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A96805 The abridgment of Christian divinitie so exactly and methodically compiled, that it leads us, as it were, by the hand to the reading of the Holy Scriptures. Ordering of common-places. Vnderstanding of controversies. Cleering of some cases of conscience. By John Wollebius. Doctor of Divinity, and ordinary professor in the University of Basil. Now at last faithfully translated into English, and in some obscure places cleared and enlarged, by Alexander Ross. To which is adjoined, after the alphabetical table, the anatomy of the whole body of divinity, delineated in IX. short tables, for the help of weak memories.; Christianae theologiae compendium. English. Wolleb, Johannes, 1586-1629.; Vaughan, Robert, engraver.; Ross, Alexander, 1591-1654. 1650 (1650) Wing W3254; Thomason E1264_1; ESTC R204089 204,921 375

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Sacrament of the New-Testament in which Christians that are of age receive spiritually Christs body and blood sealed to them in the reception of Bread and Wine according to Christs institution The RULES I. The Lords Supper is called metonimically the Eucharist or Thanksgiving Sinaxis or a collection the Lords Table the New-Testament and Synecdochically the breaking of Bread II. It hath the same efficient causes that Baptisme hath III. The outward matter thereof or Signes are Bread and Wine IV. The Supper is lame without both Signes and to rob the people of the Cup is Sacriledge Mat. 26.27 Drink yee all of this 1 Cor. 10.16 The Cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the Communion of Christs blood And 11. v. 26. As oft as you shall eat this Bread and drink of this Cup you declare the Lords death V. The inward matter is Christ with all his satisfaction and merit VI. As it is Jewish superstition to use unleavened Bread so the Popish Penny-Wafers are superstitious reliques VII It s outward form consists in Actions and Words VIII The Actions are the breaking of Bread and powring out of Wine the distribution of both Signes and the receiving thereof with the hand and mouth IX The word is the whole Institution containing the Eucharist the command and the promise but the promise chiefly X. Therefore it is impiety to think that the Bread is turned into Christs body only the bare accidents remaining by the low mumbling of these five words For this is my body and that with one breath and the Priests intention XI The internal form consisteth in the Analogie of the signe and the thing signified in which by Bread and Wine are signified Christs body and blood as spiritual meat and drink but by the breaking of Bread and powring out of the Wine are represented the breaking of his body or crucifixion and sheding of his blood and lastly by the distributing and receiving of both the applying of Christs death XII The breaking of Bread is not a thing indifferent For Christ made use of this himselfe and commanded it to be used saying do this which he himselfe explained adding This is my body which is broken for you From this the Supper is so called by this also the Churches union is shewed 1 Cor. 10.17 We being many are made one bread and one body for we are all partakers of one bread XIII The words This is my body can neither be meant of transubstantiation nor of consubstantiation but the meaning is This to wit the Bread is the Sacrament of my body The Papists interpret the words these That which is contained under the kind of Bread is my Body The Lutherans these in with under this is my Body The reason of our interpretation is explained in the former chapter They say that it is absurd to use tropical phrases which are obscure in Christs Will and Legacie Bur 1. This supposition of theirs is false that tropical phrases are obscure for we use tropes oftentimes to illustrate 2. It is false also that tropes are not used in Wils and Testaments for Jacobs Will shews the contrary Gen. 49. And Mose's Deut. 33. David 2 Sam. 23. Tobias 4. Matathias 1 Mac. 2.3 If there be no Trope in the Lords Supper then let them shew how the Cup can be called the New Testament in his blood without a Trope That saying of Austins Advers Adimant cap. 12. is worthy here to be set down The Lord doubted not to say this is my Body when he gave the Signe of his Body XIV It is one thing to say that Christ is present in the Bread and another to maintain his presence in the Supper for Christ is present in his Deitie and Spirit he is present also in his body and blood by a Sacramental presence 1. Of the Symbol not that he is present in the Bread but that he is represented by the bread as by a Symbol 2. Of Faith whereby we apply Christ with his merits to us 3. Of Vertue and efficacie XV. The proper end of the Supper not to speake of others is to seale our spiritual nutrition or preservation to life eternal by the merit of Christs death and obedience whence depends the union of the faithful with Christ and with themselves XVI It is an intolerable abuse to take this Sacrament to prove ones innocency in the courts of justice to confirm mens covenants to prosper our purposes and actions c. XVII The Lords Supper must be often times taken As often as you shal eat this bread c. 1 Cor. 11.26 XVIII The Supper differs from Baptisme not only in external signes but in its proper end because Baptisme is the signe of spiritual Regeration but the Supper of nutrition also in the object or subject to which for Baptisme is given to Infants the Supper to those onely who are of years and have been tryed they differ also in time for Baptisme is used but once the Lords Supper often-times XIX The Popish Masse is altogether repugnant to the Lords Supper 1. The holy Supper is instituted by Christ the Masse by the Pope 2. the Supper is a Sacrament instituted in memory of Christs sacrifice which was once offered but the Masse among Papists is the sacrifice it self to be offered every day the Ancients indeed called the Lords Supper a sacrifice yet not expiatory for sins but Eucharisticall and such as is joyned with prayers and charitable works which are acceptable sacrifices to God 3. Christ did not offer himself in the Supper but on the Crosse but they will have Christ to be offered in their Masse 4. Christ instituted his Supper for the living but the Masse is celebrated for the dead also 5. In the Holy Supper Christs body was already made by the virtue of the Holy Ghost not of bread but of the Virgins blood In the Masse Christs body is made anew by the Priest uttering his five words and that of bread 6. In the holy Supper there was and remained true Bread and true Wine and it obtained this name even after consecration In the Masse if we will believe it there remains onely the outward species of the Element and the accidents 7. In the holy Supper they all drank of the cup as Christ commanded in the Masse the Lay-people are denyed the cup. 8. In the Supper Bread was broken to represent Christ's body broken on the Crosse In the private Masse the bigger Hoast is broken into three parts the first is for the triumphant Church the second for the Church in Purgatory the third for the Church here on earth CHAP. XXV Of the nature of the visible Church HItherto of the outward communion of the Covenant of grace follows the externall society of the visible Church whereby all that be called are accounted for members of the Church Now the Church is considered either in it self or in opposition to the false Church the Church is considered in her self in respect of her own nature and
With the heart we beleeve unto righteousnesse and with the mouth we confesse unto salvation 1 Pet. 3.15 Be ye alwayes ready to answer to every one that shall aske a reason of the hope that is in you To this is contrary 1. A dissembling of the truth 2. The open denial of it 3. An unseasonable confession thereof An example of dissembling is in the Jews that would not professe Christ for fear of being excommunicate Joh. 12. v. 34. Peter is an example of an impefect denial proceeding of infirmitie Mat. 26.69 c. Concerning unseasonable confession Christ warns us Matt. 7.6 Give not that which is holy unto Dogs neither cast ye your Pearls before Swine lest they tread them with their feet and turn upon you and tear you Thus we have shewed how Gods name is sanctified in words it is sanctified in fact when our life and actions answer our holy profession Matt. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven To this is opposite the omission of that action which agrees with our Profession and Impiety An example of the former is in Moses and Aaron who are said not to have sanctified God in the sight of the children of Israel when he gave them the water of strife out of the rock Num. 20.12 An example of the latter is in the Jews of which Paul speaketh Rom. 2.24 For the name of God through you is blasphemed among the Gentiles CHAP. VII Of Works appertaining to the Fourth Commandment HItherto of the Parts of Gods worship Now follows the Time peculiarly appointed for Divine worship This is handled in the Fourth Commandment the summe whereof is That we sanctifie the Sabbath There are two parts of this Precept the Precept it self and the Confirmation thereof The Precept is that we sanctifie the Sabbath which is illustrated 1. By an Admonitory particle Remember c. by which it appears that the Israelites before this had been warned to sanctifie it but that it had been slighted and neglected by reason of Pharaohs oppression 2. By declaring the Precept in opposing by an antithesis the works which were to be done the six dayes to those that should not be done the seventh day 3. By a distribution of the subjects for they are either men or beasts The men are either natives or strangers and both are either superiours or inferiours Sixe dayes saith he shalt thou labour and do all thy work but the seventh is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do no manner of work thou or thy sonne c. The Confirmation is grounded on Gods example For in six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth the sea and all that therein is and rested the seventh day Wherefore c. The Sanctification of the Sabbath is whereby man rests from his external works and labour that he with his family and cattle might be refreshed and that day spent in Gods service The RULES I. The Precept of sanctifying the Sabbath was not first given on Sinai but in Paradise shewing that the manner of Divine worship was prescribed to Adam even in the state of innocencie II. To sanctifie the Sabbath is not to make that day holy but to separate it from profanenesse and to dedicate it to divine worship III. The impulsive causes of this Sanctification are 1. Gods command 2. The equity of the command 3. The promises made to them that obey This fourth Command is urged also in Lev. 19.3 23.1 Jer. 17.22 and elswhere The equity is seen in two things 1. In that God hath separated only one day of seven for Divine worship 2. In that he goeth before us by his own example The Promises are in Isa 56.2 c. 58.13 IV. The matter or object of this Sanctification is the Sabbath or seventh day in the Jewish Church to which succeeded the first day called from Christs resurrection the Lords day from the Lords supper the Day of bread and from the administration of Baptisme the Day of light anciently V. In the Precept of sanctifying the Sabbath we must distinguish between that which is Ethical or moral and that which is typical or ceremonial It was Ceremonial 1. To sanctifie the seventh day precisely 2. By this means to separate Jewes from Gentiles But Moral in that one day of seven must be sanctified for Gods service Now the Church hath sanctified the first day by the example of Christ who hath sanctified it by his resurrection and apparition Joh. 20.19 26. By the example also of Apostolical Church Act. 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 Rev. 1.10 VI. The forme of sanctifying this day consisteth in omission and action VII Things to be omitted are the works of our outward and temporal callings These are opposed to the works of divine worship in that six dayes we must labour VIII Yet some things are permitted which without great damage cannot be put off till another day Luk. 14.5 Which of you having an oxe or an asse fallen into a pit will not take him out on the Sabbath-day The Macchabees knew this Mac. 2.41 For having received an overthrow on the Sabbath they resolved to defend themselves against the enemy In such cases of necessity Christs rule must be observed The Sabbath was made for man not man for the Sabbath Mar. 2.18 IX On the Sabbath those works must be done for which that day was appointed to wit to repair to the Church to meditate on Gods word to receive the Sacraments to invite one another by exhortations and example to godlinesse to visit the sick to help the poor c. X. The end of this sanctifying of the Sabbath is either natural or spiritual XI The natural end is that men and beasts might rest and be refreshed XII The spiritual end peculiar to the Jews was 1. To shadow out to the Jewes that rest which they enjoyed in the Land of Canaan after their toylesome labours in Egypt and troubles in the Desart 2. That by this part of their beggerly rudiments they might be led to Christ the Author of our spiritual rest from sinne and the workes of the flesh XIII But now the spiritual end of it is 1. That the Congregation may be seen and that the faithful may flock together into the Church as into the Arke of Noah 2. That by meditating on this new birth of the world and Christs resurrection we might praise God our Creator and Redeemer 3. That by our rest from labour we might be admonished of our rest from sinne 4. That we might more and more aspire and raise our selves for the enjoyment of that perpetual rest and Sabbath in the life to come Hence ariseth a threefold Sabbath a typical or temporary a spiritual but onely begun here and a heavenly or eternal XIV The Sanctification of the Sabbath belongs to all chiefly to Magistrates and Pastors The Magistrate by the example of Nehemiah must take care that the
exhibited but they differ in their proper form for the Law teacheth what is that righteousness which is perfect and most pleasing to God but the Gospel sheweth where or in whom we are to finde that perfect righteousness the Law requires it of us the Gospel shews where it is to be found namely in Christ IV. They agree in their principal end to wit in Gods glory and in the next subordinate end to it namely our salvation which on either side is seen but they differ in their particular ends for the Law was given to that end that it might drive us to seek Christ but the Gospel that it might exhibite Christ V. They agree in the common object namely in man lapsed but they differ in their proper object for the proper object of the Law is man as he is to be terrified and humbled but of the Gospel man as he is terrified and humbled VI. They agree in their common adjuncts to wit holiness goodness and perfection which both Law and Gospel have being considered in themselves but they differ in this that by accident and by reason of our weakness the Law without the Gospel is insufficient to save us VII It is apparent by this comparing of the Law and Gospel after what manner these two are proposed in Scripture as subordinate and opposite the one to the other VIII They are opposite in respect of man as he is regenerate or irregenerate but they are subordinate in the regenerate man They are proposed by the Apostle as opposites Rom. 6.14 You are not saith he under the law but under grace Here he points out the state of man before and after regeneration The unbeliever is said to be under the Law 1. Because he is under the curse of the Law 2. Because he is under the rigour of the Law by which it requires perfect righteousness and obedience 3. Because he takes occasion to sin from the Law according to that We always incline to forbidden things and desire that which is denied us see Rom. 7.8 But the Believer is said to be under grace 1. Because he is freed from the curse of the Law 2. Because he is delivered from the rigour of the Law and that exaction of perfect righteousness to wit that which Christ hath performed 3. Because he is delivered from the dominion of sin so that he takes not any longer from the Law occasion to sin but begins to yield obedience to the Law by the operation of the Holy Ghost that he might give witness of his thankfulness But they are set out as subordinate when Christ is said to be the end of the Law Rom. 10.4 when it is called a School-master to lead us to Christ Gal. 3.24 and when the Law is said not to be contrary to him who doth the works of the Spirit Gal. 5.22.23 For that righteousness which the Law requires that the Gospel exhibites in Christ to the believer and albeit we cannot in this life yield full satisfaction to the law yet the regenerate begin to obey it by the grace of sanctification CHAP. XVI Of the Person of Christ God and man THe parts of the Gospel concerning Christ our Redeemer are two the first is of his Person the other of his Office In respect of the Person the Redeemer is God and man that is Gods eternal Son being incarnate or made man in the fulnesse of time 1 Ioh. 1.14 And the Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us Gal. 4.4 But after the fulnesse of time came God sent his Son made of a woman 1 Tim. 3.16 and without controversie great is the mystery of godlinesse God made manifest in the flesh The RULES I. The Incarnation of Christ originally is the work of the whole blessed Trinity but terminatively or in respect of the object it is the work of the Son alone For the Son onely assumed mans nature which the Father in the Son by the Holy Ghost formed of the substance of the blessed Virgin II. The Person of Christ is considered either disjunctively as the Word and the eternal Son of God or conjunctively as God and man the first consideration is according to Divinity the latter according to Oeconomie or Gods gracious dispensation III. Likewise the divine nature is considered either in it self and simply or relatively as it is in the Person of the Word by dispensation IV. Although then it be true that Christ God is become man yet it follows not that therefore the Divinitie is incarnate or because the Son is incarnate that the Father also and Holy Ghost are incarnate V. The matter out of which the incarnation was effected is the seed of the woman or of the blessed Virgin Gen. 3.15 VI. The form of it consisteth in the Personal Vnion whereby the Word was made flesh and Christ remained the same he was and became what he was not VII The end is Gods glory and our salvation VIII Both the truth of God as also our salvation doe evince the necessity of Christs incarnation IX The truth of God because in the Old Testament it was uttered by divers Prophesies and was shadowed by divers types These are the cheif Prophesies Gen. 3.15 I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heele Gen. 22.18 In thy seed all nations shall be blessed Esai 7.4 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bring forth a Sonne and they shal call his name Emanuel Esai 9.6 7. For unto us a Childe is born and unto us a Sonne is given Jer. 23.5 Behold the daies shall come in which I will raise to David a righteous branch and a King shall reign and prosper and shall execute judgement and justice on the earth In his dayes Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwel safely and this is his name whereby he shall be called The Lord our righteousnes But his types were the Tabernacle the Ark of the Covenant and such like of which we have said but chiefly Melchisedeck without Father without Mother Hebr. 7.3 and that humane shape or form in which he appeared of old frequently to the Fathers X. Our salvation for this cause doth evince and prove the necessity of his Incarnation in that we could not be saved but by such a Redeemer who was both God and man in one person or God-man XI That he should be God was requisite in respect of both parties on the one side the majesty of God required it on the other side our wants the greatnesse of the evill that was to be removed and the good that was to be restored Such is the majesty of God that no man could interpose himself but he who was one with the Father the very Angels durst not doe this because they also stood in need of Christ the Mediator Col. 1.16 17. Because they being compared with God are unclean Job 15.15 and for that cause they cover their faces in Gods presence
my Disciples and v. 12. There prepare the Passeover v. 15. I have desired to eat this Passeover with you To the purpose serve all those places in which Expiation is attributed to sacrifices and Purificat●on to water and washings also in which the name Jehovah is given to the Ark or to Jerusalem Psal 47.6 Ezek. 48.35 Like testimonies are in the New-Testament Mat. 26.26 27 28. While they were eating Jesus took bread and when he had blessed brake it and gave it to his disciples saying Take eat this is my body likewise taking the cup and having given thanks he gave to them saying Drink yee all of this for this is the blood of the New Testament c. See the like places in Mark Luke and 1 Cor. 11. so 1 Cor. 10.4 And the rock was Christ Ephes 5.26 That he might sanctifie his Church having purged her with the washing of water Col. 2. v. 12. Being buried with him in Baptisme Hebr. 9.13 For if the blood of buls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Yea the very same is seen in other speeches besides sacramental as Gen. 41.37 The seven cows are seven years that is types and figures of seven years Rev. 17.9 The seven heads are seven hils and v. 12. The ten horns are ten Kings XIX This kinde of speaking is called a Sacramental Metonymie of the thing signified for the signe Now it is not material whether the trope be in the attribute or in the copula or coupling of the words for though the trope may be in the attribute yet the cause or ground of the trope is in the copula The material cause of a simple enunciation consisteth in the subject and attribute but the copula being affirmed or denyed makes up the formal part by which it becomes true or false proper or figurative for as often as things of different natures are affirmed or joyned by the copula that speech is false or tropical the seal therefore of the trope is in the predicat but the cause thereof in the copula Whereas then the copula is in this enuntiation This is my Body conjoyns things of different natures to wit bread and Christs body necessarily the speech must be false but to say so were blasphemy or else tropical Therefore the interpretation of such speeches is plain bread is the body of Christ that is a Sacrament of his body Circumcision is Gods covenant that is a signe or sacrament thereof seven Kine are seven years that is figures of seven years so we are said to be cleansed with waters sacramentally because baptisme or washing is the sacrament of cleansing so sacramentally the sacrifices of the Old Testament are said to expiate because they were types of expiation by Christ XX. The end of the Sacraments is the sealing of the Covenant of Grace XXI The effects of the Sacraments are not justification or sanctification as if it were by the work wrought but the confirmation and sealing of both benefits This is plain by the example of Abraham who before he was circumcised was justified Rom. 4.11 Therefore the Pontificians falsely affirm that the Sacraments conferre remission of sins and such like benefits by their own inward vertue out of the work wrought These places then of Scripture in which such things are spoken of the Sacraments are to be expounded by a sacramental metonymie as is said XXII Sacraments are common to all that are in the Covenant in respect of the signes but proper to to the Elect in respect of the thing signified XXIII Sacraments are necessary to salvation not simply and absolutely as if they were the prime causes thereof but hypothetically as they are ordinary means of salvation to be used as Christ hath commanded Hence saith Bernard Not the want but the contempt damneth XXIV The Word and Sacraments agree in substance for what the testament promiseth the seal confirmeth but they differ 1. In that the word is received by the eare the Sacraments perceived by the eye so that the Sacrament is a visible word 2. Because the word of the Gospel is generall but by the Sacrament the promises of the Gospel are applied to every believer 3. Because by the Word faith is ordinarily begot and confirmed by the Sacraments Sacraments are of the Old Testament or of the New Of the Old Testament there were two principal and ordinary to wit Circumcision and the Passeover Of these we have handled in the doctrine of the Ceremonial Law Of the New Testament there are two Baptisme and the Lords Supper The RULES I. The Sacraments of the Old and New Testament agree in the thing signified in respect of substance to wit Christ with his benefits which is the kernel of all the Sacraments Heb. 13.8 Jesus Christ yesterday and to day is the same and for ever Rev. 13.8 The Lamb slain from the begining of the world to wit sacramentally in the Sacrifices and Passeover II. Baptisme doth answer Circumcision analogically so doth the Lords Supper the Passeover For as Circumcision was the Sacrament of initiation or of ingraffing into the Covenant of regeneration or spiritual circumcision so is Baptisme And as the Passeover was the Sacrament of spiritual food even so is the Lords Supper Hence the holy Supper succeeded the celebration of the last Passeover III. The difference between the Sacraments of the Old and New Testamen● consisteth in this 1. In external signes 2. In the manner of signifying for there was signified that Christ was to be exhibited 3. In number For besides Circumcision and the Passeover they had also other Sacraments We have none besides Baptisme and the Lords Supper 4. In amplitude for the New-Covenant doth not extend it self to one and the same people 5. In continuance for those continued only till Christs first coming but these remain to the end of the world 6. In clearnesse IV. The difference then which the Pontificians feign is false That the Sacraments of the Old Testament were types of the Sacraments of the New Testament 2. That the Sacraments of the Old Testament did only shadow out justifying grace but that ours have really in themselves the body of spiritual good things As for the first difference it is one thing to be a type of Christ another thing to be types of the Sacraments in the New-Testament That Circumcision and the Passeover were types of Christ is said but that they were types of our Sacraments I deny for it were most absurd to think that they were instituted only to represent ours The other difference also is false for both in those Sacraments and in these Christ with his benefits are the matter and marrow But the difference between the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament is rather this that they were shadows of spiritual good things whereof Christ was the body Col. 2.17 V. Neither will it follow that therefore the Sacraments of the New-Testament are not better then
Office of Christ the Mediator Page 104 Chapt. XVIII Of the Humiliation of Christ Page 108 Chapt. XIX Of Christs Exaltation Page 125 Chapt. XX. Of the Common vocation to the state of Grace Page 133 Chapt. XXI Of the Covenant of Grace Page 136 Chapt. XXII Of the Seals or Sacraments of the Covenant of Grace in generall Page 140 Chapt. XXIII Of Baptisme Page 152 Chapt. XXIV Of the Lords Supper Page 157 Chapt. XXV Of the nature of the visible Church Page 161 Chapt. XXVI Of the outward Administration of the Church Page 170 Chapt. XXVII Of the False Church Page 183 Chapt. XXVIII Of Vocation in special Page 192 Chapt. XXIX Of Saving Faith Page 193 Chapt. XXX Of Justification Page 202 Chapt. XXXI Of Sanctification Page 211 Chapt. XXXII Of the Perseverance of the Saints Page 214 Chapt. XXXIII Of Christian Liberty Page 218 Chapt. XXXIV Of the coming of Christ and Resurrection of the flesh which go before the last Iudgment Page 220 Chapt. XXXV Of the Last Judgment Page 230 Chapt. XXXVI Of the End of the World and Life eternal the consequents of the Judgment Page 234 THE ORDER OF THE CHAPTERS OF THE SECOND BOOK Concerning the Worship of God I. Of the Nature of Good works 241 II. Of Vertues pertaining to the Decalogue and whole worship of God 246 III. Of the Vertues and Works belonging to the First Commandment 249 IV. Of the Works belonging in generall to the II. III. and IV. Commandments 255 V. Of Works belonging in special to the Second Commandment 258 VI. Of the Vertues and Works belonging to the Third Commandment 274 VII Of works appertaining to the Fourth Commandment 283 VIII Of the Vertues in generall belonging to the Second Table 288 IX Of Vertues and Works belonging to the Fifth Commandment 296 X. Of Vertues and Works belonging to the Sixth Commandment 302 XI Of Vertues and Works belonging to the Seventh Commandment 307 XII Of Vertues and Works belonging to the Eighth Commandment 318 XIII Of the Vertues and VVorks belonging to the Ninth Commandment 326 XIV Of the Vertues and Works belonging to the Tenth Commandment 334 THE PRAECOGNITA OF Christian Divinity CHristian Divinity is the doctrine of the Knowledge and Worship of GOD to his glory and our salvation The RULES or CANONS are these I. This word Theologie or Divinity is diversly taken but in this place is understood that Knowledge of God which a Christian may attain unto in this life out of Gods word The word Theologie being taken abusively is sometime used for the Gentiles Divinity which was threefold Poetical or fabulous Philosophical or natural Sacerdotal or political the scope and end whereof was to contain the rude multitude within the compasse of obedience by some religious exercise be what it will But Theologie properly so called is either Original or Derived Original is that knowledge whereby God knows himself which really differs not from Gods essence Derived is a certain image or representation of that Original primarily in Christ our Mediator secondarily in Christs members Now whereas part of Christs members is triumphant in heaven another part militant here on earth that Theologie of the triumphant part is called the Theologie of the Blessed Saints that of the militant is stiled the Theologie of travellers II. Theologie in this place is considered not as a Habit residing in the intellect but as a Systeme or collection of precepts therefore it is defined by the word Doctrine For Theologie as it is comprehended within certain precepts is different from the habit of Theologie as the efficient cause from the effect Now the question is if we consider Divinity as the habit of the Intellect what genus shall we assign for it out of the intellective habits Surely there is none which if it be taken solely and apart is not of a narrower compasse then the thing defined For that habit which apprehends the Principles called Intelligentia and that habit which demonstrates the Conclusions out of the Principles called Scientia and that habit which ariseth out of the two former called Sapientia are habits meerly contemplative but for Prudentia it is an active habit directing the mind in its actions and Art is an effective or operative habit with right reason * A. R. Divinity is more speculative then practical because it principally handles divine things and in the second place humane actions But as it is a practical science it is the most noble of all practical sciences because the end of it is be atitude to winch the ends of all other sciences are ordained Divinity also may be called wisdom or sapientia because it considers the Chiefest of all Causes not only as He is known by his effects but as He is known in himself also Divinity then consists partly in contemplation partly in action Therefore Divinity may beare the name both of Sapience and Prudence Sapience so far forth as it apprehends the principles by means of the Intelligence being divinely illuminate and from thence demonstrates the conclusions by means of Science Of Prudence so far forth as it directs the mind of man in its actions III. There is a twofold principle of Divinity the one by which it is and that is GOD the other by which it is known and that is the Word of God IV. Gods word at first was unwritten before Moses his time but after Moses it was written when God in his most wise counsel would have it to be sealed and confirmed by Prophets and Apostles That the Papists may obtrude upon us their unwritten traditions in stead of Gods written oracles they would bear us in hand that the Word was written only upon hap-hazard or contingent occasions But so many mandates to write delivered to the Prophets and Apostles do cry down this error Exod. 17.14 34.37 Deut. 41.19 Isa 8.1 30.8 Jer. 30.2 Habac. 2.2 Revel 1 11 19. 14.13 19.9 21.9 The testimonies of the Apostles proclaiming that nothing was said or written by mans advice or councel cry out against this error Joh. 20.31 But these things are written that ye might believe c. Rom. 15.4 But what things are written are written for our learning that through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope 1 Cor. 10 11. These things are written to admonish us 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by divine inspiration 2 Pet. 1.20 21. So that ye first know this that no prophesie in the Scripture is of private motion for Prophesie came not of old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost Lastly these precepts cry out against them by which we are directed to the written word in matters of salvation Isa 8.20 To law and to the testimony Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures V. We acknowledge therefore no other * A. R. He means that which is called principium cognoscendi which is the first instrument by which we come
Isa 6.2 How much lesse then could any man intercede whereas there is not one just Person Rom. 3.10 The evill that was to be taken away was sin and the consequents of sin the wrath of God the power of Satan both temporal and eternal death Now I pray by whose suffering could that infinite Majesty be satisfied which was offended unlesse by his suffering who was also Infinite By whose Intercession could the wrath of God be appeased but by his onely who is that best beloved Sonne of God By whose strength could Satan with the whole power of darknesse be overcome except by his who in power exceeds all the Devils who finally could overcome death except he who had the power over death Heb. 2.15 But the good things that were to be restored were perfect righteousness adoption into sons the Image of God the gifts of the Holy Ghost life eternal and such like but now who could bestow that righteousness on us except he who is justice it self Who is so fit to make us the sons of God as he who is by nature the Son of God Who was so fit to restore in us the Image of God as he who is himself the image of the invisible God Who can bestow on us the holy Spirit so assuredly as he from whom the Spirit proceedeth Who at last can give us life eternal but he who is life it self Joh. 1.4 XII That he might be man the justice of God required which as it leaves not sin unpunished so it punisheth not sin but in that nature which sinned The first branch of this Rule is plain both by the justice and by the truth of God By his justice because God by this doth not onely resist but also punish sin Psal 5.5 6 7. For thou art not a God that hast pleasure in wickedness nor shall evil dwell with thee the foolish shall not stand in thy sight thou hatest all workers of iniquity thou shalt destroy them that speak lies the Lord will abhor the bloody and deceitfull man Now by the truth of God because the threatning which was given before the fall could not be in vain therefore Socinus is idle and foolish who that he might overthrow the merit of Christ feigns such a justice of God which doth not necessarily inflict eternal death or require satisfaction and which in this respect can be content to lose its own right but if sins are to be punished they were surely to be punished in our nature for to man the Law was given and to man death was threatened therefore it lies upon man to suffer the punishment XIII It was requisite that God and man should be united in one Person that he might be a Mediator between God and us He was therefore the medium between God and man that is he was at the same time God and man that he might perform those things which were to be effected towards God and man Heb. 5.1 These works of God and man do require both natures in the same person of which in the next Chapter more at large The parts of Christs Incarnation are two to wit the Conception and the Nativity In the Conception three things for the better understanding are considerable the forming the assuming and the personal union of the humane nature The forming of the humane nature of Christ is that whereby it was produced without the help of man of the Virgins blood by the operation of the Holy Ghost The RULES I. The Holy Ghost is not the material but the efficient cause of Christs conception For he was conceived not of his substance but by his power not by generation but by his commanding force and benediction Aug. II. The next or proximate matter was the blood of the blessed Virgin III. the form of Christs conception consisteth in the preparing and sanctifying of the Virgins blood by the vertue of the Holy Ghost in the forming of the body whereby together at the same instant it was made perfect and not successively as the bodies of other men are Lastly in the inspiring of the reasonable soul Whereas fourty dayes are appointed in ordinary generation for the time of forming the embryo the body of Christ was perfected in a moment otherwise not Christ the man but an embryo had been conceived IV. The end of Christs miraculous conception was that he might be free from Original sin for this sticks close to all that are of and by Adam that is to all who are naturally descended from him but it was needfull that Christ should be born without sin that we might have a holy High Priest Heb. 7.17 The assumption of the humane nature is whereby Christ assumed truly a humane soul and body with all their affections proprieties and infirmities yet without sin The RULES I. Christ assumed not man but the humanity not the person but the nature For otherways he had not been God-man and one person but two persons and so there had been two Christs The Scripture stiles him Emanuel because the same who is with us that is to say who is man is also God Isa 7.14 the same eternall Word is said to be made flesh Joh. 1.1 and the same is called both Davids Son and his Lord Mat. 22.42 II. And not onely did he assume a true humane body consisting of three dimensions and a true soul but also the essential Properties III. Yea and he took our infirmities too but not those damnable ones but such as were faultlesse and miserable These infirmities are either of the body or of the soule Again the infirmities of the body are from external causes as the calamities and torments inflicted by enemies Or they have their being from some internal cause and they follow wholly our nature since it fell front its primitive happinesse as to be cold to be hot to thirst to hunger to be in pain to grow weary and such like But the infirmities of the soule are sadnesse feare ignorance c. IV. So likewise he took upon him our affections but free from all disorder or inclination to evil The Personal Union is whereby the Person of the Son of God did communicate his Hypostasis or Personality to the humane nature and he so knit it to himself and with his divine nature that the propriety of both natures being entire he is in one Person God and man The RULES I. Christs humane nature hath no other or particular Hypostasis or subsistence then that of the Word that is of the Son of God In this point Christ differs from all other men because every man hath a peculiar Hypostasis or manner of subsisting by which he differs from other Persons besides his Essence consisting of body and soul but Christs humane nature wanting a proper subsistence is assumed into the fellowship of the Hypostasis of the divine nature neither doe we inferre from hence that the humane nature in Christ in this point is more inferiour then in other men for it is so much the
nature 4. The external work it self in which those actions are united This is made clear by the similie of a Fiery-sword in which 1. We see the unity of the sword 2. The two principles of working to wit the sword and the fire 3. Two actions cutting and burning 4. One work the thing cut and burned So much of Christ's Conception His Nativity is whereby Christ according to the usual time being carried in the Virgins womb was at length born brought forth to light Luc. 2.6 7. So it was that while thy were there the dayes were accomplished that she whould be delivered and she brought forth her first-born Sonne The RULES I. We firmly believe Christs nativity against the Jewes The confirmation is twofold The first out of the Prophets because the places in which he should be born and educated in which he should teach and suffer are wasted and the time is past in which according to Prophetical oracles he was to come For he was to he born in Bethlehem Mich. 5.2 to be educated in Nazareth Esa 11.1 and to enter Jerusalem while the second Temple stood Zach. 9.9 Hag. 2 7.9 and that when the fourth Monarchy was abolished Dan. 2.44 the Scepter not being totally departed from the Jews Gen. 49.10 But Bethlehem Nazareth Jerusalem and the second Temple are long since destroyed that fourth Monarchy is abolished and the Scepter totally departed from Judah The Messiah then is doubtlesse come The second confirmation is taken from the agreement of Luke's Evangelical History concerning Christs nativity with the Prophetical oracles concerning the time of the Messiah's coming Gen. 49.10 of his Pedigree Jer. 23.5 of the Virgin his mother Esa 7.14 of his Country Mich. 5.2 Lastly concerning his condition Esa 53.2 II. The Nativity to speak properly is not of the hummanity but of the man Christ not of the nature but of the * A. R. The Nativity is of the Nature as of the Terminus but of the Person as of the Subject for the Person is begot and so is the Nature this terminative that subjective person III. There be two generations of the Son the one eternal to wit of the Father the other temporal namely of the Virgin his mother There be also two Filiations or Sonships by the one whereof he is the Son of the Father by the other the Son of Mary IV. Yet we must not say there is a double Son or two Sons for he is not two Persons but one Person and two Natures V. Therefore Mary is to be named not only the Mother of Christ with the Nestorians but also the Mother of God VI. The nativity of Christ is both natural and supernatural Natural as he was born in the usual time by the opening of the wombe Supernatural as he was begot of a Virgin The Papists under pretence of maintaining Maries Virginity affirm that Christ was born of Mary without pain the womb being shut Now although we leave it as a thing doubtful whether Mary's Child-bearing was without pain or not as the Ancients thought yet we deny that Christ came out the womb being shut when in plain tearms the Law is applied to her which requires That every male which openeth the wombe shall be holy to the Lord Luc. 2.23 Neither doth Mary's Virginity consist in this that her womb was not opened in her child-birth but in this that she was not known of man VII We believe also that Mary continued a Virgin after her childbirth For her mariage with Joseph did not consist in the generation of children but in her education and holy conjunction of life with him VIII Although Christ had no other brothers born after him yet he is rightly called Mary's first-begotten Sonne In Scripture Christ is called the first-born four manner of wayes 1. In respect of eternal generation by which he was begot before all creatures Col. 1.15 2. In respect of election and dignity whereby he is the first-born amongst brethren Rom. 8.22 3. In respect of his resurrection whereby he is the first-begotten from the dead Col. 1.18 4. In respect of his nativity of the Virgin Luc. 2.7 Now he is not only called first-born whom other brothers do follow but he also who is born before others although he be indeed the only begotten or he whom other brothers do not follow whence such a one even before he had any brothers was consecrated to God as if he had been the first-born IX The fruit of Christs nativity is shewed both in ●he speech and song of the Angels Their speech is Luc. 2.10 11. Then the Angel said to the shepheards Fear not for behold I bring you glad tidings of great joy that shall be to all people that this day there is born to you a Saviour in the City of David which is Christ the Lord. Now the song is Glory to God on high Peace on earth Good will towards men Ibid. v. 14. CHAP. XVII Of the Office of Christ the Mediator HItherto we have spoken of the Person of Christ our Redeemer the office of his Mediatorship is that whereby as God-man he was to perform those things which for our salvation were to be performed between God and us The RULES I. Christ in respect of his Mediatorship is fitly called Jesus Messiah Christ and Lord. II. Christ is the Mediator of Angels and men but not after the same manner for he is Mediator to those in respect of their gracious union with God but of these in respect of reconciliation and redemption III. The efficient cause of this office is the whole blessed Trinity but the Father by way of excellency Isa 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold mine el ct in whom my soul delighteth and 49.1 The Lord hath called me from the womb Psal 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek Heb. 5.5 Christ glorified not himself to be made an High-Priest but he that said to him thou art my Son to day I have begot thee IV. The subject of this office is not onely all Christ but the whole Christ for he is Mediator according to both natures This is denied by the Samosatenians and Pontificians who teach that Christ was Mediator onely according to his humanity But this rule is grounded upon a most firm reason for if the works of the Mediator be the perfect operations of God and man in which is required not only the action of man but of God also then doubtless this office is attributed to Christ even according to his Divinity but the former is true and therefore the latter The assumption may be proved by examples without the operation of the Deity neither can he declare the hid wisdom of God nor illuminate our mindes without the power of the Deity neither could his satisfaction obtain the honour of merit with God nor could his Intercession be effectual without the Deity neither could he have sustained that heavy burthen of Gods
wrath nor had he been able to subdue or abolish death and Satan without the vertue of the Deity neither could he have saved his Church nor have subdued his enemies Neither is it any hindrance to this Truth that there is one Mediator of God and man the man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2.5 for there the word man is not the word of the nature but of the person and when he is said to be the Mediator of God and man it is presupposed that the Mediation is hypostatical as Christ is God and man In the interim there are many testimonies which prove the operation of the Deitie Act. 20.28 God redeemed the Church by his own blood Heb. 9.14 By the eternal Spirit he offered himself Joh. 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sinne And although the Son be the Party offended yet it hinders not but that he may be Mediator to himself For as properly Righteousness is called in respect of another but analogically in respect of us so Mediation is properly in reference to others but analogically in relation to the Mediator himself Christ indeed being absolutely considered is the offended party yet the same is Mediator in that he hath undertaken this office in himself of an Intercessor by a gratious dispensation No otherways then if the son of a King who being as much offended by Rebellion as his Father should notwithstanding plead for the Rebels and reconcile them to his Father V. The object of Christs office is God offended and man the offender VI. The manner whereby he is called to this office consisteth in that plentiful unction of Christ by which he received the gifts of the Spirit without measure in respect of us Psal 45.8 God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyl of gladness above thy fellows Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me Joh. 3.34 God gave him not the Spirit by measure VII The end of this office is that by whom God created all things by him he might to himself reconcile all things Col. 1.20 VIII Christ is Mediator both in merit and efficacy in merit because he hath most fully satisfied for us in efficacy because he doth effectually apply this merit to us Hence again it is apparent that this office is administred by him not onely according to his humanity but according to his divinity also to wit without which neither could his merit be of infinite value nor could it be applied to us He doth then save and quicken us he pardoneth our sins and hears our prayers in his humane nature by his merit in his divine by his efficacy IX Christ is the sole and one Mediator Act. 14.12 For in no other is there salvation nor is there any other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one Mediator of God and man the man Christ Jesus This office of Christ is threefold Prophetical Sacerdotal and Regal His Prophetical office was to instruct his Elect in heavenly Truths the parts whereof are the external Preaching of Gods will and the internal illumination of the minde His Sacerdotal office is to appear for us before God with full satisfaction and to intercede for us the parts whereof are Satisfaction and Intercession His Regal office is to rule and preserve the Church the parts whereof are the Government of the Church and the destruction of his enemies CHAP. XVIII Of the Humiliation of Christ SO much of the Person and Office of the Mediator Christ the State thereof is the condition in which Christ as God-man did execute his office of Mediatorship and this is either of his Humiliation or of his Exaltation The State of Humiliation is in which he took the form of a Servant being in the form of God and gave obedience to his Father for us he died and was buried and went down to Hell And in this state he so performed his Prophetical Sacerdotal and Regal office that in a manner he stript himself of the form and glory of the Divinity He did not cast off the Divinity but had it in the assumed form of a servant And although the Deity of Christ did manifest it self in the state of his Humiliation chiefly by miracles yet this was little in comparison of that glorious manifestation of him in his Exaltation In the state of Humiliation he performed his Prophetical office not only mediately by sendding John Baptist his Herauld before and by the Apostles whom he called but also immediately to his lost sheep especially of Israel by preaching to them the heavenly Truth with great constancy patience and efficacy both of his doctrine and miracles But his Sacerdotal office he administred in this state making a most full satisfaction and an humble intercession for us The satisfaction of Christ is that whereby he being subject to the Law for us did undergo the curse due to our sins and performed most perfectly obedience to the Law which was required of us and so hath freed us from the curse and hath restored us to life This consisteth in suffering the pains and in perfect justice in that is seen chiefly his passive in this his active obedience I do purposely adde this restriction that we may not think his active and passive obedience so to differ as if the suffering of the punishment consisted onely in his passive obedience and his perfect justice onely in his active for they differ not in time seeing both of them continued from the first moment of his incarnation till his death Nor do they differ in subject because the same obedience in a different respect is both active and passive and consequently Christs obedience is an active passion and a passive action for as passion is a receiving of the punishment it is called passive obedience but as it is a testimony of his great love it may be called active Neither is the division of obedience into active and passive a division into parts but onely a distinction taken from the end to wit the twofold satisfaction for punishment and for life eternal The curse upon the transgressors of the Law requires the former Deut. 27.26 The promise of life under the condition of perfect obedience and righteousness requires the latter Lev. 18.15 Therefore we are said Analogically by that one and most perfect satisfaction of Christ both to be freed from the punishment because he suffered the punishment for us and to be invested in the right of life eternal because he fulfilled the Law for us The suffering of punishment is whereby he undertook upon himself the punishment due to us and offered himself of his own accord a holy Sacrifice to God for us This consisteth both in the sufferings which went before his great and last Passion but especially in this last agonie The RULES I. No part of Christs Passion must be excluded from * A. R. Christs passions were truly satisfactory if 1.
Person as also in consideration of the greatness and infinite weight of his suffer●ngs and the burthen of Divine wrath which the world and all the creatures therein were not able to endure XXII The Papists do overthrow the same satisfaction ●f Christ in setting up other Priests and obtr●●ting the Idolatrous Mass for a Sacrifice They are refuted by these strong reasons 1. Because there is one Mediator 1 Tim. 2.16 2. Because Paul speaks onely of one Priest Heb. 7.26 Such a high Priest became us .3 Because there was offered but one oblation Heb. 7.25 he performed that once and 9.25 Not that he might offer himself often and 10.10 by his offering once made and ver 14. By one oblation he hath consecrated for ever those that are sanctifyed ver 18. Where there is remission of sins there is no more offering for sin 4. If therefore the Priesthood of the old Law was abrogated because the ancient Priests were but weak men then it must follow that none in the New-Testament was fit to be a Priest except the Son of God Heb. 7.28 For the Law maketh men High Priests but the word of the oath maketh the Son But they use this exception to wit that Christ is the chief High-Priest and themselves secondary and consequently Christs instruments But either they offer the very same sacrifice which Christ offered on the Cross or another If they offet another then it must be unfit for the reasons alledged if the same then these absurdities will follow 1. That Christ offered for himself because these offer for themselves for the High-Priest and the inferior Priests will do the same things though after a different way 2 That they reckon themselves among the torturers who crucified Christ 3. Whereas in this oblation the Priest and the Sacrifice are the same thing they must be a Sacrifice at least in the second place Neither is that distinction of a bloody and an unbloody Sacrifice of greater moment for so there should nor be one sacrifice which thwarts the former testimonies and remission of sins should be obtained by an unbloody Sacrifice which the Apostle flatly denies Heb. 9.12 XXIII As then much is detracted from Christs sufferings by the former errors so they extend the object thereof wider then is fitting who teach that Christ died universally for all and every one man If we look upon the greatness and worth of Christs merit it is sufficient to redeem ten thousand worlds but if we consider Gods purpose and Christs intention it is false that he died for all and singular Hence it is that he is said to die for all sufficiently but not effectually that is to say that Christs merit is sufficient for all in respect of his dignity but not effectual in all in respect of application seeing Christ died to that end that his death should be applied to all for why should he die for those for whom he prayeth not but he witnesseth that he prayeth not for the world Joh. 17.9 Our adversaries urge those places in which mention is made of the whole world also of all men 1 Tim. 2.4 and 1 Joh. 2.2 in which also all men generally are called But in 1 Joh. 22. by the name of the whole world metonymically are understood the elect dispersed over all the world and 1 Tim. 2.4 by all men are meant as the words following shew all sorts of men whether Jews or Gentiles Princes or Peasants and consequently not every one of the kindes but the kindes of every one in which sense the word All is used Gen. 16.19 Joel 2.28 Perfect Justice the other part of Christs satisfaction is that whereby in conforming himself to the Law and performing perfect obedience thereto he hath purchased for us the inheritance of life eternal And this Justice is partly original partly actual Original is the conformity of Christ with the Law in which he was conceived and born The RULES I. Original righteousnesse is opposed to original sin II. And this is not a bare innocency or freedom from sin but an aptitude also and inclination to goodness As original sin is not only a privation of justice but an inclination also to evil III. Christs original justice is a part of his Satisfaction for us The reasons are 1. Because the Law requires not onely actual obedience but also a full conformity with the Law otherwise original contagion were no sin 2. Because Christ is all ours and what he was made or did or was he was made did and was for us His actual Justice is that obedience whereby Christ did most perfectly fulfill the Law in the act it self and this is called active obedience The RULES I. As Christs Passion was necessary to expiate sin so was his active Obedience and Justice to obtain life eternal Reasons 1. Because the Law obligeth us both to punishment and to obedience to punishment because it pronounceth him accursed who doth not all the words of the Law Deut. 27.26 To obedience because it promiseth life to them only who do perform all things Lev. 18.5 who doth these things shall live by them and Luk. 10.28 Do this and live Neither doth the distinction of Justice into Legal and Evangelical hinder seeing the Gospel exhibits in Christ the same justice which the Law requires 2. Because this double satisfaction answers our double misery to wit the guilt of sin and of damnation and the want of justice Rom. 3.22 All have sinned and come short of the glory of God 3. Because true Justice properly so called consisteth in actual obedience Deut. 6.25 And it shall be our righteousness if we observe to do all these Commandments before the Lord. 4. Because he performed that actual obedience either for himself or in our stead but not for himself therefore in our stead The assumption is plain out of that relation which Christ hath to us for whatsoever he was or did in all the course of his obedience he was and did that in our stead But they who acknowledge his passive obedience only satisfactory and meritorious say that his active obedience makes toward our Redemption and Salvation but only as a necessary help or the cause without which Salvation could not be obtained for say they this active obedience is required for two causes First by the right of Creation Secondly that his Sacrifice might be acceptable to God and that he might be a holy High-Priest But the first branch of this opinion is false for Christ is not in this to be compared with other men for as the Son of God was made man and a creature for us not for himself so he was made * A. R. Christ was subject to the Law that he might free us from the curse of the Law 2. That he might take away from the Jews occasion of calumniating 3. To shew he was the end of the Law 4. That by his example he might invite us to keep the Law subject to the Law not for himself but
by preserving and protecting and delivering it as also by overthrowing the enemies thereof Psal 110. The Lord said to my Lord sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstool The RULES I. This Kingdom of Christ is not that essential which from eternity he obtained with the Father and Holy Ghost but a personal donative and oecumenical which as our head and Mediator he had of the Father II. Yet he hath for ever administred this oecumenical Kingdom 2 Sam. 7.15 I will establish the throne of his kingdom for ever Dan. 7.14 Whose dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not pass away Luk. 1.33 Of his kingdom there shall be no end The words of the Father to Christ do not oppose these sayings untill I make thine enemies c. For the meaning is not that Christ after his last coming shall reign no more but it sheweth this at least that it shall come to pass that he shall subdue all his enemies For that clause untill and the like exclude not the future time but they are affirmatively and negatively spoken of it and oftentimes they signifie the same that always or never for example Gen. 28.15 I will not forsakes thee untill I have performed that which I spake to thee 2 Sam. 6.23 Michal had no childe till the day of her death Matth. 2.25 He knew her not untill she had brought forth her first begotten Son Matth. 28.20 Behold I am with you till the end of the world nor is this saying against us 1 Cor. 15.24.28 where it is affirmed That Christ will deliver up his kingdom to his Father that God may be all in all for in that place the delivering up of the Kingdom is not a laying down of Christs Regal office but by the Kingdom there is meant as commonly in Scripture the Church he will then deliver the Kingdom to his Father when he shall present the whole Church to him therefore that subjection shall not abolish Christs Kingdom whereas Christ even as Mediator is subordinate to his Father in glory so Christ shall be and shall remain our King that notwithstanding he will with us subject himself to the Father But you will say that already he is subject to the Father That is true indeed but not simply for now the Head with the Church is subjected yet not all the Church but then together with all the members of the Church and consequently all mysticall Christ shall be subiected to the Father That finally God is said to be all in all it is not so to be understood as if he were not at this day all in all or that then he were onely to reign but this is spoken after the Scripture phrase in which things are oftentimes said to be done when they are declared to be The meaning then is whereas in this world the Kingdom of God is annoyed and obscured by the enemies thereof these enemies being at last subdued it will be most apparent that the Kingdom will be Gods and his Christs CHAP. XX. Of the common vocation to the state of Grace HItherto of Christ the Redeemer who is the efficient cause of the state of Grace Now follows the Vocation to the same This is either common to the elect and reprobate or proper onely to the elect The common calling is whereby all men are invited to the state of Grace and participation of Christ the Mediator This is also called the election of the whole people wheresoever Deut. 7.6 Thou art a holy people to the Lord thy God he hath chosen thee The RULES I. As election so vocation is either to an office or to salvation the latter is that which is here to be considered There is an example in Saul of Election and Vocation to an office 1 Sam. 19.24 Do you not see whom the Lord hath chosen II. The efficient cause of this vocation is commonly the whole blessed Trinity but particularly Christ the Lord who as in the dayes of his ministration here on earth did immediately call sinners so he doth now by the means of his ministers Matth. 22.2 3. The kingdome of heaven is like unto a King who made a marriage for his son sent his servants who should call those that were invited to the Wedding c. Mark 1.14 15. Jesus came to Gal lee preaching the Gospel of God and saying the time is fulfilled and the kingdome of God is at hand Repent and believe the Gospel 2 Cor. 5.20 Therefore we are Ambassadours for Christ c. III. The matter of this vocation are not all men nor the elect onely but any of the race of mankinde That all are not called the whole History of the Old Testament witnesseth for God at all time passing by other Nations called the people of Israel but in the time of the New Testament not all nor every one is called seeing that many never heard of Christ and that the elect onely are not called the parable of Christ doth sufficiently witnes in which good and bad are invited many also are said to be called but few chosen Matt. 20.10 14. Now all sorts of men are called of what state condition age c. they be IV. The form of this vocation consisteth partly in the proffer of the benefit of Redemption and partly in the precept of accepting it 2 Cor. 5.20 Therefore we are Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you through us we pray in Christs stead that ye be reconciled to God For he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnes of God in him V. The end of this is Gods glory and the salvation of the Elect now the glory of Gods mercy is seen in the Elect obeying the vocation and the glory of his justice in the reprobate disobeying VI. Common vocation is principally for the Elect secondarily for the Reprobate VII Yet both are called seriously and without hypocrisie Of the Elect there is no doubt as for the reprobate although they are not called with any purpose in God to save them yet they are called seriously and salvation is seriously promised to them on condition they will believe neither are they mocked in that they are deprived of the grace of Faith but because voluntarily they fell from the originall grace and with a malicious purpose they despise the means of salvation God notwithstanding may justly claime Faith of them and this right of claim which he he hath he doth as justly use as any other creditor that their mouthes may be stopped and they made inexcuseable and Gods justice may be vindicated therefore he doth not call them that he might mock them but that he might declare and make manifest his justice upon them VIII Therefore out of the common vocation we must not presently infer an election both because it is common to the Elect and Reprobate as also because it includes the condition of Faith Although a whole nation is said to
those of the Old because they do not conferre justifying grace for the work wrought for their prerogatives remain as they are expressed in the third Rule chiefly the second and sixth Here it is wont to be objected that if we acknowledge not this their fictitious difference the Sacraments of the Old Testament will be clearer then these of the New for the Passeover represents Christs death clearer then the Bread in the Lords Supper But we must know wherein the clarity of a Sacrament consisteth chiefly to wit not in external signes only but in the Sacramental word Now are not these words very clear This is my body which is given for you This is my blood which is shed for you There is nothing so plain concerning Christs death in the Passeover Besides it is false that the killing of a Lamb was a cleerer signe because many more and obscure signs were added to the killing of the Lamb as also because the breaking of bread the pouring out of wine and the receiving of both do most clearly represent the breaking of Christs body the shedding of his blood and the participation of both VI. In vain do the Pontificians reckon among the Sacraments of the New-Testament Confirmation Penance Extreme Vnction Ordination of Ministers and Matrimony Three things are required to a Sacrament 1. That it be instituted by God under the Covenant of grace 2. That it may have an external Symbol ordained by God 3. That the Promise of grace may be annexed to it Now these three belong only to Baptisme and the Lords Supper and not to any of the rest Confirmation is a Popish ceremony in which the Bishop or his Suffragan having asked certain questions of the party baptized concerning the Heads of Religion besmears him with a little ointment putting a linnen-cloth on him not to be removed by the witnesses before the third day and he cuffs him the better to remember the matter and that he may be sufficiently furnished with the Holy Ghost against Satans tentations But where in Scripture do we read of the institution of this Sacrament and of its ceremonies where is the Promise We may more truly call this the Popes excrement then a Sacrament and that mark which the Beast puts upon the forehead of his worshippers Rev. 3 16. Therefore impiously do they preferre this Sacrament to Baptism for they teach plainly that Baptism is perfected by it an that in this there is a greater measure of spiritual gifts then in Baptism and whereas any Priest or Pastor may administer Baptism yea any Lay-man or woman Confirmation must only be performed by the Bishop or his Suffragan Penance is a Sacrament with them in which the sinner having given trial of his repentance is absolved by the Priest We indeed acknowledge that repentance is enjoyned to sinners and that a power of absolving is given to Ministers though they feign a far other penance and absolution as shall appear hereafter But in the mean while there is no outward symbol instituted by God which hath a promise neither can these words I absolve thee be in stead of a symbol as Bellarmine would have it Extreme Unction is a Sacrament amongst them in which the Priest having rehearsed some Letanies anointeth the party that is dying with hallowed oile of the Olive in those parts of the body where the seats of the five Senses are and this he doth after the parties confession and absolution to the end he may recover his health if it be expedient for him and that the remainder of his sinnes after he hath received the other Sacraments may be wiped away Christ indeed promised his Disciples that the sick on whom they were to lay their hands should recover Mar. 16.18 James also commanded that the sick should be anointed after imposing of hands and prayer by the Elders which ceremonies were not Sacraments but voluntary rites joyned with miracles which together with the gifts of miracles are expired Therefore between Extreme Unction and this there is no similitude For that I may say nothing of that magical exorcisme with which the oile is hallowed it is certain that in the Apostles time not only dying people as now in Popery but any also that were sick were anointed Ordination is a Sacrament among them in which the Bishop alone or his Suffragan layeth his hands upon the Minister and delivereth to him with solemn words a Book a Platter a Pastoral staffe c. using also the ceremonies of Unction and Shaving and imprints on him an indelible character to conferre Justifying grace whereby he might rightly use the power of the Keyes Now although Ministers may be ordained by imposition of hands and prayers after the example of the Apostles yet this Imposition is a thing indifferent but for the Popish ceremonies they are partly Jewish as anointing partly Heathenish as shaving expresly forbid Lev. 19.27 Marriage is no Sacrament of the Covenant of grace both because it was instituted before the fall as also because it is common to all that are within without the Covenant yet we deny not but that Marriage is a representation of that spiritual wedlock between Christ and his Church but if for this it were a Sacrament then there should be so many Sacraments as there be Parables and Allegories Hence divers Schoolmen have denied this to be a Sacrament And in what esteem it is among the Papists appears by this that they make an irreconcileable war between Marriage and Ordination and forbid Marriage in their Clergy as if it were an unclean thing CHAP. XXIII Of Baptisme BAptisme is the first Sacrament of the New-Testament in which the Elect being received into the family of God remission of sinnes and regeneration in Christs blood and the Holy Ghost are confirmed by the outward sprinkling of water The RULES I. The word Baptisme signifieth a dipping and aspersing or washing That it signifieth aspersion appears in Mar. 7.4 And when thy come from the market they eat not except they be washed II. Here are four appellations of Baptisme to be considered 1. The Baptisme of water a 2. Of light or doctrine b 3. Of the Spirit or gifts of the Spirit c 4. Of blood or martyrdome d a Mat. 3.11 I baptise you with water b Mat. 22.25 The baptisme of John that is all his ministery both of doctrine and baptisme whence was it Act. 18.25 Apollo knew only the baptisme of John c Act. 1.5 You shall be baptised with the Holy Ghost d Mat. 20.22 Can you be baptised with the baptisme wherewith I am baptised III. Christ our Lord is the principal efficient cause but the instrumental is the Minister lawfully called IV. Therefore we hold not that baptisme lawful which is administred by any private man or a woman as in Popery For if in earthly Commonwealths that is not accounted of which a private man doth without command how much lesse can Christ be pleased with such disorder in his Church V. * A.
R. The outward matter of Baptisme is water I will here adde the reasons why water is used in Baptisme 1. Because the dipping in water represents Christs death and burial and withal our mortification so the rising out of the water is a shadow of his resurrection and our spiritual vivification 2. Water is a cheap and common element therefore obvious and easily obtained 3. In the begining the Spirit moved on the waters and was the cause of generation so in the baptisme of water and the Spirit is effected our regeneration 4. Water washeth away the filth of the body so doth Baptism the spots of the soule I will poure upon you clear water and you shall be cleansed from all your iniquities Ezek. 36. By this water Eph. 5. Christ cleanseth his Church 5. Water quencheth the thirst of the body so doth Baptisme the thirst of the soul 6. Water cools the heat of the body so doth Baptisme the heat of Gods wrath and the fire of our lusts 7. Baptisme is the Sacrament of illumination Heb. 6.4 10.32 Therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to illuminate is used for baptising and baptisme is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illumination and the dayes of baptisme were called the dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of light Now water is a diapharont body by which light is transmitted to us so is mental illumination by the water of baptisme in which now we are not dipped but besprinkled which is all one for the gifts of the Spirit are expressed by the sprinkling of clear water in Ezekiel and by the sprinkling of water in the old Purifications and by the sprinkling of the Lambs blood in the Passeover to which the Apostle alludes Heb. 10. having our hearts besprinkled from an evil conscience The outward matter is water But for oil salt spittle and other things which Papists joyn to this element belong rather to the profanation then administration of baptisme VI. The internal matter is Christ with his death passion resurrection c. VII The internal form consisteth partly in actions partly in wo●ds VIII The action is the aspersion of water which is used for dipping The dipping in and rising out of the water was a cleare symbol of Christs burial and resurrection But because of the weaknesse of infants in cold countries we use sprinkling which probably was used by the Apostles when they baptised in private families IX It is not much material whether one aspersion or three he used so it be void of superstition and that it be not performed drop by drop or by the finger but so that the symbol may answer the sprinkling or washing X. The word by which Baptisme is to be administred is to be comprehended in Christs institution especially in these words I baptise thee in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Ghost XI The Latin tongue in Baptisme and the superstitious consecration or exorcisme of the water are repugnant to the form of Baptisme XII The internal form consisteth in the analogie of aspersion and remission of sins as also of regeneration or sanctification In this Baptisme answers the legal aspersions by which likewise remission of sin by the blood of Christ was shadowed Water also as it cleanseth from filthinesse and moistneth the Plants doth adumbrate regeneration whereby we die to sin and live to righteousnes See Rom. 6. v. 1. c. XIII The end of Baptisme besides those which are common to it and the Lords Supper is the seal●ng of our regeneration and of our reception or ingraffing into the family of God XIV The subject of Baptisme are all that be in the Covenant even the children of those who are reckoned among the number of the Covenanters This rule is grounded 1. on Christs command Matt. 1.14 Suffer little children and forbid them not to come to me they ought not then to be kept off from Baptisme whom Christ will have to be brought to him The words used in this place and Luc. 28.15 Of little children and infants are emphaticall 2. On the reason alledged by Christ Matt. 19.14 For of such is the kingdome of heaven For if to them the kingdome of heaven and the Covenant of Grace belong the seale of the Covenant must needs appertain to them also but they are capable of the Covenant Gen. 17.7 I will be thy God and of thy seed Act. 2. v. 39. Te you and to your children is the Promise made 3. On the analogy of circumcision for with this Sacrament infants were initiated 4. On the example of the Apostles who are said to baptise whol families Act. 16.15.33 It were a foolish thing to apply that rule 2 Thess 3.10 If any will not work let him not eat to Infants so perversly doe the Anabaptists wrest the places of Scripture to a contrary meaning which those that are of years are commanded to be taught before they are baptised XV. Infants have both Faith and Reason although not in the fruit yet in the seed and root though not in the second act yet in the first though not by an outward demonstration of the work yet by the inward virtue of the Holy Spirit XVI But concerning the Infants of Infidels the case is otherwise for they are not to be baptized till they be of discretion and are able to testifie their Faith XVII The baptisme of Bels is a profanation of the Sacrament and idolatrous XVIII As naturally we are born before we eat so Baptisme is before the Lords Supper XIX Baptisme is not to be iterated if the essentials thereof were used Hence it is that our Church ratifies the Baptisme of the Popish Church not as it is abused there but as it is administred in the name of the Holy Trinity XX. Baptisme is necessary not absolutely but in respect of Christs command neither must we feigne such a necessity as permits any other besides the Minister to baptise or to cause us think they are excluded out of heaven if they die unbaptised XXI The Baptisme of Christ and of John are in effect the same The Pontificians deny that John's baptisme was instituted by God against these plain testimonies Matt. 21.25 Luc. 3.2 and 7.30 Joh. 1.33 Neither matters it that John distinguisheth between his baptisme and Christs Mar. 1.8 For there the opposition is not between baptisme and baptisme but a comparison onely between the office of the Minister in Baptisme and Christ for the Minister giveth the Symbol but Christ the things signified They say that such as were baptised by John were rebaptised Act. 19.1 c. If they were rebaptised by the Apostle we gather that they were not rightly baptised by some who were imitators of John neither yet can we finde out of the text that they were rebaptised for those words v. 5. are not Lukes concerning Paul but Pauls concerning John and his disciples therefore this place favoureth neither Papists nor Anabaptists CHAP. XXIV Of the Lords Supper THe Lords Supper is the other
outward administration The visible Church then is a visible society of men called to the state of grace by the Word and Sacraments The RULES I. The name of Church and Synagogue is the same with the Hebrew Kahal and Edah but the society of Christans is more usually called the Church II. We must carefully here observe the distinction of the word that we may know of what Church we speake III. For whereas it is distinguished into the triumphan and militant that belongs to the doctrine of the state of glory this is for our present consideration IV. The militant Church is divided into the visible and invisible V. The invisible Church is the company of the Elect onely This is called invisible not as if the men that belong to her were not visible as they are men but that they are not perceived as they are elect for the Lord knows onely who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 VI. This belongs to the doctrine of special vocation for by her proper effects to wit faith charity and such like the elect which are the invisible Church are known VII The visible Church is the company of all that are called in common as well Reprobates as Elect. VIII This word Church-visible is ambiguous for properly it is meant of the universal Church dispersed through the whole world more strictly of any particular Church as of France England Holland c. but most strictly of the representative Church or the company of Pastors and Elders IX Her efficient cause in common is the holy Trinity in particular Christ X. The matter of the Church are they who are called in common and received into the Covenant of grace and Infants that are born in the Church XI Neither unbaptised Infants nor Catechumeni nor excommunicate persons are to be excluded out of the number of the Churches members The two former sorts of Men belong to the Church by the right of covenant though not of profession but for the third kinde though they be cast out of some particular Church yet they are not simply ejected out of the catholike though the Papists excommunicate them XII The forme of the Church consisteth in a double union the first is of her conjunction with Christ her head the other of her members among themselves XIII The first union is in this that in the Church not onely Christ as the head is eminent but also as the head he communicates his gifts and vertue to the members Ephes 1.22 And he hath appointed him over all things to his Church which is his body and the fulfilling of him who filleth all in all and cap. 5.23 For the man is the head of the woman even as Christ is the head of his Church and giveth salvation to his body c. Col. 1.18 And he is the head of the Church which is his body XIV They make a monster of the Church who set up any other universal head thereof besides Christ For as she is not headlesse so she is not many-headed for of one body there is but one head except it be a monster neither must therefore the Church because visible have a visible head on earth for properly the elect onely are members of the Church therefore though she be visible in respect of outward administration yet she is invisible in respect of the elect and of their union with Christ XV. The other union of the members or of particular Churches among themselves consisteth in the unity of profession faith and charity Ephes 4.4 5 6. There is one body and one spirit as you are all led into one hope of your vocation there is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all c. XVI The principal end of the Church is Gods glory the proximate our salvation XVII Of the adjuncts we must observe her Titles and Notes XVIII For her titles she is called One Catholick and Holy XIX Christs Church is one in respect of the form now explained XX. She is Catholick in respect of the union of time place and persons The Church Catholick hath a treble signification 1. A very general one to wit of the whole society of men and Angels 2. A more particular of the company of all elect men 3. Most special of all of the visible militant Church XXI She is Catholick in respect of time because she hath not utterly failed since the beginning of the world but still there hath been some visible Church As the light of the Moon decreaseth though her substance never wasteth even so although the light of the Church is sometime clearer sometimes obscurer yet she remains the same still and visible too not to Hogs eyes but to the godly XXII In respect of place and persons she is Catholick because she is not tied to place and persons Matt. 24.14 15. This Gospel shall be preached through all the world Act. 10.34 35. Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons but in every nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him XXIII The Church is holy in common because of her calling and covenant but particularly in respect of the Elect who are holy in Christ by an imputed righteousnesse begun in them Concerning the holinesse of vocation God saith to Moses Deut. 7.6 Thou art a holy people to the Lord thy God Of imputed and begun holinesse Paul 1 Cor. 6.11 But you are washed but you are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus by the Spirit of our God XXIV The inherent holinesse of the Church in this life is imperfect except in respect of Christ who by his perfection covers her imperfection and in the hope of future perfection Eph. 5.26 27. Christ hath loved his Church and hath given himself for her that he might sanctifie and cleanse her with the washing of water by the word that he might present her to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinckle or any such thing but that she might be holy and without blemish XXV Therefore the Church is not free from all errour as the Papists say for although the Catholike Church doth not so erre in the fundamentals of Faith as to fall off utterly yet she is not quite exempted from errour seeing there is no member of her perfect in this life as for a particular Church she may both erre and become a harlot Hence the Church of Rome which in the Apostles time was like the woman cloathed with the Sun having a Crown on her head and the Moon under her feet is so degenerated that she is likened to the Whore sitting upon the Beast Rev. 12.1 and 17.1 c. XXVI The notes of the visible Church are the pure Preaching of the Word and lawful administration of the Sacraments We spake above of the Notes of the invisible Church that they depended upon the works of Vocation for the notes of the Elect specially called and of the visible Church are the same But here these notes are onely
either ordinary or extraordinary the ordinary is publike or private the publique is ecclesiastical or politique the ecclesiastical is that which handleth spiritual things This is either proper to publique persons in the Church or common to the whole Congregation The proper is that which is executed by any Minister of the Church according to his calling The Ministers are they to whom God hath committed the charge of his flock The RULES I. No man can have the charge of a Church but he that is lawfully called II. No man is to be forced to undertake the Ministery III. Ministers are not to be debarred from Marriage 1. Cor. 9.5 Have not we power to lead about a wife a Sister as well as the rest of the Apostles and brethren of the Lord and Cephas 1 Tim. 3.2 A Bishop must be without reproofe the Husband of one Wife and v. 4. One that ruleth well his own house having his children in subjection with all gravity Ministers are either ordinary or extraordinary They were extraordinary whom God raised upon extraordinary occasions either to establish a new government in the Church or e se to repaire the old government when it was decayed Such were the Prophets in the Old-Testament But in the New John Baptist Christ the Apostles Prophets that is such as were furnished with the gift of interpreting Scripture Evangelists that were the companions of the Apostles and supplyed their roomes in their absence Pastors to rule and teach the Churrh and Doctors for the Schools Eph. 4.11 The RULES I. The marks of extraordinary Ministers were extraordinary gifts II. Such were the gifts of Prophesie Tongues and Miracles III. These extraordinary gifts continued so long as it pleased God and the Churches necessitie required them which being taken away the ordinary Ministery succeeded Ordinary Ministers are they who be furnished with ordinary gifts and an ordinary calling And these are Pastors Doctors Presbyters and Deacons The Pastors are they who are set over a particular flock to teach them to administer the Sacraments to them and to watch over them The RULES I. The name of Bishop belongs to all Pastors 1 Tim. 3.1 II. Although this custome prevailed in the Church that he who had the charge of the Diocesse of particular Churches was named Bishop yet the name of Universal Bishop belongs to none There are Doctors who in the Schooles teach Youth the grounds of Truth which they may afterward professe in the Churches The RULE Pastors differ from Doctors in this That they have the charge of the Church these of the Schools They are to move the affections these to informe the understanding of their auditors Presbyters are godly and grave men joyned to assist the Pastors in such things as are fit for the good order of the Church in visiting of the sick in observing disordered livers and such like Deacons and Diaconesses of old were they who had the charge to gather and distribute the Church-goods Act. 6.1 c. 1 Tim. 3.1 c. The RULES I. The collection and distribution of Church-goods is of Divine right This appears by the Oeconomie of the Old Testament for by the command of God Tithes were gathered for the Priests Levites and poor In the New-Testament Christ refused not the money that was offered by godly rich persons Luke 8.3 out of which he sustained his Disciples and friends and the poor also Job 13.19 In the Apostles time the Deacons had charge of the Church-goods Act. 6.1 c. II. As we reprove the covetousness of the Romish Church supported with horrible superstition and idolatry in the gathering of Tithes and other Church-duties as likewise their profuse wasting thereof upon their pomp and luxury so among Protestants they grievously offend God and the Church who unfaithfully dispense these goods Thus of the proper administration the common consisteth in the calling of Ministers in the well ordering of the Church in judging of Doctrine and controversies and in the use of the Keyes The calling of the Ministers is the choosing of fit men for the Church into the Ministery after tryal had of their life and doctrine and an introduction of them by some solenm Rite into the possession of their Office The RULES I. The chief efficient cause of this vocation is God who inwardly calls Ministers and furnisheth them with his gifts but the ministerial cause is the whole Church or at least the representative consisting of Pastors and Presbyters or other Church-men and not the Bishop or Pastor alone For the Apostles never challenged to themselves alone the right of Election Act. 1.23 and 6.5 and 14.13 II. Three things are required to a lawfull calling triall election and confirmation III. Triall is both of life and doctrine and the life must be first tried before doctrine for he is not to be admitted to the triall of Doctrine whose conditions are not to be endured IV. The manner of Election is this After the pouring out of fervent prayers to God the persons being named out of whose number one is to be chosen either by the vocall suffrages of all or of the greatest part or else by holding up of hands that one is elected V. Confirmation is the introduction of the parties elected in which publike prayers being premised he is recommended to the Church and his calling is confirmed by imposition of hands VI. The Pontificians falsly say that this is an unlawful calling which is done by the Presbyters without the Bishop For Bishops have not by Divine right greater power and authority VII The Reformed Church hath ratified the calling of them who in our fore-fathers time reformed the Church not as if it proceeded from Popery as a bunch or swelling of the Church but as principally they were called by God and furnished with gifts They object that such men were called under Popery but that their vocation is expired since they fell off We answer that they are falsly accused of falling off for they have not fallen off from the Gospel to the preaching of which they were called even in Popery but from the corruption of the Gospel neither have they cause to cry out that they were called to preach the doctrine of the Romish Church for whereas they comprehend their doctrine under the title of the Gospel the Minister who observeth that in very truth it is far from the Gospel he by the right of his calling might contradict the same Although then they have revolted from the Romish Church yet they have not revolted from their calling VIII Neither can they produce any thing whereby they may infringe the calling of our Ministers performed according to the former Rules above handled For 1. When they ask by what right we teach We answer the same that Christ did to those that asked the same question Mat. 21.14 The Baptism of John whence is it from heaven or from men Even so we say the doctrine of our Ancestors which is preached among us at this day whence is
it Is it repugnant to the word of Christ and his Apostles or is it consonant If it be repugnant let them shew in what Articles If it be consonant they cannot reprove our vocation For where the true Doctrine hath place there the vocation is lawfull besides that calling which answers the example of the Apostles and primitive Church is lawful but that our calling is such cannot be denied The power of judging Doctrines is that whereby the Church enquires into mens Doctrine and cuts off the controversies that trouble her The RULES I. Every private man may and ought to judge of the Doctrine he professeth if it be consonant to Scripture or not Acts 17.11 the men of Berea daily searched the Scripture whether these things were so 1. Cor. 10.15 I speak as to those who understand judge you what I speak 1 Joh. 4.1 Beloved believe not every Spirit but ●●y the Spirits if they be of God II. This ought to be done also by the Presbytery or Assembly when any great controversie ariseth III. As the holy Spirit is the chief Judge of controversies so the Scipture which is the voice of the holy Spirit is the rule by which the straight is known from the crooked The power which concerneth the well ordering of the Church is that which determines what things ought to be done decently in the Church The RULES I. The object of this power are the outward circumstances of Divine Worship to wit time place and such like which in themselves be indifferent II. If in these any inconvenience is found the Church may lawfully abrogate the old Ceremonies and substitute such as are more convenient III. Yet the canons and customs of the Church must not equal the Scripture canons The power of the Keyes is that which the Church useth for preservation of Discipline whereof are two parts to loose and to binde To binde is to denounce Gods wrath against impenitent sinners To loose is to pronounce remission of sins to repentant sinners both which have certain degrees The degrees of binding are 1. A severe exhortation and commination after private admonitions have been rejected this must be done by the Presbyterie a 2. A keeping off from the Lords Supper b 3. The greater excommunication by which the sinner is cast out of the Church yet not without hope of pardon and return if he repent c 4. Anathema or in the Syriac word Maran-atha when he is cast out without hope d a Mat. 18.15 16 17. If they brother shall trespass against thee go tell him his fault betweent thee and him alone if he shall hear thee then thou hast gained thy brother but if he will not hear thee then take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of one or two witnesses every word may be established and if he shall neglect to hear them tell it unto the church but if he neglect to hear the church c b Mat. 7.6 Give not that which is holy unto dogs nor cast your pearls before swine c 1 Cor. 5.5 Let such a man be delievered o●●● to Satan to the destruction of the flesh that the Spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus d 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Chrrst let him be Anathema Maran-atha 1 Joh. 5.16 There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it In loosing the same degrees being observed the sinner is by the Church received again into favour So by the Apostles advice the excommunicated Corinthian is received again into grace 2 Cor. 2.7 8. The RULES I. Christ is the author and founder of this power Out of the testimonies above cited II. This power of the Keyes is in the whole Presbyterie not in the Bishop or Pastor alone The Pope falsly arrogates this power to himself For to say nothing of that right which he claims from Peter it is certain that the Keyes were not delivered to Peter alone Mat. 16.18 but the same right was imparted also to all the rest Mat. 18.18 Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye bind on earth c and Ioh. 20.23 Whose sins ye shall remit c. III. The object of this binding is the sinner who either was not amended by private admonition or whose scandal was greater then could be done away by private exhortation IV. The forme consisteth in the decent observation of degrees for when the first and second will prevail we should not make use of the third and very seldome of the fourth V. Popish Indulgences which are the fictitious treasure they brag of gathered by the Pope out of the merits of Christ of the blessed Virgin and of the Saints who suffered more as they teach then their sinnes deserved are far from the power of the Keyes Let the treasure of Christs blood suffice which cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Joh. 1.7 VI. Loosing consists not in those Satisfactions which they enjoin sinners By satisfaction here we understand not that which is given to the Church by a serious testimony of repentance and that publiquely when it is required but that which satisfieth for sin Besides their opinion is grounded on a false supposition that the punishment is reserved after the fault is remitted Of this we will speak in the doctrine of Justification hereafter VII The end of this power is the preservation of the Churches honour and the foreing of wicked men to repentance VIII The power of the Church and of the Magistrate differ in these 1. The object of this is any man but of that the members of the Church only without exception of the greatest personages 2. The object of this are the body and outward goods but of that the soule 3. This punisheth even penitents that receiveth penitents into favour IX Ministers and Presbyters should not divulge any secret offence revealed to them by him whose conscience is oppressed except the safety and peace of the Publique require it lest others be debarred of the Churches comfort Thus of the Church-government the Political is that whereby the Church also is governed by the Magistrate The RULES I. Magistrates are the Churches nursing-fathers as they are keepers of the two Tables of the Law as they preserve Churches and Schools and defend the Truth II. The Clergy is not exempted from the Magistrates subjection Rom. 13.1 Let every soul be subject to the higher powers The examples of Christ paying toll-mony Mat. 17.27 and of Paul appealing to Cesar Act. 25.11 witnesse this III. The Infidel-Magistrate must be obeyed in things that may be done with a safe conscience IV. We must pray for Magistrates that be infidels 1 Tim. 2.1 c. So much of the Publike Administration the Private is whereby each member of the Church is coupled with one another in the bond of love to the edifying of the whole Mystical body See Rom. 12.6 c. 1 Cor. 12.12 c. Eph. 2.20 4.1 c. Hitherto of the Ordinary Church-Government the
Extraordinary is when necessity requiring a Councel is gathered A Councel is a Meeting enjoyned by the Civil Magistrate or the common consent of the Church in which men endowed with the gifts of the Spirit and lawfully chosen for this purpose undertake the Churches cause and out of Gods word define it And this is either oecumenical and universal or else particular Particular is National or Provincial The RULES I. A Councel must be called by the Magistrate if he be Faithful If he be an Infidel either it is to be procured by Petition or if he be an open enemy to the Councel it must be held by the Churches common consent necessity so requiring it II. The Persons which should be present at the Councel are the Civil and Ecclesiastical Presidents so many Scribes and fit men chosen for this purpose Neither are private men to be altogether excluded who may be present at the handling of Doctrinal points but not in matters of Scandal which charity ought to cover III. The matter which is to be handled in the Councel or Synod are Church-businesses which are of weight and worthy of serious consideration IV. The form of the Councel consisteth in a religious and orderly disquisition of the truth V. It will be religious if after fervent prayers to God all things be tryed by Scripture as by an infallible rule VI. It will be orderly if every man be mindfull of his duty VII It is the part of the Civil President to gather the Councel to protect it being gathered to prohibit all violence and disorder to cause proclaim the Decrees lawfully made and to curb the refractory VIII The Ecclesiastick President is to propose the Question to moderate the Disputation by the advice of his Assistants to ask their Opinion and by Notaries to record the Decrees IX The rest of the Delegates are to propose their opinion calmly and roundly or to assent to him that spake before if his opinion was right X. The presidencie that the Pope claimes over Councels is far from this form who neither consulteth with Scripture nor asketh the opinion of his Assistants but obtrudes his Dictates to be confirmed by the Councel XI The form of the Councel of Jerusalem was far otherwise in which every man might lawfully utter his opinion Paul and Barnabas had as much freedom to speak as Peter and after their opinions had been canvassed to and fro James at length concludes Act. 15. v. 6.19 XII The end of Councels is peace and truth in the Church XIII As far as Councels agree with Scripture so great is their authority neither are they more exempted from erring then the Church her self What credit we are to give to Popish Councels may be seen both by the opposition of Councels one to another as likewise by their impious Decrees The Councels of Constance and Basil subjected the Pope to the Synod but that of Trent on the contrary extols the Pope above all Councels The second Councel of Nice impiously thrusts out the second Commandment and that of Constance sacrilegiously robs the people of the Cup in the Lords Supper CHAP. XXVII Of the False Church THus in two Chapters we have considered the Church in her self Now of the False Church which is opposite to her and her enemy The Churches enemies are either open or secret These are called in Rev. 20.8 Gog and Magog that is covered and uncovered Her open foes are Heathens Jewes and Mahumetans The Heathens are they who feign paint and worship false and fictitious Gods The Jews deny the Trinity and the coming of the Messiah and interpret carnally what is spoken of Christs kingdom in the Prophets spiritually The Mahumetans preferre their Mahumet to Christ and their Alcoran to the Scriptures which Alcoran that Impostor compiled by the help of a Nestorian Monk and an Arrian out of the sink of Gentilisme Judaisme Mahumetisme Arrianisme and other heresies The hid or counterfeit enemies are either false Christs or Antichrists False Christs are they who brag themselves to be Christ As Simon Magus Barcochab Moses Cretensis David Georgius and such like Antichrists are commonly all Heretiques but particularly and by way of excellencie that great Antichrist 1 Joh. 2.18 Little children now is the last time and at ye have heard that Antichrist would come even now many Antichrists are begun 1. c. 4. v. 3. Whatsoever spirit doth not confesse that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh he is not of God but this is that spirit of Antichrist of whom you have heard that he was to come and that he is now in the world Heretiques are they who maintain stubbornly against the plain light of truth any doctrine which overthrowes directly or by necessary consequence the fundamentals of Christian faith The RULES I. Not every Error makes an Heretick For either there is an error against the foundation as that of the Arrians and Marcionites of whom they denied the divinity of Christ these his humanity Or about the foundation so the Papists erre while they teach Transubstantiation which overthrows the truth of Christs humanity Or besides the foundation such errors are by Paul compared to hay wood c. 1 Cor. 3.12 II. An Heretick is made 1. by an errour in or about the foundation 2. by conviction 3. by contumacie III. Not every Schismatick is an Heretick He is a Schismatick who without hurting the foundation of Faith departs from some Ceremony of the Church out of ambition The great Antichrist is he who under the name of Christs Vicar persecutes him The RULES I. The name Antichrist belongs not to one person alone but to a whole state or order of men as it were in the same kingdom succeeding each other Even as the word of High-Priest He is not then opposite to Christ as one person is to another in respect of substance but he is opposite to him in respect of quality or office II. The Papists will have Antichrist to be one particular man a Jew of the Tribe of Dan the Jews Messiah and the restorer of their Religion who shall reign at Jerusalem three years and a half shall fight with Henoch and Eliah shall offer to ascend to Heaven from Mount Olivet but shall be destroyed by Christ III. But we out of Scripture describe Antichrist thus 1. That he is a man at one time one but in succession of time an order of men in the same state succeeding each other 2. Raised by Satan 3. A Christian in name onely 4. In very deed Christs enemie 5. Sitting in the Temple of God as God 6. Reigning in that great City which ruleth over the Kings of the earth 7. Seducing the Inhabitants of the earth with lying wonders 8. Setting a mark on his followers 9. Full of idolatry ambition avarice cruelty and impurity 10. Revealed in the last times 11. He shall be destroyed by the breath of Christs mouth and shall be overthrown by his own lovers and utterly abolished at Christs glorious coming If
these things be proved the description of the Pontificians will vanish in smoak 1. He is not one particular person but an order succeeding each other as appears by the appointed time of Antichrist which extends it self even from the time of Paul and John when this mysterie began to appear 2 Thes 2.7 1 Ioh. 4.3 even till the coming of Christ 2 Thes 2.8 whence that fiction of three years and a half faileth 2. He is raised by Satan 2 Thes 2.9 his coming shall be with the power of Satan Rev. 13.4 The Dragon gave him power Whereas otherwise Magistrates are raised by God Rom. 13.2 3. Thirdly A Christian in name only 2 Thes 2.4 He sits in the temple of God Fourthly Christs enemy 1 Joh. 4.5 He denieth Christ to have come in the flesh to wit by the sequel of his Doctrine Rev. 13.11 He hath horns like the Lamb by arrogating that to himself which belongs to Christ Rev. 17.14 He fights against the Lamb and 19.19 and 20.8 Fifthly He sits in the Temple of God 2 Thes 2.4 Not in that of Jerusalem which is abolished without hope of resurrection Dan. 9.26 27. But in the Church which is Gods temple 2 Cor. 6.16 Sixthly He sits that is he reigns Rev. 18.7 She sits as a queen He sits as God and exalts himself above everything that is called God 2 Thes 2.4 6. He reigns in the great City the type whereof is The beast with seven heads and ten horns sitting upon many waters where the seven heads are seven hills and seven kings or forms of Government by a Metonymie Ten horns signifie ten kings and the waters many people and nations Rev. 17.1 c. Seventhly VVonders are preached 2 Thes 2.9 Lying wonders Rev. 13.13 14. He worketh great wonders so that he maketh fire to come down from heaven upon the earth in the sight of men and he seduceth the inhabitants of the earth c. and ver 15. And he had power to give life to the image of the beast c. Eighthly And he caused every one great and small to receive his mark on their right hands or foreheads and that none might buy or sell but such as had his mark or name or number of his name c. and his number was 666. Rev. 13.16 17 c. Ninthly Idolatry by a familiar Scripture phrase is shadowed out by a Whore Rev. 17.2 His ambition appears by that place in the Thessalonians His covetousness is noted by his gainful merchandising Rev. 18.11 His cruelty is set out by the Beast drunk with the blood of the Martyrs Rev. 17.6 His impurity by sins heaped up to heaven Rev. 18.5 Yea thus in general by the mystical name of Sodom Egypt Babylon and Jerusalem are described in which mystical Christ that is Christ in his Members is crucified Rev. 11.8 and 14.8 Tenthly He is to be revealed in the last times He that letteth must be taken out of the way 2 Thes 2.7 8. that is the Roman Emperour for so long as he lived in Rome he hindred the revealing of the Antichrist Eleventhly there be two degrees of destroying 1. He shall be slain by the breath of Christs mouth 2 Thes 2.8 that is with the sword of his word which proceedeth out of his mouth Rev. 19.21 The effect whereof shall be this that as soon as Antichrists fraud shall be found out the lovers of the whore shall hate her and shall make her desolate and naked and shall eat her flesh and burn her with fire Rev. 17.16 2. He shall be abolished by the glorious coming of Christ 2 Thes 2.8 VVhen he shal be cast into that Lake of fire which burns with brimston Rev. 19.20 IV. This description sheweth not only what but who this great Antichrist is for that must needs be the thing defined to which the definition belongeth but the definition belongs to the Pope therefore he is the thing defined The Minor is proved by an induction or application of each member 1. The first member is out of question for every one knows that the Popes succeed each other The second member is manifest both by its effects as also by their example who have attained that Seat by wicked arts and wayes as Alexander the sixth Sylvester the second Benedict the ninth of whom see Platina and other Popish Writers 3. By profession the Pope will not deny himself to be a Christian 4. That he is Christs enemy and that he hath made horns to himself like those of the Lamb is apparent because he claims to himself Christs Prophetical Sacerdotal and Regal offices together with the titles of High-Priest Prince of Pastors Head and Husband of the Church c. while he casts by Christs word as needless and obscure like a nose of wax equalling yea preferring his traditions to it He overthrows Christs Prophetical office whilst he urgeth the merits and intercession of Mary and of the Saints He destroys Christs Priesthood and his Kingly office whilst he takes upon him to do what he pleaseth in the Church But if you compare Christs life with the Popes the humility of the one with the pride of the other the doctrine of the one with the doctrine of the other concerning Free-will Justification the Sacraments and such like articles it will appear that fire and water are not more contrary 5. That he sits in the temple of God that is in the Church which is his temple as is said is manifest Now the Roman Church as it is Popish is not called the temple of God But 1. As in Johns time it was the true Church of Christ and so the Temple of Jerusalem of old was called the temple of God though it had been converted to a den of theeves Jer. 7. ver 11. 2. As God hath there yet those that belong to election The Pope is born in the Church he sits in her not as her true and naturall Son but as a Monster a bunch or swelling or as a canker cleaving fast to the body Furthermore that he sits there as God the titles which his Flatterers give him make it plain they deny him to be a man therefore they call him Admirable which is Christs title Esa 9.6 c. Gloss de Elect. c. fund Also their Lord God de concess praeb c. proposuisti In the Councel of Lateran the acclamation which they gave to Pope Leo the tenth was To thee is given all power in heaven and earth But he extols himself above God not onely in preferring himself before Magistrates which are called gods especially before the Emperour whom he calls the Moon and himself the Sun but also by preferring his Decrees to Gods Word and consequently himself to God 6. He possesseth that city which hath seven hils and had seven kings That Rome hath seven hills all the world knows but the seven Kings metonymically are the seven forms of Government which were in Rome before Popery for there were 1. Kings 2. Consuls 3. Dictators 4. Tribunes
4.5 To this is opposite too much Right which is commonly called too much Wrong Of the latter sort are Vindicative Justice and Fortitude The former is when offences are curbed with fit punishments that one rather may perish then unity To this is opposite too much Lenity which begets too much liberty in sinning Not only is it a sin to kill but also not to kill when the Law requires it Of this we have an example in Saul 1 Sam. 15. Fortitude is that whereby according to the strength and vigor of a high and unconquered mind we endure difficulties and undertake high matters to Gods glory and our neighbours safety To this Sluggishnesse is opposite or Pusillanimity arising out of fear of dancers or desire of pleasures Temerity also and too much boldnesse To this also belong Duels undertaken for deciding of doubtful rights or upon other light and rash occasions Such Conflicts may be fitly reduced to Self-murther Both these to wit Justice and Fortitude appear either in Peace or in War War is publike hostility which the Magistrate exerciseth with armed power for ends pleasing to God and profitable to the State The RULES I. It is lawfull for Christians to wage war as it was of old for the Jewes The reason is because it is no where prohibited in the New-Testament And that Captain of the Capernaites Mat. 8. and Cornelius the Centurion Act. 10. are reckoned amongst the faithful Neither did John dehort the souldiers from wars but from injustice Luk. 3. II. War is to be managed by the Magistrate not by private authority III. War must not be made but that which is just and necessary IV. It will be just in respect of the matter forme and end if it be made in a just cause for a good end and according to the prescript of Gods word V. It will be necessary if the matter be tried by Councel before it be handled by Arms. VI. When war is undertaken it matters not whether it be managed by strength or policie VII Policie joyned with lying and breaking of covenants is not to be allowed but it may be approved with dissimulation VIII Although the Church is built by the Word not by the Sword yet being built is justly to be defended by the sword against unjust violence CHAP. XI Of Vertues and Works belonging to the Seventh Commandment THus of our duty towards the life of our neighbour In the Seventh Precept is set down how we must preserve our own and neighbours Chastity the summe whereof is that the Heavenly Law-giver would have our own and neighbours chastity preserved inviolable This Precept is negative Thou shalt not commit adultery and Synecdochical also for under the name of Adultery all lust and intemperance is understood Hence ariseth the Affirmative that by endeavouring temperance we preserve our own and others chastity There be two meanes to preserve chastity Temperance and Wedlock the first is enjoyned to all men the other to those who are called to wedlock Temperance is a vertue moderating the affections of our mind in persuing and avoiding bodily pleasures Tit. 2.11 12 13. The grace of God which bringeth salvation to all men hath appeared teaching us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and that we should live soberly justly and godly in this present world looking for that blessed hope and glorious appearance of the mighty God and of our Saviour Iesus Christ To Temperance is opposed Intemperance and Insensibility whereby honest and lawfull delights are despised also Hypocritical temperance of Monks and Eremites Temperance is both Sobriety and Chastity as also Modesty and Honesty The former vertues have relation to us the latter to our neighbour Sobriety is temperance from superfluous meat and drink We must study to Sobriety 1. Because of Gods command 2. Because of the reasons annexed to it taken from our calling 1 Thess 5.8 But let us who are of the day be sober From the necessity of Prayer and from the end of the world 1 Pet. 4.7 But the end of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watch unto prayer Lastly from the snares of Satan 1 Pet. 5.8 Be sober and watch for your adversary the devil walketh as a roaring lion seeking whom he may devoure To Sobriety is opposite Delicatenesse whereby dainties and delicacies are fought for imoderately in meats drinks Gluttony also of Voracity Drunkenes hurtful Abstinence Of daintines Solomon speaks Pro. 23.1 2 3. When thou sittest to eat with a Ruler consider diligently what is before thee and put a knife to thy throat if thou be a man given to appetite be not desirous of his dainties for they are deceitfull meats Gluttony and drunkennesse are to be avoided 1. Because they are prohibited by God Pro. 23.20.31 Luk. 21.34 Rom. 13.13 2. Because the effects thereof are most pernicious for they hinder the meditating on Gods works Isa 5.12 and thinking upon Christs coming Luk. 21.34 Prayers also 1 Pet. 4.7 It stirs up anger and strife Pro. 20.1 29.30 It kindles lust Pro. 23.31 32. It causeth scandal as the example of Noah sheweth Gen. 9. and shuts out of Gods kingdom 1 Cor. 6.10 Gal. 5.21 Hurtful abstinence is when we refrain from meat and drink to the prejudice of our health Neer to Sobrietie is Vigilancie when we abstain from untimely and too much sleep that we may serve God with chearfulnesse and follow the works of our vocations 1 Pet. 5.8 Be sober and watch Now as under the name of Sobriety sometime abstinence from pride and evil affections is meant Rom. 12.3 so oftentimes spiritual vigilancie is understood as an abstinence from the sleep of security to which Peter hath respect in the place above cited To Vigilancie is opposite Sleep and Monkish superstitious Watchings Chastity or Sanctimony so called Rom. 6.19 is temperance from lust We must follow chastity 1. Because God commands it Lev. 19.2 Be ye holy for I the Lord you God am holy 1 Thess 4.3 This is the will of God even your holinesse that ye abstain from fornication 2. Because they that follow it shall see God Mat. 5.8 Heb. 12.14 To Chastity is opposite both Dissembled chastity as is that of them who are tied with the Vow of chastity as also all Impurity as Fornication Adultery Whoredome Incest Rapes Softnesse Sodomy Bestiality c. Although there be degrees of these sins yet all of them exclude from the Kingdom of heaven as is taught plainly 1 Cor. 6.10 c. And how grievously God is offended at these sins let the Flood the fire of Sodom the destruction of the Israelites Num. 23. the miseries of David the ruine of Troy and the like bear witnesse Modesty is temperance from filthy words and lascivious gestures Heb. 12.28 Let us have grace whereby we may acceptably serve God with reverence and godly feare or modesty To this is opposite Filthy communication lascivious and unclean gestures Dances also obscene Pictures and Songs and filthy Sights
Of the Principal Matters and Words ADam and Eves fall 58 Adam in his fall not a private person 61 Adjuration what and how we are to obey it 281 Adjuration of Devils ibid. Adoration of idols of the hoast of the Crosse of Reliques of holy Angels and dead men 270 c. Adoration of Saints 272 c. Adultery what the cause of divorce 312 Affections how manifold 336 Agnus Dei idolatry 272 Alms 324 Angels when created 39. what 42. in what bodies they appeared ibid. the head of good Angels their felicity order and office 50 51. if their adoration be lawful 272 The apostacy of evil Angels 52. their sin ibid. their Prince ibid. their remaining qualities 53 Anger 304 Antichrist what and who 185 his ruine how a signe of the last judgement 186 c. Appetite ordered or disordered 336 Arke of the Covenant 83 Assurance vide Salvation Astorgie or want of natural affection 300 Atheisme 250 Avarice vide Covetousnes BAptisme what 152. how it differs from the Lords Supper 160. if to be administred by a private man 153. if in Baptisme one or three sprinklings be required 154. if children are to be baptised 155. how Baptisme is necessary 156. if the Baptisme of Christ and John be the same ibid. Bargains how to be made 320 Beatitude its degrees 240 Beneficence 324 Benevolence 300 Boldnesse vide Fortitude Foolish Bragging 332 Bread in the Eucharist what 157 c. Busie bodies 301 CAlling how manifold 133 Calling common to elect and reprobate 134 Calling proper to the elect 192. how it differs from the common 197 Calumnies 329. impatience in bearing Calumnies 333 Censuring 332 Charity towards God 252. towards our neighbour 289 Chastity 309. how preserved 307 Christ eternal God 19 20 c. his incarnation 90 94. how the first born 103. his conception 94. the union of two natures in Christ 96. communication of properties 97. the excellency of Christs humane nature 99. if equal to the divine nature 130. his adoration 99. his knowledg how manifold ibid. his perfections what 101. his generation twofold 102. his nativity 101. fruit thereof 104. his exinanition 108. Christs office in his humiliation ib. 124. and in his exaltation 130. his office of mediatorship 104. in what nature he was mediator 105. how manifold 106. our mediator ib. works of mediation 94. his active and passive obedience 109. the necessity of both ib. 120. his active how shadowed 123. his passive how the cause of life eternal 122 his passion 110. each part thereof satisfactory ib. how attributed to Christ and how manifold 115. if he despaired on the cross 111. his death what 112. if he died for all 119. his sepulture 113 114 c. his three dayes detention in the grave 113. his descent to hell 114. his intercession 124. his exaltation 125. his resurrection 127 c. what body he had after his resurrection 126 127. his ascension with its fruits 127. c. whether yet on earth 129. how present in the Supper 143 160. his return or second coming its signs 220 c. Christs kingdome how to be delivered up to the Father 131. Christs justice vide I. works vide W. Church what 162. her forme and head 163. how one holy catholique 164 165. her marks or notes 166. if she can erre ibid. her administration 158 170. her office concerning controversies of Religion 175. false Church what and what sorts 183 184. Church goods 172 Clemencie 304 Complaints in affliction 254 Concupiscence original 335 actual 336. to beresisted 339 Confessiō of the truth 276 282 Confidence for the forme of faith 200. for the effect of faith and good works 251 idolatrous confidence ibid. Conscience 248 Consecration true and superstitious 276 277 Constancie 248 Contempt of superiors 297 Contentation v. self-sufficiency Covenant of works the seals thereof 55 Covenant of grace 136 c. how the new and old differ 138. the seales of both 146 Covetousnesse 325 Councels how to be convened 180. Councels Papistical 243 Courtesie 331. Craft 247 Creation 39. Cruelty 291 305 Curiosity 328 DAmnatiō if the end of reprobatiō 37. the pains state of the damned 70 Death of man fourfold 69 Decalogue its parts and rules of interpreting it 75 Deceit when lawful 306 Gods decree what 28. its causes objects if one or many 31 Denial of the truth 282 Desperation 251 c. Destruction of the world 234 Diffidence or distrust in God 251. Diligence 301 Disobedience to superiors 299 Dissembling when lawful 247 when unlawful 282 The Praecognita of Divinity I If malicious desertiō may cause divorce 317 Double-mindednesse 329 Doubtings of Gods goodnesse and power 250 251 Drunkennesse 308 ELection for calling to an office 133. for spiritual calling 192. for Gods decree what it is 31. its causes and marks ib. the Elect if they may become reprobate 216 Envy 292. Of two Evils what is to be chosen 247 FAith for a part of Gods worship 250. for constancie in words and deeds 329. of miracles temporary historical 198 Saving faith what ibid. and whence 199 its quality and degrees ib. how it justifieth 204 implicite faith what 200 presumption of faith 250 Fall of Adam 59 Fasting what 262. and how to be kept 263 Fear of God 252. servile and filial fear ibid. Feasts 85. Flattery 328 Folly 246. Fortitude 305 Free-will 57 62 Friendship true counterfeit 294. Frugality v. Parsimony GEntlenesse 331 our Glorification 239 God his names essence and properties 12 13 14 Gospel what and how it differs from the Law 87 Gratitude towards God 253 towards our superiors 299 Gravity 330 HAppinesse v. Beatitude Hardning v. Induration Hatred of God 252 Hatred of our neighbour 290 Hell where 71. Heretick who 184. Honesty 310. Hope 251 Humanity 291. Hypocrisie 248 IDlenesse 326 Idolatry what and how manifold 266 268 An idol what how it differs from an image or picture 266 Images of Christ and of the Saints idols 268. also the painting of the Trinity 269 vid. Worship Image of God what 41. of what gifts it consisteth 56 what of it remains since the fall 64 Impatience 254 Impatience of correction 299 Imprecations 281 Imprudence 247 Inconstancie 249 Indulgence too much 304 Induration how ascribed to God 49 253 Industry 325 Infants baptisme and faith 155 Infidelity 250 Ingratitude towards God 253 towards our superiors 300 Inhumanity 291 Injuries how lawfully repelled 302 Insensibility 308 Integrity 248 Intemperance 308 Intercessors of the Papists 124 Christs intercession vid. C. Irreverence to superiors 297 Last Judgement with its circumstances and signes 230 Justice how used in Scripture 210 Christs justice 119. how manifold 120 Justice towards our neighbour what and how manifold 295 320. Justice commutative how to be exercised 295 300 320. of superiors to inferiors 300. Vindicative justice 305 To justifie in Script what 202 The causes and parts of Justification ibid. 203 The Keyes and power thereof what 176 c. how it differs from the power of
the Magistrate 179 Knowledge of God 250 LAbour before the fall 58 Law what 72. why renewed since the fall 74 if it be corrected by Christ ibid. how it differs from the Gospel 87. ceremonial 78 political 86 c. Levites office 80 Liberality 324 Liberty essential to the will 45 Christian liberty 218 Liberty of speech 332 Life eternal 238 First Light 40 Limbus Patrum of infants 72 Lots 282 Love ordered and disordered 336 337 Evil Lusts 335 Luxury in food 308 Lying if any be lawful 327 MAgistrate how to be obeyed 180 Magistrates nursing fathers to the Church 179 Magnificence 324 Malevolence 292 Mans creation 41. his foursold estate ibid. Man what 42 how immortal before his fal 58. what he is before his calling 193 Mary Mother of God remained a Virgin 103 Marriage what how and between whom it is to be contracted how to be dissolved 310 311 Masse vid. Sacrifice Mercy 293 The conditions of Merit 245 Merit of congruity and condignity 244 Mildnesse 304 Ministers of the Church 170 and their calling 173. their duty to conceal secrets 179 Our Misery how manifold 58 Moderation 305 Modesty 310 Multiplicity of Gods vide P. Murther 303. Self-murther ib. Nazarites 81 OAths what and how manifold 277 c. of whom how to be performed why to be kept ibid. 279. being offered their refusal ibid. Obstinacie in evil 249 Opinion of wisdome 246 PArsimony 325 Patience 254 Pawns vide Pledges Persidiousnesse 330 Perjury 280 Perseverance of the Saints 214 Perseverance in sin 253 Persons of the Deity what 18. their trinity unity 24 25. how Person and Subsistence differ 18 19. Person of Christ how considered 90 Pledges to be taken or restored 323 Polythelsme or multiplicity of gods 250 Pratling 330 Self-praise 332 Prayer what 260. its parts ib. its impulsive causes ibid. the Lords prayer a perfect form ibid. for whom and against whom we must pray 262 External gesture in prayer ib. Predestination what 32 33 whether absolute ibid. the means of its execution 34 Priests of the old Law 80 The High-Priests ornaments ibid. Popish Priests 118 Prescience and Predetermination how different 35 Profusion 325 Promptitude in Gods service 248 Propitiatory 83 Providence of God eternal 28. How it differs from Fate ibid. 47. His actual Providence 46. How it useth sinne 47 Prudence 246 REdemptions necessity by the Law Verity by the Gospel 72. Redeemer who 95 Why God and Man 92 93 Regeneration diversly taken 211 Rejoycing in evil 293 True Religion what 255. It 's Antiquity 256. If to be defended by Armes 257. The word Religion diversly taken 255. Reformation of Religion 257. If the Reformers were lawfully called 174 c. Reliques vide Idols and Worship Repentance 253 Good Report 333 Reprobation and its causes 36 Resurrection of the dead 227. Desire of Revenge 304 Reverence to Superiours 297 Rusticity 331 Sabbath its Sanctification 284. It 's Profanation 287 Sacraments before the fal ●5 Sacraments of the New-Testament clearer then of the Old 147 c. Five Popish Sacraments 149. Sacramental phrases 144 c. Sacraments how differing from the Word 146 c. Sacraments of the Old and New-Testament their difference 148. Union of the signe and thing in Sacraments 142. Signes in the Sacraments of foure sorts 143 Sacrifices of the Old-Testament what and how many 83 c. The Masse contrary to Christs Sacrifice 118 160 c. Assurance of Salvation 215 216 Sanctification what 211. The causes of Sanctification 212 Sanctification of Gods name 275 276 Scripture or Word of God unwritten and written 3. Scriptures Divinity 4. It 's Authority 5. It 's perfection 8. Translation 9. Meaning and sence 9 10 Scurrility 331 Cornal security 252 Silence 330 Sedulity vide Diligence Simplicity fained ibid. Sinne what whence how manifold 58 59. First Sin 60. Sin original 62. Sin actual 67. Sin against the Holy Ghost 68 Sincerity 328 Sloth 301 Sobriety 308 Soul of man its original 42 its immortality faculties 45 Stars their creation and use 41 Spiritual Stupidity 275 Self-sufficiciencie 324 Superstition 274 the Lords Supper 157. It s difference from Baptism 160 the Cup to be given to the people 158. Tropes in the words of the holy Supper 145 159. THe Tabernacle and its parts 81 c. Temperance 307 Testament old and new vide Covenant Theft what and how manifold 319 320 Holy times 84 85 c. Tree of Knowledge what 56 Truth 327 Tyranny 301 VIgilancie 309 Watchings superstitious ibid. Unmercifulnesse 293 Voracity 308 A Vow what and how manifold 264 Usury lawfull and unlawfull 322 323 War how lawful 306 Watching vid. Vigilancie Wisdome 246 False witnesse 327 c. Word of God vid. Scripture Works of God how manifold 26 27 Good works what 241. if they justifie 209 if performed by the irregenerate 64. 244. how necessary to salvation 245. Christs works of mediation 93 c. 104. Works of supererogation 242 243. the World its end 234 the true Worship of God 258 ready Worship 248 Worship of idols 270 Adoration of the Host 271 Worshiping of Reliques 272 vide Idolatry Will-worship 265 ZEal for the glory of God 275 THE ANATOMIE OF THE BODY OF DIVINITIE DIVINITIE speaks of GOD As he is to be known In himself in regard of his Essence by His Names Properties Incommunicable such are his Simplicity Infinity Communicable in analogical effects such are his Life Will. Power Of the three Persons Differing in Order Properties Manner of operation Agreeing In the same e Essence In the same Equality In the same Vnion or Cohabitation In their works which are First Essential Personal Secondly Inward Outward Immanent see B. Transient see B. As he is to be worshipped see A. B. Immanent His Decree Of all things called His eternal Providence Of reasonable creatures Angels Men. called Predestination consisting of Election Reprobation Transient The Creation in six dayes Actual Providence General by which all things are governed Good by effecting of them Evil by Permitting Determining Directing Special governing Angels God Evil. Man in the state Partly Of Innocencie where The Covenant of Works Sacraments the Tree of Life of Knowledge of God and Evil. Of Misery which is of offence or sin The first derived from the first Original Actual of Infirmity Malice Of Punishment which is either Temporal or Eternal Partly see C. C. Partly Of Grace in Redemption the necessity of which is known by the Law Moral Ceremonial Politick The truth by the Gospel concerning Christs Person which from eternity the Son of God In time Incarnate by his Conception in the power of the Holy Ghost of the blood of the Virgin By his Nativity By his Office Prophetical Sacerdotal Regal By his State of Humiliation Exaltation In Vocation to the Redeemer which is common to Elect and Reprobate to the outward communion of the Covenant or Testament of Grace which in substance from the first preaching in Paradise is the same In Administration different to wit the