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A73267 The dignitie of Gods children. Or An exposition of 1. Iohn 3. 1.2.3 Plentifully shewing the comfortable, happie, and most blessed state of all Gods children, and also on the contrarie, the base, fearefull, and most wofull condition of all other that are not the children of God. Stoughton, Thomas. 1610 (1610) STC 23315.5; ESTC S117855 406,069 519

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know God Can they loue him whom they know not The same is to be said of their loue towards men For how can they loue men when they loue not God How can they loue the lesse when they loue ●ot the greater If they loue not God of whom they receiue all that they haue and who receiueth no●● 〈◊〉 them ●●ther is any waies chargeable vnto them how can they loue them from whom they receiue nothing or very little and that only as from the instruments of God and vpon whom they are forced to bestow somthing of their owne and so to be at charge with them For these reasons and the like when the Apostle in the place before alledged had described vs in our naturall state and being vnregenerated to be vnwise disobedient deceiued he addeth further that we were hatefull and hating one another Tit. 3. 3. So the wicked are both hated of other and doe also hate other and nothing but hatred is to be looked for amongst them This hatred of the wicked against God and men is a notable testimony of that extreme foolishnesse and madnesse beforespoken of which is in the heart of the wicked For what extreme madnesse is it for mortall men that are but as the pot in the hand of the potter to hate the immortall God who being of all might and power is able when he will to breake them all in pieces like a potters vessell What folly also is it to hate all other whereby to make themselues likewise hatefull and odious to all other Doe not such both waies as we say much worse then bring an old house vpon their owne heads They that make themselues odious to God and men shall certainly smart full deeply and wofully in the end If it be obiected touching the loue of God that Paul being but a naturall man before he knew Christ so loued God that he speaketh much of his zeale and that in his said zeale his righteousnesse of the law was such that he was vnrebukeable Phil. 3. 6. and that that seemeth to haue been in truth and not in shew If any I say obiect this I answer that though the aforesaid zeale and feruent loue of Paul were indeed true as this word Note true may be an attribute of the affections and is opposed to hypocrisie or to that which is but counterfet and feined and as it signifieth vnfeined and without hypocrisie yet as the same is an attribute of the obiects of the mind and is opposed to erroneous and signifieth right so it cannot be said that the zeale or seruent loue of Paul was true Though he loued God vnfeinedly and in the truth of his affections from the heart and so was very strict touching the outward righteousnesse of the law yet it cannot be said that he loued God truly that is rightly because his mind being not rightly informed his iudgement therefore touching the principall causes why and the manner how God was to be loued could not but be erroneous For so long as he knew not Christ but persecuted him and the doctrine and professors of him and so much lesse beleeued in him he wanted that which should haue giuen life to his loue For as we haue heard Faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. and loue must come from faith vnfeined 1. Tim. 1. 5. The like is to be said of the zeale of God in the Israelites whereof Paul beareth them witnesse and yet saith that it was not according to knowledge Rom. 10. 1. 2. So also of the zeale of many other ignorant men Howsoeuer their loue and their zeale may be said to be true that is vnfeined and without hypocrisie euen in simplicity yet because it is without knowledge and much more without faith therefore it cannot be right and therefore also not at all acceptable vnto God For without knowledge the mind or heart is not good Pro. 19. 2. and without faith it is not possible to please God Heb. 11. 6. Yea Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14. 23. That which I haue said of this loue towards God in meere naturall men may be said of the like loue in the like towards men For that which condemneth the loue of such towards God how vnfeined soeuer condemneth also the loue of such towards men how earnest and feruent soeuer the same bee The loue therefore that is betwixt man and wife betwixt parents and children betwixt kindred and betwixt friends c. the parties that doe so loue being not regenerate but meerly naturall cannot be right as not comming from sound knowledge and faith vnfeined neither being directed by the word which is the only rule both of affections and also of actions Againe the loue of such towards God and men is most vncertaine and altogether vnconstant so that to day a friend and to morrow a mortall enemy I will not stand vpon the examples either of ancient or of later times of such as haue seemed at the first to haue been very zealous of God and for God and yet afterward reuolted such in old time were Ioash 2. Chro. 24. and Vzzta 2. Chro. 26. and Demas and many other Heb. 10. 25. and in late times euen here in England Bonner Harding a brother of Doctor Reinolds that is reported first to haue conuerted him to the truth and yet afterward fell away from it and by writing persecuted it I will not stand vpon these examples but I will chiefly insist vpon the vncertainty and inconstancy of the loue of natural men towards other Touching this therefore as Salomons words may be by way of similitude applied to other things euen to the vncertainty and shortnesse of the prosperity of the wicked as afterward also we shall see so they seeme chiefly and most properly to be vnderstood of the loue of the wicked either towards God or towards men but in that place chiefly towards men viz. Note that it is like the cracking of thornes vnder a pot Eccles 7. 8. that is though very great for a time yet suddenly vanished away This I say seemeth to be the most proper and naturall sense and meaning of that place because Salomon hauing said in the verse next before It is better to heare the rebuke of a wise man then that a man should heare the song of fooles that is it is better to heare some sharpe words wisely by wise men spoken in the iust reproofe of sinne then the soothing and faire words of foolish men what protestation soeuer they make of their loue and whatsoeuer their loue be for the present Salomon I say hauing so said immediatly inferreth the former words as a reason and confirmation of these and saith For like the noise of the thornes vnder the pot so is the laughter of a foole meaning by laughter that which before he had meant by the word song and by the word song vnderstanding the sweet and pleasant words whereby the wicked doe flatter and sooth vp other in any
the Pages where they beginne CHAPTER I. OF the speciall reason of writing this treatise of the text of Scripture generally whereupon the same is grounded of the coherence of the said Scripture with the words going before as also of the reason of them in respect of the words following Of the logicall analysis or resolution of the said Scripture and of the first particular word therein in pag. 1. c. CHAPTER II. Conteining obseruations of the soure next particular words in this text the ground of the whole treatise viz. of the word what of the word loue of the word Father and of the word hath giuen pag. 13. c. CHAPTER III. Of the foure next particular words in this text viz. of the word to VE of the word that we shold be called of the word the children and lastly of the word of God p. 23. CHAPTER IIII. Of the Dignitie of Gods children from the excellencie of God himselfe who is their father the rather because it is further prooued by the difficulty and greatnesse of the worke of regeneration that the said worke is altogether and only the worke of God pag. 31. CHAPTER V. Of the first mouing cause of our regeneration viz. which first moued God to regenerate v●●●ag 42. CHAPTER VI. Of Christ Iesus being one of t●● principall causes of and agent in our adoption of the great price he hath giuen for it of the worke also of the holy Ghost therein and of the true nobility of all Gods children by the ioint working of all the three persons in the●r adoption pag. 50. CHAPTER VII Of the excellent instrum●nts that God vseth in the worke of our regeneration viz. the ministers of the word and the word it selfe pag. 59. CHAPTER VIII Of faith a chiefe internall cause of regeneration or the first degree and step thereunto and of Christ againe as hee is the chiefe matter of regeneration as before we heard him to be one of the principall efficient causes likewise thereof pag. 66. CHAPTER IX More largely shewing other things concerning the matter of regeneration especially the renewing of this life of God in vs all that are new borne which before were vtterly void of the said list pag. 72. CHAPTER X. Of some other things further concerning the matter of the regeneration of the children of God and of their very being the children of God viz. of their knowledge of God and of their true wisedome declared by the opposition thereunto of the ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse of all meere naturall wicked and vnregenerate men pag. 84. CHAPTER XI Of some other branches of the former life of God in all new borne viz. of holinesse and righteousnesse both generally and also in some particulars pag. 101. CHAPTER XII Of the true loue of God and of men only found in the children of God and so of the further dignity of the children of God in respect thereof pag. 114. CHAPTER XIII Of a further degree of the freedome of Gods children pag. 125. CHAPTER XIIII Of true hope proper only to the children of God and therefore much making for their further dignity and of some other speciall points belonging to all before said of their life wisedome c. pag. 130. CHAPTER XV. Of the finall cause of the regeneration and new birth of the children of God pag. 139. CHAPTER XVI More largely laying foorth the communion of the children of God with Christ Iesus and of some speciall benefits they haue thereby pag. 145. CHAPTER XVII Of other benefits of the children of God by their foresaid communion with Christ and with the whole Deitie and first of the forgiuenesse of sinnes pag. 159. CHAPTER XVIII Of the dying more and more of the children of God vnto sinne and of their preseruation from many great sinnes which the wicked doe daily commit and of their liuing more and more vnto righteousnesse pag. 171. CHAPTER XIX Of the dignity of Gods children by the word as it is a rule of saith and life and a speciall part of our Christian armor pag. 192. CHAPTER XX. Of the word as it is giuen for consolation and comfort of the children of God in their afflictions and also of the sacraments pag. 214. CHAPTER XXI Of the prerogatiue of Gods children by their libertie and free accesse to the throne of Gods grace to aske any thing euery one for himselfe and also for other with much assurance of obtaining that which they aske pag. 227. CHAPTER XXII Of the communicating of many titles of Christ to the children of God pag. 237. CHAPTER XXIII Of the benefits of the children of God for this life viz. of their immunity from euill and of good things of this life belonging vnto them pag. 254. CHAPTER XXIIII Shewing why the children of God doe sometime meete with the afflictions of this life threatned against and most properly belonging to the wicked and how beneficiall such afflictions are vnto them and that all things worke to their good pag. 270. CHAPTER XXV Of the benefits of the children of God in the life to come and first of their freedome from condemnation pag. 284. CHAPTER XXVI Of the inheritance of the children of God in the life to come pag. 297. CHAPTER XXVII Of the peace of conscience in the children of God pag. 317. CHAPTER XXVIII Of the benefits that other doe enioy by the children of God not only which other men both the liuing and dead do inioy but also which other creatures yea also the Angels in heauen doe inioy by them pag. 336. CHAPTER XXIX Of diuers similitudes and other comparisons setting soorth the dignity of Gods children wherein also is handled whether they haue preheminence aboue the blessed Angels pag. 355. CHAPTER XXX Of the promises of God to them that shall shew kindnesse to any of the children of God and of the threatnings to the contrary pag. 372. CHAPTER XXXI Of the vses of the former doctrine concerning Gods children pag. 383. CHAPTER XXXII Of the obiection that might be made against all generally before written of the dignity of Gods children and of the first part of the Apostles answer thereunto pag. 405. CHAPTER XXXIII Of the second answer to the former obiection or of the second reason why the world knoweth not the children of God In this Chapter are shewed many good reasons why it appeareth not what the children of God hereafter shall be pag. 417. CHAPTER XXXIIII Of that which the children of God shall be viz. of their future similitude and likenesse vnto Christ and of the certainty thereof pag. 434. CHAPTER XXXV Of the time when the children of God shall be so like vnto Christ as before wee heard and of the reason of the said likenesse by an effect thereof In this Chapter this question is largely handled whether the bodies of Enoch and Elias be already in heauen and made like vnto Christ pag. 452. CHAPTER XXXVI Of euery mans purging himselfe in whom there is the former hope of being like vnto
be likewise said of the worke of our adoption and of the loue of God in making vs his children This is the Lords worke and it is maruellous in our eies This circumstance noted by this word is to bee ioined with the former word Behold the more to prouoke vs to long after the knowledge of the excellencie of the children of God especially after that knowledge that is by experience sense taste and feeling as it were of the excellencie thereof For no man so well knoweth this excellencie or can so well speake or write thereof as he that is partaker of it and findeth the sweetnesse of it in himselfe For this is that white stone promised to them that ouercome wherein is a new name written which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it Reu. 2. 17. The rather is this to bee ioined with the former word to make vs more desirous of getting this title and the more carefull to keepe it being gotten yea to carry our selues according vnto it All men doe gaze vpon the honourable titles of the world and are in great admiration of them but no man almost doth once looke after this yea euery man almost in respect of the contempt wherein this name is with the world afterward to be spoken of in handling this obiection is afraid to be called or knowen by this name As many of the chiefe Rulers that beleeued in Christ for feare notwithstanding of the Pharises durst not professe him Ioh. 12. 42. so many hearing so much as often times they do of the dignity of Gods children haue some desire and could be content to bee the children of God but fearing the world and the great men in the world especially such as to whom they doe specially belong are loth to be seene to haue any minde or affection that way But of these more afterward Thus much of the second word in this text preparing vs to thinke the more highly of the dignity of the children of God heere spoken of The third word is Loue. Behold what loue This word setteth foorth the fountaine or principall cause of making vs the children of God to be the loue of God So it is said to bee the cause why God sent or gaue his onely sonne for vs Ioh. 3. 16. and. 1. Ioh. 4. 9. wherof we shall heare more afterward If the loue of God be the fountaine of sending his sonne then also it is of our making or adopting to bee the children of God For whence is it that we are made the children of God Is it not by Iesus Christ It cannot bee denied and it shall afterward bee more plentifully prooued Heerein the Lord differeth from men for men cannot properly bee said to beget children of Note loue There may be and is in men a desire of children but there cannot properly be a loue of children till children bee begotten and borne For how can men loue them that haue no being at all in nature But God is said to loue vs and in loue of vs to make vs his children or to beget vs againe to himselfe and so his loue towards vs is before we are borne againe or begotten againe vnto him As this loue of God was before the action of our regeneration so it continueth euer after Gods loue is vnchangeable As Christ is the same yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13. 8. so is God in his loue towards them whom he loueth yea there is not only no change in him but also with him there is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning Iames 1. 17. But being to speake of this loue againe afterward this in this place shall be sufficient thereof The fourth word heere to be obserued is the Father As the former word setteth foorth the originall cause of our being the children of God so this setteth foorth the authour thereof and the subject of that loue before spoken of and that to be not onely God barely considered in his diuine essence but as he is inuested with the title of a Father To speake more plainly The loue before spoken of whereby wee are made the children of God doth not come from God as he is God only but as he is a Father and that first of all as he is the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ And therefore when the Apostle Peter speaketh of this matter euen of our regeneration he saith not only Blessed be God but hee saith further euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which of his abundant or rich mercy hath begotten vs againe 1. Pet. 1. 3. God was alwaies the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ in the distinction of persons in the diuine essence and so Iesus Christ as the second person in the Deitie was alwaies the sonne of the Father euen before all times so that there neuer was any time when the one of these two persons was not the Father and the other the Sonne Secondly this loue heere spoken of commeth from God not only as he is the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ but also as by Iesus Christ he is our Father To speake this also a little more plainly the Apostle heere speaking of himselfe and of them to whom he did write not only as the people of God nor as the workes of God but as the children of God it was therefore the more sit that hee should describe God by such a title as was most answerable to that respect wherein he speaketh of himselfe the writer and of them to whom he did write These being as they were the children of God it was more answerable to the word children that he should say Behold what loue the Father hath giuen vnto vs then Behold what loue God hath giuen vnto vs. For the word God doth more fitly answer to the word creatures or people and the word Father is a plain correlatiue to the word children Now although euer sithence the creation and sithence the first time that there were any elect and beleeuing men God was alwares their Father yet as God was not so knowen to bee the father of our Lord Iesus Christ in the old Testament and before the mearnation and manifestation of Christ in the fleth as ●●thence so God also Note did not so plainly open and manifest himselfe to be the father of the elect as he hath done sithence the time of the Gospell And therefore wee finde this title Father ostener attributed vnto God in respect of Christ and of the elect in the new Testament then in the old In the old Testament he is most called and made knowen by the name of The God of Abraham the God of Izaak and the God of Iaacob but in the new Testament he maketh himselfe knowen by the name of The Father of our Lord Ie●us Christ and of them that by faith are made members of Christ and flesh of his flesh euen one bodie with him As the grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men is said especially to
hatred is said to haue been more against Tamar then his loue had been towards her 2. Sam. 13. 15. Dogs loue in this manner for let their masters that doe alwaies feed them but vnawares tread a little vpon their foot and they will be ready to bite them by the leg if not to slie in their face It is far otherwise with the children of God For so many as are new borne not of mortall but of immortall seede by the word of God hauing purified their soules in obeying the truth to loue brotherly without feining doe accordingly loue with a pure heart feruently 1. Pe. 1. 23. Now although that place be vnderstood specially of brotherly loue yet he that loueth them that are begotten will much more loue him that hath begotten And indeed how can the children of God but loue him whom they know by his word to be so mighty so infinit so wise so iust and euery way so good in himselfe and so gracious so louing and so mercifull towards them whom he hath so loued as to make them his children in such manner as hitherto we haue heard and shall further heare As touching the loue of the children of God towards men especially towards such as are the children of God with themselues how can they but loue them that are his creatures and the workmanship of his hands yea and which doe resemble their heauenly father and their eldest brother and that are stamped with the same spirit wherewith themselues are stamped that are heires likewise of the same inheritance and for the loue of whom there be so many precepts to command it so many sentences to commend it so many promises to prouoke it so many examples to encourage vnto it In all these respects the said loue is very excellent and precious the more because it doth not only come from God alone but also because that thereby we know that wee are translated from death to life and that we are of the truth and shall before him assure our hearts 1. Ioh. 3. 14. The Apostle saith not that Note thereby we are translated and that thereby we are assured but only that we know our selues so to be So then this loue is a speciall part of the euidence of our saluation and of our comfortable appearance before him both in this life and also in the life to come euen in the great day when all flesh shall be gathered together and when the books of all mens actions known and secret shall be opened before him That which the Apostle in the former Chapter vers 29. had ascribed to the whole worke of regeneration is in the places before alledged ascribed to this one point thereof viz. our vnfeined loue towards other the children of God because indeed all other things are nothing without it 1. Cor. 13. 1. 2. and where that is there are all other graces either as causes working it and by it or as effects and fruits thereof comming from it and therefore as before we haue heard it is called the fulfilling of the law and the bond of perfection Our Sauiour also saith that vpon these two commandements Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy soule with all thy strength and with all thy minde and thy neighbour as thy selfe hangeth the whole law and the Prophets Mat. 22. 40 So that these two points either as they are to be performed by vs or as they Note be performed for vs by our Sauiour Christ Iesus are the text as it were of all the rest of the word of God which is so excellent that when Dauid had learned much thereof yet he praieth the Lord to open his eyes that he might see the wonders of his law Psal 119. 18. thereby nothing that the wonders of the law of God which he did see he accounted in a manner as nothing in respect of those which he did desire further to behold So also in further commendation of the excellency of the said law he saith againe Thy testimonies are wonderfull therefore doth my soule keepe them vers 129. If therefore the word of God be so excellent is not that also excellent that is the chiefe subiect matter thereof and whereunto all that is contained in the word some way or other may well be referred Notwithstanding although this loue be so excellent yet it is not as the papists blurt it out and stoutly defend it the forme of faith For then should it be a part of faith yea the chiefe part of faith and that part without which faith should haue no being at all because the forme doth giue being to that which is formed and so it should be no otherwise distinguished from faith then as a part of faith it selfe which is directly repugnant to that place which they especially plead for the magnifying of loue And now abideth faith hope and loue these three 1. Cor. 13. 13. For in this place we see the Apostle as plainly to distinguish loue from faith as he doth distinguish hope and to make these to be three How could this be if loue were a part of faith and if faith were no faith without loue Indeed there is no faith without loue but if therefore we should make loue to be the principall part of faith we should make many a mad conclusion Againe loue by the doctrine of the Papists vpon the former place is better then faith Can a part be better then the whole Then it should be better then it selfe with addition of another good thereunto Loue also is an effect of faith as before we heard out of 1. Tim. 1. 5. therefore it cannot be the forme of faith Last of al by faith we meane faith in Iesus Christ and euery mans beleeuing of the particular forgiuenesse of his own sinnes and of his own particular saluation by Iesus Christ The loue that is required of vs was in Adam before his fall in whom there was no such faith But to returne to the excellency of the loue before spoken of as we haue heard the loue of the wicked to be very variable and soone quenched yea turned oft times into extreme hatred so the loue of the children of God is most constant and abideth to the end Loue doth neuer fall away though that prophecying be abolished or the tongues cease or knowledge vanish away 1. Cor. 13. 8. The loue of the children of God being sincere without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. well rooted and grounded Ephes 3. 18. vpon the word and in Christ Iesus it is constant without wearinesse either in affection or in action Gal. 6 9. As God loueth to the end whomsoeuer he loueth Ioh. 13. 1. so his children walke in the steps of the same loue Ephes 5. 1. 2. To conclude this point the more excellent this loue is a speciall point wherein consisteth the matter of our regeneration the more excellent also is the estate and condition of all the children of God so regenerated in whom alone it
is to be found The silly Cock doth sometimes find an earthly pearle of great price in an earthly dunghill and a foole may as soone as a wise man find a great iewell in the mire of the street but this heauenly pearle and iewell of loue whereby we doe most resemble God and shew our selues to be borne of him 1. Ioh. 4. 7. and whereby all men doe know vs to be the disciples of Christ Ioh. 13. 35. This I say is not to be found in the dunghill and myry heart of naturall and vnregenerate men that are only of the earth earthly It is only to be found in the children of God that are borne from aboue and by their regeneration are from heauen heauenly as he is into whom they are incorporated whose hearts are sanctified by the word Ioh. 17. 17. and purified by faith Acts 15. 9. as before we haue heard Thus much of the loue of God and men peculiar only to the children of God and so consequently of the further dignity of the said children of God thereby CHAP. XIII Of a further degree of the freedome of Gods children THus we haue heard of the precious freedome of Gods children in that they are not only discharged from the seruitude of sinne but are also made the seruants of God and may serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse from whence it commeth that they are sober watchfull and louing as before we haue heard There remaineth yet a further degree of the said liberty and freedome of Gods children as one special part as it were of the matter of their new birth and as one speciall point wherein as well as in other things consisteth their being as they are the children of God This is that besides that before mentioned they are also enfranchized and made free of a most excellent of a rich and of a glorious city euen of the heauenly Ierusalem wherof many glorious things are spoken in many places of the scripture as the Prophet speaketh of the old Ierusalem in the same respect viz. as it was the Church of God Psal 87. 3. especially in the 21. Chapter of the Reuelation where it is most excellently and diuinely described not only as it is in heauen with God and in the presence of God and of his holy Angels but also as yet it is and shall be vpon earth Of this excellent and glorious city are all the chilldren of God made free beeing released from their naturall seruitude and bondage vnto sinne This freedom of the new Ierusalem seemeth to be noted by the Apostle to the Hebrews where after the opposition of many and diuers things whereunto they were not come as vnto the mount that might not be touched to the burning fire to blacknesse and darknesse and tempest and the sound of a trumpet and the voice of words c. by all which hee meaneth their deliuerance from the Lawe which consisted in the letter not in the spirit then hee addeth that they were come vnto the mount Sion and to the city of the liuing God the celestiall Ierusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels and to the assembly and congregation of the new borne which are written in heauen and to God the iudge of all and to the spirits of iust and perfect men and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament and to the bloud of sprinkling which speaketh better things then that of Abel Heb. 12. 22. c. This is a most pregnant and noble testimony not only setting forth the excellency of that City whereof all the children of God are made free but many other points also before more largely handled To speake yet a little more of this freedom As apprentices that serue in Cities in London Canterbury Yorke Norwich and other when they haue serued a certaine time according to the custome and order of such Cities or other townes corporate then they are not only released from their seruice but they are also themselues made free of the Cities and do enioy diuers priuileges and benefits belonging to such Cities so they that are released from the bondage of sinne and satan are made free also of the heauenly Ierusalem before spoken of and do enioy the priuiledges and benefits thereof such as do not belong to any forrainers but are proper only to the children of God and to those that are discharged of their masters whom by nature they serued Yet here this difference is not to be forgotten betwixt the priuileges of this heauenly City and the priuileges of all earthly cities For the priuileges of earthly cities are intended towards such as haue serued their times in some trade or other as rewards of their said seruice supposed faithfully to haue been performed by such seruants but the priuileges of the heauenly city now spoken of are no rewards of our seruice to sinne and satan for the reward or wages thereof is nothing but death Rom. 6. 23. but only benefits belonging to the children of God only of Gods free grace and goodnesse yet the more to comfort them against their former hard seruice of sinne and against the daily reliques of sinne in them and the manifold stormes and tempest● whereu●to by the meanes thereof they are subiect Now the more excellent this heauenly city is the greater needs must be the benefits and priuiledges belonging thereunto and therefore also the greater benefit is the freedome thereof The freedome of Rome was wont to be so highly esteemed Note that Claudius Lysias a chiefe captaine for the Romans at Ierusalem acknowledged that freedome to haue cost him a great summe Acts 22. 28. Paul also himselfe being free borne of that city pleadeth his said freedome in that behalfe against those iniuries that were offered vnto him vers 25. and so by pleading thereof he found the more fauor at least they feared the more to wrong him as they had done The freedom of many Cities in this land especially of London and of the ●inque ports in Kent is such that many great men are content both that their sonnes being of good yeers and growth shall serue seuen eight or nine yeeres yea and to giue likewise good summes of mony right out with them that they may haue the benefit of the freedome after their time expired and also to procure the said freedome for themselues in diuers respects What then is the freedome of this heauenly Ierusalem whereof now we speake and for which Christ hath giuen a greater price then all the cities in the world yea then ten thousand such worlds are worth Truly it is this that whereas we are here pilgrims and strangers 1. Pet. 2. 11. yet beeing free of the heauenly Ierusalem wee haue our conuersation in heauen Philip. 3. 20. that is that we behaue our selues as citizens of heauen liue according to the lawes which we haue from heauen and do that which we doe as cheerfully and willingly as the Angels in heauen Is this all No we haue liberty
their liues Though these viz. that disgrace otherwise wrong the children of God escape a while vnpunished seeme to laugh in their sleeues and to shew their faces in all companies plesantly with Agag to say in their harts as he spake with his tongue Truly the bitternes of death is past 1. Sa. 15. 32. yetwofull without repentance shall their reward be at the last when they shal find that they had beene better the greatest the proudest and mightiest of them all to haue bitten their fingers ends to the bones to haue eaten the flesh from their armes or to haue gone a thousand miles of an errand that on their bare feet all the while vpon thornes then to haue done any hurt to the least to the poorest and to the meanest of Gods children Last of all the more any king rewardeth any kindnesse done to any of his children or punisheth any indignitie offred vnto them the more hee sheweth himselfe to regard such as haue receiued such kindnesse or met with such indignity and the more hee doth grace and honour them before his people that see his rewards vpon such as haue shewed that kindnesse or that heare of his seuerity against such as haue offred that indignitie I conclude therefore the like of the dignity and honourable state of the children of God in respect of his gracious promises made and performed to any that shew but the least kindnesse towards the least of his children as likewise in respect of his indignation threatned and executed vpon all that doe any of them any wrong Thus much for this point and thus much also for all the arguments whereby I thought good to lay foorth the doctrine of the dignitie of Gods children CHAP. XXXI Of the vses of the former doctrine concerning the dignity of Gods children IT remaineth now according to my order before insinuated in the beginning of the fourth Chapt. that I shew the vse of all the doctrine hitherto handled concerning the dignity of Gods children These I will only touch and as it were but point at with the finger leauing the further inlarging of them to the better consideration of the reader as also of such as shall haue occasion more to apply and presse them then it is fit for me to doe in this Treatise Thesevses are generally of two sorts viz. either common to all euen to the wicked as well as to the children of God or speciall either to the wicked alone or to the godly alone Touching common vses this doctrine first of all serueth to correct the base opinion that most men haue conceiued of the children of God and to teach vs to thinke and esteeme of them according to those things before spoken All men for the most part regard men more according to their state in the world that is according to their riches to their honour and credit with great men in the world to their power and authority for doing of worldly matters All men I say for the most part doe more regard men according to these things then according to their adoption according to their graces whereby they shew foorth their adoption and according to that estimation in which the said graces accompanying adoption doe declare them to be with God himselfe Neither is this the fault onely of naturall men such as are not the children of God themselues but euen sometimes of them that are themselues regenerated and sealed with the spirit of adoption euen they I say doe not so regard one another as they ought to doe in respect of their adoption yea the children of God doe often times thinke the more basely of themselues and are the more deiected in their owne hearts because they are so little regarded by other But sith wee haue heard before how honourable their state and condition is and how God hath most highly dignified and aduanced them why should they not be so regarded of other Why should they not so esteeme of themselues Not any whit to puffe themselues vp and to make themselues to set vp their bristles as it were with contempt against any other but rather to comfort themselues the more against such contempt disgrace and indignity as they meet with in the world at the hands of other This vse the Apostle Iames commendeth when hee exhorteth not to haue the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons or to esteeme of men according to their ccstly apparell or outward countenance which they did beare in the world but according to their riches of faith and according to their in heritance in the kingdome which God hath promised to them that loue him Iames 2. 1. c. Vnder this opinion I comprehend also loue of the heart and honour of the outward man agreeable to the said opinion For so much Iames signifieth in the plac● before alleged by hauing the faith of Christ inrespect of persons which appeareth plainly by his words immediately following viz. For if there come into your company saith hee a man with a gold ring and in good apparell and there come in also a poore man in vile raiment and ye haue respect vnto ●im that weareth gay clothing and ye say vnto him Sit thou heere in a good place and s●y vnto the poore Stand thou heere or Sit heere vnder my footstoole These words I say of the Apostle doe plainly shew that hee reprooueth not only a base opinion inwardly of the children of God but also the outward abasing and disgracing of them by preferring men before them according to their riches and costly apparell c. And this Iames wrote not to heathen men nor to meere naturals but to them whom God of his owne will had begotten with the word of truth to bee as the first fruits of his creatures chap. 1. 18. thereby shewing that it is a fault not onely amongst the men of the world too lightly both in their iudgments and in their affections and also in their outward carriage to regard the children of God but also in them that are of the same father and haue the same in hert ance And this indeed in these daies is a fault not onely amongst prophane men that contemne all goodnesse nor amongst Papists and professed Atheists but also amongst professors themselues euen of the best sort viz. too much to esteeme the gay men of the world and such as are gentlemen borne and haue good estates in the world though they bee neuer so wicked and vngodly and despisers of all grace and too basely to esteeme and too little to regard the most apparant children of God knowen to bee vertuous and shewing many tokens that they are turned from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan vnto God and haue receiued ●orgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith in Christ Acts 26. 18. Whom a king will honour all his subiects also honour much more Therefore it is said that when Ahashuerosh promoted Haman
and exal●ed him and set his seat aboue all the Princes that were with him then all the Kings seruants that were at the Kings gate bowed their knees and reuerenced Haman though an Amalekit because the King had so commanded c. Ester 3. 1. 2. We see also whom the King createth Earle or Baron or maketh a Knight all other good and bad high and low call him by names agreeable and doe otherwise honour him accordingly Shall the King of Kings then honour men with the title and dignity of his children and shal not men esteeme and respect them in like maner This vse is necessary specially in iudgement For in iudgement especially appeareth the contrary corruption men for the most part preuailing most in their suits that can set the best face vpon their matters and that can most braue flaunt it out by their apparell riches friends and countenance in the world and they that haue none of these but are poore yet rich in the graces of adoption going to the wall and being vtterly put downe how good how honest and how righteous soeuer their cause is But as I said before I meane not too largely to stand vpon any vse but only to point them out briesly therefore I will proceed Another common vse of the same doctrine and not much vnlike the other is that that we do not only not contemne the children of God inwardly neither only loue them or outwardly honor them but that also we refraine from all other vnkindnesse against them and that we be ready to performe any curtesie vnto them Let vs doe good vnto all saith the Apostle but especially to them that are of the houshold of faith Galat. 6. 10. Who are more of the houshold of faith then the children of him of whom is named the whole family in heauen and in ea●th Ephes 3. 15. Who would be accounted behind in shewing kindnesse to the children of a king and to offer any vnkindnesse to any of them is little lesse then treason There is no vnkindnesse offered to them which is not more dangerous to vs then hurtfull to them There is no kindnesse performed to them whereby we receiue not as much benefit as they yea much more because the bestowing of it is compared to seed cast vpon waters that is sowen vpon the low grounds by the waters that are alwaies most fruitfull Eccles 11. 1. and the recompence to be looked for for thereof is compared to the reaping in time of haruest Galat. 6. 8. 9 Other arguments for further proofe of this point haue been touched before Chap. 12. in that which hath been written of the loue of Gods children and chap. 21. where we heard of the efficacy of the praiers of Gods children as well for the wicked sometimes as for the godly and chap. 28. where we intreated of the manifold benefits that other do injoy by Gods children and finally in the last before of the promises of God to them that do shew any kindnesse to his children It shall not therefore be needfull to inlarge this vse with any other arguments in this place Let this only be added that if men were perswaded indeed of the excellency of the children of God and of that gaine that is in shewing any kindnesse vnto them they would strine who should shew most and euery man would think him happiest that could shew most Is it not so towards the children of eathly Princes and that pattly because of their excellency and partly because they hope one day to haue all plentifully recompensed This no doubt made Abraham and Lot so forward to shew kindnesse to the children of God that the one sate in his tent dore the other at the gate of the city of Sodom as looking for some of the children of God whom they might entertain with such kindnes and therefore also as being ready so to doe and indeed they did accordingly For they did no sooner see the Angels of God comming towards them in the forme habit of men but presently they ran towards them would neuer leaue them till they had brought them into their houses and made them the best cheere they could Gen. 18. 1 and 19. 1. c. This made the poore old labouring man of Gibeah be so liberall that he did no sooner see the Leuit and his concubin● wandring about the streets of the said city without entertainment by any but that vpon very little conference with them and he complaining how destitute he was of lodging through the inhumanity of that place he without any further delay or deliberation spake most kindly vnto him and did most curteously receiue him and his concubine into his house ministring vnto them both according to all their necessities Iudg. 19. 20. This made the Shunamit to constraine Elisha to eat bread in hir house as also most earnestly to perswade her husband to make him a little chamber of purpose with walls and a bed and a table and a stools and a candle sticke that be might the oftner turne in thither as he came that way 2. Kings 4. 8. c. This made Tabuba otherwise called Dorcas full of good works and almes and to make coats and garments for such as could not make them for themselues Acts 9. 9. 33. and 39. This made Lydia not only to beseech Paul and Timothy but also to constraine them if they iudged her faithfull to the Lord to come into her house and to abide there Acts 16. 15. This made Gaius so bountifull in entertaining all the saints that he is not only commended by Paul as his bost and the bost of the whole Church Rom. 16. 23. but that Iohn also testifieth of him and to him that he did faithfully what soeuer he did to the brethren and to strangers c. who also did beare witnesse of his said loue before the Churches 3. Iohn 5. How few such are in these daies How few men like to Abraham to Lot to the old Gibeonite and to Gaius How few women that for bounty and forwardnesse therein are comparable to the Shunamit to Tabitha and to Lydia A further common vse of this doctrine is to teach all both good and bad the honorable condition of the ministers of the word by whom it pleaseth God to call v●to be his children Before indeed we heard the dignity of Gods children to be the greater because God emploied such honorable persons as the ministers of the word are in begetting them to himselfe But as children are the more honorable the more honorable their parents are so sometime also parents are made the more honorable by their children Therefore the woman that heard the gratious words which came from our Sauiour for his sake commended his mother crying out aloud before all the multitude present Blessed is the wombe which bare th e and the paps which thou hast sucked Luk. 11 27. In like manner therefore we may now as well commend the honorable state of the
honourable then is it for the poorest children of God to eate of Christs owne flesh and to drinke Christs owne blood Verily neither the meate of Dauid nor the dainty fare vpon Salomons table in his greatest glory nor the dointiest fare of any other Princes in the world in their greatest solemnities nor the Manna and quailes and water out of the rocke before mentioned to be giuen to the Israelites was euer comparable in any respect to this diet of the meanest sonnes and daughters of God Touching the third former metaphor what a strange thing is it that such siences as we were though indeede compared to wilde oliue branches yet ten times worse should be grafted into so precious and pleasant a stocke as Christ is and thereby bring forth fruits agreeable to Christ himselfe Iohn 15. 5. Philippians 1. 11. Though in our grafting Iouis omnia plena the siences which we graft bee nourished by the vertue of that stocke whereinto they are grafted yet they bring forth fruit according to their owne nature not according to the nature of the th●cke whereinto they are grafted But wee beeing grafted into Christ not the better into the worse but starke naught into the best are both nourished by vertue from him and also doe bring forth fruits agreeable to his nature not to our owne Touching the fourth former metaphor how great a grace is it for vs that were so rough and vnhewen stones as we were to be hewen smooth and made fit to bee coupled to such a precious corner stone as Christ is The same is much more to be vnderstood of the dignitie of Gods children in respect of the first former metaphor For if it bee an honour to bee wrought and carued and euery way made fitte to be coupled to such a precious corner stone as Christ Iesus is how much greater honour is it to bee made an house for Christ himselfe to dwell in yea for him not onely as man but also as God and man Hauing beene before habitations of Satan and houses of vncleane spirits Mat. 12. 43. c. Is it not an honourable change of such to be made houses houses yea more then houses For God filleth all things and all things in some sort as touching the essence of GOD euen the wicked themselues are full of God Is it not I say an honourable change of such as we were to bee made houses yea more then houses euen holy houses tabernacles and temples of the liuing God 1. Cor. 3. 16. and 2. Cor. 6. 16. verily touching this matter this second Scripture before alledged is the more to be obserued because with the former point of men to be houses and tabernacles and temples for God himselfe and of Gods dwelling among men and familiar walking or conuersing with them the Apostle ioineth also another ancient promise of God viz. that be would be a father vnto them and that they should be sonnes and daughters vnto him 2. Cor. 6. 18. Leuit. 26. 11. 12. For by this conioining of these two together the Apostle doth most plainly teach that the former honour of being Tabernacles and Temples for God is proper onely to them that are the sonnes daughters of God The dignity of the children of God in respect of this metaphor is yet the greater because as the whole world in all the beautie of it was at the first made a palace for man to dwell in so man himselfe in this second creation is made a palace for God to dwell in Touching the sixt former metaphor is it not more then meruailous that such vile persons as we naturally are euen little better then limmes of the diuell at least his children and bondslaues as hath beene before shewed should haue so honourable and glorious an head as Christ Iesus is that sitteth at the right hand of God in the heauen and hath the Angels good and bad in subiection vnto him 1. Pet. 3. 22. Besides all before spoken of the excellency of Christ in speaking of him as of one of the efficient causes of our regeneration is he not most excellently also described to bee clothed with a garment downe to the feete and girded about his pappes with a golden girdle to haue his head also and haires white as white wooll and snow and his eies as a flame of fire yea to haue his feete like vnto fine brasse burning as in a fornace and a voice as the sound of many waters yea to haue further in his right hand seuen starres a sharp two edged sword going out of his mouth and his face shining as the sunne shineth in his strength Reuelation 1. 13. c. Neither is the dignity of the children of God thus amplified in respect that they haue so excellent a head excellent for power for wisedome for iustice for meeknes for goodnes for all things that are excellent but also because as Christ hath no other body then his Church so the Church hath no other head but Christ Iesus and as none doth or can giue life to other either to quicken them from the death of sinne here or to raise them at the latter day when before that by the doctrine of the Papists themselues the Pope shall be suppressed as none I say can thus giue life to men but onely Christ Iesus for who dareth say that the Pope can raise vp a man either from his sinne or from the graue especially when the Pope himselfe shall be dead so none is or can be the head of the Church but only Christ Sith therefore Christ is not onely so excellent an head but also the sole and onely head of the children of God in this respect also it must bee granted that their state is so much the more honourable Yea this honour of the children of God by Christ Iesus his being their head is the more because as he hath not taken the nature of angels vpon him but onely the nature of man so hee is not the head of Angels as he is of elect men For as it is a monstrous bodie that hath two heads so is it no lesse monstrous for the bodie to bee of one nature and the head of another And as the Angels cannot be neither euer are called the members of Christ so Christ cannot bee called the head of the Angels All the members also of the body of Christ are said to grow to a perfect man in Christ and euery part and member of the body of Christ is said to receiue daily encrease as it were by nerues c. Ephesians 4. 13. 15. 16. Let no man here mistake me As kings are called heads that is chiefe gouernours of their people so Christ not onely as GOD but also as God and man is the head and chiefe gouernour and that absolutely without any such limitation as kings haue of the Angels as well as of all other creatures But in that speciall maner that he is head of men borne anew vnto God hee is not the
head of Angels Therefore in this respect also the condition of Gods children is so much the more excellent Touching the seuenth and last former metaphor what heart of man can conceiue the depth the height the bredth and the length of this loue of Christ in matching and ioining himselfe to vs and vs to him that hee I say that was the heire of all things by whom the worlds were made and who was the brightnes of the glory and the engrauen forme of the person of God the father Hebrewes 1. 1. 2. and beeing in the forme of God thought it no robbery to bee equall to God Philippians 2. 6. 7. that hee I say should so cast his loue and liking vpon vs as to take vs to be his spouse and wife and that way also to make vs the daughters as it were in lawe and by marriage to God the father euen vs that not onely had no portion and were euery mothers childe of vs beggers brattes but that also were base horne creatures and had an Ammonite to our Father and an Hittite to our mother and that therefore as most base children are were in such misery as a new borne childe whose nauell is not cut neither is washed with water to soften him neither is salted with salt for the better hardning the nauell and the whole skinne for the better strengthning of all the inward parts and for the better decocting and consuming of all corrupt humors neither was swadled with clouts and whom being borne in misery there was no eie to pitie or to shew compassion so that hee lay in the open field to all contempt and altogether polluted with blood Ezekiel 16. 3. 4. 5. 6. yea who were altogether deformed and misshapen euen a crocked generation hauing neither good face nor good heart nor good eie nor any member well proportioned yea being altogether also without witte and vnderstanding of heauenly things as wee haue heard euen pure naturals as wee speake and no more able to conceiue the things of God and pertaining to our owne good then very ideots Is not this wonderfull that such an one as Christ was and is should so vnequally in many respects match himselfe with such as wee were and that by matching himselfe so with vs should make such a change in vs of crooked to make vs straight of deformed to make vs beautifull of beggerly to make vs rich of fooles to make vs wise of prophane to make vs holy of earthly to make vs heauenly and of children of the diuell to make vs the children of God his father What a preferment therefore is this Were it not a great aduancement and a matter of exceeding honor for a mighty Prince to take some vagabond woman poore naked deformed miserable c. and to marry her to himselfe and to put her presently into all costly and princely robes yea it was an honor for Ab●ga●l though the wife of a rich but a miserable yeoman such as this time hath too many like and also a wise and a vertuous woman to be taken to wife vnto Dauid was it not also an high preferment for Ester a poore maiden of another nation to be made wife and Queen to that mighty Monarch and Emperor Ahashuerosh that raigned ouer an hundred seuen and twenty Prouinces How honorable then is it for vs more poore base miserable then any rogue to bee married to the naturall and only sonne of God hei●e and Lord of all things Verily this match is so much greater preferment of vs then the former matches were either of Abigail with Dauid or of Ester with Ahashuerosh because both Dauid and Ahashuerosh had many other wiues besides those but Christ Iesus hath so matched himselfe with vs that as he had no other before vs so he desireth no other besides vs but contenteth himselfe wholly with vs and taketh as great delight in vs as if we had been his equals when he first made choice of vs and as though we had been as wise rich beautifull vertuous and euery way as glorious as either he doth make vs after his marying of vs in this life or as hee will make vs hereafter in the life to come To leaue these metaphors and similitudes whereby hitherto the communion of the children of God is so described and their dignity in such sort amplified let vs further vnderstand that our said communion is the more admirable in it selfe and honorable to vs in as much as thereby we cannot but haue communion also with the Father because Christ and the father are one Ioh. 10. 30 And the father is in the Sonne and the Sonne in the Father Ioh. 14. 10. 11. In which last place our Sauiour praieth that as he and the father are one in another so also the children of God whom God had giuen to Christ Ioh. 6. 37. and 17. 6. might be one not only amongst themselues but also in them that is in the father and in the Sonne Therefore our Sauiour likewise saith before If any man loue me he will keepe my word and my father will loue him and we will come vnto him and will dwell with him Ioh. 14. 23. Yea therefore Christ came into the world and was made one with vs that we might haue communion with the Father and be made one with him and as he was made one with vs to make vs one with the father so also he did effect that for which he did come Therefore the Apostle hauing set forth our miserable state in the world by nature viz. that amongst other things we were without God in the world Ephes 2. 12. he doth presently by way of opposition adde our contrary state in Christ and by Christ saying But in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre of are made neerer by the bloud of Christ c. vers 13. Hauing that communion with the Father and with the sonne we haue also the like with the holy ghost and therefore it is not onely said that they that are led by the spirit of God are the sonnes of God but also that they that are the sonnes of God haue receiued the spirit of God whereby they ●rie Abba father Rom. 8. 14 c. and againe that because they are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into their hearts which crieth Abba father Therefore also our Sauiour Ioh. 14. where he promiseth the communion of himselfe and of his father vnto his disciples promiseth also to send the holy ghost which should abide with them Therefore also the holy ghost is said to bee shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour Tit. 3. 5. Finally as by the sonne we haue communion with the father so the holy ghost is the bond of our communion with the father and with the sonne Through him saith Paul wee haue an entrance to the father by one spirit Ephes 2. 18. and by one spirit we are all baptized into one body c. 1. Cor. 12. 13. Is