somuch as all were created ●y him but in speciall manner ouer his Church by the right of that redemption whereby hee hath recouered and purchased it to himselfe to the eternall saluation thereof Explicatiō proofe I is true according to that 2. Pet 2.1 where the Apostle calleth him the Lord that hath bought vs. And that not with siluer and golde but with his most precious blood as the same Apostle hath taught before 1. epi 1. verses 18.19 Read also Cor 6.20 and ch ● 23 Acts ●0 28 Read also Iohn 3.35 and chapt 17.2 Matth 28 18. Rom. 14.9 And Mal 3.1 Now therfore from that which hath bene said for the interpretation of the particular titles wee may th● more easilie perceiue what our meaning must be in the whole when we professe that we doe beleeue in Iesus Christ the onelie Sonne of God our Lord What is the summe of all laide together Question The meaning of all is brieflie thus much that wee are to beleeue in the second Person of the most holie and glorious Trinitie Answere the onelie begotten naturall Sonne of God that hee beeing verie true God and eternall life coessentiall coequall with the Father touching his diuine nature hath taken our humane nature and in this respect inferiour to the ●ather was from all eternitie appointed of God to be in one and the same Person verie God and verie Man the perfect Mediator Redeemer and Sauiour of the whole Church Of the which euerie faithfull Christian is to be●eeue himselfe to be a member and that our Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of God is particularlie his Redeemer and Sauiour as well as any other It is true Euerie true Christian must so beleeue as he may say in some measure of truth Explication and proofe with Iob I beleeue that my Redeemer liueth And with the Apostle Paul I am perswaded that neither death nor life c shal be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Rom 8.38.29 The reason why euerie Christian must in some measure beleeue this is for that euerie one must liue by his owne faith according to that Hab 2. Rom 1.17 The particulars of this answere haue beene alreadie prooued and therefore it is not necessarie that wee should set downe the proofes againe at this time Onelie let vs here summarilie call to minde and consider thus much in this place that beside the mysterie of the second Person of the holie Trinitie distinct from the Persons both of the Father also of the holie Ghost ●nd yet remaining neuertheles one in nature and substance with them wee haue this other great mysterie to know to beleeue concerning the same the Sonne of God our blessed Lord and Sauiour that ther is a Personall vnion of the humane nature to the Diuine according to that holy acclamation of the Apostle Paul Great is the mysterie of godlines God manifested in the flesh c. Beliefe in God the Son both God and man in one diuine person of a me●i●tor betwixt God and man Concerning the which mysterie we haue seene also The ground and warrant of it that it is religiously to be obserued that like as the distinction of the Persons in the holy Trinitie hindereth not the vnitie of the blessed Godhead though euery one doe entirely and constantly retaine their incommunicable properties so neither doeth the distinction of the two natures in our Sauiour Christ the Sonne of God in that he is both God and man hinder the vnitie of the Person of the Mediator albeit either nature remaine entier in it selfe and do hold their seuerall properties incommunicably agreeing to either nature without all commixtion or confusion or any other inconuenience For the diuine nature of our Sauiour abideth alwaies infinite incomprehensible almighty knowing all things euery where present c. But the humane nature how highly soeuer it be dignified and aduanced by the Personal vnion with the diuine yet it is still both finit in substance and also in euery qualitie or vertue yea euen since it hath beene glorified in heauen in that it is not neither can be euery where present neither almightie c. as the diuine nature is Neuertheles we are yet againe to keepe in minde that although either nature doe abide for euer thus distinct yet the Person is neuer but one and the same neither dis-ioyned in nature nor seperate in the least distance of place since the verie first moment that the Personall vnion was made in the wombe of the Virgin For wheresoeuer the humanity is hath beene or shall be there the diuine nature is hath beene and will be alwaies present though the humane nature neuer could nor can be present in all places at once as the Godhead is as our Sauiour himselfe giueth to vnderstand Matth. 26.11 conferred with chap. 28.20 And Reuel 2. verse 1. And furthermore let vs in no wise forget that without any contradiction to distinction of the natures and onely to note the most neare and inseperable cōiunction of them in the vnion of one and the same Person diuers speeches are vsed in the holy Scriptures which though as they may seeme somewhat cōfusedly yet in truth they do very elegantly attribute the same things to either nature by an vnproper or tropicall communicating of the proprieties Tropus Veteribus idiomatoon coinonia dictus as learned Diuines haue of ancient times heretofore and euen
declaration haue you for this Answere In the 26 chap of the Euangelist Mat beginning from the latter part of the 45. verse thus it is written Behold saith our Sauiour to his Disciples the houre is at hand and the Sonne of man is giuen vnto sinners 46. Arise let vs goe behold he is at hand that betraieth me 47. And while he yet spake loe Iudas one of the twelue came and with him a great multitude with swordes and slaues from the high Priests and Elders of the people 48. Now he that betrayed him had giuen them a token saying whomsoeuer I shall kisse that is he lay hold on him 49. And forthwith he came to Iesus and saide Haile Rabbi that is according to our phrase of speech God saue thee Maister and kissed him 50. Then Iesus said vnto him Friend wherefore art thou come Explication We haue scene before the plot and compact of this treason by Iudas who therein greatly gratified the wicked Priests and Rulers of the people according as it is the manner of the wicked to reioice greatly in the successe of th●●r wicked deuises to their owne well away and vtter destruction in the ende Here wee haue the practise and execution of it according to the trauerous fidelitie of wicked Iudas a most vnthankefull and gracelesse seruant against a most gracious kinde and beneficiall Lord and Maister And hee performeth his treason to his newe couenanted Maister the Diuel and his instruments very substantially and against his Maister renounced most hypocrytically For he hasted a little before the company to salute and kisse his olde maister according to the signe which hee had giuen his newe maisters that they might not in any wise take their markes amisse in the darke of the night and so apprehend one in stead of an other God saue thee saith he when wicked cai●iffe as he was he sought his life And not content with this he returning backe to the company inciteth his maisters who were too forward and eager of themselues that they should lay hold on him whom they might see to bee of his owne accord comming toward them Yea as the Euangelist Marke writeth chap 14 44. so carefully that they might not in any wise let him escape Take him saith the traitor and leade him away safely that is very diligently and circumspectly as it is in the Syrian translation And that there might be no defect in this seruice he did all with great diligence and expedition as it followeth in the next wordes of the same Euangelist But in this part of the narration of the betraying of our Sauiour Christ we may not omit that which the Euangelist Iohn declareth concerning our Sauiour Christ in that to the conuincing of the euill conscience both of Iudas and also of the rest in seeking his life without cause on his part giuen to them or to any other in all the world hee causeth them to fall downe backward at his first meeting of them And also he doth by name reproue Iudas for his wicked treacherie against him which could not but be grieuous vnto our Sauiour as we may perceiue by that report which the Euangelist Luke maketh in this behalfe Let vs therefore here call to minde the further testimonie of either of these Euangelists And first of Iohn as it is written in the 18 chap from the beginning of the chapter Question What is that which he hath written Answer 1. After that the Euangelist hath described the place where our Sauiour was betraied as we haue heard before then it followeth thus 2. And Iudas who betrayed him knewe also the place For Iesus oftentimes resorted thither with his Disciples 3. Iudas then after hee had receiued a bande of men and officers of the high Priests and of the Pharisies came thither with lanternes and Torches and weapons 4. Then Iesus knowing of all things that should come vnto him hee went forth and saide vnto them whom seeke yee 5. They answered him Iesus of Nazareth Iesus said vnto them I am he The groūd and history of his apprehension Now Iudas also who betraied him stood with them 6. Assoone then as he had saide vnto them I am hee they went backward and fell to the ground 7. Then he asked them againe whom seeke yee and they said Iesus of Nazareth 8. Iesus answered I saide vnto you I am he therefore if yee seeke me let these goe their way He meaneth his Disciples And then it followeth in the next verse This saith the Euangelist was that the word might be fulfilled which he that is Christ h●mselfe spake to wit in his prayer as we read in the 12. verse of the former chapter of them which thou gauest me haue I lost none And it was indeede a great deliuerance as we shall see more fully by the sequell in that euery one of the eleuen escaped the furie of this band thou●h Peter by his rash attempt had generally ind●ngered both himselfe and all the rest and in that they were all reserued to serue afterward in the office of Apostleship To the which very ende indeede our Sauiour did principally worke the former great worke as it may well be conceiued of vs. Thus much out of the Euangelist Iohn concerning the diuine power of our Sauiour Christ Now let vs likewise see how the Euangelist Luke reporteth the ●eproofe which our Sauiour Christ gaue Iudas Question What are the words Answere In the 22. chap verses 47.48 thus we read 47. And while he yet spake that is while our Sauiour spake to his Disciples exhorting them to prayer behold a company and he that was called Iudas one of the twelue went before them and came neere vnto Iesus to kisse him 48. And Iesus saide vnto him Iudas betrayest thou the Sonne of man with a kisse Explicatiō A sharpe rebuke no doubt a iust reward of his wicked forwardnes a corosiue meete to be laid to his hart if he had had any desire of recouering his desperate health For the height of his most heynous sinne in his treason together with his most deepe hypocrysie and dissembling in the manner of his perpetrating and cōmitting of it is as quickly laide before him as he was expedite and speedie in the bold and shamelesse working of his mischiefe So that hee might easily haue perceiued by a short viewe that he had to deale with him before whom all things are naked and bare and to whom he must at the last giue an account of this his villanous treacherie At what time all his newe maisters the Diuel and his instruments shall not be able to beare neither him nor themselues out in that which they had so boldly and impiously taken in hand And thus we see how vnworthily our Lord Iesus Christ the king of kings and Lord of al Lords by the right of his most holy annointing was in this time of his humiliation betraied The which though he did most patiently indure yet the indignitie of it
and feete yet hee died not so much either by the forcing violence and power of the Iewes or of the Diuel or of d●ath it selfe as of his owne accord in laying downe his life in obedience to the good will and pleasure of God Moreouer it may iustly be a good and comfortable assurance vnto vs that hee hath and shall for euer on our behalfe and benefite preuaile against all both his and our aduersaries insomuch as in his very impotencie and g●eatest weakenesse as we see hee hath shewed himselfe stronger then them all in their mightiest rage and furie Explication Herevnto indeed doth the strength of the voice of our Sauiour in vttering these sweete wordes of this last farewell as we may say vpon the crosse leade vs. For herein was fulfilled in him that which is saide of God 1. Cor 1.25 The weakenes of God is stronger then men But you haue not said any thing of the wordes themselues Question How may they be comfortable vnto vs Answere First they doe confirme the same things vnto vs which the loudenes and strength of the voice did Explication It is true For insomuch as our Sauiour commendeth his soule into the hands of his Father it is euident that he yeeldeth himselfe to death rather apprehending and laying hold or arresting of it then as one violently apprehended and taken away or led captiue by it Question How else may the same worde be comfortable vnto vs Answer Secondly by how much the faith and assurance of our Sauiour was more firme and sure t●at he hauing borne the sorrowes and torments of the second death and now mindi●g presently to dye the naturall death should therevpon on our behalfe not onely escape eternall death but also peaceably enter vpon the eternall possession of euerlasting life and glorie his soule immediately and both soule and body within three dayes after by so much may wee be more assured that wee beleeuing in our SAVIOVR shall likewise through him not onely escape eternall death but also haue our naturall death turned to a benefite in that it shall giue vs an enterance into the glorious kingdome of heauen our soules immediately after their seperation from the body and our bodies at the day of the generall resurrection notwithstanding both the first and also the seconde death were iustly due to our sinnes Explication proofe It is very true according to that which our Sauiour hath giuen to vnderstand by his gracious promise to the repenting thiefe in respect of his soule as wee sawe before And as it may appeare by the prayer of our Sauiour in the 17. chapter of Iohn And touching the resurrection of our bodies at the last day we shall afterward haue a further occasion to see howe the resurrection of our Sauiour is a pawne and pledge of it In the meane while the present wordes of our Sauiour containe a sweete comfort in that we haue good warrant that our soules are a spirituall and immortall substance not vanishing away but retaining their existence and beeing still and for euer though for a time they are seperated from the body And in that ●e haue like warrant that the place of their beeing shall be in the heauenly paradise of the Lord our God The which comfort was that which gaue good Simeon so great peace as he had at his death euen because he had seene him by whom he knewe hi● soule should still liue blessedly after his bodily death Luke 2. And it was the comfort which caused the Apostle Paul so earnestly to desire and long after death when once he should haue finished his course because then he knew likewise that his soule should be with Christ But of this also more afterward And thus we cannot but see that the comfort of the manner of the dying of our Sauiour is very great Question NOw what is the comfort of his death it selfe Answer This ariseth from the comfortable fruites and benefits thereof Explicatiō proofe It must ineedes be so And they may be all of them considered of vs from the holy Scriptures vnder the name of our Sauiours sufferings of death or of his shedding of his precious blood or of the most holy sacrifice which he hath offered vp to God for vs. For all these doe note vnto vs one and the same thing and therefore also all the benefits proceeding from them they are likewise one and the very same And herein also it is worthy to be obserued that howsoeuer no part no not of the least of the holy sufferings of our Sauiour is to be excluded from the making vp of the full measure of our comfort much lesse are the most dolorous extreame sufferings of his soule to be excepted Yet because the death of our Sauiour was the shutting vp and ratifying of all the rest therefore not without cause all the fruites and benefites of his sufferings are most vsually deriued from the mention of his death or bloodshed or sacrifice externally offered vp and sacrificed vpon the crosse Let vs therefore according to the direction of the holy Scriptures gather them together so well as we can here in this place And whereas like as was touched before from the large speech of our Sato his Disciples we may well reduce them to these two kindes either euills remoued or benefits procured and conferred or bestowed vpon vs let vs consider of them vnder these heads againe though from some other testimonies of holy Scripture Question And first which are the euills remoued from vs by the most precious death and bloodshed or sacrifice of our Lord Iesus Christ Answere First by his death and passion hee hath deliuered vs from the guiltinesse and offence of all sinne both originall in corruption of nature which is the mother euill of all the rest and also actuall through transgression of life as well in the omitting or failing in good duties as in the omitting of euill both in smaller and also in greater measure of exceeding therein And consequently he hath deliuered vs from the wrath of God and from all the iust punishments due to our sinnes from the same Question Which are those punishments Answer The encrease of naturall rebellion and sinne by the exasperating power of the harsh rebukes of the lawe Likewise the handwriting or enditement and curse of the lawe Moreouer the tyrannie of death both first and second and also the tyrannie of the Diuel and Hell and of all wicked instruments Frō all which he hath so deliuered vs as they shall neuer be able to preuaile against vs to frustrate our eternall saluation Explicatiō proofe That we are deliuered from all these euills by the death and bloodshed or sacrifice of our LORD IESVS CHRIST it is euident by many testimonies of the holy Scriptures And first that wee are deliuered from the guiltines of all our sinnes the Apostle Paul testifieth Gallat 1.4 Our Lord Iesus Christ saith he gaue himselfe for our sinnes So
ground in the word of God and therefore to abstaine from all curious speculations beside As for example it were in the present case a vaine thing for any of vs to busie our selues to know who those men were that our Sauiour raised vp at this his owne resurrection and who they were to whom they appeared and what their communication behauiour was c. Neuerthelesse insomuch as the end why our Sauiour Christ did raise vp the bodies of these Saints is of it selfe euident namely to declare the mighty effect and most blessed fruite of his Resurrection vnto his Church which is that by him all the faithfull shall at the last day rise againe to euerlasting life neuer to die any more it seemeth that we may not without good reason conceiue that they died not againe but that they are receiued vp into heauen as a fruite of our Sauiours Ascension thither on the Church of Gods behalfe like as their resurrection was a fruite of his Resurrection as was said euen now But it is not meete that we should be ouer stiffe or contentious in it no more then wee ought to be concerning the bodies of Henoch or Elijah though it is most likely that they were taken vp bodily into heauen The iudgement of M. Caluin is worthy to be respected of vs in that he writeth concerning this point in his Harmonie thus Sicuti non facilis est nec prompta solutio ita anxié laborare nihil attinet in re cognitu non necessaria Diu in hominum coetu fuisse versatos verisimile non est quia tantum ad breue tempus conspici oportuit vt in illo speculo vel imagine manifesta esset Christi virtus Quum autem Deus apud viuos spem celestis vitae confirmare voluerit in illorum persona nihil absurdi erit si dicamus eos hoc officio defunctos iterū quieuisse in suis sepulchris Veri similius tamen est vitam qua donati sunt non fuisse deinae illis ademptam Nam si mortalis fuisset solidae resurrectionis documentum esse non poterat That is As the dissoluing of the doubt is not easie or readie at hand so there is no neede to trouble our selues much about it seeing it is a matter not necessary to bee knowne That they continued long among men it is not very like for it was enough that they were seene for a short time to the end that the power of Christ might in that glasse as it were bee represented and made manifest vnto them And insomuch as it was the pleasure of GOD in their person to confirme vnto the liuing the hope of the heauenly life it shall not bee vnreasonable to say that they rested againe in their graues after they had performed this dutie Neuerthelesse it is more likely that the life where-with they were indued was not afterward taken away from them For if it had beene subiect againe to death it could not haue beene a through proofe of the resurrection To the which resolution Master Beza doth easily condescend where hee writeth thus Qui ante ipsum per ipsum ex miraculo suscitati sunt iterum morituri suscitati sunt quum tamen huius miraculi finis sit vt sciamus hos fuisse suscitatos testes virtutis resurrectionis Iesu Christi in aeternam felicitatem futuros Hom. 34. in Hist. Passionis Sect. 4. That is They which haue beene miraculously raised vp before him and by him were raised vp to die againe but the scope of this miracle is to let vs know that these were raised vp to set forth the power of the resurrection of Iesus Christ touching endlesse happinesse And Master Perkins in his exposition vpon this Article It may be demanded saith hee what became of the Saintes that rose againe after Christs resurrection Answ Some thinke they died againe but seeing they rose for this end to manifest the quickening vertue of Christs resurrection it is like that they were also glorified with Christ and ascended with him to heauen This is the iudgement of those good and faithfull seruants of God But some man may say If it be not a matter of faith but left as vncertaine by the holy Euangelist what mattereth it that any should be carefull to say any thing at all this way or that way of it I answer that it is a good duty and a worthy fruit of faith in matters doubtfull and yet of good vse to interpret them most nearely according to the proportion of faith and yet so as to determine without preiudicing of those who without contentiousnesse and without preiudice against any Article of faith doe differ in iudgement from vs. Touching other things conteined in this text they are more questionlesse and very certaine First that the bodies of the Saintes onely that is of those that died the faithfull seruantes of God were raised againe and that also to certifie the faithfull liuing that Christ was risen and that the raising vp of the bodies of these Saints should be likewise as a pledge of the resurrection of all the faithfull to euerlasting life at the end of the world Secondly that their soules returned euery one to their owne bodie from that place of rest where they were preserued among the soules of all other the faithfull departed Whence also the being or existence and immortality of the soule though seperated from the body may bee confirmed And thirdly it is certaine that these Saints did not appeare after the manner of Ghosts without any true bodies but they appeared verily and indeede in their owne true and naturall bodies which God restored to them againe And finally where it is demanded why in this our text the Citie of Ierusalem being most bloody and wicked yea though there had beene no other sinne among them but this of putting our Sauiour to death i● for all that called the holy Citie I answer that the holy Euangelist calleth it so first and principally in respect of Gods sanctification dedication of it from the beginning to himselfe to be a most holy Citie therfore pl●ced his holy Temple in it though they had now long since miserably polluted defiled both it and the Temple by their sinne● And secondly he calleth it so The causes why hee was to rise againe because there were in it remaining stil a remnant of the holy seruants of God both of men and women Thirdly it is called holy because God minded to reare vp a spirituall Temple and Church vnto our Lord Iesus Christ in the midst of it by the Apostles preaching that from thence euen out of the Sion of God might the Gospel bee carried vnto the ends of the earth Psalm 110.3 Isai 2.3 Mich. 4.2 Luke 24.46.49 Thus farre of the manner of the resurrection of our Sauiour THe reasons or causes why the same our Sauiour did rise againe they are next to be considered of vs. Question Which are they Answer First the prophecies of
him That is to say not so as we should linger after his bodily presence but rather that we should be carefull to knowe and imbrace him spiritually and with the armes of our faith For seeing Mary Magdalene was to doe so while yet our Sauiour was vpon the earth and not ascended vp into heauen then much more ought wee now as well as all other euer since his ascension so to doe that wee may say in truth with the Apostle Paul in the 2. Epistle to the Cor chap 5. verse 16. Henceforth knowe we no man after the flesh yea though we had knowne Christ after the flesh yet now henceforth knowe we him no more to wit in any carnall or weake manner but according to his diuine grace and godly power c. in a more cleare measure So that they who at this day dote after a reall presence of the body of our Sauiour Christ either in Sacrament or other wise they doe shewe themselues to bee altogether farre otherwise minded then our Sauiour himselfe would haue them to be We are all of vs to lift vp our minds to him in the heauens whither he is long since ascended and not to looke to haue him bodily with vs on earth as he taught Mary Magdalene immediately after his resurrection in that he said vnto her as we see here Touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father c. Neuertheles we are herewithall to vnderstand that our Sauiour had a more particular intent in the same wordes namely to signifie thus much vnto Mary that she for her part should haue a further time of filling her minde with the comfort of his humane presence for a few dayes before he would ascend leaue this world And therefore that she should for the present without any further delay so much the more willingly leaue him now and hast with all speed to his Disciples to doe that message which it pleased him to send vnto them by her For so it followeth as we haue already seene Goe to my brethren saith our Sauiour to Mary and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and to you● Father and to my God and your God Now the message is the last thing to be considered concerning this first appearance of our Sauiour Wherein sundry most high points and the same also most sweet and comfortable to all true beleeuers are to be reuerendly weighed of vs. And first of all this message thus committed by our Sauiour to a woman though to bee deliuered in a priuate manner as it is a great honour to Mary and as a blessed fruit of her former godly care and reuerend regard toward our Sauiour as was said before so is it a gentle kind of reproofe vnto the negligence vnbeliefe of those most choise Disciples of our Sauiour to whom he sendeth her Secondly this message sent by Mary concerning the ascension of our Sauiour conta●neth in it a proofe of his resurrection which must needes goe before his ascension as well as it is a prediction and foreshewing of the ascension it selfe Thirdly this message sent by our Sauiour to his Disciples vnder the name of brethre● it decla●●th the most deare and admirable loue of our Sauiour vnto them Wherein also is bewraied the like his affection in generall toward all the elect of God as wee may plainely perceiue by comparing that which we read Mat 12.48.49.50 Heb 2.11.12 with the words of this message For in those places our Sauiour extendeth the name of brethren to all the adopted children of God whosoeuer doe heare and keepe his word This is also an euident confirmation of that which the Euangelist Iohn hath written ch 13.1 that those whō our Sauiour loueth he loueth to the end Yea that he loueth them so that nothing can alienate ●is loue from them For as we knowe great were the infirmities of his Disciples in their forsaking of him c. And therefore whereas our Sauiour doth most graciously passe by al their grea●est weaknesses and failings in good dutie though hee might haue taken iust occasion to haue vtterly reiected and forsaken them this sheweth vndoubtedly that his loue was most constantly and vnremoueably confirmed toward them Blessed be his most holy name therefore for euer and euer Amen Fourthly in that our Sauiour in the wordes of this most sweete message calleth God his Father and his God hee speaketh therein as hee is in our nature a mediator betwixt God and vs and thereby pointeth vs vpward to behold the supreame cause of all our happines and wel-fare And in that he calleth him the Father and God of his Disciples and so consequently the Father and God of all true beleeuers hee teacheth vs all with good assurance of faith to call God our Father and so sheweth what are the singular effects of his mediation on our behalfe euen our adoption reconciliation peace and saluation with all other blessed fruites and benefites whatsoeuer both the most tender and fatherly mercies and also the almightie power of God our heauenly Father either is able of himselfe or willing for his Sonne our Lord Iesus C●rists sake to bestow vpon vs. To this God therefore our heauenly Father together with his Sonne our Sauiour and the holy Ghost our Comforter be all eternal glorie and praise Amen Fiftly our Lord Iesus Christ in sending this his message so earnestly and with all expedition to the comforting of his Disciples who were at this time in great heauines as we reade Marke chap 16.10 he sheweth and professeth plainely thereby that he is exceedingly desirous that both they and euery true Disciple of his should both knowe and beleeue and also enioy and hold firmely this great prerogatiue that we are by his meanes the children of such a Father and the seruants of such a God as God our heauenly Father is Finally as the Disciples of our Sauiour to whom Mary was sent yea notwithstanding they were the Apostles elect of our Sauiour were to receiue this message gladly and thankefully euen from the mouth of a priuate woman so yea much rather ought we from the mouth of the poorest publike minister of the word of God receiue gladly and dutifully the same message in their preaching thereof and euery other point and Article of the whole ambassage of the Gospel of Christ and of God That which is furthermore to be considered concerning the comforts and fruites of the ascension of our Sauiour it shall by the grace of God be more fully laid open when we come to that Article Hetherto of the first appearance of our Sauiour Christ for the first proofe and confirmation of his most holy and blessed resurrection Now as touching the performance of this message deliuered by our Sauiour to Mary it is expressed by the Euangelist Iohn verse 18. of this 20. chap For saith he Mary Magdalene came and tould the Disciples that she had seene the Lord that he had spoken these things vnto her And
G●ntils yea euen towards our selues at this day who should neuer haue heard of our Sauiour Christ and the fruites and benefits of his Gospell nor enioyed any ordinarie ministerie and preaching of it had it not beene by the meanes of this most blessed and Apostolick cōmission granted to these disciples to that ende For as touching the Apostle Paul his calling and commission we may well reckon it to be but for a time as it were of this grand charter if I may so speake In the second of the circumstances that is the order of their proceeding which our Sauiour prescribeth is an effect of the constant loue of God towards his peculiar people the Iewes who though they had deserued to be forthwith reiected yet insomuch as in his rich mercy he had reserued a remnant of his election to himselfe he would honour that citie of theirs wherein he had placed his name and his Temple with the calling and gathering together of the first Christian Church yea euen from among them that were persecutors and murtherers of his Sonne And to And to the same end doth our Sauiour himselfe magnifie his mercy towards them in that he commandeth his Apostles to preach first at Ierusalem as also that the holy prophesies might be fulfilled which gaue forth long before that the Lord would send forth the rod of the power of our Sauiour out of Sion Psal 110.2 Isai 2.2.3 Michah 4.1.2 And so it came to passe that euen manie of all sorts were conuerted not onely in Ierusalem but also of other Countries such as were Proselytes c. by the first preaching of the Apostles as we read in the 2. chapter of the Acts c. For at one Sermon three thousand were conuerted and called to the faith of Christ and after that many more by Peter and the rest Hitherto of the sixth particular belonging to the last remedy which our Sauiour vsed against the vnbeliefe of his chiefe disciples it consisting of diuers branches as we haue seene Let vs proceede to the seuenth Question What is that Answere 48. Now yee are witnesses of these things saith our Sauiour Explicatiō proofe In this seuenth particular our Sauiour authoriseth his Disciples to be authenticall witnesses both of his sufferings and also of his resurrection that repentance and forgiuenes of sinnes was graunted generally to the Gentiles as well as to the Iewes In which respect they are called witnesses chosen before of God as was obserued from the sermon of Peter to Cornelius and the assembly gathered together in his house Act. 10.41.42.43 and in many other places as they were alledged and set downe before Neither were they appointed to be witnesses that they should onely report things which they knew to be certainly performed and so to leaue the hearers to themselues whither they would beleeue them or no but so to report them as they might by effectuall signes and wonders and by the mighty power euidence of the holy Ghost confirme vnto them that the most ioyfull message which they preached did belong vnto them euen to so many of them as would giue credite to their testimonies deliuered to them in the name of our Sauiour Christ and of God to their saluation But as touching the effects and vses of this their Apostolicall testimonies and preaching our Sauiour expresseth them more purposedly in that which we reckoned for the eight particular of the dealing of our Sauiour in this his last and most effectuall remedy which he vsed against the vnbeliefe of his disciples in this his fift appearance Question Which is that Answere It is that which the Euangelist Iohn hath recorded in these words of our Sauiour chap. 20.23 Whosoeuers sinnes yee remit they are remitted vnto them and whosoeuers sinnes yee retaine they are retained The powerfull effect here promised and assured to the Apostolicall ministerie Explicatiō is generall like as their commission was For as they were aucthorised to preach to all nations repentance and remission of sinnes in the name of Christ so here our Sauiour for their further incouragement giueth them his warrant that whosoeuers sinnes they should remit should certainly be remitted and whosoeuers sinnes they should retaine should verily be retained Thus therefore the effect of the Apostles ministerie is assured to be as generall as their commission was But the effect is not all of one sort or of like kinds as we see For to some it is healthfull and sauing to other it is not so but contrariwise hurtfull and damnable according to that of the Apostle Paule 2. Cor. 2.15.16 We are vnto God the sweet sauour of Christ in them that are saued and in them which perish to the one we are the sauour of death vnto death and to the other we are the sauour of life vnto life and who is sufficient for these things The reason of which contrary effect is not in the Gospell which is in the owne nature one and the same but in respect of the contrary disposition of those to whom it is preached Insomuch as the one sort through the grace of God doe in hearing beleeue and obey it the other of their owne stubbornnes either altogether despise it as a doctrine vnworthy to be receiued and so prophanely reiect it or else they are such as vnto secure contempt do add presumptuous rebellion and opposition against it Like as the sunne though of one and the same nature in it selfe melteth wax but hardneth clay maketh a sweet thing to smel the more sweet but causeth carrion to stink the more And therfore as the same Apostle saith further in the 12. chap. of the same 2. Ep. to the Cor. ver 3.4.5.6 Though we walk in the flesh yet we do not warre after the flesh For the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to cast downe holds casting downe imaginations and euery high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God and bringing into captiuity euery thought to the obedience of Christ and hauing in a readines vengeance against all disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled Answerable also to that 2. Thess 1.7.8.9.10 The Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels in flaming fire rendring vengeance vnto them which do not know God which obey not the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ which shall be punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power when hee shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be made meruailous in all them that beleeue because our testimonie towards you was beleeued in that day Now that we may vnderstand these contrary effects of the Apostolick ministerie the better contained in these words of remitting and retaining of sins we are to consider two things Question First what is meant by the words of remitting and retaining Secondly how these actions may be ascribed to the Apostles Touching the first therfore how are we to
though we see not either to the mystical transubstantiation of the bread in the Sacrament into the very true body of our Sauiour Christ or to the consubstantiation of the body with the bread or to the inuisible presence of the body euery where without the Sacrament doe most grosly and erroneously misapply these words of our Sauiour insomuch as it is so farre off that those monstrous opinions haue any warrant in the holy Scriptures that they are directly contrary to all that which the articles of our faith do teach assure vs concerning the truth of his naturall body that it is but in one place at once and that wheresoeuer it is or hath beene that it is and hath beene alwaies both visible and touchable as our Sauiour himselfe hath plainly giuen vs to vnderstand both in this and also in his former appearance Moreouer wee considering duly of the holy ends wherefore our Sauiour retained the print of his wounds in his most glorious and holy body for a time namely to giue assurance of his resurrection and thereby also to assure vs of the blessed fruit of his death and enduring of those wounds themselues which was to satisfie Gods wrath iustly bent against vs c. and considering also the holy vse which Thomas made of the seeing of them it cannot but be a most horrible thing for vs to thinke of the cursed blasphemies of those which in their fury or otherwise prophanely and wickedly sweare by these wounds of our Sauiour Thus much briefely concerning the proofe of the resurrection of our Sauiour Christ by his sixt appearance And vnto this the Euangelist Iohn drawing toward the conclusion of his booke addeth a certaine aduertisement as it were by the way giuing to vnderstand that whereas he euen as he was directed by the holy Ghost The proofe of his resurrection by his seuenth appearance whose Secretarie he was had set downe but a fewe appearances of our Sauiour and accordingly but a fewe of the miraculous workes which hee had wrought for the confirmation of his resurrection and minded to set downe but one appearance more that yet neuerthelesse our Sauiour shewed himselfe oftener then he minded to rehearse the rather because he knew well that sundry other were mentioned by other of the Euangelists And hee giueth to vnderstand likewise that he wrought many other signes then he would speake of According to that of the Euangelist Luk Act. 1.3 He presented himselfe aliue to his chosen Apostles after that he had suffred by many * Tecmeriois certis seu indubitatis signis et indicijs Eiusmodi namque signa quae necessariā et demōstratinā consequentiam habent Tecmeria vocantur infallible tokens being seene of them by the space of fourty daies c. And therwithal the Euangelist Iohn doth very notably shew in few words the principall ends and vses both of the resurrection of our Sauiour also of all the proofes confirmations therof namely that we and all other to whom they are reported recorded might therby be brought to the faith so be saued So that hereby he manifesteth vnto vs the excellencie of this hi●tory of our Sauiour his resurrection most worthy to be diligently regarded of all Christians But let vs heare the words of the Euangelist himselfe to this purpose Question Which are they Answer 30. And many other signes also saith S. Iohn did Iesus in the presence of his disciples which are not written in this booke 31. But these things are written that ye might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ the sonne of God and that in beleeuing ye might haue life through his name Explication From these words we may see plainly that the meaning of the holy Euangelist is such as hath bin already expressed As if he should preocupate or preuent meet aforehand with that which might be obiected either against him self because he spake of so few appearances of our Sauiour or to the preiudice of the other Euangelists for setting down somewhat more affirming that both by them by him there were appearances signes enough set down for the confirmation of faith vnto saluation which is the end scope of all signes and appearances and also euen of the resurrection it selfe The which being obtained there is no further need of appearances or signes whatsoeuer Yea therwithall the Euangelist doth with like breuity very notably shew vs the sum of that which we are to beleeue namely that Iesus is the Christ the sonne of God In which words is contained a plaine declaration both of the most diuine person and also of the most holy and blessed office of our Sauiour on our behalfe For by the name of our Sauiour Christ the Euangelist doth not meane the bare titles whereby he is called but all whatsoeuer is signified by them in the holy scriptures the which he assureth vs to be fully verified in him whose resurrection he reporteth vnto vs. And thus also wee put a difference betwixt these words the last of this 20. ch those in the end of the book in the two last verses of the next chap. like vnto thē because these do more specially concerne the particular history of the resurrection of our Sauiour but they are to be extended to the history of the whole booke and to all the works which our Sauiour did before his death as well as after that he rose againe THese things thus inserted we come now to the seuenth appearance of our Sauiour as it followeth in the next chapter which is the last of the Euangelist Iohn Concerning which let vs first of all heare the words of the Euangelist Question How doth he report this appearance Answer After these things saith the Euangelist cha 21.1 Iesus shewed himselfe againe to his disciples at the sea of Tiberias and thus he shewed himselfe 2. There were together Simon Peter and Thomas which is called Didymus and Nathanael of Cana in Galile and the sonnes of Zebedeus and two other of his disciples 3. Simon Peter said vnto them I goe a fishing They said vnto him we also will goe with thee They went their way and straightway they entered into a ship that night caught they nothing 4. But when the morning was now come Iesus stood on the shore neuerthelesse the disciples knew not that it was Iesus 5. Iesus then said vnto them * Paidia pueri children Sirs haue ye any meate They answered him No. 6. Then he said vnto them Cast out the net on the right side of the ship and ye shal find So they cast out and they were not able at all to draw it for the multitude of fishes 7. Therefore said the disciple whom Iesus loued vnto Peter It is the Lord. When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord he girded his coate to him for hee was naked and cast himselfe into the sea 8. But the other disciples came by ship for they were not farre from the
to haue respect in his speech to Peter after dinner admonishing him to try his heart whether he loued him more then the rest according as he shewed himselfe most venterous and earnest in comming first vnto him But of this more afterward The last effect of the former speech of our Sauiour Cast out the c. that is yet behind Question What effect was that Answer It was more generall concerning all the rest to whom the wordes were spoken For they vsing the ordinary meanes to serue the prouidence of God came by shippe for as the Euangelist saith they were not farre from land but about two hundreth cubites and they drew the net with fishes verse 8. Explicatiō This indeed was a more generall and common effect But yet considering what was said before that the net was so full of fishes that they could not draw it at all we haue good reason to thinke that euen in this their drawing of the net so heauie with the fishes the Lord put to his hand and made them able to doe it And therefore also may wee well thinke that the Lord would vse their diligence and labour in this worke though indeede it was altogether his that they might the rather thereby be led to consider that in the worke of the holy ministery and fishing for men to catch them out of the sea of this world wherein they drinke vp sin as fish doe swallow water that so he might drawe them into his heauenly kingdome by the preaching of the Gospell hee would vse their seruice howsoeuer it is true as they had experience euen in this their sea-faring fishing that vnlesse God doe giue blessing Paules planting and Apollos watering shall be all in vaine And thus much concerning the effectes of that second speech of our Sauiour Cast out the net c. and therein of the first of those miracles which our Sauiour wrought in the time of this his seuenth appearance namely the gathering together of such a multitude of great fishes into their net as was aboue all expectation or reason The second miracle is next to be obserued Question What was it How doth the Euangelist Iohn report it Answer Assoone then saith he as they were come to land thy sawe hote coales and fishe laied thereon and bread verse 9. Expli This is indeede a second miracle a very diuine worke For this fire and fishe and bread came not by any humane prouision but by the almightie power of our Sauiour by whom as all things were created at the first so are they continually ordered and gouerned by him to this day and for euer Hee that fed many thousandes with a fewe loa●es and a small number of fishes at one time more then fiue thousand with fiue barly loaues and two fishes and at an other time aboue foure thousand with seuen loaues and a fewe litle fishes yea so as more remained after the multitudes were satisfied then there was at the beginning as wee read in the Gospell by multiplying the substance thereof in the handes of his Disciples by a miraculous creation Matth 14.15 c. and chap 15.32 c. Hee the same Creator made this strange manner of prouision for these his Disciples whom he knew now after the labour and watching of the whole night to be very hungry Wherefore doubtles hee would let his Disciples vnderstand yea sensibly shew it before their eyes that hee was able to prouide for them not onely by one meanes alone but by as many waies and meanes as should be best pleasing to him and most meete for them For al things as they might plainly see both by sea and by land were at his becke and commandement as well now after his resurrection as before as he had giuen them infinite proofes euen before his death The which also he did at this time giue them iust and very comfortable occasion to call to minde againe And euen therefore may we perswade our selues that he wrought the like workes after his resurrection which he did before his death that from the like workes they might learne to acknowledge and beleeue the same his diuine power Let vs now come to the next speech of our Sauiour which hee vttered before dinner Question What was that Answer Iesus saith the Euangelist saide vnto them Bring of the fishes which ye haue nowe caught verse 10. Explicatiō As by the power of the former speech Cast out the net c. the fishes were gathered into the net so by the vertue of this speech Bring ye of the fishes c. the dis●iples were inabled to draw them to land the which also that it was not done without a third miracle the Euangelist declareth in the very next words Question Which are they Answer Thus it followeth Simon Peter shewed forth and drew the net to land ful of great fishes a hundreth fif●ie three albeit there were so many yet was not the net brokē v. 11. Explication This may well be reckoned for a third miracle indeed For certainly though the maske of the net had bin of great coard yet had it bin weake enough to haue held in so great a number of so great fishes as were inclosed and haled to the land in it In the 5. ch of Luk. v. 4. c vnto the which miracle there reported this answereth as was before obserued the net brake through the multitude of fishes so that they were faine to call for more helpe Here therefore in that the net brake not at all and that the small companie of fishers did prosperously draw so many great fishes to land the miracle is in that respect so much the more amplified and might iustly minister so much the more comfort to the D●sciples as touching the ends wherefore our Sauiour wrought it euen such as haue bin declared before That which is written here of Peter his stepping forth to draw the net to land sheweth that as was said before although the zeale of his affection toward our Sa constrained him to swim to the shore yet it is like also euen as the effect declareth that he did it partly for some more cōmodious help which he might by that meanes yeeld to the busines in hand This busines well ended we are now to consider of the next speech of our Sauiour which he vttered immediately before dinner namely that his speech whereby he as the maister of these fishermen inuited them to that miraculous dinner which he had prepared for them without their skil or labour Rehearse the words of our Sauiour Question as the euangelist reporteth them Which are they They are these Answer Iesus said vnto them Come and dine verse 12. in the beginning of the verse Expli Our Sauiour no doubt spake these wordes with like affection that he had in the wildernes ouer the people when he saide I haue compassion on this multitude c. Mat 15.32 For he knew that his Disciples must needes be hungry after their
labour all the night the morning also being well spent And in this prouision which was prepared we are to consider of our Sauiour both as of the baker or rather maker of the bread and as of the fisher of the fish that was now a broiling and as of the Cooke which kindled yea altogether made that fire wherewith they were broiled Yea we are to consider of him as being all in all the onely maister and maker of this feast Wherein all things were so admirable to the Disciples and so euident declarations of the diuine power of our Sauiour beside that knowledge which they had of his person that they wrought this effect in their hearts that as the Euangelist saith as it followeth in the 12. verse None of the Disciples durst aske him who art thou seeing they knewe that he was the Lord. Yea euen their Lord and maister indeed according to that his first speech wherein he called them by the name of his children or seruants as was declared before And thus we may easily see that there was no cause why they needed to aske our Sauiour who art thou Question But why doth the Euangelist say they durst not aske him Answer He giueth thereby to vnderstand that although there was some remnant of doubtings in their minds yet that their doubtings were now so weakened by the former appearances of our Sauiour and by his present diuine workes that they durst not for feare of the iust rebuke of our Sauiour giue place vnto them Explicatiō proofe And not without very iust cause For seeing their owne hearts reprooued them they might wel know that he that was greater then their hearts might by all right haue more sharply rebuked them And verily it ought to be a shame to euery Disciple and scholler of our Sauiour much more to those that are of the head forme as it were to be alwaies learning not to profit by the excellent instructions that are giuen vnto them Heb 5.12 It is very meet that faith enioying the meanes of increase should grow more more and not alwaies be a like infirme and weake We ought not to beare with such slouth in our selues much lesse may we thinke that the Lord will indure it and not reproue and chastice vs for it Such therefore was the cause of the Disciples feare Question Now what followeth in our text Answer Iesus then came saith Saint Iohn and took bread and gaue them and fishe likewise ver 13. Explicatiō The taking of bread which the Euangelist speaketh of and likewise of fish it is in such manner to be vnderstood as hath beene else where more particularly described to wit as being accompanied with thankes-giuing after the most holy manner constantly vsed by our Sauiour And so must the giuing both of the bread and of the fish also bee vnderstood not after the common custome of the housholder who alloweth to euery one of the family his portion but as from the author and giuer of all things euen from the God of heauen and earth like as if our Sauiour should haue said to his Disciples behold my deare children and seruants I giue yee a visible signe and plaine proofe that I am both able and also willing while yee shall performe a faithfull seruice vnto me to prepare and furnish you a table in the middest of your enemies wheresoeuer yee shall become euen as I did to Dauid my seruant as he acknowledgeth Psalm 23. The Lord is my shepheard I shall not want c. Thou doest prepare a table before mee in the fight of mine aduersaries c. Such no doubt is the meaning of our Sauiour by making his Disciples this extraordinarie banquet And it may iustly teach vs all this common and vniforme lesson that all whatsoeuer wee receiue either for foode or for any other reliefe of our fraile estate here in this life it commeth not originally from our owne industrie and labour or by any other meanes but from the good hand and blessing of God our Sauiour who pitieth vs and knoweth wherereof we stand in neede And therefore that we are to receiue all things as from his holy handes and to vse all the good blessings of God soberly and purely as becommeth his guests inuited by himselfe to be partakers of them c. Specially may the faithfull Ministers and preachers of the Gospell take their comfort from these declarations of the diuine care and prouidence of our Sauiour ouer his Disciples For out of all question he retaineth the same care all waies euer since he ascended into heauen which hee at this time expressed thus graciously while he was on the earth It is he that giueth bread to the hungry c. Hetherto of all the gracious speeches and actions together with the effectes of them such as were saide to be considered of vs in the time before dinner And as for that which the Euangelist saith verse 14. This was the third time that Iesus shewed himselfe c. wee haue shewed already how Saint Iohn is to be vnderstood and that it doth nothing hinder why we in our more particular account may not reckon it for the seauenth appearance c. Now let vs come to the speeches of our Sauiour such as hee vttered after dinner We may for orders sake reduce them to the number of foure They are all of them directed indeede particularly to Peter though not for his instruction and admonition alone The first speech hath sixe branches consisting first in three questions and secondly in a threefolde charge and direction following vpon a threefolde affirmatiue answere of Peter all of them tending to one ende and purpose which our Sauiour intended thereby and all almost in the very same wordes Let vs therefore first of all consider of this first speech of our Sauiour to Peter How doth the Euangelist report it Question Answer It followeth thus in the holy story 15.16.17 So when they had dined Iesus saide to Simon Peter Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me more then these He saide vnto him yea Lord thou knowest that I loue thee Hee saide vnto him feede my lambes He saide vnto him againe the second time Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me He saide vnto him yea Lord thou knowest that I loue thee He saide vnto him Feede my sheepe Hee said vnto him the third time Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me Peter was sorie because hee said to him the third time louest thou me and hee saide vnto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I loue thee Explicatiō Iesus said vnto him Feede my sheepe This may well be reckoned for the first speech of our Sauiour after dinner though consisting of sundry branches seeing all of them as was saide are tending to one and the same ende and all as wee see repeated almost in the same wordes Whether we looke to the three questions of our Sauiour or to the three answers of Peter
Sauiour Christ the originall meanes of our attaining vnto it Neither doth the holy Apostle rest or stay his speech vntill he doe come by an excellent gradation euen to the height of this exaltation at the right hand of the maiestie of God That euen as when God hath made all his workes of creation at the first he looked vpon them and saw that all was very good so by the ascension of our Sauiour to his right hand the worke of our redemption and saluation according to the new creation of all things in Christ after the most holy consultation decree of the whole Trinitie might bee represented most glorious and perfectly good before him For to this purpose it is that the holy Apostle thus writeth in that holy scripture Those saith he speaking of God whom he knew before he also predestinated to be made like to the image of his Sonne that hee might be the first borne among many brethren Moreouer whom he predestinated them also he called and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them he also glorified What saith the Apostle herevpon shall we say to those things If God be on our side who can be against vs who spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him freely giue vs all things else charisetai Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen it is God that iustifieth who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather who is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and maketh request also for vs. Who shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ that is from that loue which wee are sure CHRIST beareth toward vs Shall tribulation or anguish c. No saith the Apostle For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angells nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shal be able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord to wit from that loue wherewith God is affected most tenderly and constantly toward vs for Christ Iesus sake The Apostle wee see speaking of that high consolation which we haue in our Lord Iesus Christ being at the right hand of God making request for vs feareth not lest he should vse any too high excesse of speech For the matter exceedeth euery hyperbole insomuch as it is higher then the very heauens and all creatures either in heauen or in earth So that indeede to speake generally as was answered the height of our Sauiour Christs most high exaltation is as it were the toppe and vpshot or perfection of the comfort of our faith yea euen the very full triumph and glory of it as his most low humiliation and sufferings are as the ground and foundation thereof And so the same Apostle reasoneth also Ephes 2.1 c. For immediately after that he had in like loftie manner described the most high aduancement of our Sauiour euen from his resurrection to his sitting at the right hand of God he inferreth vpon it that whereas we are by nature dead in trespasses and sinnes and children of disobedience c. and by nature children of wrath as well as others yet as he there affirmeth God who is rich in mermy through his great loue wherewith he loued vs euen when we were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs together in Christ for by grace are ye saued saith the Apostle And he that is God hath raised vs vp together and made vs sit together in the heauenly places in Christ Iesus that he might shew in the ages to come the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse toward vs in Christ Iesus For by grace are ye saued throgh faith that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes c. Sessio Christi ad dextrā patris est perfectio vel excellentia officij mediatoris● officij scil prophetici Sacerdotalis ac regij quod iam Christus vt pote caput ecclesiae glorie ficatum in humana natura gloriose in coe●is exercet Cui etiam haec gloria debetur tum ratione officij tum ratione personae Dei Vrsinus Thus then we may perceiue what and how great the vse of our Sauiours sitting at the right hand of God is for our comfort generally But it is meete that we should looke more neerely into the particulars The which that we may doe we cannot as I thinke take a better course then according to the diuers parts of our Sauiour Christs most holy and high office wherein he is according to the most excellent worthines of his Person most gloriously aduanced to consider what be the fruites and benefits thereof For although wee haue already considered of the annointing of our Sauiour to this threefold or tripartite office when we speake of the title Christ yet this letteth not why we should not now treate of the perfit accomplishment of the same though therein we call againe to minde some of those things which haue been set downe before And further also notwithstanding the office of our Sauiour Christ is most vsually determined in his kingdome and priesthood yet because the holy Scriptures doe giue vs to vnderstand that he was a princely Prophet like to Moses and Dauid as well as a kingly high Priest like to Melchisedech we may not amisse for the more plainenesse of doctrine make his prophetship a distinct member of his office First therefore what are the fruits of the aduancement of our Sauiour as a most high and princely Prophet interpreter or Preacher of the word of God First he hath most perfectly sealed vp and authorised all former doctrine and prophesie taught both by himselfe and also by all other the holy Prophets that were since the beginning of the world as the true testimonie and declaration of the will of God touching the saluation of his people Secondly he hath more plentifully cleared published and confirmed the doctrine and Gospel of saluation them euer he had done before Thirdly he hath giuen more gratious and plentifull effects to the ministerie and preaching of his Gospel then euer he gaue to the ministerie of the former Prophets or vnto his owne whi●e he preached in his bodily presence here vpon earth Explication and proofe These are the fruits and benefits indeede which we may not vnfitly referre to the sitting of our Sauiour at the right hand of God in respect of his princely prophesie as we will by the grace of God indeuour to make plaine And first that our Sauiour Christ hath by his sitting at the right hand of God sealed vp ratified al former holy doctrine prophesie taught both by himself his holy Prophets to be the very true testimony of the will of God touching the saluation of his Church And secondly that he hath thereby from thence more plentifully cleared published confirmed
Prophesies which were giuen forth concerning this soueraigntie of our Sauiour and this mightie administration of his kingdome from the right hand of God long before as Psal 110.1 c. The Lord saith the Princely Prophet King Dauid saide to my Lord Sit thou at my right hand vntill I make thine enemies thy footestoole The Lord shall send the rod of thy power out of Sion c. The whole Psalme is nothing else but a propheticall description of the mightie fruites and effectes of the royall Priesthood and Priestly royaltie of the kingdome of our Sauiour Christ in the subduing and ouerthrowing of his enemies from the glorious right hand of God And so also saith the holy Apostle Paul 1. Cor 15.25 from the authoritie of the same Psalme he must raigne till he hath put al his enemies vnder his feete In which words of the Apostle two things are well worthy to be obserued of vs. First that he interpreteth the sitting of our Sauiour at the right hand of God by this word to raigne because thereby as hath beene shewed alreadie his most high and kingly authoritie is signified Secondly that he referreth it vnto our Sauiour Christ which the holy Psalmist attributeth vnto God insomuch as the Lord doth that by our Sauiour Christ to whom he hath giuen all power and authoritie for the gouernment of his Church which the Prophet saith that God would doe himselfe And so he doth indeede though not imediately but as it were by the hand of our Lord Iesus Christ This most high souereigntie of our Sauiour was likewise prophesied of by the Prophet Daniel as we read cha 2 verses 44.45 The God of heauen saith Daniel shall set vp a kingdome which shall neuer be destroied and this kingdome shall not be giuen to another people but it shall breake and destroy all these kingdome hee speaketh of the proud rebellious monarchies of the world it shal stand foreuer And to his purpose is our Sauiour Christ compared there to a stone cut out of the mountaines without hands that should breake in peeces the yron The letter intēds the 4. Monarchies vz of the Babiloniās the Medes and Persians of the Grecians and Syria Egypt the clay the siluer and the gold that is to say which should breake all other kingdoms how strong or how rich soeuer they should be which wil not submit themselues vnto him For as it is in the 35. verse of the same chapter all the rebellious kingdomes of the world were to become like the chaffe of the sommer flowers which the winde carrieth away so that no place is found for them But as touching the stone which smote the image that should become as the Prophet saith a great mountaine and fill the whole earth And againe ch 7. v. 13.14 As I beheld in visions by night behold one like the Sonne of man came in the clowdes of heauen and he approached vnto the aucient of dayes and they brought him before him And he gaue him dominion and honour and a kingdome that all people languages and nations should serue him his dominion is an euerlasting dominion which shall neuer be taken away and his kingdome shall neuer be destroied And in the same chap verses 26.27 The same holy Prophet foretelling the afflictions which should befall the Church through the crueltie of tyrannous persecutors saith that the iudgement should sit to take away the dominion of the persecutor to consume and destroy it to the end And as the Prophet addeth further The kingdome and dominion and the greatnes of the kingdome vnder the whole heauen shall be giuen to the holy people af the most high whose kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome and all power shall serue and obey him The Prophet Daniel I confesse doth in these words first of all speake to comfort the Iewes to describe vnto thē what their estate should be vntil the cōming of our Sa Ch into the world and that though many tirants should arise to trouble them yet should they be suppressed by the hand of God Neuertheles his prophesie extendeth it selfe further yea euen beyond all extent of time as his wordes doe plainly shewe And euen that also which did most properly concerne the Church of the Iewes it containeth a proportionable resemblance of the state of the Chistian Churches such as it was afterward in the like times of their persecutions vnder the like vnmercifull tyrants And in this respect many things are spoken in the Reuelation of the new Testament in way of reference or by allusion at the least to this prophesie of Daniel and to some other of the holy Prophets Thus Reuel 1.6 our Sauiour is called in these dayes of the Gospell the Prince of the Kings of the earth And chap 19. verses 11.12 c. I sawe heauen open saith Saint Iohn and behold a white horse and hee that sate vpon him was called faithfull and true and he iudgeth and fighteth righteously And his eyes were as a flame of fire and on his head were many crownes and hee had a name written which no man knewe but himselfe And he was clothed in a garment dipped in blood and his name is called the word of God And the warriors which were in heauen saith Saint Iohn followed him vpon white horses clothed with fiue linnen white and pure And forth of his mouth went out a sharpe sword that with it he should smite the heathen for he shall rule them with a rod of yron for he it is that treadeth the wine presse of the fiercues and wrath of almightie God And he hath vpon his garment vpon his thigh a name written The King of Kings and the Lord of Lords And chap 17 14. The Lambe shall ouercome the Kings of the earth for he is Lord of Lord and King of Kings c. Thus then wee see how our Sauiour shall finally preuaile against all the enemies of his Church the which he doth account to be his enemies as was said And also how all the neglect of his Saints is esteemed of him to be the neglect of himselfe according to that Mat 25. verse 42. c. I was an hungred and yee gaue mee no meate c. Verily I say vnto you insomuch as ye did it not to one the least of these ye did it not to me And that he doth likewise take all the iniuries done against them to be done against himselfe we see it plainely from that his owne speech to Saul saying thus vnto him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me And againe I am Iesus whom thou persecutest And therewithall sheweth Saul his dangerous enterprise telling him that it was hard for him to kicke against prickes Act 9.4.5 How as he shall finally preuaile against all his enemies so we are further to consider and to assure our selues to our comfort that hee will in the meane white euermore so wisely order and moderate yea so mightily ouer rule all causes and persons as may best
al the children of God as if the holy Apostle should haue spoken thus Maruel not at this that I say all the enemies of God shall be subdued vnto him for euen the Son of God himselfe in that he is man yea in that being both God and man and bearing the office of the Mediator he shall in regard of the same his office willingly submit himselfe vnder God as to his head 1. Cor 11 3. though he shall neuertheles for that but rather more gloriously rule and raigne ouer vs as our head to our infinite benefit Eph 1.22 and ch 4. 15. Colos 1.18 and ch 2 19. And thus may we perceiue that the cleare manifestation of the subiection of our Sauiour such as it shall be containeth a most sure ground of perfect comfort to vs insomuch as we shall at that time and thenceforth for euer continually behold and enioy the most blessed presence of our Mediatour by whom wee being once reconciled and vnited to God our heauenly Father shall by him and vnder him bee held in so sweete a bonde of subiection to ou● God that we shall neuer haue any minde to lift vp ourselues against God or at any time to withdrawe our dutifull obedience and seruice as in Adam out first Father all of vs did and are still of our selues alwaies apt so to doe But yet one thing more remaineth concerning this great point of our faith Quest What doth Saint Paul meane when he saith that our Sauiour shall be subiect to the end God may be all in all Is it his meaning that then our Sauiour Christ shall cease to be any longer Christ and that hee shall lay aside his humane nature c. Answer Far be it from vs once to admit any such thought The meaning of the holy Apostle is that by the subiection of our Sauiour which he speaketh of the diuine Maiestie of the Godhead both Father Sonne and holy Ghost shall be so clearely manifested that the bright glory thereof shall not onely infinitely excell the glory of all other creatures but euen the humanitie of the Sonne of God himselfe So that though our Sauiour Christ shall retaine his eternall glory euen in that he is the head and mediator of the Church yet the perfection of all glory yea euen touching our redemption iustification sanctification and glorification shall be ascribed to the Deitie both Father Sonne and holy Ghost by whom we were with one most holy consent eternally elected and chosen and through whose grace toward vs and the whole Church the Father did send the Son in due time to take the nature of man by the holy Ghost and so to obtaine this high grace to be the Redeemer and Sauiour of men Explication This is indeede the holy meaning of the blessed Apostle so farre as wee in our weakenes could attaine to the glimse at the least of so high a mysterie The which doubtles neither wee nor any other shall be able fully to vnderstand vntill the time come that wee shall knowe as wee are knowne as the some Apostle speaketh and that we see it fulfilled before our eyes in the blessed season appointed of God Hitherto of the comforts of faith arising vnto vs from the sitting of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ at the right hand of God the Father almightie NOw let vs come to the vse of the same comforts touching those fruites of obedience and thankes which we stand bound to yeeld vnto God our Sauiour for the same Question Which are they Answer To speake more generally As all the fruites and benefites of our redemption are by this last and highest degree of our Sauiours exaltation most comfortably sealed vp and assured vnto vs and to the whole Church for euer so are wee in euery respect both of his princely prophesie and also of his royall Priesthood and k ngdome exceedingly to reioyce and comfort our selues in him as in an al sufficient Prince and Mediatour of our eternall redemption and saluation And accordingly with the greatest chearefulnesse of soule and spirit that may be to yeelde him all the duties of the greatest loue reuerence and obedience that we can possibly attaine vnto Explicatiō proofe It is indeede most reasonable and meete that it should be so as euery one must needes acknowledge in his heart though wee should say no more For seeing hee is a most high and holy Prophet wee are to reioyce in him more then euer the people of Israel did or might lawfully reioyce in Moses though he was the blessed instrument of God to deliuer them out of that heauie bondage of Egypt wherein they had beene a long time sore oppressed And more then any other of the same people might afterward reioyce in any other of the holy Prophets though God made them to bee as Fathers vnto them and as the horses and chariotes of Israel according to that which one of the Kinges acknowledge concerning the Prophet Elisha 2. King 13. verse 14. Seeing he is a royall high Priest it is our dutie to take more ioy in him spiritually then all the sweete perfume and all the glorious garments of Aaron or any other of the high Priests of the lawe could yeeld outwardly to those that beheld and sinelled to the same Exodus 28. Psal 133. Seeing he is the King of Kings The Duties and so crowned of God in the Lighest heauens we ought to reioice in him with ioy infinitely exceeding the ioy which the people tooke at the anointing and coronation of King Salomon heere vpon earth though at the blowing of the trumpet all of them said God saue King Salomon and piped with pipes and reioyced with great ioy so that the earth rang with the sound of them 1. Kings chap. 1. verses 39 4● And hereunto we are in speciall manner exhorted by the Spirit of God in the Song of Songs in that sweet allegorie borrowed from the same anointing and crowning of King Salomon in that he was a type of our Sauiour Christ chapter 3.11 For Come forth ye daughters of Sion saith the Church and behold King Salomon that is our Salomon the great King of the whole Church both in heauen and in earth with the Crowne wherewith his mother crowned him in the day of his mariage and in the day of the gladnes of his heart But this beholding must be with the eye of faith for otherwise we cannot pierce so high as to see the glory of the coronation of this our Salomon whom we now speake of Thus I say more generally wee are to reioice with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious in respect both of his princely Prophetship and also of his kingly high Priesthood and Kingdome though with our naturall eyes as the Apostle Peter saieth we doe not see him And this is the next and most immediate duty which doth kindly follow vpon the former doctrine For insomuch as there is so great a ground or Sea full of comfort what may more aptly
the proofe of the second point that all religious worship both inward and outward is due to our Sauiour sitting at the right hand of God Which that it is so it may be euident vnto vs from that which we reade Philip. 2.9 10 11. where after that the Apostle hath made a notable description of his exceeding great humiliation hee inferreth this vpon it saying Wherefore also God hath highly exalted him and giuen him a name aboue euery name That at the name of Iesus euery knee should bow both of things in heauen and of things on earth and of things vnder the earth And that euery tongue should confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord vnto the glory of God the Father Reade a●so 1. Tim. ● 21 I charge thee saith the Apostle to Timothie an Euangelist before God and the Lord Iesus Christ and the elect Angells that thou obserue these things without preferring one to another and doe nothing partially He speaketh of such things as doe nearely concerne the diuine worshippe and seruice of God and our Sauiour Christ and the reuerend ordering and performing the duties thereof And againe 2. Epist 4.1 I charge thee therefore before God and before the Lord Iesus Christ c. Reade also Heb. 12.28 29. Wherefore saith the Apostle seeing we receiue a kingdome he speaketh of the kingdome of our Lord Iesus Christ now established from heauen which cannot be shaken let vs haue grace whereby we may so serue God that wee may please him with reuerence and feare For euen our God is a consuming fire And so it is said of our Sauiour Christ that hee shall come at the last day with flaming fire rendering vengeance to them that doe not know God and which doe not obey the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ c. To this purpose therefore the propheticall exhortation of the 2. Psal ought to take place among vs yea among the Princes of the earth as wee reade verse 10 c. where after that the Prophet hath shewed how fearefully our Sauiour shall proceede against his enemies yea euen here in this worlde hee earnestly admonisheth and exhorteth those that bee corrigible euen so manie as appertaine to the Lorde that they would bee wise in time and so preuent the perill Be wise now therefore O yee Kings saith he be yee learned O yee Iudges of the earth Serue the Lord in feare and reioyce in trembling Kisse the Sonne that is in all honourable sort declare your selues to be his willing and professed subiectes lest hee be angrie and yee perish in the way to wit before you bring your owne deuises to passe which surely hee will frustrate aboue that you can be aware when his wrath shall sodenly burne or as they translate and as the wordes will well signifie burne neuer so little to shewe the fearefulnesse of his wrath And then hee concludeth the Psalme with this excellent sentence Blessed are all that trust in him The last place which I will alledge to this purpose is Psal 110. verse 3. where the same holy Prophet euen the princely Prophet Dauid deriueth this as an effect from the sitting of our Sauiour in his kingly glory and souerainge power at the right hand of God that his people should bee such as will through the mightie power of his word and by grace of his holy Spirit in the daies of his Gospel stocke in companies and that also with great cheerefulnesse to yeelde all spirituall worshippe and seruice to our God in the name of Iesus Christ our Lord. The Lord saith King Dauid shall send the rodde of thy power that is the scepter of his word and Gospel out of Zion saying Be thou ruler in the middest of thine enemies Thy people shall come to offer willingly in the time of the assembling of thine armie to wit to defend thy Gospel by the sword against the violent aduersaries thereof according to that Psalme 47. verse 9. or rather when they shall come by troopes vnto the places of thy spirituall worshippe to learne to fight thy spirituall battells against their spirituall enemies the worlde the flesh and the Diuell by an allusion to the holy custome of the Iewes resorting by companies to the Temple of the Lord at the solemne feastes of the Lawe according to that Psalme 42. verse 4. and Psalme 84 verse 7. For so the wordes seeme to follow aptly thus in the seemely places of thy holinesse yea euen from the wombe that is so soone as they shall bee spiritually reg●nerated vnto thee as it were betimes in the morning or at the peepe of the day that is most diligently shall the dew of thy youth that is thy newe borne babes very copiously according to the falling of the dew vpon the earth like to that phrase of speech 2. Sam. 17.12 vsed in that sense though then by Ahitophel to a wicked purpose shall present themselues vnto thee The reason whereof followeth answer rable to that which went before The Lord hath sworne and will not repent Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech And thus wee see that from this Article concerning our Sauiours royall aduancement to bee the onely spirituall King and Prince of his Church that is of all the Saintes of God that all holy and religious worship is due vnto him Now thirdly that all submission and obedience is for his sake and according to this word to be yeelded to all ciuill Magistrates and t all ecclesiasticall Church gouernour as it is euident Rom. 13.1 c. Let euery soule be subiect to the higher powers c. And Matth. 18.15 and verses 18 19. Verily saith our Sauiour I say vnto you Whatsoeuer ye shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen c. Where out of all question he had respect of that heauenly soueraigntie which he hath now at the right hand of God And fourthly touching generall obedience in the common actions and conuersation of our liues reade Colos 3.1 c. If then yee be risen with Christ saith the Apostle seeke those things which are aboue where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God Set your affections on things which are aboue and not on things which are on the earth For ye are dead your life is hidden with Christ in God When Christ who is our life shal appeare then shal ye also appeare with him in glory Mortifie therfore your mēbers which are on the earth fornication vncleannes c. And 1. Thes 4.1 2. And furthermore saith the Apostle we beseech ye brethren exhort ye in the Lord Iesus that ye increase more more as yee haue receiued of vs how yee ought to walke and to please God For yee know what commandements we gaue you by the Lord Iesus For this is the will of God euen your sanctification and that ye should abstaine from fornication c. If we shall doe thus yea constantly to the end and not be turned away by any afflictions then behold
them as hypocrites NOw let vs come to the reason or rule of this first part of the sentence or iudgement of our Sauiour concerning them of his right hand Question Which is that For as our Sauiour telleth vs hee will say I was an hungred and yee gaue mee meate I thirsted and ye gaue me drinke I was a stanger and ye lodged me I was naked and ye clothed me I was sicke and yee visited me I was in prison and ye came vnto me Explication These words of our Sauiour as was said euen now conteine a reason and therein also that rule or law according to the which our Sauiour frameth his iudgement Let vs therefore consider of them in either respect And first in what sense they are to be accounted a reason of that part of the iudgement which our Sauiour hath expressed Question How is that Answer They may well be so accounted in diuers respects First in that they argue from a speciall instance of the manifold effect and working of Gods grace in the hearts of those whom hee calleth the blessed of his Father that they are so indeede and that the kingdome of God it prepared for all such Secondly in that they shew that the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and our Sauiour himselfe doe so greatly esteeme mercifulnesse and the fruits thereof toward his needie and afflicted ones when they proceede of true faith and obedience to God that hee will of his infinite mercie reward such as yeelde and practise them with no lesse reward then eternall life Thirdly in that they containe a direction to the elect children of God what way they must take and walke in to the end they may first glorifie God here in this world and then be partakers of this glory of his heauenly kingdome for euer afterward Finally in that they shew the children of God how they may comfortably assure themselues from the fruits and effects of their faith that they are true beleeuers the very elect of the Father and heires of his eternall kingdome prepared for them from the beginning Expsi In all these respects indeede well may these latter words of our Sauiour be a reason of the former part of his sentence or iudgement concerning the godly as may be proued by many testimonies of holy Scriptures But before wee come to the proofe of the particulars of this respectiue reason to the end we may carry the matter more plainely before vs wee are to consider in a few words both the kinde of the workes here mentioned by our Sauiour and also the kindes of those persons to whom they are to be performed The kinde of the workes are of true christian mercy pitie and compassion Our Sauiour mentioneth foure particulars first feeding which may well comprehend the giuing both of meate and drinke secondly lodging thirdly clothing fourthly visiting the which agreeth both to the shewing of mercie vpon the sicke and also vpon such as be in prison Some make sixe of them 1. giuing of meate 2. giuing of drinke 3. lodging 4. clothing 5. visiting of the sicke 6. visiting of prisoners But we are not to stand much vpon the number which was a thing that our Sauiour himselfe stoode not vpon For whereas there be other duties of mercie besides these we may be sure that he meant not to exclude any one of them By the rehearsall of some hee pointeth to all the rest making choise of those that are most sensible and familiar euen such as are to be most generally practised among his people The persons to whom these works of mercy are to be performed they are to speake generally all such as stand in neede of the reliefs and succours mentioned We may reduce them to three heads First those that be ordinarily in want to wit the poore which are euery where dispersed among the rest of the people of God of whom our Sauiour hath said before The poore ye shall alwaies haue with ye And that also by the very appointment of God according to the holy Prouerbe which saith The poore and the rich meete together the Lord is the maker of them all For as it is said elsewhere the Lord maketh poore and he maketh rich he maketh high and he maketh low Of these speaketh our Sauiour Luke 14.12 When thou makest a dinner or supper call not thy friends nor thy brethren nor thy kinsmen nor thy rich neighboures c but call the poore the maimed the lame and the blinde And thou shalt be blessed because they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the iust The second sort may be vnderstood of those that through persecution are driuen from house and home for Christ his gospels sake concerning which sort our Sauiour speaketh saying When they persecute you in one Citie flee to another he vnderstanding it of such as for whose escape God so prouideth that they doe not by their flight dishonour his name or discourage and daunt the weake brethren The third sort are of those to whom God denieth the opportunitie of fleeing or in their flight or otherwise be apprehended by the enemies of the Gospel and cast into prison according to that saying of our Sauiour Luke 21.12 They will deliuer you into prisons Of the which three sorts the first though they haue housen and lodging such as they are may easily suffer hunger and thirst and also want clothing for them and their children The second sort though they haue clothing and it may be for a while money in their purses yet shall they want safe comfortable lodging in their trauell if good christians doe not entertaine them yea in short time they may grow into their tatters want mony also to pay for victualls necessary for them The third sort though they cannot be lodged at home yet vnlesse the case be very straight they may be visited and relieued with such things as they want though they be shut vp in prison Finally some of euery sort are sometimes sicke and then haue need of speciall visiting and looking vnto And of all these stand the rither sort bound to haue a christian care to minister vnto them according to their necessities lest they should faint and be discouraged vnder their afflictions Yea so doe the richer sort stand bound that without the practise of these duties they shall neuer be able to stand with comfort before the Lord in the great day of his iudgement as we shall more fully see afterward when wee shall come to the other part of the sentence which containeth the condemnation of the wicked Now touching the particular considerations of the reason which our Sauiour annexeth to the present part of his iudgement for the acquiting of the godly First that the duties of compassion and mercy which he mentioneth are speciall testimonies declaring who are the blessed of God for whom the inheritance of the kingdome is prepared euen from the effects or working of Gods holy
God as if they were alreadie perfectly accomplished according to the more full description thereof Matth 8.11.12 and Luke 13. verses 23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30 Where by occasion that one saide to our Sauiour Lord are there fewe that shall he saued Hee saide to them that is to him that asked the question and to the rest that were present Striue to enter in at the straite gate for many I say vnto yee will seeke to enter in and shall not be able When the good man of the house is risen vp and hath shut to the doore and ye begin to stand without and to knocke at the doore saying Lord Lord open to vs and he shall answer and say vnto you I knowe ye not whence ye are Then shall yee begin to say we haue eate and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streates But hee shal say I tell you I knowe yee not whence yee are depart from me all yee workers of iniquite There shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth when yee shall ●ee Abraham and Isaak and Iacob and all the Prophets in the kingdome of God and your selues thrust out of doores Then shall come many from the East and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit at table in the kingdome of God And againe Matth 13 41.42 43. The wicked shall be cast into a furnace of fire There shall bee wailing and gnashing of teeth Then shall the iust men shine as the Sunne in the kingdome of their Father Hee that hath eares to heare let him heare Likewise Iohn chap 5.29 And 2. Thes 1 6 7 8 9 10. According also to the holy Prophesie of Daniel chap 12.2 3. And thus we see that there are diuerse testimonies for the further confirmation of the ful execution of either part of this last sentence and iudgement to be pronounced by our Sauiour But let vs weigh them seuerally and a part And first whereas our Sauiour affirmeth that it is most sure that the wicked shall goe into euerlasting paine yea euen into the furnace of fire and therewithall also into shame and perpetuall contempt as the Prophet Daniel hath foretold where shal be weeping and gnashing of teeth where also beside that the fire shall neuer be quenched as our Sauiour affirmeth Marke 9.43 the worme to wit of a guiltie and conuicted conscience neuer dyeth but lyeth alwaies gnawing as it were and nipping or stinging as a ferpent in the bosome according to that Isai chap 66 24. where shall be no rest either day or night Reuel chap 14.11 where also as wee haue seene before shall be the most wofull and hiddeous companie and fellowship of the diuels where also death and torment shall beare their full sway Reuel chap 20.10 and verses 14 15. O therefore in all these respects how heauie and fearfull shall this execution be Heauie and fearefull I say first in that it is a separation of the wicked from him in whose fauourable presence onely standeth the comfort and happinesse of life It were an vncomfortable thing for a subiect to be banished for euer from the presence of a gracious Prince here vpon earth as we may take the example from Absalom 2. Sam 14.32 concerning the bitternesse of his banishment from the Court of the King his Father But what is this in comparison of that The anger of an earthly King is as the messengers of death Prouerbs 16.14 how much more then he indignation of the God of heauen Wee may feare the anger of any earthly King more sometime then there is cause but our feare can at no time exceede the anger of God whensoeuer it is kindled against vs according to the Psalm 7 6 7. Thou euen thou art to bee feared and who shall stand in thy sight when thou art angrie And Psalm 90 11. Thine anger is according to thy feare But specially in the execution of this last iudgement yea though we should consider it but in this first degree of it in that the wicked shall for euer be abandoned from euerlasting life and from the glory thereof But it is yet more fearefull in that they shall bee punished with vexation and torment both bodies and soules not for a certaine space of time and so to end but for euer and euer world without end not to endure vexation and torment in some small measure but in all extremities easelesse and remedilesse as well as perpetuall and endlesse For hence it is that it is compared to fire yea to euerlasting fire and the same also so violent that it shall make the mightie diuels to bewaile their estate vnder the reuenging hand of God in the middest of it as wee may perceiue by that which we reade Matth 8.29 and in the 6. verse of the Epistle of Iude as was alledged before it being such a fire as though it haue a consuming nature yet shall it neuer consume and deuoure this fuell of Gods wrath which shall bee once cast into it A long lingering griefe as wee knowe though it bee not exceeding sharpe yet it is by reason of the continuance very tedious Much more tedious therefore must it needes be if it be both grieuous and also of long durance When King Saule had his deaths wound hee accounted his miserie the greater because his armour-bearer refused to kill him out of hand 1. Sam 31.4 And Deut 28.65.66.67 It was threatened as a heauie punishment of God vppon the Israelities if they would not obey the commandements of God that they should haue no rest but bee combred with a trembling heart both night and day so that in the morning they should say World God it were euening and at euening Would God it were morning for the feare of thine heart which thou shalt feare and for the sight of thine eyes which thou shalt see But what is all this and all the most grieuous diseases and torments of this life though they were continuall by the colicke or gout or any other yea though they met altogether in one man in comparison of the eternall torments and dolours of Hell Wherefore deare brethren let vs by all meanes take warning by this doctrine of our blessed Sauiour that we may be carefull to auoide them Verily the miserie shall be aboue all our vnderstanding so wofull that wee may iustly account our selues happie and blessed of God if wee may escape if whatsoeuer firy affliction wee endure here in this world yea though it should be all the dayes of our life and the same also prolonged neuer so many yeares Neither let any wicked man abiding in his sinnes flatter himselfe when he heareth these fearefull things saying God forbid as the wicked Pharisies said to our Sauiour when he spake to them of this iudgement of God Luke 20.16 For this part of the iudgement shall be as certainly executed as that other which followeth in the next place concerning the euerlasting and most happy life of the godly Wherefore to the
of God how this is vrged from the force of the same argument read 1. Ioh 2.28.29 Litle children saith the Apostle abide yee in him that when he shall appeare wee may be bold and not be ashamed before him at his comming If ye know that he is righteous knowe ye that he which doth righteously is borne of him And chap 3. verses 2.3 Dearly beloued now are we the Sonnes of God but yet it doth not appeare what we shal be we know that when he shal appear we shal be like him for we shal see him as he is And euery man that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure Read also 1. Tim 6.13.14 and 2. Ep 4.1.2 Where a most earnest charge is laide vpon the Ministers of the Gospel that they be faithfull in their office as they will answer it at the appearing of our Sauiour to iudge all flesh This moued the Apostles themselues to be carefull in the discharge of their dutie in their Preaching of the Gospel 2. Cor 5.9 10. And generally it ought to moue all to the like care in the duties of their seuerall callings 2. Pet 3.11.12.13.14 To this end also tend all the parables of our Sauiour whereof we haue heard before Mat ch 24. 25. and Luke 12.35 36. c. And in other places of the Euangelists Touching constancie in godlines the holy Apostles did earnestly pray for it on the behalfe of the Christians to whom they wrote euen from this consideration as Philip 1 9. c. And 1. Thes 3 12.13 And chap 5 23.24 For the obtaining of which grace of constancie they giue all incouragement that they shall be partakers of it whosoeuer will chearefully seeke after it according to that 1 Cor 1 8 9. Our Lord Iesus Christ shall confirme yee to the ende that ye may be blameles in his day God is faithful c. And in the Epistle of Iude verse 24. God is able to keepe vs that we fall not and to present vs faultles before the presence of his glory with ioy And 1. Thes 5 9 10. Of the duties of loue and mercy toward Christians being in outward want and distresse how they are perswaded from the description of the last iudgement by our Sauiour himselfe we haue seene before And that it is mightie to moue vs to pitie poore sinners that lye in their sinnes to their extreme perill without repentance whether they be our children or seruants or friends or euen our very enemies we may consider from the exhortation of the Apostle Iude verses 20 21 22 23. But yee beloued edisie your selues in your most holy faith c. And haue compassion of some in putting difference And other saue which feare pulling them out of the fire c. We may consider it also from the example and practise of the Apostles themselues mentioned a litle before 2. Cor 5. Wee knowing the terrour of the Lord saith Paul doe perswade men c. And Colos 1.28 We Preach Christ saith the same Apostle whom in the verse before he calleth the hope of glory admonishing euery man and teaching euery man in all wisedome that we may present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus c. And who I pray you can but rue to thinke in his heart that either his wife or his child or his friend yea or his enemies as was said should through any default or negligence on his part be throwne into endles easeles and remediles extremitie of vnspeakable torment Among other duties it may not be forgotten of vs that we do stand bound to be very carefull to celebrate most gratefully the memoriall of the death of our Sauiour Christ by our often resorting to the table of the Lord from time to time in euery generation euen till his comming againe as we are admonished 1. Cor ch 11.26 To conclude this point The care of performing these duties faithfully and constantly in our seuerall callings with regardfull remembrance of this comming of our Sauiour to iudgement It doth cause exceeding ioy to the conscience of euery Christian as may appeare from the example of the holy Apostles and of other Christians For they hauing care to haue a good conscience in the hope of the resurrection of the dead c. Act 24 15 16. they did likewise obtaine exceeding peace and ioy to the same their consciences in hope of the same at the last day according to that which we read further Phi 3.20.21 1. Thes 2.19.20 For what is our hope or ioy or crown of reioycing Are not you euen it in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming yes yee are our glory and ioy And 2. Tim. 4. verses 6 7.8 A like notable place to the same purpose Now fourthly concerning patience with ioyfulnes in all present troubles from the consideration of the same argument beside the example of Paul last alledged 2. Tim 4.5 c. wherein the same is euident let vs hearken to the exhortation of the Apostle Iames ch 5. v 7. Be ye patient therefore saith he vnto the comming of the Lord. Behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruite of the earth c. Read also Heb 10.32.35.36 And 1. Pet 1.3.4.5.6.7.8.9 And ch 4 12.13 Moreouer wee haue the promise that if wee suffer with our Sauiour Christ we shall be glorified with him Rom 8 17 18. And 2. Tim 2.11.12 It is a true saying c. And Luke 22. verses 28.29.30 Ye are they saith our Sauiour who continued with me in my tentations Therefore I appoint vnto you a kingdome as my Father hath appointed to me That ye may eate and drinke at my table in my kingdome and fit on seates and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Fiftly that the reuerend consideration of the last iudgement of our Sauiour Christ ought to restraine vs from rash vnaduised iudging of others the Apostle Paul teacheth vs Rom 14. v. 10. c. Why saith the holy Apostle doest thou iudge thy brother or why doest thou despise thy brother For we shall all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ. For it is written I liue saith the Lord euery knee shall bowe to mee and all tongues shall confesse vnto God So then euery one of vs shall giue accounts of himselfe vnto God Let vs not therefore iudge one another any more but vse your iudgement rather in this that no man put an occasion to fall or a stumbling blocke before his brother And Iames chapt 4.12 There is one Lawgiuer which is able to saue to destroy Who art thou that iudgest another man 1. Cor 4.5 Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten thinges that are in darknes make the counsels of the hearts manifest then shall euery man haue praise of God It is the same precept which our Sauiour himselfe gaue Matth 7.1 Iudge not that ye be not iudged c. Luk 6.37 Iudge not ye shall not be
ought to be the estate and condition of euery true Church of Christ throughout the whole world This Church of God therefore generally considered is but one as the Apostle sheweth by the similitude of the naturall bodie the which though it haue many members is yet but one bodie Song of Songs ch 6. v. 8. And Ioh. 10.16 Now whereas there are diuers kindes of bodies First naturall such as euery man carrieth about him now Secondly spirituall such as the faithfull shall haue indued with far more excellent gifts at the resurrection from the dead 1. Cor. 15.44 Thirdly politike bodies such as are ciuill corporations whereof the King of the Nation is the head in a borrowed sense or metaphorically 1. Sam. chap. 15.17 Fourthly Mysticall bodies as for example the Churches of God spiritually vnited to our Sauiour Christ the onely immediate head and vitall quickener and gouernour thereof Hence it is the more manifest what manner of body the Church is by how much the similitude wherevnto it is compared is more distinctly expressed So then the Church of God to speake generally as we began to say is but one mysticall and spirituall bodie how many members soeuer it haue being considered either in particular Churches whether nationall as wee vse to speake or in cities or in country townes and villages or whether it be considered in regard of singular persons and therefore is called Catholike or Vniuersall Furthermore it is so called not onely to note thereby the calling of the Gentiles to the fellowship of the faith and couenant of Gods grace with the beleeuing Iewes who from the time of Moses were the onely peculiar people of God aboue all other of the Nations Ephes 2.16 and 3.6 but also to the end that vnder this name of catholike or vniuersall might be comprehended the whole number of the elect whomsoeuer God hath ordeined to saluation from the beginning of the world to the end of the same as well such as be called alreadie as such as are to be called in euery age of the world and the same also out of euery nation farre and neare and out of euery estate and condition of people noble or vnnoble rich or poore learned or vnlearned young or olde man or woman and all according to the free grace of God without respect of person Yea the Church hath this generall name giuen vnto it that it might not onely comprehend that part of the Church which is called the militant part here on earth but also that part which is alreadie partly and in some measure triumphant in heauen According to that which we reade Ephes 3.15 God is the Father of the whole familie in heauen and in earth Reade also chap. 1. verses 9 10 11. And Colos 1.19 20 21 22. Heb. 12.22 c. And Gal. 4.26 This then is that which the holy Apostle saith in our text that in the one only body of the Church of God here on earth both Iew Gentile bond free c are conteined as the seuerall members thereof The which as was said we may proportionably extend to the whole Church most generally taken that all is but one c. Reade also Acts 2. verse 39. The promise is made to you and to your children and to all that are a farre off euen as many as the Lord our God shall call Likewise Ephes 2.13 c. And Gal. 3. at the end of the chapter And Colos 3.11 Neither Grecian nor Iew circumcision nor vncircumcision neither Barbarian nor Scythian neither bond nor free none of them are excepted from hauing their part in Christ either because they are of this or that nation of this or that condition and calling c. Reade also Acts 10.34 35. Of a truth saith the Apostle Peter I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons But in euery nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him And Reuel 5.9 Thou hast redeemed vs to God by thy blood out of euery kindred and tongue and people and nation c. And chap. 7.9 I beheld saith Saint Iohn and lo a great multitude which no man could number of all nations and kindreds and people and tongues stood before the throne and before the lambe clothed with long white robes and palmes in their hands c. And verse 14 c. These were they which came out of great tribulation c. This vniuersality of the Catholike Church is according to the ancient promise of God made to Abraham that in his seede all the nations of the world should be blessed It is also according to that more ancient and propheticall prayer of Noah Gen. 9.27 God perswade Iapheth that he may dwell in the tents of Shem. And yet before that according to that most ancient promise of God euen from the beginning of the world Gen. 3.15 The seede of the woman shall breake the Serpents head Yea God as a most prouident Father knowing that fraileman would fall into sinne and so be the iust cause of his owne miserie and ruine it pleased him of his infinite goodnesse and mercie in the secret of his owne counsel and purpose to ordaine him a remedie euen before the foundations of the world were laid 1. Pet. 1.20 Herein therefore God hath dealt with mankinde after the manner of wise and louing Parents who knowing that their young children are subiect to burning or skalding c will alwaies haue some thing prepared afore hand which may be ready with them to helpe at any time of neede Yet that which man doth vpon an vncertaine feare God did of certaine knowledge without any doubt what would ensue By reason that the Church is thus Catholike and vniuersall in the generall acception of it therfore is it made a matter of faith not that we should beleeue in the Church but because it is to be beleeued of vs according to the holy Scriptures that God hath such a Church as may iustly be so termed And because also it is so firmely founded established in our Sauiour Christ according to the most sure stable counsel of God that nothing no not the gates of Hell shal euer be able to preuaile against it Mat. 16.18 Read also Ps 125. and Ier. 33.17 18 c. to the end of the chapter Moreouer 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his c. And that this vniuersall Church consisting both of Iew Gentile is founded vpon our Sauiour Christ it is euident Ephes 2.18 For as the holy Apostle saith there wee both that is both Iew and Gentile haue through him an entrance vnto the Father by one Spirit And verse 22. In whom we are also built together to be the habitation of God by the Spirit By the Spirit saith the Apostle and that also through faith to remoue all conceit of any bodily commixtion or confusion of the Church or members thereof with Christ bodily and likewise to
vpon the glory of Moses his face after became from the Lord out of the mount Neither could Moses himselfe see any more but as it were the back partes of the Lord and that through a crannie of the rocke Exod 33.18 c. and chapter 34.33 c. and 2. Corinth 3.7 Read also Ier 10.6 Isai 40.12 c. Rom 11.33 c. And as touching those things which apperteine to the kingdome of heauen they are farre aboue those which the eye hath seene or eare heard or euer came into mans heart 1 Corinth 2.7.8.9 It foloweth therefore according to the second parte of the answere that these things and this euerlasting mansion place is by all good reason to bee principallie sought after and affected according to that of our Sau Christ First seeke the kingdome of God c Herevnto also doth the example of the holie Patriarches call vs according to that which wee read Hebr chapt 11. verses 13 14.1● 16. Neither may wee in any wise neglect the holie exhortation of the Apostle Paul Coloss 3. ● c. Set your affection on things which are aboue and not on things which are on the earth c. And verse 5. Mortifie therefore your members which are on the earth fornication vncleannes c. For as wee read Reuelat 21. verse 27. There shall enter into the heauenly Ierusalem no vncleane thing neither whatsoeuer worketh abomination and lies but they which are written in the Lambes bo ke of life O therfore how vaine yea how absurd and madde a choise is this of the children of this world who for earthlie things which are but smoke and dost yea for the pleasure of sinne which is abominable skum and filthy dish-wash doe lose the most durable pure and pleasant ioyes of the kingdom of heauen And for the loue of houses of clay whose foundation as Eliphaz saith truely in the book of Iob 4.19 is in the dust and shall be destroyed before the mothe that is most sodeinlie as a flying mothe may be crushed to nothing with a mans finger to loose the glorious and eternall Palace of heauen Th s verilie is intollerable madnesse and follie But let vs who minde the kingdome of heauen proceede to consider the waies which guide vs thervnto Question In the next place therefore which are the Duties that belong to the comfort of this that God our heauenly Father hath created the holie Angels to be his ministring Spirits for our manifolde benefit both in bodie and soule in this life and concerning the life to come as wee are hereafter in the Prouidence of God more fullie to consider Answere As wee ought from Gods creating of the holie Angells for our comforte to prouoke our hearts to most an tifull thankefulnes to God our heauenly Father who thereby doth exceedingly commend his loue and regarde of vs though most vnworthie so ought wee from the example of the holie Angels themselues who at the commandement of God doe willinglie attend vppon vs their inferiours yea euen vpon vs most vnworthy and miserable sinners to learne to be so humble and lowlie euerie one of vs for our parts that wee bee not onelie dutifullie subiect to all higher powers according to the ordinance of God but euen to the owest also Yea and that euen the chiefest themselues should likewise willinglie be the seruants of God for the benefit and comforte of the poorest and lowest of the whole Church and people of God Explicatiō and proofe The reason is plaine and lightsome of it self and hath great force in it to perswade euery faithfull magistrate of Iustice and euery faithfull and belee●ing minister of the Word euen with their best gifts and with their most royall power which they haue receiued of God to be therewithall willing seruants to the lowest of the Church and therein also to thinke themselues nothing abased but greatly honoured of God Moreouer the wicked may by this ministerie of the holie and mightie Angels if they had grace to consider it be feared from all wicked attempts against the Church or any the least members thereof Numb chapt 22. verse 22. c. Math 18.10 And wee our selues that wee doe nothing vnbeseeming the presence of so holie ministers and glorious seruants of God who though inuisiblie are yet oftener present with vs and among vs then wee are ware of 1. Corinth 11.10 According also to that Exod 23.21.22.23 For notwithstanding that is spoken of our Lord IESVS the Prince of Angels yet such as the Lord and Maister-Angell is such also are the seruants on their Lords behalfe according to that Commission which he giueth vnto them Thus much for the Duties from the comfort of Faith concerning the inuisible creatures of God Let vs make speede to the Duties concerning those that are called visible ANd first concerning the creation of other Creatures besides our selues Question What are the Duties belonging to the comfort of Faith in that God hath giuen vs assurance that hee hath created them for vs and giuen vs the free vse of them to wit of the light of the Sunne and of the Moone c. of foode and of apparell of flowers of all sweete smells of all pleasant and Musicall soundes c. What I say are the Duties belonging to the bountifull and Fatherly goodnes of God herein Answere It is our bounden Dutie to vse euerie of them with all wise and holie discretion and in all good and sober moderation as becommeth those that are called the children of the light euen to those blessed ends onely whervnto God himselfe hath appointed them And furthermore to the ende we may in all ho●e wise and sober manner vse these kindes of creatures it is likewise our bounden dutie to blesse God in all and for euerie of his blessings which wee beholde with our eyes which wee heare with our cares wherewith we cloth our bodies c. And according to the approoued examples of the holie seruants of God it is our dutie in speciall manner and with open profession of thankfulnes to blesse God for the continuall renewing of our food which is the most sensible and necessarie meanes for the ordinarie maintenance of our life Such is our bounden Dutie indeede according to that ancient preceptorie admonition of the Lord by the Prophet Moses Deut 8.10 Explicatiō and proofe When thou hast eaten and filled thy selfe thou shalt blesse the Lord thy God for the good land which hee hath giuen thee Beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God c. This holie commandement hath bene regarded of the faithfull in the Church of God from time to time no doubt And it is approued euen by the practise of our Sauiour Christ himselfe Of whom it is recorded in the Gospell that hee blessed God for the bodilie foode wherwith he fed the people Matth 14.19 Yea after his Resurrection his disciples knew him by his breaking of bread in that as it is most likely hee vsed a forme of