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

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Scriptures bee throughly vnderstood of vs as will appeare in the handling of the points themselues For in the Articles of our faith as they are abridged the doctrine of creation is mentioned but in part for nothing is expressely set downe of mans creation or of any other creature vppon earth or of the Angels in heauen Nothing is mentioned of the prouidence and gouernment of God ouer his creatures And in the doctrine of redemption likewise nothing is mentioned concerning the life doctrine or miracles of our Sauiour Christ Neither is it expressed what wee are to beleeue concerning the holy Ghost nor wherein as touching a principall part the communion of Saints consisteth nor what is the state of our soules immediately after this life and so forth till the resurrection of our bodies vnles wee bee aduertised by interpretation that though euerlasting life is set after the resurrection of the bodie yet is it not then onely to begin but that beginning by regeneration in this life it continueth for euer notwithstanding this naturall life endeth in death And howe should wee knowe what is to bee beleeued concerning the descension of our Sauiour Christ to hell but by the interpretation of those Scriptures Fidei fundamentum gratuita promissio Ab ipsa inquit Caluinus incipit in ipsa cōstat in ipsam definit Instit lib 3. Cap. 2. Sect. 29. The promise of free grace is the foundation of faith From it saith maister Caluin it beginneth in it it consisteth and it endeth also in the same whence that phrase of speech may be opened vnto vs Wherefore in the second place we will from the ground and warrant of the holy Scriptures open the meaning of euery article Thirdly insomuch as faith looketh directly to the most free and gracious promise of GOD wherein standeth the comfort and stay of it yea seeing it is the wisedome and prudence of Faith to looke alwaies hereunto as wee see the practise of it very often in the 119. Psalme and Psalme 56 3 4 10 11. and Psalme 57 1 2 3. we will therefore inquire out the promises of GOD made to his people concerning euery article For in this respect the faithfull are called heires by promise Galatians 3 29. and children of the promise Chap. 4.28 Read also Heb. Chap. 4.1 and chap. 10 36 chap. 11. ver 13. Read the whole Chapter and Rom. 4 from the 13. ver to the end Fourthly wee will shewe what comfortable fruites and benefites belong to the beleeuing of euery article Fiftly seeing faith cannot bee idle wee will likewise search out what those duties bee which GOD requireth as fruites of obedience and thankefulnesse for so singular fruites and benefites of his loue as faith assureth vs off The generall diuision of the Articles of our Beliefe Finally wee will note the iust punishment and danger of infidelitie but especially of hereticall and obstinate opinion fancie gainsaying the truth and soundnes of any part of our true and orthodox Christian faith and beliefe Question BVt before wee come to these points how may the Articles of our faith the summe whereof you haue rehearsed be most shortly sorted and diuided Answere Into these two generall heads First they shewe both me euery Christian how we stand bound to beleeue in our God Secondly what euery one of vs ought to beleeue concerning the whole company of the people of God called his holy Catholike or vniuersall Church Explication and proofe They may be so diuided indeede And the like is the order of the lawe of God for the direction of our life and of praier for the exercise of our faith and of the Sacraments also for the strengthening of our faith God hath worthily the first place whose glory we ought principally to respect and then it followeth how God hath a most gracious regard of our selues of all the rest of his people So that if we would define faith according to the articles thereof we might well say though as may peraduenture be thought somewhat out of place now yet not altogether without some good vse that it is a comfortable apprehending and applying of the whole doctrine of the Gospell in the right vnderstanding of the seueral articles of it to a mans own particular benefit with some measure of assurance that hee is a true m●mber of the Church of Christ and that his part is in all the spirituall priuiledges or prerogatiues which doe belong vnto it in the holy fellowship and communion of the Saints of God And further the summe of this briefe profession of our common faith is in effect no more but this that the onely true God euen the father o● our Lord Iesus Christ is through the mediation and intercession of the same Christ our redeemer and Sauiour become my father and that for his sake hee hath receiued me to mercy and sanctified me and sealed me by his holy spirit to be one of his adopted children and that he will for euer make me a partaker of all the benefits of the most holy meditation of the same Iesus Christ his onely sonne our Lord to my endles saluation euen to the fruition of vnspeakable felicitie and glory in his heauenly kingdome But these things require a very ample and large vnfolding Beliefe in one onely God LEt vs therfore come to the first part of your diuision of the Articles of faith Question How doe they teach vs and all Christians that wee stand bound to beleeue in our God Answere First that he is onely one in his diuine nature or spirituall Essence and beeing Secondly that he is neuertheles in the same onely one nature and essence three distinct persons That this is so it wil further appeare in the particular opening of this most high mysterie Question In what words doe they teach vs that we stand bound to beleeue in our God as being one onely in nature or essence and beeing Answere In these wordes I beleeue in God Explication and proofe It is true and therefore is the word God but once mentioned euen to the ende that the vnitie of the Godhead might bee the more plainely testified and obserued although the same word is in vnderstanding to bee referred to euery one of the three persons following in this wise Beliefe in one onely God I beleeue in that one onely God who is God the father God the sonne The ground of it and God the holy Ghost yet not three Gods but only one God For like as whē mention is made indefinitely of the name of God the whole Trinitie may bee vnderstood coessentially and coniointly so whē we apply the same name God to any of the three persons alone wee must take it personally according to the distinction of the one from either of the other by the proper incommunicable proprietie belonging to the same though not without respect to the vnitie of one essence of them all So that as it is well opened
But of the fatherly prouidence and gouernment of God our heauenly Father we shall likewise haue iust occasion to consider more fully afterward Wherein also the most perfect wisedome of this our Father wil be made more manifest vnto vs. And that yet further accōpanied with his most tender mercy according to that thanksgiuing of our Sauiour Christ Matth. 11.25 c. and according to that of the Apostle 2. Cor 1.3 Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of mercies and God of all consolation and comfort Moreouer we are to beleeue in him as being most righteous according to that 1. Pet. 1 17. For he is such a Father as iudgeth without respect of persons And therefore doth our Saui Christ pray to him as being a righteous Father Iohn 17 25. And likewise also as being a holy Father in the 11. verse of the same chapter Finally we are to beleeue in him as being most faithfull and true according to that which we read in the same Euangelist ch 8 14 16. Though I beare witnesse of my selfe saith our Sauiour Christ yet my record is true for I knowe whence I came c. And if I also iudge my iudgement is true for I am not alone but I and the Father that sent me And ver 26 27. He that sent me is true and the things which I haue heard of him those speake I vnto the world They vnderstood not saith the Euangelist that he spake to them of the Father c. And thus we may see that we are to beleeue in God our heauenly Father the first Person in the holy Trinitie as being an eternall almightie the most wise most holy most righteous and most mercifull Father the most faithfull and true c. For whatsoeuer is ascribed to the Father who is God it must be vnderstood as attributed vnto him absolutely and in all diuine perfection aboue all comparison to bee made with any creature Yet so doe we attribute these things to the Father that we doe not neither may wee exclude either the Sonne or the holy Ghost as hath beene obserued before and is more fully to be cleared and confirmed hereafter These things thus obserued let vs now goe forward to those points which are to be furthermore considered for the vnderstanding of this Article And first insomuch as was a little before touched God is termed and is in very deed a Father in diuerse respects I desire that you doe make a more full rehearsall of this point Question What are those diuerse respects according to the which God is called by the name of a Father Answere First God is called and is in truth most properly a Father onely in respect of his naturall and onely eternally begotten Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ Secondly in respect of his workes of Creation Thirdly in respect of his fatherly prouidence preseruation and gouernment ouer all his creatures euer since he created and made them Fourthly in respect of his holy Church and elect people whom he hath in special manner most graciously adopted in his beloued and onely begotten Sonne by nature to be his children of meere fauour and grace Explication and proofe That God is most properly a father in respect of his naturall and onely begotten Sonne it is euen of it selfe euident For Father and Sonne are naturally and properly relatiues euen here among men on earth but principally whē we speake of God the heauenly Father and his Sonne For though as touching the earthly nature of man one Father may haue many naturall Sons the which haue all of them their seueral participation in the nature of their Father yet in the diuine nature there cannot possibly be more then one Sonne seeing the whole nature of the Father is essentially eternally and euerlastingly communicated vnto him alone And likewise howsoeuer the naturall Father on earth hauing many children doth by naturall instinct diuide as it were his affection among them according as he had euen by nature a distinct and often renewed affection and desire to enioy them yet the heauenly Father hauing but one entier infinite and eternall desire of generation in his diuine nature he hath wholly and without all possibilitie of distribution or reiteration from before all beginning and for euermore placed his whole desire delight and affection in his owne onely Son And euen so much doth the Father himselfe testifie at the baptisme of the same his Sonne hee hauing then taken to his diuine nature the nature of man This is my beloued Sonne saith the Father in whom I am well pleased And thus doth the word Abha vsed in the holy language for Father signifie from the roote Abha which is in the proper signification of it so to desire or affect a thing that the desire and affection doth rest it selfe in the same being once attained vnto This is perfectly naturally to be found onely in the minde and will of God the Father according to that in the Prophesie of Hosh chap 11.1 I called my Sonne out of Egypt because I loued him Ahabehu For these wordes doe principally respect our Sauiour Christ the Sonne of God eternally and most perfectly beloued of him yea so as he is for euer setteled in this his loue as we read Mat chap 2.15 Thus then in the first place God is a Father in respect of his owne one onely begotten and naturall Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ Secondly that he is called a Father in respect of his workes of creation it may appeare by this that the Angels of heauen are called the children of God as Iob chap 1.6 The children of God came and stoode before the Lord Satan came also among them And againe Chap 2.1 And Chap. 38.7 All the children of God reioyced from the beginning of their Creation Read also Dan. 3.25 Where the Angell that preserued the three children of Israel from burning in the fierie fornace is said to be like to the Sonne of God as one of singular comlines and beautie c. Thus Adam also though in a degree a little inferiour to the heauenly Angels is called the Sonne of God as we read Luk. ch 3.38 And the posteritie of Adam also though degenerated are called the off-spring of God Act. 17.29 Not by generation to speake properly but by Creation And so is that word off-spring to be vnderstood According to that Isai ch 64.8 O Lord thou art our Father we are the clay c. And Mal 2.10 Haue we not all one Father hath not one God made vs And Heb 1● 9 God is called the Father that is in a special manner the creator of spirits For he hath made our soules as well as our bodies yea our soules by a most excellent creation as shal further appeare when we come once to the purposed handeling of that doctrine Now in the third place that God is a father in respect of his most fatherly prouidence and of the souereigntie of his
incourage his Disciples saying Feare not little flocke it is the Fathers pleasure to giue you a Kingdome Secondly that God as a most louing and bountifull Father wil indue and furnish his children with all spirituall gifts graces c. consider it from the parable of our Sauiour Christ Luke chap. 15.22.23.24 The prodigall child hath spent all his worldly riches but his Father inricheth him with a spirituall treasure and feedeth him with heauenly dainties c. Read also Isa ch 11.9 ch 54.13 Call to mind againe Eph. 1.3 and verses 16.17 c. For the third branch read Math. 6.31 Take no thought saying what shall wee eate c. For your Father saith our Sauiour Christ knoweth that ye haue need of all these things But seeke ye first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnes and all these things shal be ministred vnto you Seeing God is minded as we haue seene before to giue his children a heauenly Kingdome doubtlesse he will not denie them earthly things so farre as is meete for them Seeing hee hath already giuen his owne sonne for vs how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Rom. 8.32 Fourthly that God is minded to beare with the infirmities of his children that are carefull to obey him read Mal. chap. 3.17 They shall be to me saith the Lord of Hostes in that day that I shall doe this that is execute my iudgements against the wicked for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his owne sonne that serueth him Then shalt thou returne and discerne betweene the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serueth God and him that ●erueth him not Read also Psal 103.8.9 The Lord is full of compassion slow to anger and of great kindnes He will not alwaies chide neither keepe his anger for euer He hath not dealt with vs after our sinnes nor rewarded vs according to our iniquities As high as the heauen is aboue the earth so great is the mercie of God toward them that feare him As farre as the East is from the West so farre hath hee remoued our sinnes from vs. As a Father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him For he knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth that we are but a●st And Psal 13● 3.4 If thou Lord straitly markest iniquitie O Lord who shall stand But mercie is with thee that thou maiest be feared Fiftly that when God correcteth his children he doth it in loue reade Heb. 12.6 And that as a fruite of his loue he keepeth measure wee reade Psal 89.32.33 And Psa 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous c. Finally that God of his most gratious and fatherly goodnes will heare the complaints and supplications of his children in all their necessities i● is euident by this that our Sauiour Christ hath most comfortably taught and commanded and incouraged vs to pray to God as to our heauenly Father Math. 6.9 c. And chap. 7. verse 7. c. Aske saith our Sauiour Christ and it shall be giuen vnto you c For what man is there among you who if his sonne aske him bread would giue him a stone Or if hee aske fish will hee giue him a Serpent If ye then who are euill saith our Sauiour can giue your children good gifts how much more shall your Father which is in heauen giue good thinges to them that aske him Yea as wee reade further Luke chap. 11.13 How much more saith our Sauiour Christ shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Ghost to them that desire him It is very comfortable also that wee reade in the same Chapter from the ● verse Which of you shall haue a friend c. And Iohn chap. 16.23 Our Sauiour Christ is earnest in this point Verily verily saith hee I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my name hee will giue it to you For as it followeth v●rse 27. the Father himselfe loueth you because ye haue loued mee saith our Sauiour Christ and haue beleeued that I came out from God Thus farre of the comforts of this that God vouchsafeth to bee a Father vnto vs. THe duties pertaining to the comfort of this Article of our faith are next to be considered of vs. Question Which are they Answere First in so much as it is our principall comfort that God is our Father and that of his meere ●auour and grace it is our dutie first of all to beare in remembrance what our miserable estate is from our naturall parents of whom wee are conceiued in sinne and borne in iniquitie Yea that as wee ar● naturally descended of them wee are no bett●r then the children of the Diuell to whom the wrath of God is due for euer and euer This I say we are first of all to call to remembrance to the end we may continually put our selues in minde of that constant and euer increasing thankfulnes which i● due for so iuestimable and euerlasting a benefit and aduancement Secondly it is our most bounden dutie to withdrawe our selues from all the wayes motions and lustes of our owne sinnefull flesh and of this worlde and of the Di●ell Thirdlie it is our dutie to walke most chearfullie The Duties in all humble obedience and childe-like dutie toward God our heauenly Father beeing sorie aboue all things that wee haue hetherto bene so vndutifull vnto him Fourthlie wee are likewise admonished that it is our duety in that wee are children of God to bee imitators and followers of the same our heauenlie Father in all his most noble and diuine vertues so farre as wee may imploye our selues for the common benefit of all men speciallie concerning our Christian brethren who are members of the same houshold of faith with vs. Finallie in that wee beleeue in God to be our Father it is our bounden dutie to depende vpon his Fatherlie prouidence and in all things to account our selues to bee most gratiouslie dealt with and ordered in whatsoeuer estate and condition of life he hath placed vs for the time of our so beeing and so long also as it shall seeme good vnto him that wee doe so abide and remaine Explicatiō proofe These speciall dueties doe verie iustlie arise from the comfort of this so principall a point of ourfaith as may appeare by the proofes heereafter following Touching the first the Proph Ezekiel may be a worthie admonitor vnvnto vs in the name of God himselfe chapt 16. of his Prophesie from the beginning of the chapter in a very large and elegant discourse manie verses togither though verie sharpe and reprehensiue as the intollerable ingratitude of that people had fullie deserued Sonne of man saith the Lorde cause Ierusalem to knowe her abominations And say thou thus saith the Lorde God vnto Ierusalem Thine habitation and thy kindred is of the lande of Canaan thy father was an Amorite and thy mother an Hittite And
the first night which euer was came to an ende the Lord God by his gratious word and commandement created and brought forth light yea before there was yet either Sunne or Moone or any one Starre in the whole compasse of heauen o the ende it might most euidently appeare that God is the immediate author of this excellent creature And thenceforth did the Lord in his wisedome establish the order and succession of the day and night euen to this day so to continue to the end of the world Thus the whole space of the first day and of the first night doth by the determination of God himselfe of the more worthie and excellent part take the denomination of the first day Explicatiō proofe It is verie true And thus you haue in one Answere laid open the meaning of Moses in the first foure verses of our first Chapter of Genesis according as it is both plaine in it selfe and also confirmed by other testimonies of the holie Scriptures of God in this behalfe As first touching the heauens which we do vulgarly call the Element and the large spreading thereof read Iob 9.8 He himselfe alone spreadeth out the heauens And chap 37.18 Hee hath stretched them out firme as mou●ten glasse And Psal 104.2 Hee hath spread them like a Curtaine This large extension and spreading out of the highest visible heauen is also called the Firmament from the Greeke and common Latin Translations as Dan 12.3 They that be wise shall shine as the brightnes of the Firmament Read also Isai 42.5 He hath created the heauens and spred them abroad And chap 44.24 Read also Psal 1 36.5 Hee hath made the heauens by his wisedom c. And Ier 10.12 Hee stretcheth them out by his discretion And touching the earth it is written in the Psal 104.5 mentioned euen now that God hath so set it vpon the foundation that it cannot be moued And Psa 102.25 Thou hast laide the foundation of the earth and the heauens are the worke of thy hands Reade also Iob 38.4 and Prou 8.29 The earth therefore may iustly be called the Lords earth as Ps 24.1 Touching the couering of the earth by the waters reade Ps 104.6 Thou coueredst it with the deepe as with a garment and by their owne nature they would stana aboue the mountaines Touching the creation of the light and darknes reade Isai 45.7 I saith the Lord forme the light and create darknes Herevpon also the day and the night is by good right ascribed to the Lord. Psal 74.16 The day is thine and the night is thine And herevnto hath the Apostle Iames respect when chap 1.17 hee calleth God the Father of lights The constant order succession of the day and the night according to the law which God hath set in nature is set downe to the praise of God Ps 19.2 And Ier 33.19.20.21 The Lord maketh it an argument of his faithfulnes in his couenant of euerlasting mercy toward his people This breaking forth of the light is to be thankfully acknowledged for euer for a very gratious glorious worke of the Lord. Reade Psa 104.23.24 and Iob ch 38. 12. 13. 14. But ch 24. 17. The morning is to the wicked as the shadow of death Now let vs heare the holy words of Moses himselfe from whence all these things are cleared vnto vs. Question Which are they Answere 1 In the beginning saith Moses God created the heauens and the earth 2 And the earth was without forme and voyd and darknes was vpon the deepe and the spirit of God moued vpon the waters 3 Then God said let there be light and there was light 4 And God sawe the light that it was good and God seperated the light from the darknes 5. And God called the light day and the darknesse he called night so the Euening and the Morning were the first day In these words we haue the ground of your former answere and we may see the truth of it fully warranted vnto vs. And besides the holy Prophet sheweth vs how the rude lumpish and indigested matter of the earth and the huge gulfe of waters aboue the same were as it were moulded vp held together and made apt and fit to receiue that excellent forme which in the third day they were fashioned into That is how they were thus supported to wit by the holy Ghost the diuine Spirit and power of God himselfe Moreouer we haue a singular commendation of the light as of a most comfortable and commodious creature euen from the approbation of God himselfe who saw that it approued it selfe to be good according to that Eccles 11.7 Surely the light is a pleasant thing So that hereby we are admonished to be in speciall manner thankfull to God for it and that we ought to be carefull to vse it well euen as we may thereby giue the greatest glorie to God that we can walking as becommeth those whom hee hath vouchsafed to call to be the children of light and to this ende hath caused the light of his Gospell to shine forth vnto vs. Yea euen to this our God who thus at the beginning commanded the light to shine out of darknes as the Apostle Paul writeth 2. Cor 4 6. ought we to giue all the glory we can On this first day also it may appeare that the vpper Region of the aire was made apt to send forth thunderings and lightenings by the fierie brightnes of it the which as we know is a very glorious and fearefull creature of God Reade Iob chap 37.1 2 3 4 5. and chap 38.24 35. But whereas Moses telleth vs that God calleth the light day and the darknes night hee would not haue vs to thinke that hee gaue those names vnto these things but that he appointed and ordeined the things themselues to continue such and in such order as he had alreadie created and made them For so the Lords calling doth vsually note his effectuall establishing of things thēselues rather then the giuing of them their names according to that of the holy Apostle Rom 4.17 God calleth those things that be not as though they were And 1. Cor 1.26 Brethren ye see your calling And our Sauiour Christ in the Gospel I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Finally Moses in saying that the euening and the morning were the first day he speaketh by a double Synedoche First putting the part for the whole that is the day both for the day and also for the night and then the beginning of the day and of the night both for the whole day and also for the whole night This first day of the creation is that which since the resurrection of our Sauiour Christ is called in the holy Scriptures the Lords day to Christians euen that wherin our redemption was perfected as the 7. day which was the next day a●ter the creation finished was then the Lords day to all people that is a day of speciall worship to
die their death Num. 23.10 so yea much more no doubt when the reuenging hand of God fell vpon him would he haue wished to haue beene as the least among the people of God to wit when the sword came against him in the slaughter of the Midianites Num. 31.8 And thus questionlesse would all the wicked desire when they are terrified by the vengeance of God breaking forth against them like as was noted before concerning the Egiptians at that time when the water began to returne forcibly vpon them Thus the iudgements of God vpon the wicked are many waies profitable and comfortable to the godly NOw let vs come to those fruites and benefites which the children of GOD doe in time reape to their comfort from the iudgements of God vpon themselues while they did liue in their sinne and after that also by his chastisements from the time that they began to repent and to turne vnto him Question And first what are the comfortable fruites or benefites proceeding from the iudgements of God vpon them while they lay in their sinnes and were not mooued to repentance or to say the most were onely entring into it Answere While the children of God are in this estate God vseth his iudgements or punishments as effectuall helpes First to humble them in the sight of their sinnes by a taste of that horrible wrath and miserie which is in the iustice of God due vnto them Secondly to stirre them vp to seeke for mercie and forgiuenesse Thirdly to make their deliuerance and saluation the more sweete and pretious vnto them Finally that by the recordation and calling to minde of the same their former punishments they being once turned to God might thenceforth take warning that they doe neuer returne to their former wickednes againe Explicatiō and proofe You say well that the iudgements of God are effectuall helpes to the ends you haue rehearsed For it pleaseth God for the better expedition and more speedie effecting of his worke to adde vnto the threatnings of his word the execution of his curse in some measure euen vpon his owne elect children whom he findeth to bee by nature children of wrath and knoweth that they haue neede of such vehement awaking and rowsing vp out of their dead sleepe of sinne To this purpose reade in the booke of Iob. cha 33. verse 17 c. Where af●er that he hath spoken of the sundry afflictions wherewith God doth humble his children preparing them first by his bodily chastisements and then sending the instruction of his word vnto them then saith Elihu to Iob verses 2● 30. Lo all these things will God worke twice or thrice with a man That he may turne backe his soule from the pit to be illuminated with the light of the liuing That is that he hauing his life prolonged may learne the way to the kingdome of heauen And hereof we haue the most wicked King Manasses for a notable example 2. Chron. 33.12 13. Of whom it is written that howsoeuer hee exceeded in wickednes and despised the ministerie of the Prophets which were sent vnto him yet when God cast him into tribulation that is gaue him into the hands of the King of Ashur who put him in fetters and bound him in chaines and carried him to Babel then he prayed to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers And he praying to God God of his infinite mercy was intreated of him and heard his prayer and brought him againe to Ierusalem into his kingdome And then as the text saith Manasses knew that is he acknowledged the Lord to be God To this purpose also it is well obserued by a godlie learned man that by affliction as by a speciall helpe God vseth commonly to call them whom he will saue and make instruments of his saluation to others To the which end he alledgeth the example of Paul from the testimonie of the holy Scriptures and from Ecclesiasticall storie the example of Constantine the first Christian Emperour and of Edwine the first Christian King of Northumberland Of the which Edwine thus he writeth that notwithstanding he had married a Christian woman the daughter of Ethelbert a christened King of Kent who perswaded with him all that shee could and Paulinus also a preacher of the Gospel yet could he not be wonne till God had bumbled him by sundry afflictions No not till at the last hee was sore wounded by a wicked and desperate ●●t throat who was suborned to kill him This is the obseruation of Mr. Foxe in the historie of King Edwine about the yeare of our Lord 630. Where also he alledgeth to the same end the late example of Martin Luther whose spirituall conflicts and agonies were many before hee could bee made fit to preach the doctrine of iustification by Christ openly And so saith hee bo all they most commonly which come to any liuely feeling or sensible working of Christ the Lord in them Hence it is that this confession is heard often in the mouthes of the seruants of God after that they are once truly and effectually humbled vnto him Blessed be God for such a sharpe checke that I had for such a losse for such a disgrace for such an imprisonment for such or such a danger for such a languishing sicknes for such a paineful or loathsome disease for such a wound for such a terrible feare in a grieuous thunder and lightening c. For if I had not bin thus or thus afflicted humbled I had not knowne my selfe I had not regarded Gods word I had neuer come to the feare of God I had perished in my sinnes c. If I had not lost such or such a friend or worldly stay I should not haue depended vpon Gods prouidence as now by the grace of God I see that I ought to doe Thus much therefore for the two former vses of afflictions or punishments or iudgements howsoeuer we doe thinke good to call them Now thirdly how the bitternes of such iudgements or afflictions sent of God doe make the saluation of God and his tender mercies the more sweete and comfortable I neede not to speake seeing no man can truly discerne what sweetnesse meaneth vnles hee haue tasted before what the sower is Finally touching the last point it cannot be doubted but that speciall iudgements of God are sent to the end they might leaue behinde them a memorable impression of his reuerend feare in the hearts of his children and so to nourish in them a continuall care of dutie answerable to the first entrance of their calling remembring alwaies that the anger of God against sinne is as great as any feare that is euer apprehended of vs. Psal 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thy wrath For according to thy feare is thine anger The practise of this memoriall is commended vnto vs Lament chapter 3. verses 19 20 21. in these wordes of the Prophet Remembring mine affliction and my mourning the worme-wood
argumēt that God hath adopted vs and taken vs to be his children You haue forgotten saith he the consolation or as we may read it exhortation yet so as wee must still vnderstand it to be a most sweete and comfortable exhortation of the Spirit of God which speaketh vnto you as vnto children My sonne despise not the chastening of the Lord neither faint when thou art rebuked of him For whom the Lord loueth hee chasteneth and hee scourgeth euery Sonne whom hee receiueth If yee indure chastening God offereth himselfe vnto you as vnto Sonnes c. Let vs I pray you diligently reade and for ever remember this and the rest of the same Scripture as it followeth in the text and so through the blessing of God wee shall at euery neede finde it to bee a singular comfort vnto vs. Yea not onely in such afflictions as wee endure for godlinesse sake but also euen in such as God at any time layeth vpon vs more directly for our sins prouided that by them we shall learne amendment of life and be sorie that wee have offended God our most mercifull Father thereby For then as the Apostle 1. Cor 11.32 certifieth vs God correcteth vs in the world to the end we should not be condemned with the world And this may iustly be no small comfort vnto vs. For the fourth branch read 1. Pet 4.12 13 14 15 16. where the Apostle Peter teacheth as much as is contained therein yea notwithstanding the afflictions be at the sharpest though the fier thereof doe burne most hotly vpon vs. Dearely beloued thinke it not strange saith hee touching the fierie triall c. But reioyce in so much as yee are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his glory shall appeare ye may be glad and reioyce If yee be railed vpon for the name of Christ blessed are ye for the spirit of glory and of God resteth vpon you c. Fiftly touching the readie ministerie of the holy Angels to comfort the children of God euen then especially when they are in greatest distresse we may consid●r it first from their seruice offered to our Sauiour Christ in his first speciall temptations Matth 4.11 And againe in his last speciall temptation Luk 22. ●● And then wee may see it generally concerning all that bee in Christ Psalm 34 7. The Angel of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him and hee deliuereth them Reade also Psalm 91.11 Matth 18.10 and Heb 1.14 This might easily bee exemplified by many particulars But because this point hath beene handeled more at large before we hast vnto that which remaineth Now therefore touching the 6. branch read 1. Cor 10 13. There hath no temptation taken you but such as appertaine to man And 1. Pet. 5.9 Resist ye the Diuel steadfast in the faith knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren which are in the world And Reuel ch 1.9 I Iohn saith the holy Apostle of himselfe euen your brother and companion in tribulation and in the kingdome and patience of Iesus Christ In which respect the Apo Paul saith also I reioice in my sufferings for you and fulfil the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which it the Church whereof I am a minister c. For verily there is great vse of such afflictions of the seruants of God both for incouragement and confirmation of faith and also for mutuall comfort according to that of the same Apofile 2. Cor 1.3 c. Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort who comforteth vs in all our tribulation that wee may bee able to comfort them which are in any affliction by the comfort wherewith we our selues are comforted of God For as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs so our consolation aboundeth through Christ And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and saluation which is wrought in the induring of the same sufferings which we also suffer or whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and saluation And our hope is steadfast concerning you in somuch as wee knowe that as ye are partakers of the sufferings so shall ye be also of the consolation This place as we see is as a ful Commentarie concerning this point of the comfortable communion of the children of God in their afflictions Wherevnto also that place is answerable which we read Heb 10.32.33 34.35 This communion is so necessarie that none can withdrawe themselues from it yet be true Christians Nay it cānot be so done without danger of perdition according to that which we read verses 38 39. of that 10. chap to the Heb To the which purpose consider the speech of Mordecai to Queene Ester ch 4.13.14 And the threatening of God Amos ch 6. verses 6 7 8. And that saying of our Sauiour Christ Mat 10 33. wherein he professeth that he will bee ashamed of such as be ashamed to professe his name for feare of persecution c. Wherefore let the example of Moses be alwaies our blessed imitation in that he made choise rather to suffer aduersitie with the people of God then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season Esteeming the rebuke of Christ to be greater richer then the treasures of Egipt and in that respect when he came to age refused to be called the Sonne of Pharaohs daughter And finally let this comfort animate vs against that conceit which euery one is apt to discourage himselfe withall in the time of his affliction as if none were euer so afflicted as we be For it is not so we haue our companions whatsoeuer our affliction or triall is or possibly can be Let vs therefore in all our temptations quiet and comfort our hearts in the Lord and reioyce that wee haue our portion in Christ with the rest of his seruants in euery affliction wherein we suffer as Christians as the Apostle Peter speaketh 1. Epistle 4.16 Moreouer as it followeth in the seuenth branch of the answere it is not an idle or vaine comfort that the holy afflictions of the children of God doe by his fatherly prouidence priuiledge them from worldly and profane cares and troubles according to that similitude which the Apostle Paul vseth 2. Tim chap 2. verses 3.4 Thou therefore saith he to Timotheus suffer affliction as a good souldiar of Iesus Christ No man that warreth entangleth himselfe with the affaires of this life because hee would please him that hath chosen him to be a souldiar Much more therefore as the Apostle giueth thereby to vnderstand doth the true seruant and child of God free his minde from all other cares Yea hee hath it freed through the grace and mercy of God to the ende hee may attend his seruice with comfort and with good courage followe the fight of his spirituall warrefare It is reported that some of the Martyres had their bodily health more comfortably through
sertò se quisque nostrûm excutiat meritò nos pudefaciet immensa scelerum nostrorum congeries vt hominem perditum qui meragratia salutem adeptus est ducem antesignanum habere minimè pigeat That is If so be saith he euery one of vs doe truly and in good earnest sift himselfe iustly will the vnmeasurable heape of our sinnes so shame vs that it shall be nothing irkesome vnto vs to haue a forlorne man who hath of meere grace obtained saluation to be our leader as one going next to the standard before vs. And thus God hath most gratiously admonished vs by the impenitencie of the one example of these two robbers to take heede of all presumptuous or secure delaying of repentance seeing vsually the end of all such is like to the former course of their life that is deuoid of true repentance and by the other he doth exceedingly comfort such poore sinners as doe yet at the last truly repent them of all their sinnes For to this end no doubt God would set forth his wonderfull mercy in one notable example repenting at the point of death though no more then one is mentioned in all the Bible of so late repentance as he was The duty of which comfort hath also beene declared Question Now what may we learne to be our duty furthermore from that comfort which is cōta●ned in the answer of our Sauiour to the request of the repenting and beleeuing thiefe saying To day shalt thou be with m● in Paradise Answere We learne from hence that we beleeuing in our Sauiour Christ and repenting of our sinnes are to dispose of our selues comfortably to depart this life nothing doubting of the blessed estate of our soules in the kingdome of heauen immediately after our naturall life is at an end here in this world Explicatiō proofe That we may boldly and comfortably doe thus beside this particular example wee haue the generall warrant of the holy Ghost Reuel 14. expressed heretofore in the Comforts So that we neede not be in feare of the sleeping of our soules till the last day as some fondly imagine neither yet of the danger of any purgatory fire for them to passe through For who might haue beene more like to goe to purgatory then this robbing thiefe before he should haue beene admitted to heauen if there were any such place ordained of God for such as liue not to worke out their owne satisfaction as the popish Teachers would make vs to beleeue But as wee see our Sauiour saith plainely To day shalt thou be with me c. Neuerthelesse it will peraduenture be replied and said that though our Sauiour Christ made an exception in this particular and that he may as pleaseth him dispence with whō he will yet the other is the ordinary course for such as he was We may answer them vpon better ground that if there were any such matter as is pretended for a place of purgatory our Sauiour would rather haue taken this so singular an occasion to haue made it knowne for the common admonition of all such kinde of persons and not to haue beene vtterly silent concerning such a point These are the duties to be learned from this part of the Story Question LEt vs proceede to those that follow And first what are we to learne from that fearefull darknes which God cast vpon the land of the Persecutors of our Sauiour Answer We are to take heede that we ioyne not our selues with the wicked in conspiracie against Christ lest wee be partakers with them of their punishments threatned and portended by that darknes such as are ignorance and hardnes of heart and all outward calamities yea and euen Hell it selfe and vtter darknes at the last Explicatiō proofe All these euills indeed were aptly threatened and portended hereby And it standeth with good equity that all the companions in one and the same sins should be partakers of one the same kindes of punishment Re. 14. ● 10 Question Now what duties doth this require at our hand that we see and heare it proclaimed with so lowd a voyce that wee cannot but heare it that our Sauiour hath endured wonderfull paines and torments for vs yea so that he hath been as one euen for the time forsaken of God for vs Answere The extremitie of the sufferings of our Sauiour are most fit and effectuall if we haue any grace in vs to teach vs how infinitely we stand bound in all loue The Duties in respect of his agony vpon the Crosse and good dutie to serue and honour Christ our Lord and Sauiour and God our heauenly Father for his infinite mercy toward vs in him And againe how deadly we are to hate and abhorre sinne and that we ought to be very willing and ready to suffer any the most sharp sufferings that may fall vpon vs for his sake Explication and proofe It must needes be so indeede according as vpon like occasion hath beene obserued once or twice before For who duly weighing the vnspeakeable dolour and torment of soule and body which our Sauiour indured for his sinne but the same partie must needes be out of loue with his sinne yea in an earnest loathing and hatred against it so as he will be no longer a retainer or v●ss●ll to sinne and Satan but contrariwise a faithfull seruant to God choosing affl ction for godlinesse sake and not the pleasures of sinne It is vsed for a good reason to draw children to a due regard of their dutie toward their naturall parents euen because their fathers haue begotten them and their mothers haue brought them forth and because either of them haue had a tender and diligent care of their education The Spirit of God himselfe vseth these reasons Pro chap. 23. verse 22. and chap. 31.2 O therefore how much more ought the consideration of the sufferings of our Sauiour for vs be effectuall to moue vs vnto good duty toward him seeing his care hath beene infintely more tender toward vs all and his sufferings a thousand folde more painefull for our sakes then the trauell of all mothers can bee in their childe-bearing or of all both fathers and mothers care or sorrow about the bringing vp of their children To this end therefore let vs well thinke of that which a good and very learned Preacher of the Gospel hath prompted vs with to wit that insomuch as the cause of all the wrath of God toward our Sauiour was in vs and from vs deriued to him as being our Suerty we ought in him to behold as in a glasse what sinne is to the end that wee should all that we can turne away and flye from it and not to cocker the inticements thereof as we vse ouer much to doe Beza Hom. 5. vpon the history of the Passion Sect. 12. And againe in his 32. Hom. Sect. ● as was in the Comforts noted before And yet againe more fully in the same Hom. Sect. 9. writing
his abundant mercie hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance immortall c. And ch 3.21 And Eph. 2.4 5 6. Acts 4.10 11 12 13. For proofe of the sixt reade 2. Cor. 1.8 9 10. and chap. 4.8 9 10 11 12 13. 14 15 16 c. And 1. Cor. 15.57 according to the prophesie of Isaiah 53.12 And Hosea 13. verse 14. For the proofe of the seuenth part reade Iohn 11.25 I am the resurrection and the life he that beleeueth in me saith our Sauiour though he were dead yet shall he liue Reade also Rom. 8.11 and 1. Cor. 6.14 and chap. 15. verse 12 13. and verses 19 20.21 22. and verses 32 33. and 35. and 45 49. Likewise Philip. 3. ●0 21. and 1. Thes 4.13 14. A liuely representation and foregoing demonstration whereof was the opening of the graues at the death of our Sauiour and the resurrection of the bodies of many Saints who came out of their graues and went into the holy Citie immediately after the resurrection of our Sa iour and appeared to manie Matth. 27.52 53. For seeing 2. Kings 13 21. God gaue testimony to his faithfull Prophet Elisha after his death by reuining a dead man that was put into his graue that he was a Prophet sent of him much more would he confirme vnto vs by the resurrection of many after the death and buriall of our Sauiour Christ that he is the true Messiah the very Prince of all Prophets that were before him But not onely so he would thereby shew also that our Sauiour did not rise for himselfe alone but for vs and that therefore by his resurrection he hath broken and dissolued the power of the graue that will it nill it it must perforce one day yeelde vp all the dead that are holden vnder the dominion of it as touching their bodies thogh their soules be presently in a heauenly and happy estate And in this respect Col. 1 1● our Sauiour is called the first borne of the dead the Apostle thereby giuing to vnderstand that all other of the faithfull shall in their order be in like manner borne a gaine and deliuered as it were out of the bowells The Duties or wombe of the graue To the which purpose also 1. Cor. 15.20 hee is saide to be the first fruits of them that sleepe to shew that in due time all that belong to him as a holy lumpe or croppe shall in their bodies be awaked out of the sleepe of death that as it is contained in the same chapter Like as by man came death so by man might come the resurrection of the dead And that as in Adam all die so in Christ all should be made aliue Neither is it to be neglected but diligently to be marked as seruing greatly to our comfort that all the faithfull which died before our Sauiour Christ died in this hope where vnto wee are called by the Gospel Heb. chap. 11. verse 35. Reade also Daniel 12.2 3 13. Iob. 19.23 c. Isai 26.19 And Ezekiel 37. a notable allusion to the ground and Article of the resurrection familiarly imbraced of them according as we may perceiue by the answer of Martha to our Sauiour Iohn 11.24 I know saith shee speaking of her brother which was dead that be shall rise againe in the resurrection at the last day Reade also Psalme 49.16 God saith the holy Psalmist will deliuer my soule from the power of the graue for hee will receiue me Selab For here as Master Caluin worthily obserueth wee haue a notable testimonie of the faith wherein the holy Fathers liued and died vnder the Law Praeclarum inquit habemus testimonium fides in qua vixerunt mortui sunt sancti patres sub Lege Now for the proofe of the eight part of the answer Reade Acts chapter 17. verse 31. God hath appointed a day in the which hee will iudge the world in righteousnesse by that man whom hee hath appointed whereof hee hath giuen assurance to all men in that hee hath raised him from the dead And Rom. 14.9 Christ therefore died and rose againe and reuiued that he might be Lord both of the dead and of the quicke Finally from the proofe of the last part reade Rom. 5.10 11 c. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saued by his life c. And chap. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne It is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God c. Doe we not see that the resurrection is the first steppe of the gradution or amplification of the comfort for which he reasoneth And the Apostles in their sermons did instantly insist in this point of the resurrection as being that which is more familiar for vse though not the highest degree of his exaltation and lifting vp as wee haue a president in the Acts of the Apostles and in some other places of the holy Scriptures as Rom. 109. And chap. 14.9 Abraham as we read Heb. 11.19 reioyced when he receiued his sonne Isaak after a sort from the dead infinitely much more may we reioyce in that God hath not giuen vs our Sauiour Christ raised vp after a sort but hath verily and indeede raised him vp from the dead and so giuen vs assurance that hee is a perfect Sauiour vnto vs. Thus comfortable euery way is the resurrection of our Sauiour to the faith of euery true christian euen as a most ioyous and plentifull haruest after a hard seede time of his death as was obserued before NOw let vs proceede Question What is the dutie of our thankes and obedience to God In regard thereof Answer Insomuch at the fruites and benefites of the resurrection of our Sauiour are so many and great as wee haue heard and that all the fruites and benefites of his death and sufferings are hereby more authentically and comfortably sealed vp vnto vs wee ought therefore by all good reason in speciall manner to glorifie and praise God our heauenly Father with most high and heartie thankes and with all dutie most boundenly in this behalfe It is very true In this respect may wee well reason as it is in the beginning of the 48. Psalme Great is the Lord and greatly to be praised Iustly may we say as Dauid doth What shall we render vnto the Lord for this so great a benefit And with Paul What thanks way we render answerable to this so great a mercy for our comfortable incouragement to continue and abide faithfull vnto the Lord. 1. Thess 3.8.9 Read also Rom. 7.24.25 And 1. Cor. 15.57 Question But to speake something more particularly what may we account to be our duty in this respect Seeing the comfort of the resurrection of our Sauiour
them as hypocrites NOw let vs come to the reason or rule of this first part of the sentence or iudgement of our Sauiour concerning them of his right hand Question Which is that For as our Sauiour telleth vs hee will say I was an hungred and yee gaue mee meate I thirsted and ye gaue me drinke I was a stanger and ye lodged me I was naked and ye clothed me I was sicke and yee visited me I was in prison and ye came vnto me Explication These words of our Sauiour as was said euen now conteine a reason and therein also that rule or law according to the which our Sauiour frameth his iudgement Let vs therefore consider of them in either respect And first in what sense they are to be accounted a reason of that part of the iudgement which our Sauiour hath expressed Question How is that Answer They may well be so accounted in diuers respects First in that they argue from a speciall instance of the manifold effect and working of Gods grace in the hearts of those whom hee calleth the blessed of his Father that they are so indeede and that the kingdome of God it prepared for all such Secondly in that they shew that the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and our Sauiour himselfe doe so greatly esteeme mercifulnesse and the fruits thereof toward his needie and afflicted ones when they proceede of true faith and obedience to God that hee will of his infinite mercie reward such as yeelde and practise them with no lesse reward then eternall life Thirdly in that they containe a direction to the elect children of God what way they must take and walke in to the end they may first glorifie God here in this world and then be partakers of this glory of his heauenly kingdome for euer afterward Finally in that they shew the children of God how they may comfortably assure themselues from the fruits and effects of their faith that they are true beleeuers the very elect of the Father and heires of his eternall kingdome prepared for them from the beginning Expsi In all these respects indeede well may these latter words of our Sauiour be a reason of the former part of his sentence or iudgement concerning the godly as may be proued by many testimonies of holy Scriptures But before wee come to the proofe of the particulars of this respectiue reason to the end we may carry the matter more plainely before vs wee are to consider in a few words both the kinde of the workes here mentioned by our Sauiour and also the kindes of those persons to whom they are to be performed The kinde of the workes are of true christian mercy pitie and compassion Our Sauiour mentioneth foure particulars first feeding which may well comprehend the giuing both of meate and drinke secondly lodging thirdly clothing fourthly visiting the which agreeth both to the shewing of mercie vpon the sicke and also vpon such as be in prison Some make sixe of them 1. giuing of meate 2. giuing of drinke 3. lodging 4. clothing 5. visiting of the sicke 6. visiting of prisoners But we are not to stand much vpon the number which was a thing that our Sauiour himselfe stoode not vpon For whereas there be other duties of mercie besides these we may be sure that he meant not to exclude any one of them By the rehearsall of some hee pointeth to all the rest making choise of those that are most sensible and familiar euen such as are to be most generally practised among his people The persons to whom these works of mercy are to be performed they are to speake generally all such as stand in neede of the reliefs and succours mentioned We may reduce them to three heads First those that be ordinarily in want to wit the poore which are euery where dispersed among the rest of the people of God of whom our Sauiour hath said before The poore ye shall alwaies haue with ye And that also by the very appointment of God according to the holy Prouerbe which saith The poore and the rich meete together the Lord is the maker of them all For as it is said elsewhere the Lord maketh poore and he maketh rich he maketh high and he maketh low Of these speaketh our Sauiour Luke 14.12 When thou makest a dinner or supper call not thy friends nor thy brethren nor thy kinsmen nor thy rich neighboures c but call the poore the maimed the lame and the blinde And thou shalt be blessed because they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the iust The second sort may be vnderstood of those that through persecution are driuen from house and home for Christ his gospels sake concerning which sort our Sauiour speaketh saying When they persecute you in one Citie flee to another he vnderstanding it of such as for whose escape God so prouideth that they doe not by their flight dishonour his name or discourage and daunt the weake brethren The third sort are of those to whom God denieth the opportunitie of fleeing or in their flight or otherwise be apprehended by the enemies of the Gospel and cast into prison according to that saying of our Sauiour Luke 21.12 They will deliuer you into prisons Of the which three sorts the first though they haue housen and lodging such as they are may easily suffer hunger and thirst and also want clothing for them and their children The second sort though they haue clothing and it may be for a while money in their purses yet shall they want safe comfortable lodging in their trauell if good christians doe not entertaine them yea in short time they may grow into their tatters want mony also to pay for victualls necessary for them The third sort though they cannot be lodged at home yet vnlesse the case be very straight they may be visited and relieued with such things as they want though they be shut vp in prison Finally some of euery sort are sometimes sicke and then haue need of speciall visiting and looking vnto And of all these stand the rither sort bound to haue a christian care to minister vnto them according to their necessities lest they should faint and be discouraged vnder their afflictions Yea so doe the richer sort stand bound that without the practise of these duties they shall neuer be able to stand with comfort before the Lord in the great day of his iudgement as we shall more fully see afterward when wee shall come to the other part of the sentence which containeth the condemnation of the wicked Now touching the particular considerations of the reason which our Sauiour annexeth to the present part of his iudgement for the acquiting of the godly First that the duties of compassion and mercy which he mentioneth are speciall testimonies declaring who are the blessed of God for whom the inheritance of the kingdome is prepared euen from the effects or working of Gods holy
needes be exceeding great insomuch as herein the beleeuing Christian is assured that our Sauiour himselfe and all whatsoeuer belongeth to the Church by him is his for his part as well as the portion of any other yea that it is his ioyntly together with all the members of our Sauiour Christ in this holy communion Explicatiō proofe This must needes be exceedingly comfortable indeede insomuch as our communion with our Sauiour Christ is the very roote ground of our christian regeneration and spirituall Beeing that is that we are Christians or haue any truth of christianity at all according to that saying of the Apostle 1. Cor. chap. 1.30 Ye are of God in Christ Iesus And Ephes 5.23 Christ is the head of the Church and the Sauiour of his body And verse 30. We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Moreouer wee hauing this neare communion with our Sauiour Christ wee haue also by him our communion with the whole most blessed Trinitie that is with the Father and the holy Ghost as well as with the Sonne 2. Cor. chap. 13. verse 13. And hauing our communion with our Sauiour himselfe wee haue also all things with him and by him from the Father through the holy Ghost Rom. 8.32 For seeing as the Apostle saith God spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also To this purpose call againe to minde that which was alledged 1. Cor. chap. 1.30 31. and chap. 3.21 22 23. For hence it is euident that insomuch as our Sauiour with his righteousnesse and holinesse is ours by so perfit an vnion and communion with him and among our selues it is no vaine or imaginary imputation of his righteousnesse whereby we are iustified in the sight of God But it is a very true and reall imputation which faith apprehendeth farre aboue all the exceptions which the ignorant and skornefull Papists take vp and cast forth at their pleasures to make themselues sport with euen with their owne ignominie and shame For who seeth not they onely excepted that are ignorant of the mysterie of godlinesse that to be iustified by faith in our Sauiour Christ into whom we are spiritually incorporated is a farre other manner of thing then to say that one man should liue by another mans soule The Comforts or that he should be learned by another mans learning c. For there neither is nor can be any such coniunction of any one man with another as there is betwixt our Sauiour and his whole Church and with euery particular member thereof Let the Papists therefore skorne as they list the truth will in good earnest beare it selfe out with full breast to the iustifying of it selfe against them all Thus therefore the communion of Saints is exceedingly comfortable to euery true beleeuing Christian in regard of their most blessed communion first with Christ Iesus himselfe For this is the ground of all holy communion 〈…〉 But is it not also comfortable in respect of their owne communion among themselues by the meanes of our Sauiour Christ 〈…〉 Yes for by our loue to the brethren in this communion of Saints we haue assurance that we are passed from death to life 〈…〉 So indeede doth the Apostle Iohn most comfortably affirme 1. Epist 3.14 We know saith he that we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren For there is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare chap. 4.18 And Colos ch 3.14 Loue is the bond of perfectnesse The comfort which is to be found in the communion of Saints is aptly expressed by sundry similitudes For as many stickes make the warmer fire many flowers put together make the sweeter smell the compound water is more delightfull then that which is simple c so albeit euery true Christian apart is acceptable to God hath his measure of comfort being alone by himselfe yet when many ioyne together in holy societie they are both more pleasing to God and also more ioyfull among themselves in their mutuall exercises of religion and in the practise of loue one toward another And this is that which mooued the Prophet Dauid so greatly to bewaile his exile from the Church of GOD and so earnestly to desire that he might be restored againe to the exercises of Gods publike worship among the rest of Gods people Psal 42. and 84. And note we also that the comfort of faith concerning the communion of Saints doth extend it selfe euen to those Saints which are departed this life insomuch as seeing we beleeue as they did wee shall goe to them and be where they are That is to say we shall rest in eternall happinesse with them euen with Abraham Isaak and Iacob c and likewise with all our owne right deare christian friends and acquaintance departed this life in the faith And thus it ministreth vnto vs a notable comfort against the feare of death and against all excessiue lothnesse and vnwillingnesse to leaue our friends that are liuing though their familiaritie for the present is very sweete and pretious vnto vs. For the condition and estate of the faithfull departed is farre more happy and more to be desired then our present estate and condition is Wherevpon also it followeth that we ought to prepare our hearts when we shall once haue finished our course to be desirous greatly longing after our more neare communion with the excellent seruants of God whose faith is so highly commended in the word of God and with those whose excellent vertues wee haue obserued here in this life who are now in the heauens with the Lord. But this belongeth to the Duties of the which more by and by Neither is it to be neglected that the communion of Saints yeeldeth no small comfort to the faithfull in their sufferings seeing as was obserued before euen therein also consisteth part of it so that no other thing befalleth any but they haue some other of the brethren companions with them in it The which also God turneth in singular manner to their mutuall comfort as 2. Cor. ch 1. ve 3 4.5 6 7. Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comort Who comforteth vs in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any affliction by the comfort wherewith we our selues are comforted of God For as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs so our consolation aboundeth through Christ And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and saluation which is wrought in the induring of the same sufferings which we also suffer or whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and saluation And our hope is stedfast concerning you in as much as we know that as ye are partakers of the sufferings so shall ye be also of the consolation Read likewise Ephes 3.13
respects And the rather also because the couenant of this forgiuenes of sinnes is an euerlasting couenant Ier 32 40 41. Which he hath confirmed by oath and sealed with the blood of his Sonne the which is therefore called the blood of the euerlasting couenant Heb 9.22.26 ch 13 verse 20. Of the which blood it is further said in this respect that it speaketh better things then the blood of Abel which cried for vengeance against Caine ch 12.24 Gen 4 10. Thus we see touching the first part of the vse of this Article that the cōfort of it is exceeding great to all true beleeuers euen to so many as haue grace to lay hold of this great mercy of God to the assuring of themselues of the forgiuenes of their sinnes NOw let vs come to the second part of the vse of it which concerneth the obedience of faith Question Which therefore are the duties which the comfort of faith in the forgiuenes of sinnes challengeth at the hands of all those to whom they are forgiuen They are these which followe Answer First an humble acknowledgement of our selues to be grieuous sinners ioyned with godly sorrowe for them and earnest praier for the forgiuenes of them all Secondly most earnest and heartie thankefulnes to God for his so infinite and vnspeakable mercie as sheweth it selfe most clearly in the forgiuenes of our most hainous and infinite sinnes Thirdly exceeding loue toward the Lord God our heauenly Father according to the greatnes of his mercy by how many the more and the greater sinnes he doth forgiue vs. Fourthly a reuerend care not to offend him any more as heretofore we haue done yea rather a most earnest studie and desire to please him better in all things then yet we haue done Fiftly a ready and tender affection of mercifulnes to forgiue one another euen as God our heauenly Father in and for our Sauiours sake hath forgiuen vs. Finally earnest resistance of all feares and doubts touching Gods faithfulnes in forgiuing the sinnes of our selues or of any other that doe walke in these duties Explicatiō proofe Concerning the first branch of this answer to wit our acknowledging of our selues to be grieuous sinners that it ought to be so the truth of the assertion it self that we are so may be a sufficient warrant vnto vs. For the proofe of which assertiō that we are grieuous sinners read 1. Kings 8 46. Eccl 7.22 There is no man that sinneth not No not the regenerate as their own cōfessiōs plainly shew Paule Rom 7.14 c. Iames ch 3 2. Iohn 1. Ep ch 1.8.9.10 Read also Psal 19.12 and 130.3 Prouerbs ch 20.9 And though there are degrees of sinners as well as of sins yet euery one for his own part ought to account himselfe among the chiefe as Paule did 1. Tim 1. Daniel ch 9. Yea and though it were so that a man did not know any thing of speciall offence by himselfe yet seeing our Sauiour who knoweth vs all better then wee doe our selues teacheth vs all to pray for forgiuenes it ought to be a sufficient proofe vnto vs that we are great sinners and that we doe stand in great need of forgiuenes Neither is it in vaine as was touched before that this Article of the forgiuenes of sins is lincked with that other of the cōmuniō of Saints insomuch as not onely in most holy things but also in our most holy assembling of our selues and accompanying together we doe many waies offend And that not at our owne Tables alone which made holy Iob to feare his children so much as hee did and to be so carefull as he was to sanctifie them by holy exercises of religion while they feasted one another lest they should forget themselues and speake any thing to the dishonour of the name of God cha 1 5 but also euen in the Lords house and at his most holy Table Which was the cause why God did appoint Aaron in the time of the lawe to sacrifice for the iniquitie euen of the holy offerings of the children of Israel Exod 28.38 and why wee are so earnestly admonished to examine our selues when wee come to the Table of the Lord c. Wherefore let vs alwaies and in all things well remember that we are sinners and that God could easily lay greater sinnes to our charge then we are ware of and accordingly let vs without all hypocrisie acknowledge in his sight that wee are more grieuous and miserable sinners then we are priuy vnto Let vs I say do it without hypocrisie for else we should euen herein make our selues more abominable sinners then in any thing beside Luke 16 15. Mat 23. Neither could the Article of forgiuenes of sinnes be any Article of faith at all vnto vs for our comfort vnlesse we doe acknowledge our selues to be sinners and vnlesse we see iust cause why wee should be sorie for them and pray earnestly alwaies for the forgiuenes of them according to the instruction of our Sauiour Mat 6 12. and according to the example and instruction of the Prophet Dauid Ps 32 5 6. and Ps 25 7. and Ps 51. But here an obiection may be made how it may stand with faith to pray still for foriguenes of sinnes seeing it is an Article of faith to beleeue that they are forgiuen at the least those sinnes which haue already beene committed and for the forgiuenes whereof faithfull praier hath beene already made Question What is to be said to this Answer First this Article of the forgiuenes of sinnes presupposeth true repentance to be in euery one that hath any true faith to beleeue that his sinnes are forgiuen Neither can it stand with any reason that faith should disanull or any way preiudice prayer which God hath appointed to be the onely subordinate messenger and Spokes-man as it were of faith for the intreatie of the forgiuenes of sinnes through the mediation of our Sauiour Christ Secondly no man doth so firmely beleeue the forgiuenes of former sinnes by former praiers but by the renewing of his praiers for the forgiuenes of the same he may bee better assured against all temptations of feares and doubtings that they are verily forgiuen vnto him Thirdly faith by exercising of it selfe in prayer to the further strengthening of it selfe touching the forgiuenes of old sins it doth therewithall make it selfe both more watchfull against new sinnes that they be not wilfully committed and also more comfortable in the assurance of the forgiuenes of those our sinnes of infirmitie and weakenes which we cease not to commit day after day Finally God doth at once and for euer after forgiue all the sinnes of true beleeuers but yet vpon this condition that they continue in prayer for the forgiuenes of them and for daily profiting in godly sorow and repentance for the same so long as they haue a day yea an houre to liue in this sinfull world Explication and proofe It is very true For these are
God doth certainly belong according to that Rom 2 7. God will giue eternall life to them that by continuance in wel-dooing seeke glory and honour and immortalitie But we must vnderstand that he wil giue it of free grace and that for our Sauiour Christ his sake and not for any merit of their wel-dooing They that are true members of the Church militant heere on earth shall bee members of the Church triumphant in heauen They that haue a true enterance and so abide in the kingdome of grace they shall both enter and also abide for euer in the kingdome of glory But of this some thing hath beene saide in the Article of the Church and more is to bee saide in the duties of this Article And therefore here wee ende concerning the Promise THe vse for comforf followeth next The Comforts Question What may that be in respect of this Article Answer The comfort of faith in respect of this Article is euery way comfortable yea it is euen the comfort of all comforts that God hath appointed vs to immortalitie and glory It is as one may say the generall sealing vp The Comforts and ratifying of the whole comfort of the Gospel to all true beleeuers Quest It is true that you say But can you shewe it to be so by any particulars Ans First of all this Article bringeth singular cōfort with it in that as it containeth the greatest benefite euen that in the fruition whereof all other are perfitted vnto vs so it is most gratiously assured vnto vs by the whole blessed Trinitie as that which is on our behalfe the finall end why our Sauiour Christ tooke our humane nature and that in the same he wrought and suffered all that he did both worke and also suffer for vs. Secondly because we enioy the beginning and as it were the first fruites of the comfort of euerlasting life here in this world through the gratious presence and working of the holy Ghost in our hearts Thirdly because the custodie of this most precious and excellent benefite is more sure and safe in the hand of God for vs then if it were in our owne keeping Fourthly because this euerlasting life shall put a blessed end to all discomfort and remoue all causes and occasions thereof for euer Finally because that comfort which it shall bring with it is not onely the greatest comfort containing all causes of comfort and reioycing in it but also because in the greatnes and perfection thereof it shal continue world without end Explicatiō proofe That this benefite is the greatest and euen the perfitting of all other the benefits of God vnto vs it is euident in that according to the last part of the first branch it is the chiefe ende on our behalfe wherefore our Sauiour Christ tooke our nature c. as hath beene declared before Yea it is euen of it selfe euident that this benefite is the very perfiting of all the rest in such sort that all particular comforts flowe as it were into this great Sea of all comfort And that the comfort of it is and may iustly be the greater vnto vs in that it is most gratiously assured vnto vs by the whole blessed Trinitie we cannot but conceiue from that which we read 1. Iohn 5.4.5.6.7.8 c. 13. if wee shall aduisedly ponder and weigh the same And yet more particularly saith our Sauiour to the woman of Samaria Iohn 4.10 If thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith vnto thee Giue me drinke thou wouldest haue asked of him and he would haue giuen thee water of life And verse 14. Whosoeuer drinketh of the water that I shall giue him shall neuer be more a thirst but the water which I will giue him shall bee in him a well of water springing vp to euerlasting life And chap 6.35 I am the bread of life And againe in the same chapter yea againe and againe verses 40.47.48.50.51 And chap 17. ● The Father saith our Sauiour hath giuen the Sonne power ouer all flesh that hee should giue eternal life to al them that he hath giuen vnto him Yea our Sauiour himselfe is in this respect called the Father of eternitie that is the author and giuer of eternitie to his Church from the Father Isai 9.6 And 1. Iohn chap 1. verse 1. he is called The word of life as hauing the fountaine of euerlasting life in himselfe in that he is God in the flesh Iohn 1.1 c. And ch 14.6 I saith hee himselfe am the way the truth and the life For the proofe of the second branch read Iohn 5.24 Verily verily saith our Sauiour I say vnto you He that heareth my word and beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation And chap 6.54.55.56 Whosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day For my flesh is meate indeede and my blood is drinke indeede c. And chap 10. verse 10. I am come that my sheepe might haue life and haue it in aboundance And verse 28. I doe giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hands c. And Luke 10.24 Marie hath chosen the good part which shall not be taken from her Here call againe to minde 1. Iohn 3 14. And Rom 8.6 Moreouer Philip 3.20 Our conuersation saith the Apostle Paule is in heauen And 2. Peter 1.11 By adding of vertue to vertue saith the Apostle Peter an entrance into the euerlasting kingdome of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ is aboundantly ministred vnto vs. And Act 11.17.18 Forasmuch as God gaue them that is the Gentiles a like gift as he did vnto vs saith the same Apostle when we beleeued in the Lord Iesus Christ who was I that I could let God When they that is the rest of the Apostles heard these things they held their peace as Saint Luke writeth and glorified God saying Then hath God also granted to the Gentiles repentance vnto life Now for the proofe of the third branch beside these testimonies euen now rehearsed Iohn 10 28. and Luke 10 42. read also 1. Pet 1 3 4 5. c. Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who according to his aboundant mercie hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead To an inheritance immortal and vndefiled and which fadeth not away reserued in heauen for ye who are kept by the power of God phrouroumenous kept as by a garison of souldiers through faith vnto saluation which is prepared to be shewed at the last time That is to say as touching the perfection of it c. Read also 2 Tim 2 19. The foundation of God remaineth sure c. And Rom 2 29. The gifts and calling of God are without repentance And 1 Cor 1 8 9. God will confirme yee vnto the ende
in such places where the faithfull and diligent preaching of Gods word the chiefe preseruatiue against this leauen of false doctrine is most wanting So that for some supplie of so great a defect what may wee thinke to be accounted of the bookes of one impression though of more then a thousand yea though the same booke should be imprinted thousand after thousand manie a time But to this it may be saide that not manie thousands among many millions of people are so well minded as to be studious in reading of good and godlie bookes And in verie deede it cannot bee denyed but that it is too true Neuerthelesse this wee may as truely answere that God hath his thousands and seuen thousands in his Israel better minded then anie one or manie of vs are priuie vnto Now therefore good Christian brethren what remaineth but onely this that we be wise and carefull to vse all such good helpes as God vouchsafeth to best 〈◊〉 vpon vs in their due time and place so farre as wee shall finde them to be profitable vnto vs but the chiefe helpes alwayes with greatest care and diligence ●his great grace of Christian wisedome and discretion with all other nece●●●rie for vs our good God and most gratious and mercifull Father graunt vnto vs all both Preachers Hearers Writers and Readers working them in vs by his most holie Spirit through his rich mercie in the Lord Iesus To whom with the Father and the holie Ghost three most glorious diuine and distinct Persons one true and euerliuing God almightie and in all things all-sufficient be all praise honour and glorie nowe and for euer Amen London October 1606. Yours in the Lord with the best dutie and seruice that hee is able most willing Robert Allen. Page 5. line 3. of this Preface For beeing I pray read to be The rest of the Errata through the whole are noted at the ende of the last Booke yet so as not all there mentioned are to be found in euery Booke THe Christian Reader ●ath in the Heades or chapters following the contents of this first book of The Doctrine of the Gospel or second part of the Treasurie of Catechisme set before him in a short viewe Yet so as hee may vnderstand that vnder the heades mentioned there are many particulars and much varietie of matter both for instruction confirmation and comfort of faith and also for duties of obedience deducted from the same The which would be ouerlong and the lesse necessarie to be set down here because the gene●all being found according to the present direction the particulars will readily offer themselues THE GENERAL CONTENTS of the first ●ooke WHat the Gospel i● pag. 1 2 3. How the Gospel diff●reth from the Lawe pages 4. 5. ● How the Law accor●eth with the Gospel pag. 7 8 9. Who are fi● hearers of the Gospel pag. 10. The Gospel exalteth those or●●● whom the law humbleth pag. 11. Faith m●st necess●rie to saluation pag 12. 13. Faith most pleasing to God And why pag 14. What Faith is pag 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. God iustifieth sinners pag. 21. What Iustification is pag. 22. 23. c to the 33. pag. What Saluation is pag. 33 34 where the title of the page 〈◊〉 wrong Iustification and saluation onely by Christ pag. 3● 36 3● 8. What Repentance is pag 〈◊〉 4● c. to the. pag. 45. The ●●ac●● of Re●entance pag. 46 c. to 71. The ●●●●rence betwixt Re●eneration and Repentance 72. The Doct●●ne of the Gospel as persed through the holy Scriptures 73. A briefe summe of the Doctrine of the Gospel pag. 74 75. A generall diuision of the Articles of the Faith or Beliefe 76. The Ground of the Article pag. 77 78. Beliefe in o●e onely God The Meaning of it pag. 79. 80. c. to the 87. In the which page is a large discourse shewing what manner of one God is The Promi●e belong●ng to this Article pag. 87. Where the tit●e of the page faileth It belongeth to euery Christian. pag. 88 89. 90. The Comforts and benefites of it pag ●1 to 96. The Duties arising from the comforts pag 97 c to the 109 pag. The Danger of not beleeuing in one onely God 1●● 100. Beliefe in one onely God three distinct Persons Beliefe in God the Father The Ground and meaning of it pag. 107. c. to the 116. The Promise pag. 117. The Duties In the same pag. and the next The Danger of not beleeuing this Article pag. 119. The Ground of it pag. 120. 121. 122. 123. The Meaning of it pag. 124. The Promise pag. 125. The Comforts pag. 126 127. 128. The Duties in the same pag. and 129. 130. The Danger of not beleeuing pag. 131. B●●●●fe in God the Father Almightie The Ground and meaning of it pag. 132. 133. The Promise pag. 134. The Comforts in the same page and 135. The Duties pag 136. 137. The Danger of not beleeuing pag. 138. B●●●fe in God the Father maker of heauen and earth The Ground and meaning of it pag. 139. 140 c. to the 169. In a large discourse where the wh●● Historie of the creation is declared The Promise be ●n●ing●● it pag. 169. The Com●●● beg●●●ing in the same page are continued to the. page 173. The D●●●a●● 〈◊〉 pag 174 175 c. to the 183. The dan●er of ●ot ●e●e 〈◊〉 th●● Article pag. 183. 184. The 〈…〉 c to the 207. pag. By a large inquirie an●w●●●le to the ●ar●e 〈…〉 all creatures Persons causes and actions The Promi●e ●et 〈…〉 prouident Father for his children is set down page 〈…〉 ●1 1● ●● ●3 Be●●●e in the Fatherly Prouidence of God The C●m●or● contained in th●●e promises are prosecuted from the 214. pag. to the 248. 〈…〉 yet not larger then the argument it selfe requireth The 〈…〉 which those comforts call for doe followe in the same pag. and pag ● 9. 250 25● 252. 25. to 256. The Danger 〈◊〉 not beleeuing in Gods Fatherly Prouidence 256. 257. THE DOCTRINE OF THE GOSPEL HAuing through the goodnes of God finished the first part of our Treasury of Christian Catechisme or instruction concerning the morall Lawe of God let vs trusting in the same his diuine goodnesse and mercy vse as good diligence as we can in like manner of familiar instruction to enquire into the Doctrine of the Gospell Yea let vs search after it as after the most rich and precious part of our spirituall treasure according to the holy testimony and profession of the Apostle Paul Philip. 3 8 9 Doubtlesse I thinke all things but losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus my Lord for whom I haue counted all things losse and do iudge them to be d●ngue that I might winne Christ And that I might be found in him that is not hauing my owne righteousnesse which is of the lawe but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith c.
hearts and reynes And Ierem 11.20 and chap 17.10 I the Lord searche the heart and trie the reynes Acts. 15.8 God which knoweth the hearts and 1. Thess 2.4 Iudge of the whole world Gen 18.25 Shall not the iudge of all the world doe right saith Abraham to the Lord. Read also Iob. chap 34.10 c. 19. He iudgeth without respect of persons Deut 10.17.18 Acts 10.34 Rom 2.11 And in many other places The iudge who maketh lowe who also maketh high Psalm 75.7 Lorde of Hostes Psalm 46.7 The Lorde of Hostes is with vs. And Psalm 82. thrise in that Psal And Ps 84. fower times and Psa 89.8 O Lord God of Hostes who is like vnto thee which art a mightie Lorde and the truth is about thee 32.18 Amos 4.13 The Lord of Hostes is his name And note also that the works of God not onely of Creation of the ordina●ie course of Gouernment but also his extraordinarie and wondrous works partly such as he worketh by his own immediate hand partly such as he worketh by the ministerie of his seruants both for his people and against the wicked they are so manie declarations of his diuine wisedome mercie iustice c. According to that Psal 9.16 The Lord is knowne by executing iudgement Selah A point worthie singular obseruation And in respect of his mercie according to that Psal 68.20 This is our God euen the God that saueth vs. c. Question NOwe which are the titles of God in a more particular respect of the degrees of his people in humane societie Answere He is in this respect called the most high excellent he that inhabiteth Eternitie whose name is the Holie one Isai 57.15 Ps 83.18 The mosthigh ouer the whole Earth Ps 97.9 And 1. Tim 1.17 The King euerlasting immortall God onely wise And ch 6.15.16 He that is blessed prince onely the King of Kings Lord of Lords who only hath immortalitie dwelleth in the light that none cā attain vnto whō neuer man saw neither cā see vnto whō be honor power euerlasting Amē Explication proofe This title of GOD Gneljon the most high is often in the Psalms namelie in these 7.9 18.21.46.47.50.56.57.73.77.78.82.83.87 91.92.107 Read also 1. Chron 29.11.12.13 and Psal 24.7.8.9.10 The king of glorie that is the most glorious King And 82.1 God standeth in the assemblie of Gods For Iudges magistrates assembled are the honourable assemblies which God himselfe hath called to the seate of iustice and hee iudgeth among Goddes that is among the same Iudges magistrates gathered togither in his name either ratifying euery right sentence which they giue or reprouing the contrarie as it followeth in the same Psalme For all Iudgement is properlie the Lords it is his soueraigne prerogatiue belonging as it were to his Crowne and Dignitie Deu 1.17 2. chro 19.6.9.10.11 Read also Eccles ch 5.7 If in a Countrie thou seest the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of iudgment iustice be not astonied at the matter For he that is higher then the high regaraeth yea he that is most high aboue them Where the word Gebhohim vsed in the plurall nūber noteth the most high excellencie of God And that also as some interpret it in respect of the most high misterie of the holy Trinitie In Ezra Nehē God is diuers times called the God of heauen Thus we see what manner of one God is in comparison of those that bee in higher place aboue the rest Though they be high yea higher powers as Ro 13.1 yet God onely is the most high Wheras these are mortall Ps 146.3.4 Isa 51.12 The Lord God is immortall Though they dwell in Princely Palaces yet their dwelling places are nothing cōparable to the habitation of his heauenly glorie They are many so their gouernment is a parted gouernmēt but God is one hath the whole soueraigntie entierly vnited in himselfe Ps 47.6.7.8.9 God is called also oftentimes in the holy Scriptures Adonai the chief Lord authoriser supporter of all Lordship and Gouernment And therfore the title is in a speciall forme of writing attributed to God as some obserue Adonai not Adon or Adoni as it is applied to mē And in this respect of his soueraignty he is called Adonei Adonim Ps 136.3 the Lord of Lords that is the Lord of all that haue gouernment whether domestical eccl or ciuill And Mal 1.6 The plural nūber for the singular in the same sense twise in the same verse Hence or according to this the word Heden is vsed for basis or sustentaculum the foundation of a thing Question NOwe further which are the Titles of God which shewe what manner of one God is in respect of those of inferiour estate and low degree who are humbled in themselues c Answer Hee is the Father of Mercies the God of all consolation and comfort 2. Corinth 1.1.3.4 and chapt 7 6. The God that comforteth the abiecte Hee is the Father of the Fatherles and iudge of the Widowes Psalm 68.5 and Psalm 113.5 who is like vnto the Lord our God that hath his dwelling on high who abaseth himselfe to behold things in the heauens and in the earth Hee raiseth the needie out of the dust and lifteth vp the poore out of the dung c. And Psalm 146.7 He executeth iustice for the oppressed he giueth bread to the hungry He looseth the prisoners c. It followeth that you shew which those kind of titles are which declare what manner of one our God is against the wicked whether Princes or any other Which may they be Question Answere He ouerthroweth the way of the wicked as it followeth in the same 146 Psalm He is terrible to the Kings of the earth Psal 76 12. Yea generally it is a fearefull thing for any contēptuous sinner to fall into the hands of the liuing God For vengeance belongeth to the Lord and he will recompence Heb 10 30 30 31. and Rom 12 19 according as Psal 94 He is expresly called God the auenger To this purpose we may call to mind againe That God iudgeth without respect of persons Explicatiō proofe For seeing he will not haue his magistrates to respect the poore in any euill cause Exod 23 3 and Leuit 19 15 Much lesse will God himselfe deale partially Question NOw in the last place what are those titles of God which doe concerne his Church and that speciall fauour which he beareth to it and to euerie true member thereof Answere The Lord God of the Hebrewes and the God of Abraham Isaak and Iaacob or Israel in many places of the holy Prophets The holy one Iob. cha 6.10 The holy one of Israel Isai cha 6.3 and 41.14 and cha 43.15 and Luke cha 1.49 Holy is his name The hope of Israel Ierem. 14.8 and Psal 46.1 and 62.8 yea the hope of all the ends of the earth Psal 65.5 The God both of Iew and Gentile Rom 3.29
Redeemer Deliuerer and Sauiour of his people as he is often called and as he himselfe calleth himselfe in the writings of the Prophets and euery where else in the holy Scriptures Explicatiō proofe We shall finde it to be true for a good taste if we doe call to minde the testimonies alledged before out of Isaiah to proue that there is but one onely God who there is called the onely Sauiour And likewise The God of our saluation Psal 68.19.20 and Psal 25.5 and 27.9 Moreouer Isaiah chap 41.14 The Lord calleth himselfe the redeemer and the holy one of Israel And chap. 44.6 and chap 47.4 and chap 48.17 and chap 49.7 and chap 59.20 I know that my redeemer liueth saith Iob chap 19.25 This redeemer as well writeth F Iun is the father in the sonne by the spirit And to this end and purpose is the Lord also called the God who onely worketh wonders for the deliuerance and safety of his people Psal 77 14 and Psal 72 18 and 136 4. And Dauid for his part calleth God his deliuerer out of all his trouble and from all his enemies 2 Sam 4 9. and Psal 18 48. And otherwhere a present helpe in time of neede c. And againe Great are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth them out of all He is the King of Saints Reuel chap 15 3. In all which respects he is called The blessed one that is he that is for his incomparable goodnes to be blessed and praised aboue all yea euen the wicked being Iudges Marke chap 14 61. And thus we haue holpen our selues with some distinction of the manifold titles of God that from thence we might learne what manner a one our God is in whom onely wee are to beleeue There are some places of Scripture wherein the principall of these titles are purposedly set downe together It were therefore to good purpose that you doe rehearse some one or two of them Question Which may they be Answere In the 6 and 7 verses of the 34 of Exodus God himselfe proclaimeth his owne diuine name and nature in these words The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gratious slow to anger and aboundant in goodnes and truth reseruing mercie for thousands forgiuing iniquitie transgression and sinne but not making the wicked innocent visiting the iniquitie of the fathers vpon the children and vpon childrens children to the third and fourth generation The same almost word for word is repeated by Moses Numb 14.18 which he maketh the ground of that his prayer whereby he intreated and obteined mercy for the people who had greeuously prouoked the Lord to anger against them by their infidelitie Reade also Deut. 10.17.18 and Psal 103.7.8 c. The like is in many other places The which we must not think tedious to search out and to obserue more diligently from time to time For when men of this world are exquisite in seeking out and blazing and setting forth the titles and stiles of earthly Princes shall not the seruants of God much rather vse all holy diligence to seeke and enquire after the knowledge of the excellency of God what his diuine stile is infinitely exceeding all the multiplied titles that can be attributed to all the Princes of the world Yes the rather are we to vse al diligēce herein for the reproofe of the sottish rudenes of a number who notwithstanding they are carefull to obserue the titles of men they wil not wholie and right out as some vse to speake or with any reuerence vtter one title of God He is not God Almightie in the mouthes of many but God a might as if they might bee haile-fellow well met with him Here therefore we will by the grace of God staie yet a little longer in this point For seeing it hath pleased God to expresse his owne nature not only simply and entierly in it selfe but also in way of comparison and that partly negatiuely and by an infinite inequalitie partly by similitudes in a certaine proportion of resemblance for a further helpe of our weaknes we wil also cōsider of these things And first of this that by an infinit disparagement as it were the Lord expresseth himselfe after this sort that he is such a one as none may be compared or matched with him As Psal 89.6 Who is equall to the Lord in the heauens and who is like the Lord among the sonnes of the Gods that is of the most mightie vpon the earth Wherevnto we may make that for a true answere which we reade Psal 97.9 The Lord is most high aboue all the earth and much exalted aboue all gods that is aboue all the Angels of heauen And againe Psal 86.8 Among the Gods that is to say among any of those to whom the name of God is giuen whether to Angels or men of magistracy and power aboue the rest or to false Gods such as are so onely by Idolatrous conceit there is none like thee ô Lord and there is none that can do like thy workes And Psal 135.5.6 I know that the Lord is great and that our Lord is aboue all Gods Whatsoeuer pleased the Lord that did he in heauen earth in the sea and in all depthes Herein therefore the Prophet Isaiah is earnest cha 40.18 To whom then will ye liken God or what similitude will ye set vp vnto him And v. 25. To whom now will ye liken me that I should be like him saith the holy one And Exo chap. 1● 11 Who is like vnto thee ô Lord among the gods who is like thee so glorious in holines fearefull in praises doing wonders c And Deu 32.31 Their God is not as our God euen our enemies being iudges And also Psal 115.3 c. Our God is in heauen he doth whatsoeuer he will Their Idols are siluer and gold euen the work of mens hands They haue a mouth and speake not c. And Ier. 10.16 The portion of Iaacob is not like them for he is the maker of all things and Israel is the rodde of his inheritance The Lord of hostes is his name And Gal 4 8. The gods of the heathen are not gods by nature as our God is to wit of a most spirituall diuine nature infinite and eternall as hath bene declared before To this kinde of expressing the Lord in way of comparison negatiuely belongeth that which is written Numbers 23.19 God is not as man that hee should lye neither as the sonne of man that hee should repent Likewise 1. Samuel 15.29 The strength of Israel will not lye nor repent for hee is not man that hee should repent Moreouer Hosh Chap. 11.9 I am God and not man the holy one in the midst of thee c. And Rom 3.4 Let God be true and euery man a lyar As though he should say howsoeuer man is found light and inconstant yet this is a principle which ought to be aboue all exception that God is alwaies and in all things
blessing is in it so wil I doe for my seruāts sakes that I may not destroy them whole As though hee should say were it not for my seruants sake Israel should bee whole destroied For so it followeth in the next verse in these wordes But I wil bring a seede out of Iaakob out of Iuda that shall inherit my mountaine mine elect shall inherit it and my seruants shall dwell there And Sharon shall be a sheepfold c. And verse 13. Thus saith the Lord God behold my seruants shall reioyce and yee shall be ashamed c. Read also Mal●ch 3 16 17 18. The Queene of Sheba pronounced Salo seruāts to be happy men in that they serued so wise a King 1. Kin. 10 8. but more happy was Salomon himselfe in that hee was the seruant of the most wise God Herein also did king Dauid his father reioyce as Ps 119 124 125. Deale with thy seruant according to thy mercy and teach me thy statutes I am thy seruant grant me vnderstanding that I may knowe thy testimonies Finally that Gods sentence shall stand on the behalfe of his seruants so as none shall be able to reuerse it it may be perceiued from that we read Isay ch 41 1 c. Keepe silence before me c. And Micah 7 16. The nations shall see and be confounded for all their power They shall lay their hands vpon their mouth c. And Habbak 2 20. When the Lord chief Iustice of a nation giueth sentence none no not of the bench replieth much lesse shall any dare reply when the Lord of Lordes the chiefe Iustice of all the world shall pronounce his sentence and iudgement Read Isay 52 7 8 9. and Rom. 8 31 32 33 34. Question WHat is the comfort of this that the Lord our God is infinite in wisedome and that according as he hath made all things in wisedome as Ier. 1● 12 and Ps 104 24. Lord how manifold are thy workes in wisdome hast thou made them all so doth he in like perfection of his diuine wisdome order and gouerne them all What I say is the comfort of this Answere It is very comfortable to vs in that hereby we are assured that there is no wisdome nor vnderstanding nor counsell which can possibly preuaile against the Lord. And likewise it is no small comfort to so many as are wise in the Lord and according to the instructions of his holy word that they may thereby assure themselues that they are truly wise and of the truth as the Apostle Iohn writeth 1. Ep. chap. 3 and verse 19. And that no craft or subtiltie of their aduersaries shall finally preuaile against them no more then they can preuaile against God himselfe Expiratiō proofe It is true as it is expresly testified Pro. 21 30 Read also Ier. 8 9 ch 9 23 24. Iob. 5 12 13. Luk. 1 51 1. Cor. 3 19 20. Read also Psal 23.4 The Lord is my shepheard c. Yea though I should goe through the shadow of death I will feare no euill for thou art with me thy rod and thy staffe they comfort me Question Now what is the cōfort of this that the Lord our God is likewise not onely long suffering of great patience toward vs when we offend him but also infinite in all goodnes and mercy according to his owne most free grace and purpose Psal 145 8 9. Answere It cannot but be exceeding comfortable if we consider that no multitude or greatnes of sinne nor any indignitie vnworthines of person can hinder the most free course and as it were the streame of Gods mercy from those that doe truly seeke mercy and forgiuenes at his hands Ex●licatiō and proofe Likewise it cannot be but exceedingly comfortable to consider that the mercy of our God yea that the bountifulnes of his mercy is greater then all our wants and miseries can be and that he will in his due time aboundantly succour and relieue vs in and against them all This infinite goodnes and mercy of God is most comfortably described and testified in the 103. Psal verses 8 9 10 c. Read also Ier. 31 10 11 12 13 c. and Mich. 7 18 19 20 and Ezech. 16 1 2 3 4 5 6 c. God is so exceeding in mercy that the wickednes of the wicked cannot altogether alienate and restraine his mercy from them Act 14 17. Much rather then will he be mercifull to his children that feare him Isay 30.18 19 c. chap. 49 15. c. 1. Tim. 4.10 Yea God preserueth bruite beastes much more will he preserue men specially his owne elect children Psal 36.6 and 147 9. and that also most freely euen for his owne sake Isay 43 25. Rom. 9 15. Let vs proceede to the rest Question What is the comfort of this that the Lord our God is perfectly righteous Answere That he wil in his good time right all iniuries and wrongs done to his faithfull seruants and that he will certaine●y fulfill both all his promises towards his seruants and also all his threatenings against the wicked Explication and proofe For a proofe of this comfort arysing from the most perfect and incorrupt righteousnes of God Read Ecclse 5. verse 7. If in a countrie thou seest the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of iudgement and iustice be not astonished at the matter ●or he that is higher then they that be high regardeth yea euen he that is the most high aboue them all And further for the proofe of the rest of this answere read 2. Thes 1 6 7. and Heb. 6 1● Rom ● 25 26 and Psal 119. verses 137 138. Righteous art thou ô Lord and iust are thy iudgements Thou hast commanded thy Testimonies which are exceeding righteous and faithfull And Psal 33 5. The Lord loueth righteousnes and iudgement And Psal 3● ●● The Lord loueth iudgement and forsaketh not his Saints they shall be preserued for euermore c. And Psal 45 7. Thou louest righteousnes and hatest wickednes Question SHewe therefore now furthermore what the comfort of this is that the Lord ●ur God is most ●aithfull and true immutable and vnchangeable in all his promises as Psal 89 28 c. and 105.8 and 110.4 and 146.6 Rom. 11 29. Numb 22 1● Answere Nothing can bee more comfortable then the assurance of Gods euerlasting mercy and fauour to our eternall happines and saluation Explication and proofe It is vndoubtedly true The fauour of God is better then life as Psal 63 3. Thy louing kindnes is better then life therefore saith the holy Prophet shall my lips praise thee And we may all of vs iustly say as we read Psal 60 6 God hath spoken in his holines therefore I will reioyce And againe Psal 56 10. I will reioyce in God because of his word c. And Psal 119 162. I reioyce at thy word as one that findeth a great spoile Yet one thing more and so an end
of God externallie or ad extra as they say the Father by the Sonne and both the Father and the Sonne by the holy Ghost and the holy Ghost from them both whether in the workes of the common creation and gouernement of them all or more speciallie in the speciall worke of the redemption of the elect children of God this knowledge from outward effectes declared from the holy Scriptures and testified by the holy Ghost inlightening and certifying our mindes and consciences thereof it is through the grace of God so familiar and so full of comfort that the more wee vnderstand and taste it the which no doubt wee may doe with dailie increase so long as wee liue the more may wee with holie reuerence and boldenesse euen to the same ende looke into it accord●ng to that Ephes 2.18 By him that is by the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ we haue an entrāce vnto the Father by one Spirit And chapt 3.12 c. By faith in him wee haue boldnesse and entrance with confidence Read all that followeth to the ende of the Chapter But of the comforts more afterward Question In the meane season that we may proceed and make all as plaine as we can What meane you by a Persone of the blessed TRINITIE in the one onely most holie and Diuine nature of God Answere A Persone in the Diuine nature is an eternall Subsistence the which hauing the whole Deitie or Godhead as it were in common or rather in a most holie Communion the one equallie as well as the other it is neuerthelesse distinct from either of the other in way of a supernaturall relation and according to the Diuine manner or order of their Beeing and working onely by one proprietie which it hath incommunicable to either of the other Question Howe is that Answere The FATHER who is the first Person in the holie Trinitie though not the first in time or dignitie but onely in the order and manner of Beeing as was answered euen now hee hath eternallie and without all beginning begotten the Sonne and so hath both taken to himselfe and also communicated to the Sonne the whole nature or Essence of the Deitie The SONNE of GOD is the second Persone of the same most holie and blessed TRINITIE eternallie and without all beginning begotten of the Father and so hath eternallie receiued the whole Deitie or Essence of the Godhead from the Father The HOLY GHOST is the third Person eternallie proceeding both from the Father and also from the Sonne and so hath the whole essence of one and the same DEITIE eternallie and coequallie communicated to him from them both Explicatiō proofe This is indeed the true and onely distinction of the Persones in the one onely and vndeuided Nature or essence of God For as touching the Deitie or Godhead it selfe it neither begetteth nor is begotten neither yet proceedeth The distinction therefore by the proprieties rehearsed it doth onely concerne the Persons of the Diuine Nature And although the Diuine nature belongeth equallie as hath bene obserued to euery one of the Persones For the Father is God the Sonne is God and the holy Ghost is God not three Gods but one onely God one in nature one in wisedome one in power one in will one in glorie for the Father is the Father of glorie Ephes 1.17 the Sonne the Lord of glorie 1. Cor 2.8 Iohn 1 14. and ch 12 41. and ch 17.5 and Heb 1. ● Iam 2.1 and 2. Pet. 1.17 Matt 16.27 cha 25.31 the holie Ghost the Spirit of glorie 1. Pet 4.14 and 2. Cor 3.17.18 so that the Father who is the God of glorie Act 7.2 and giueth his glorie to no other Isaia 48.11 Yet hee doth after a sorte giue it to the Sonne and to the holy Ghost that is he is well pleased that they should haue it because they are one with him howesoeuer no one Person can be any of the other The Father cannot be the Sonne or the holy Ghost the Sonne cannot be the holy Ghost or the Father neither can the holy Ghost be either the Father or the Sonne as was said before But of this that the Father is verie true God and consequently eternall and euerliuing infinite in wisdome power mercie iustice c and that the Sonne is so also and likewise the holy Ghost wee shall by the grace of God make it plaine in the handeling of the seuerall Articles of our beliefe the which doe concerne euery one of them In the meane while let vs make some further search after those grounds of holie Scripture which God of his infinit goodnes and mercie hath vouchsafed vs for our assured direction and warrant touching the things allreadie affirmed by vs. Question ANd first what ground and warrant can you alledge to prooue that our God in whom wee beleeue beeing one onely in Nature is neuerthelesse three distinct Persons Answere In the 5. chap of the first epist of the Apostle Iohn verse 7. There are three saith the holie Apostle which beare recorde in heauen the Father the Worde and the holy Ghost and these three are one And in the Gospell according to the same Apostle chapt 10.30 I and my Father saith our Sauiour himselfe are one Explicatiō proofe Read also cha 17.21.22 wher our Sauiour Christ prayeth for all true beleeuers that they may be one as hee and the Father is one the Father in him and he in the Father c. And as the Father the Sonne is one so is the holy Ghost one with and in them both according to the first testimonie alledged in the answere out of the 3. epi. of Iohn For there it is said that all three are one not onely consenting in one as it is said in the next verse that the three which beare witnes on earth to wit the Spirit and the water the blood are Eis to en that is agreeing in one but the Father and the Worde that is the Sonne as he is called in the Gospell ch 1.1 c. and the holy Ghost are one En eifi that is they are naturallie and Essentiallie one and consequentlie also most perfectly consenting in one It is euident therefore by the testimonie of the holie Apostle that God beeing but one in Nature is neuerthelesse three Persones This distinction of Persons in one God may also be prooued from the holie Scriptures of the old Testament partly by such testimonies wherin God is spoken of in the plurall number as Genes ch 1.1 Bara Elohim The Godes hee created the heauens c. And likewise verse 26. ch 3.5 ch 20.13 ch 35.7 Iob 35.10 and Ps 149.2 Laetetur Israel in facientibus ipsum Let Israell reioyce in them that made him Deut 4. ● Ioshua 24.19 Elohim quedoshim hu The Goddes hee is the holie ones Eccl 5.7 Gebohim he is the high ones And Ier 10.10 Iehouah Elohim hu Elohim chaijm that is the Lord Godes he is the liuing Godes And
2. Sam 7.23 Read also Isai 6.8 and chapt 54.5 Thus the distinction of Persons may be proued partly by the vsuall phrase or form of speach in the holy language And partly it may be prooued by such testimonies as doe in our owne translation make more expresse mention of the Persons as Psalm 33.6 By the worde of the Lorde were the heauens made and all the hoste of them by the breath of his mouth That is as Iunius interpreteth Pater in filio per spiritum The father in the sonne by the spirit And Isai 63.9.10 In all their troubles hee was troubled and the Angell of his presence saued them in his loue and in his mercie he redeemed them and hee did beare and carie them alwaies continually But they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit c. Haec tota narratio vt idem Interpres est in primis euidens si qua in vetere Testamento ad confirmandum doctrinam Christianam de vno Deo tribus Personis This whole narration as saith the same Interpreter is as euident as any in the olde Testament to proue the Christian doctrine concerning one GOD and three Persons Likewise Hagg 2.5.6 Yet nowe be of good courag● ô Zerubbabel c. for I am with you saith the Lord of Hostes. According to the word that I couenanted with you when ye came out of Egipt so my spirit shall remaine among you feare ye not Est hic locus de sancta Trinitate euidentissimus This place say Trem and Iunius is a most euident place concerning the holy Trinitie But it will peraduenture be obiected of some that in none of these places no nor in that of the Apostle Iohn where hee saieth There are three which beare witnesse in heauen there is any mention of the word Person Question What other testimonie or ground of holy Scripture haue you that wee may safely and boldly assure our selues to beleeue that these three are and may be called by the name of three Persons Answere In the first Chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrues verse 3 the Apostle saith of our Sauiour Christ the Sonne of God that he is the brightnes of the glory and the ingrauen forme of the Person of the Father Wherefore seeing the Father is a person in a respect or relation to the Sonne so is the Sonne in a like respect or relation to the Father and consequently also the holy Ghost is a person in a like respect and relation to them both Explicatiō proofe There is in deede the same reason of all three persons mutually which is of any one to either of the other And touching the Sonne of whom it is said that he is the ingrauen forme of the person of the Father the Sonne himselfe our Lord Iesus Christ saith in this respect that he which knoweth the Sonne knoweth also the Father Iohn ch 14.7 c. If ye had knowne me saith our Sauiour Christ ye should haue knowne the Father also c. I am in the Father and the Father is in me c. Read also chap. 8.19 Onely it must be confessed that the Apostle in the place of the Epistle to the Hebrues vseth the word Hypostasis the which word for word is a Subsistence but assuredly hee vseth it altogether in the same sence as wee commonly vse the word person as it is rightly translated according to the vse of all true Christian Churches For these words Hyphistamenon Hypostasis Prosopon with the Christian Grecians are the same in common interpretation with our English word Person as it is vsed of vs from the Latine word Persona in such sence as it is applied of all Latine Diuines to the opening of this mysterie Of this therefore for this present enough Shew now likewise what ground you haue that the Persons in the Deitie are to be distinguished not onely in the relation of words but also really as we may say and in respect of the order of the Beeing of the diuine nature it selfe Answere What proofe haue you for this Question At the baptisme of the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ Math. chap. 3. verses 16.17 God the Father did actually make it most cleare in that by audible voice from heauen he pronounceth of the Sonne then vpon earth in the nature of man This is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased And the holy Ghost in the likenes of a Doue descended and lighted vpon our Sauiour Christ the sonne of God at the very same time This is a liuely proofe and declaration of it in very deede Question But what ground haue you that the Persons are to be distinguished in such manner as was before affirmed by generation and by beeing begotten and by proceeding In the 14. verse of the first Chapter of the Gospell according to Iohn our Sauiour Christ the Sonne of God Answere is called the onely begotten Sonne of the Father full of grace and truth And chap. 3. verse 16. God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne c. And Heb. chap. 1 verse 5 6. Vnto which of the Angels said he that is God the Father at any time Thou art my Sonne this day begat I thee And againe I will be his Father and he shall be my Sonne And againe When hee bringeth his first begotten Sonne into the world he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him Explication and proofe Heere it is plaine that the Father hath begot and that the Sonne is the onely begotten of the Father The which generating or begetting that it was eternall and before all beginning we read Prou. 8 22. c. The Lord saith wisedome euen the eternall wisedome of God the euerliuing Sonne of the Father he hath possessed me in the beginning of his way I was before his works of old I was set vp from euerlasting from the beginning and before the earth When there were no depthes was I begotten c. And must it not needes be that the Sonne of God is begotten in speciall manner that is after a most diuine manner seeing it cannot agree to the Angels of God though they be the chiefe of all his creatures Neither is it against the eternitie of this generating and begetting of the Sonne of God that he saith This day begat I thee For these words concerne onely the manifestation of the Sonne of God in the nature of man either typicallie in King Dauid who was a figure of him or properly by his owne appearance in the flesh in the due time and season thereof But the former words Thou art my Sonne as they are referred to our Sauiour Christ they are spoken of the eternitie of the Sonne of God before all worlds according to the witnesse of the Sonne of God himselfe Iohn 17.24 Father thou louedst me before the foundation of the world No● shew likewise some testimonie for proofe of the eternall proceeding of the holy Ghost Question Where may that
vnpossible that any who professing Christātie doe not beleeue in one onely God three distinct Persons should auoide the opinion either of many Gods or of the inequality of Gods For the name of God is cōmunicated to euery one of these Persons in the holy Scriptures Finally they that doe not thus beleeue doe deny vnto God his due worship and honour seeing the Father requireth to bee honoured in his Sonne that his Sonne should be honoured with him and that both Father and Sonne should be honoured in and with the holy Ghost From all miserable vnbeliefe therefore specially from all hereticall blasphemous and obstinate contradiction to this so chiefe and foundamentall a point of our onely orthodoxe and true Christian faith the Lord our most gracious and mercifull God euen the Father for his onely Sonne our Lord Iesus Christs sake by the grace of the holy Gost preserue and keepe vs for euer Amen Thus much concerning the doctrine of beliefe in the most holy and glorious Trinitie of Persons in one onely true God more generally or coniointly Be●●efe in God the Father Beliefe in God the Father The groūd of it HEnceforth wee are to examine the doctrine of our faith concerning euery distinct Person Question And first concerning the Father how doe the articles of our faith teach vs to beleeue in him Answere They doe teach vs to beleeue in the Father as in the almightie God the maker of heauen and earth It is so They are the very wordes of the Creed I beleeue in God the Father almightie maker of heauen and earth Here are many things to be considered Question BVt first of al what proofe haue you that God is a father or as the words of the articles of our beliefe are the Father that is such a father as none else is or possibly can be euen he that is almightie c. and that therefore wee are accordingly to beleeue in him Answere Beside other diuine testimonies we haue the witnes of Saint Paul in the 8. Chapter of his first Epistle to the Corinthians the 5 and 6. verses And likewise in the 5. and 6. verses of the 4. chap to the Ephesians Rehearse you the words of the holy Apostle in the first of those places Question Which are they Answere Though saith the Apostle there be that are called Gods whether in heauen or in earth as there be many Gods and many Lords yet vnto vs there is but one God who is the Father of whom are all things and we in him Explication and proofe The meaning of the holy Apostle is that howsoeuer partly by most wicked and abusiue custome the name of God hath by idolaters beene vsually attr●buted to their idolls and false Gods for so as he saith there be many Gods and many Lords to wit cōmonly so called according to that 2. Kings chap. 1 2 and chap. 18 33 34 35. and Amos. 8.14 and Ier. 2 26. They say to a tree thou art my father and to a stone thou hast begotten me for they haue turned their backe vnto me Read also Isa● ch●●● 1●●● and not their face but in the time of their trouble they will say Arise and helpe vs. But where are thy Gods which thou hast made thee Let them arise if they can helpe thee in the time of thy trouble for according to the number of thy cities are thy Gods ô Iudah Thus I say howsoeuer as the Apostle saith partly by abusiue and idolatrous custome the name of God is ascribed to idolls and false God● and partly also albeit God himselfe doe in most wise considerations as hath beene declared in the Treasury vpon the 5. Commandement impart his most holy honourable names God and Father to ciuil Magistrats and to naturall Parents c. Psal 82 and Iohn 10.34.35 36. and in many other pl●ces Yet to speake properly and from the originall roote and fountaine of all Father-hood and power or authoritie God the father onely is both Father and God according to that of our Sauiour Christ Matth. 23 9. Call no man your Father vpon earth for there is but one your father euen hee that 〈◊〉 in heauen The other place to the Ephesians mentioned in the former answere is like to that alreadie rehearsed out of the Epistle to the Corinthians For these are the wordes of the Apostle in that fourth Chapter to the Ephesians There is one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all who is aboue all and through all in you all Not that the diuine nature of God the father is mixed ●ith ours or with the nature of any other creature for he is onely and altogether entire and perfectly consisting in and by himselfe but because it is his power which continually supporteth all creatures as wel as at the beginning he did originally create and make them all Thus therefore seeing God is a father yea rather the onely father of all fatherhood that is so a father as none else is or can be as was said we haue no cause to doubt but that wee are to beleeue in him accordingly that hee is such a Father as is very true God euen God the Father almightie c. And thus when the Apostle Peter 1. Epist Chap. 1. verse 21. writeth that God hath raised vp Christ from the deade and giuen him glorie that our faith and hope might bee in God it is plaine from that which goeth before in the 17. verse that the Apostle writeth of that God who is the Father Yea euen our Father and the Father of all true beleeuing Christians by the grace of that adoption and couenant which of his infinite mercie it hath pleased him to make with vs through his owne onely and naturall Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ as we are hereafter further to consider And now furthermore this also we are to vnderstand that insomuch as our heauenly Father in whom wee are to beleeue is very true God therefore all the essentiall attributes of the diuine nature doe essentially belong vnto him in that he is the Father So that we are not onely to beleeue in him as in an Almightie Father of the which his almightie power wee are to consider afterward but also as in our eternall Father according to that which we read Isay chap 63.16 Thou ô Lord art our Father redeemer thy name is for euer Neither are we to beleeue in the Father onely as in an almightie and as in an eternall Father the maker of heauen and earth but also as in a most prouident Father euen the most gracious ruler and gouernour of all thinges specially ouer his Church As Iohn 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto saith our Sauiour Christ And Matth. 6.26 Your heauenly Father feedeth the foules of heauen And Chap. 10 29.30 A Sparrowe falleth not to the ground without your Father Yea and all the haires of your head be numbred Read also chap. 18.10 and 24.36 and 26.53 and Act. 1.7
gouernment it may hence appeare in that hee is called the father of the fatherlesse Psal 68. ● And againe as was alledged before in that our Sauiour Christ saith Call no man your Father vpon earth for there is but one your Father who is in heauen Neuerthelesse as was also alledged God doth not refuse to impart this his name not onely to natural Parents but also to ciuil Magistrates in regard of that dignitie authoritie which they haue receiued of him as Ps 82 6. Iohn 10.34 Fourthly that God is a father in respect of the adoption of his holy Church and elect people both Iewes and Gentiles euen so many as shall truly beleeue in him as in their heauenly Father and likewise that he is a Father in respect of his most gracious prouidence and gouernment ouer it this may bee made plaine and confirmed by that which wee reade Deut. 14.1 Where Moses saith to the Iewes Yee are the children of the Lord your God And Chap. 32.6 Doe yee so reward the Lord ô yee foolish people and vnwise Is not he thy Father that hath bought thee he hath made thee and proportioned thee Likewise Elihu of olde called God his father as Iob. Chap. 34. v. 36. My Father saith he as Trem and Iunius doe well translate that word let Iob be tryed c. And thus also Isaiah Chap 43.8 the Israelites are called the Sonnes and daughters of the Lord And Chap. 63.16 Doubtlesse thou art our Father c. This dignitie and preheminence of the Filiation or Son-ship as one may say of the Church is fitly expressed by this that God calleth it his first borne to wit in comparison of all the worlde beside As Exod 4.22 23. the Lord saith to Moses Thou shalt say to Pharaoh Thus saith the Lord Israel is my Sonne euen my first borne Wherefore I say vnto thee let my Sonne goe that he may serue me c. And Ierem 31.9 I am a Father to Israel and Ephraim is my first borne And thus King Dauid and King Salomon speciall tipes and figures of our Sauiour Christ the onely naturall Sonne of God they are by special grace and fauour called the Sonnes of God as Psal 2. Thou art my Sonne and 2. Sam 7 14. I will be his Father and hee shall bee my Sonne And Psal 89 26 27. Hee shall cry vnto mee thou art my Father c. But more generally concerning both Iewe and Gentile the Apostle Paul saith Ephes 3 15 16. Of the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ is named the whole family in heauen and in earth And in this respect doth the Euangelist Iohn teach vs that the children of God are borne not of blood nor of the will of flesh nor of the will of man but of God To the which purpose also serueth that which we read Rom. 8 14.15.16 Gal. 4. verses 5.6 and 1. Pet. 1.3 Blessed be God the Father who according to his aboundant mercy hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead To an inheritance immortall c. It is true indeed that in respect of this worke of our spirituall regeneration and sanctification and of our preseruation in the same the Sonne of God hath the name of an euerlasting Father giuen vnto him Isay ch 9.6 And ch 8.18 mention is made of his children And ch 53.10 the promise is made by God that he should see his seed The accomplishment whereof is testified He● 2.10.11.12.13 He brought many children to glory And therefore is he brought in speaking thus Behold here am I the children which God hath giuen me In which respect also he said while he was yet with his Disciples I will not leaue you as orphanes that is fatherles or comfortles Iohn ch 14.18 Likewise the holy Ghost whom our Sauiour Christ thus promised to send for the cōfort of his church is in the same worke of our spirituall regeneration and sanctification as a father to vs and to the whole church together with God the father and the Son according to that we read Ioh. ch 3 5 6. Except a man be borne againe by the holy Ghost c. and Rom. 8 14. As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the Sonnes of God The Meaning Yet this ioint work of the whole Trinity in this whole spiritual work of grace must so be vnderstod to wit in a certain metaphorical or borrowed sense when it is attributed to the Son the H.G. as it may in no wise preiudice the distinctiō of Persons nor impeach the proprietie of this name Father as properly attributed to the first Person of the holy Trinitie of the which we treat IT is therefore to very good purpose that you doe in the next place expresse what you meane when you say I beleeue in the Father almightie maker of heauen and earth Question What doe you meane by these wordes Answere My meaning is to professe that according to the two former acceptions of the word Father I doe vndoubtedly beleeue that God the Father the first Person in the most holy and blessed Trinitie euen the naturall Father of his eternall and onely begotten Sonne hath by the same his Sonne together with the holy Ghost in infinite wisedome and by his almightie power made the heauen and the earth the Sea and all that in them is of very nothing at the first Here in your meaning is agreeable to the truth it selfe according to that we read Ioh. ch v. 1 2.3.4 Col 1 15 16.17 Heb 1 v. 2. Read also Gen ch 1. verse 2.26 And Iob 26.13 Question But hath God the Father by his Sonne together with the holy Ghost the spirit of them both onely created and made all thinges at the beginning and thenceforth left them to themselues to be as we vse to say at vncertaine Answer Nothing lesse And therefore according to the third acception of the word Father I doe beleeue that God in his most souereigne and fatherly prouidence hath from the beginning of his creation doth stil and will likewise by the same his Sonne together with the holy Ghost continually euen to the end of the world vniuersally rule gouerne and preserue all his creatures in all wisedome and righteousnes according to the most holy and determinate pleasure of his owne most gracious and diuine will Explication and proofe This also is very true and agreeable to the holy Scriptures as we may read further Iohn ch 1. verses 5 9.10 ch 3.17 Col 1.17 In the Sonne all things consist from the Father And Heb ch 1.3 The Father by the Sonne beareth vp all things Read also Psal 104.30 If thou send forth thy Spirit they are created and thou renewest the face of the earth And in the 24. v. of the same Ps O Lord how wonderfull are thy workes In wisedome hast thou made them all the earth is full of thy riches So is this Sea great and wide
in thy natiuitie when thou wast borne thy nauell was not cut c. And when I passed by thee I saw thee polluted in thine owne blood and I said vnto thee when thou wast in thy blood Thou shalt liue euen when thou wast in thy blood I said vnto thee thou shalt liue I caused thee to multiplie as the budde of the fielde c. Who duely considering this forlorne estate of the Church and of euerie member of it as the Lorde findeth it and the great pittle which hee taketh on it and the manifold blessings which hee bestoweth vpon it Who I say duelie considering these things can doe lesse then acknowledge that God is most highlie to be honoured and praised for euer therein and that the forgetfulnes thereof is a most hainous sinne And herewith also howe can it be thought but that it must be one bounden duetie to loue the Sonne of God with a singular loue in so much as God is not our Father but by meanes of him According to that which our Sauiour Christ himselfe saith Iohn 8.42 If God were your father then would you loue mee And likewise it is our dutie to loue the children of God for Gods cause who is their Father 1. Iohn 5.1.2 Euerie one that loueth him which begate loueth him also which is begotten c. Secondlie that this reason ought effectuallie to mooue vs to withdraw our selues from the lusts of sin c the Apostle Iohn telleth vs plainly saying 1. Epi 2.15.16 That the loue of the Father cannot be in them that loue the world the lusts thereof c. And ch 3. verse 3. That euery one that hath the hope of euerlasting life and glorie through the mercie and goodnes of God purgeth himselfe that is more and more indeuoureth after it by vsing all good and holie meanes appointed of God considering that God our heauenly father is pure and that no vncleane thing can haue any abiding with him Read also verse 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not c that is hee doth not giue himselfe ouer to sinne but earnestlie resisteth it c. Moreouer read Deuteron 14.1.2 Ioshua 24.1.2 c. Read also 2. Corinth 6.14 c. The want of this care in the people of God who glorie in this that God is their father it is no lesse iustlie then vehementlie reproued in the holy Scriptures as Deuteron 32.4.5.6 Isai chapt 1. verses 2.3.4 and Ierem chap 2.26.27.28 and chap 3. verses 2.3.4.5 and verses 19.20.21.22 The third part of the Answere resteth vpon as good reason and is a consequent of the former For wherfore is vndutifulnes reprooued but to the ende that the children of God should be stirred vp to care and conscience of all good dutie To this purpose therefore let vs thinke often of the holie and zealous exhortation of the Apost Pet 1. Epist chap 1. verses 13 14 15 16. c. in these words Wherefore gyrde vp the loines of your minde c. as obedient children c As hee which hath called you is holie so be ye holie c. And if yee call him Father who iudgeth without respect of persons c. Let no word of so weightie and pre●ious an exhortation be vnweighed and vnvalued of vs. Read also Iohn 4.23 The hower cometh and now is saith our Sauiour Christ to the woman of Samaria when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth for the Father requireth euen such to worship him And 2. Cor. chap 7.1 The holy Apostle of our Sauiour Christ hauing made mention of the most gratious promise of God that hee will be a Father to all such as shall forsake Idolatrie and the fellowship of Idolater● he thervpon inferreth this his earnest exhortation Seeing then we haue these promises dearely beloued let vs cleanse our selues from all filthines of the fleshe and of the ●pirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God Read also 2. Epist of Iohn verses 4.9 And Mal cha 1.6 A Sonne honoureth his Father saith the Lorde by his Prophet and a seruant his maister If then I be a Father wher is my honour And if I be a maister where is my feare saith the Lorde of Hostes c. In all these places of holie Scripture wee see how the spirit of God calleth for all manner of good duetie toward God in this respect especiallie that he is a most gratious and honourable Father aboue all other And hee doth it most iustlie For seeing ther are no naturall parents which doe not or which may not of good right looke for readie and constant dutie from their children while they themselues performe the care of good parents toward them And on the contrarie if children shall stubbornelie refuse to yeelde good duetie to their parents they a●e so farre from taking delight to heate their children to call them Father that they rather enter into purpose to cast them off and to refuse to take them for their children Infinitelie much more may the Lorde God our heauenly Father cast off all such as hypocriticallie call him Father and in the meane s●ason denie the obedience of children vnto him For in verie truth they shew themselues not to be the k●ndely children of God but the base borne of their father the Deuill as wee shall haue further occasion to obserue and to produce some proofe of it by and by In the meane while for the shutting vp of this pointe worthie is the example of him whom our Sauiour Christ describeth for the common imitation of euerie true childe of God that after former ●eglect of his dutie shall returne to performe the dutie of a childe againe Father saith he and so is euerie one of vs to say in remembrance of our former vndutifulnes I haue sinned against heauen and against thee I am not worthie to be called thy Sonne c. Now further as touching the fourth branch of the answere which sheweth that it is required of euerie true childe of God that he bee an imitator of God himselfe in all goodnes and helpfulnes towards others read Matth 5.43 c. and Luk 6.35.36 And Ephes chapt 5.1.2 Be yee therefore followers of God as deare children and walke in loue c. And Coloss ● 12 Nowe therefore as the elect of God holie and beloued put on tender mercie kindenes c. And 1. Iohn ● 10 in this are the children of God knowen and the children of the Deuill Whosoeuer doth not righteousnes is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother For this is the message that yee hearde from the beginning that we should loue one another Not as Caine who was of the wicked and slewe his brother c. Reade a so in the Gospell according to Iohn chap 8.44 They that doe the lusts of the Deuils as our Sauiour Christ saith they are not the children of God but of their father the Deuill To conclude this fourth branche that the houshold of Faith
that which we read Iohn ch 12.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8 The which treason of Iudas vpon that most vnworthy occasion so intended plotted our Sauiour Christ speaketh of againe foure daies after Mat 26. verses 1.2 where also the Euangelist Matthew doth in the verses following record the same wicked occasion that Iudas tooke and testifieth further and that from that time he sought opportunitie to betray our Sauiour he euen therin as the Diuel would haue it fitting the malicious desire of the chiefe Priests the Scribes and Elders of the people who consulted before how they might take him by subtiltie and kill him so as they might best auoid the vproare and tumult of the people verses 3.4.5 c. 14 1●.16 and Luke ch 22.1.2.3.4.5.6 Thus I say the thought of the indignitie of the most wicked intent and diuellish practise of one of his owne Disciples with whom he had alwaies dealt louingly and kindly c. was some cause of this trouble to the spirit of our Sauiour Christ But this was little in comparison of the chiefe cause which was that most heauie trouble which he did see by this occasion and with the occasion to hast on a pace to the most deepe piercing and wounding of his soule as we shall see further according as the time of the practising or executing of the treason intended and plotted already approched more neare and grew as it were to the maturitie and ripenes of it Question What ground or testimonie haue you for the declaration of this Answere In the 26. chapter of Matthewe thus we reade from the beginning of the 36. verse 36. Then went Iesus with them into a place which is called Gethsemane and saide to his Disciples sit ye here while I goe and pray yonder 37. And he tooke Peter and the two Sonnes of Zebedeus and began to wax sorowfull and grieuously troubled 38. Then said Iesus vnto them My soule is very heauie euen unto the death tarrie ye here and watch with me 39. So he went a little further and fell on his face and praied saying O my Father if it be possible let this cuppe passe from me neuertheles not as I will but as thou wilt And ve se 42. 42. He praied the second time saying O my Father if this cuppe cannot passe away from me but that I must drinke it thy will be done 44. And yet againe we read verse 44. He praied the third time saying the same wordes Explication This third spirituall trouble and agonie fell vpon our Sauiour Christ in Gethsemane as the Euangelist Matthew testifieth the which place as appeareth before in the 30. verse of the same chapter and Luke ch 22.39 was a part of ground of or belonging to the mount of Oliues the which also was on the other side of the brooke Cedron distant from Ierusalem some good space a mile or two And it was also a garden or Ortchard either of Oliue trees or some vineyard as the Euangelist Iohn doth more particularly record and describe the place Iohn chap 18.1 where also it is very likely there were some dwelling housen as euery where there is on euery side of great cities at the least for the dressing and looking to the Gardens there about as may appeare by that which the Euangelist Marke writeth ch 14.51.52 The vnspeakable greatnes of the trouble and agonie of our Sauiour Christ in this place at this time and that for a long time as may be gathered the greatnes of the sorrowe and anguish considered it may be in some good measure conceiued of vs if we will only consider that which the Euangelist saith guided by the holy Ghost that our Sauiour Christ began in this place euen while he was with his Disciples to waxe sorrowful and grieuously troubled The Euangelist vsing such wordes as note an astonishing and amazing or confound ng sorrow and distresse or a perplexitie of mind such as no humane succour or solace can mitigate or asswage But it may be more liuely discerned from our Sauiour himselfe partly by his behauiour and partly by his speech By his behauiour first in that albeit hee tooke three of his Disciples with him to wit Peter and Iames and Iohn as Marke more expresly nameth them euen such as hauing seene his glorie before at his transfiguration might haue beene most fit to be eye witnesses of his humiliation and abasing yet his sorrowes increasinge exceedingly much more then the sorrowes of the woman going to her trauell and seeing them vnfit to be very neare beholders or hearers of them he giueth them their charge that they pray to God for grace that they should not be led into temptation and sodainly breaketh from them as one violently pulled away the space of a stones cast as the Euangelist Luke describeth it chap 22.40.41 that so he might without their vtter discomfiture the more freely humble himselfe and most lamentably bemone his distressed estate before his heauenly Father the bitter cup of whose wrath bent against that sinne of ours which our Sauiour Christ had vndertaken to beare the punishment of and to satisfie for was euen now put neare as it were to his mouth to the end he should drinke it vp for vs. Herevpon therefore he falleth down vpon his face groueling to the earth not satisfying himselfe to kneele vpon his knees Marke 14.35 And afterwards through the vehemencie of the agonie and conflict of his soule his sweat was like drops of blood trickling downe to the ground Luke 22.44 A most strange sweate both for the matter vnheard of before in any neuer so grieuously tortured and also for the quantitie it being so aboundant and that from so thinne and spare a body as wee may conceiue the body of our Sauiour to be which no doubt was not grosse and corpulent as the bodies of many full fed and pampered are Thus by the behauiour of our Sauiour Christ in this time of his trouble and dolour we may perceiue that it was exceeding vehement and bitter and the rather if we doe consider the most perfect patience and magnanimitie of our Sauiour Christ whereby he was able as afterward he did to passe through all the externall vexations that man could possibly prouoke him with The same extremitie of the most grieuous sorrowe of our Sauiour Christ may be yet further discerned from his owne speech partly by those wordes which he spake to his three choise Disciples while yet he was with them My soule is heauie euen vnto death The which no doubt if it had beene vpon any of vs sinfull wretches it would not onely haue taken away all naturall life out of our bodies but haue pressed our soules downe for euer vnto the bottome of Hell But yet more fully may it bee discerned by the wordes of his most lamentable prayer O my Father if it bee possible let this cuppe passe from mee Yea in that he insisteth so vpon the almightie power of God ioined with his infinite mercy as it
And when he was accused of the chiefe Priestes and Elders hee answered nothing 13 Then said Pilate vnto him Hearest thou not how many things they lay against thee 14 But hee answered him not one worde insomuch that the Gouernour marueiled greatlie Explicatiō Thus indeed it followeth in the Euangelist Matthew concerning the proceeding and course of the sufferings of our Lord Iesus Christ Neuertheles we may not altogither neglect that which he inserteth betwixt the condemnation which passed vpon our Sauiour Christ by the iudgement of the Councill of the Iewes so farre as they might proceede against him that is to conclude and set downe an Acte in register as it were that they iudged him worthie to dye to wit as a blasphemer and betwixt the first examination before Pilate that Iudas who had betrayed our Sauiour Christ seeing him to be condemned repented himselfe that is to say beeing now conuicted in his conscience that his fact was damnable because he had betrayed innocent blood is swallowed vp with a despairing sorrow and therfore bringeth againe the money that he had receiued of the chiefe priestes and elders for the rewarde of his iniquitie and confesseth his sinne not with godlie sorrowe but in a seruile terrour and confusion of his soule a iust reward for so horrible a Traytour and most desperately and wofully hangeth himselfe Matth 27.3.4.5 For casting himselfe downe head-long with great violence from that gibbet as it were which he had chosen to dispatche himselfe withall he burst in sunder in the middest so that his bowells gushed out as wee read Acts 1.18 But of the particulars of this heauie iudgement of God and all things to be considered therein as also how the Scriptures were fulfilled in this wrath which fell vpon Iudas and in those thinge● which followed vpon the restoring of the money in that the chiefe priestes c bought a potters field therewith as it followeth Matth 27. verses 5.6.7.8.9.10 wee will not stay nowe because the sufferinges of our Sauiour Christ requireth all the time that wee may well spare at this present for the more thorough opening of them But in the meane while the Testimonie of a chiefe aduers●rie to the clearing of our Sauiour Christ and that with the condemning of h●msefe as hauing no cause at all wherfore he should be moued to deale treacherously against him as if he had bene worthy to haue bene deliuered as an offender to the sworde of the magistrat and the same test●monie also confirmed by most heauie punishment and vengeance of God vpon the Traitour it may iustlie be of no small weight with vs to confirme th'innocence of our S●uiour Christ euen from heauen it selfe The which iudgem●nt against the traitour was likewise an euident declaration of the singula loue which God the Father did beare to our Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne euen in that hee was the Sonne of m●n although he setting himselfe in the stead of v● sinners did beare the hatred and curse of our sinnes For it was vnp●ssib●e that the Father should not most perfitlie and most constantlie loue hi● Sonne yea euen in respect of his humane nature in that he was therin perfectlie holie and righteous and in all things obedient to the Father and chieflie because of the most neare vnion therof vn●o the diuine nature It was vnpossible a so that God though in his diuine iustice permitting yea ordayning and appointing that all these things should be thus disposed to these most holie endes which hee of his infinit wisedome and mercie intended should not therwithall most perfectly hate and abhorre all the mal●tious enemie persecutors of our Sauiour Christ and all their wicked and vniust proceedings against him Whereof this one iudgement against Iudas was a shewe-token portending like heauie iudgement against th●m all in due time whosoeuer should not by another manner of repentance then was the repentance of Iudas preuent the same These things therefore thus obserued in way of an interim let vs nowe returne to goe forward to inquire of the rest of the Sufferinges of our most blessed Sauiour Wher●n because the Euangelists Mathewe and Marke are very briefe as touc●●ng those that belong to his examination before Pilate and also doe altoget●er omit his examination and s●fferings before Herod we wil repaire to th' other Euangelistes L●ke and I●hn for our further supplie in this behalfe and that euen to th' end wee may so nea●e as we can consider of all things in such order as they fell out against our Sauiour Question Howe may wee orderlie proceede Answer In this parte of the Storie th'Euangelist Iohn is first as wee read chapt 18. verses 28.29.30.31.32 Question Rehea●se the wordes of the Euangelist Which are they Answere 28 His wordes are these Then ledde they Iesus from Caiaphas into the Common hall Now it was morning they themselues went not into the Common hall lest they should be defiled but that they might eate the Passeouer 29 Pilate then went out vnto them said what accusation bring ye against this man 30 They answered and said vnto him if hee were not an euill doer wee would not haue deliuered him vnto thee 31. Then saide Pilate vnto them Take yee him and iudge him according to your owne lawe Then the Iewes said vnto him It is not lawefull for vs to put anie man to death 32 It was saith the Euangelist that the worde of Iesus might be fulfilled which hee spake signifying what death he should die Explicatiō In these wordes the Euangelist S. Iohn repeateth that the chiefe priestes and the Elders hauing condemned our Sauiour Christ in their owne Councill and proceeded so farre as they could by their owne ecclesiasticall iurisdiction they do thenceforth deliuer him ouer to Pilate as it were to the secular power But they themselues hauing very ranke malitious and murthering hearts they will not forsooth go into the common hall the place of ciuill iustice lest they being verie deuoutlie minded to eat the Passeouer in th' euening of this day by the religion or rather licentious tradition of their owne custome the which by the law of God they should haue eaten th'euen before as our Sauiour Christ obeying the law had done with his Disciples should be defiled Pilate therfore as the Euangelist writeth yeeldeth so farre as to goe forth vnto them And carrying our Sauiour Christ with him he requireth as good reason led him to do what they had to say against him before he should giue any sentence Wherevnto as the Euangelist sheweth the Iewes answere in generall termes that if our Sauiour had not bene an euill doer or in more plaine s●eache in th' vse of our language a malefactor they would not haue deliuered him vnto Pilate presuming belike that Pilate should by and by haue approued of their proceeding and of the decree of their Councill without any further question But Pilate as one discontented and loath also to meddle in the cause would
according to the most holy annointing of God and that he should ascend vp to the heauenly throne of the Maiestie thereof Neither could he otherwise with any comfortable hope of remission of sins and of the inheritance of his heauenly kingdome among the rest of his Saints desire our Sauiour to remember him that is to shew him so great and grieuous a sinner when he should take the possession or sit downe in the throne of his kingdome And thus we may plentifully perceiue by these so manifold excellent graces wrought so speedily and without all meanes yea against all outward lets hinderances obiect to his senses by the reproches of the wicked against our Sauiour notwithstanding the troublesome paines of his own crosse that his conuersion was most extraordinarie and admirable and therefore a most euident and eminent declaration of the mighty grace and vertue and merit of the sufferings of our Lord Iesus Christ in the sight of his father to reconcile poore sinners yea euen most great and grieuous sinners vnto him whosoeuer shall find grace truly to beleeue in his name and vnfeinedly to repent of his sinnes as this great sinner did And hereunto we are to adde for the conclusion of this point and for a perfect confirmation of all that hath beene obserued concerning this rare conuersion the most gracious answere of our Sauiour Christ to the suppliant and repenting thiefe the which wee reade in these most sweete and comfortable words as the Euangelist Luke doth likewise rehearse them Then said Iesus vnto him Verily I say vnto thee to day shalt thou be with me in Paradise O admirable effect of mercie answerable to the former admirable cause of mercie I meane that gift of mercie in the conuersion of this so miserable a sinner of the most free grace and mercie of God our heauenly father whose onely fauour is both the cause and also the effect of all mercy he crowning and rewarding nothing in any of his elect children but those gifts and graces which he hath first giuen them The greatnes of this grace of our Sauiour is to be considered from his own words the faithfull interpreter of his gracious mind and therefore let vs stand a litle to ponder and weigh them Verily saith our Sauiour euen he that is the truth affirmeth it in truth and with his holy and graue affirmation vsuall to him in the affirmation of great and weightie points worthy all credit to the end he might raise vp the mindes of those to whom he spake to the more firme and vndoubted faith of them thus he speaketh to the conuerted thiefe of a profane thief being now changed to be a beleeuing and holy Christian And it is to great purpose that it be obserued that he who is thus the truth and the true Sauiour speaketh it because whosoeu r else had spoken it it should haue beene a vaine speech Yea it is singularly to be obserued that Christ crucified speaketh it because it is by the vertue of his sufferings vpon the crosse that he saueth both him and all of vs. And therefore to magnifie the benefit of his crosse he is thus gracious and earnest in giuing assurance of remission of sinnes and eternall life to a very great and grieuous sinner Neither doth our Sauiour hold him in any long suspence by making him a promise for a long time to come but he assureth him of the experience of his mercy and saluation euen the same day the day also being now halfe spent to the end that the poore soule might be comforted more and more with the assured hope of a blessed life against the discomfort of the naturall death euery minute of the houre more and more hasting and approaching Yea and he doth not assure him of a small blessing and fauour but that hee shall be with him that is that his soule shall be with the soule of our Sauiour Where Euen in Paradise that is in heauen According to that similitude whereby the holy Scriptures doe sundrie times vse to signifie the same as 2. Cor. 12.4 and Reuel 2.7 And euen to this end that the holy delight and spirituall pleasure and ioy of heauen might be familiarly shadowed out from the Hebrewe word Pardes which signifieth a pleasant and delightfull garden or orchyard principally alluding to that garden of Eden wherein Adam was placed at the first in a very blessed and comfortable estate and condition To the which ende also our Sauiour ioyneth these two together with me in paradise meaning in the like happie estate condition for euer though not in the same degree of honour glory which is not meet for any creature according to the most holy prayer of our Sauiour Iohn 17.20.21.22.23.24 Such is the most gracious promise and answere which he maketh the repenting sinner he himselfe as well as the thiefe hanging yet fastened to the crosse Wherein notwithstanding we see how he beginneth his most glorious triumph The which wordes of our Sauiour were noe doubt not onely comfortable to the thiefe that was though now noe thiefe but a Saint clothed with the righteousnes of Christ by a true and liuely faith but also to Marie the mother of our Sauiour and to the other Maries mentioned before and to Iohn his beloued Disciple who no doubt marked these things and laied them vp in their hearts And they may also be exceedingly comfortable to vs and to all true beleeuing Christians as we are diligently to obserue in our course and order among the rest of the comforts Hetherto of the first part or space of time and the memorable things falling out therein which we propounded to our selues to consider of concerning the third that is to say the last part of the execution of our Sauiour The first part or space of time as wee haue seene reached from the fastening of our Sauiour to the crosse which was a little after the third houre to the sixt houre of the day which was with them about high noone THe second space of time which we according to the course of the holy storie haue propounded to consider of as i● were in another diuision or seuerall treatise is from the sixt houre to the ninth touching those other like worthy and memorable things which fell out in that time Of this part of the storie let vs therefore henceforth set our mindes with like reuerence and diligence earnestly to inquire But this we are to doe from the ground testimonie of the holy storie Which therefore are the words thereof 44. It followeth thus in the Euangelist Luke ch 23. v. 44.45 And it was about the sixt houre and there was darkenes ouer all the land vntill the ninth houre 45. And the Sun was darkened the vaile of the Temple rent through the middest The holy Euangelist hauing described vnto vs the notable conuersion of one of the thieues the gratious acceptation which our Sauiour vouchsafed him he telleth vs now about
assuredly shortly after to performe And verily hee hath effectually performed it both on their behalfe and on ours that wee might likewise by faith in him ouercome as it is testified in other places of the holy Scriptures And namely in the 1. Ep. of Iohn ch 5 verses 4.5 For all that is borne of God ouercommeth the world and this is the victorie that ouercommeth the world euen our faith Who is it that ouercommeth the world but he who beleeueth that Iesus is the Sonne of God Thus then our Sauiour beginning to comfort his Disciples in the Gospel of Saint Iohn from the beginning of the 14. chapter hee continued still more and more to comfort them as hee himselfe saith in the same chapter verses 28.9 And againe chap. 15. verse 11. And chap. 16.1 and verses 6.7 And last of all hee ended with most sweete and comfortable wordes verse 33. as wee saw euen now So that it is very euident that our Sauiour would haue his death and whole sufferings and his departure out of this world bodily to be a most plentifull argument of all comfort to his Disciples Apostolicall first and then to all other Christians and to his whole Church for euer Thus much therefore more generally for our comfort as touching the fruites and benefits which wee doe enioy from the sufferings of our Sauiour Christ according to his owne most sweete and consolatory speeches which hee vsed to his Disciples to comfort them against all whatsoeuer might be most discomfortable to them NOw let vs furthermore well weigh and consider how the same and like comforts may likewise be warranted vnto vs from the rest of the holy history of his sufferings and from the testimony of other Scriptures We will collect them as briefly as so large an argument will permit And to beginne withall well may it bee an exceeding comfort vnto vs that as wee haue seene our Sauiour indured all his sufferinges throughout the whole ted●ous course of them most willingly for our sakes For hence were they satisfactory to the iustice of God on our behalfe which otherwise they could not haue beene Yea not only the cōsideratiō of this one vertue but also of all the excellent vertues of our Sauiour shining forth most brightly throughout the same his sufferings as wee haue li●ewise seene they may iustly be so many comforters to cheare vp our hearts as it were by the light and warmth of the Sunne in the whole race which it runneth from morning to noone from noone to night euen so often as we shall renew and settle the thoughts of our mindes thereon Doubtlesse through the blessing of God they will be as the renewing of the day vpon vs by the new arising of the Sun of righteousnes to bring the health of his Sun-beames vpon our soules and consciences The answere which God the Father gaue to our Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne at his first enterance into his most bitter passions was an answere containing much comfort in it not onely in respect of our SAVIOVR himselfe but also in respect of vs as we reade Iohn chapter 12. verse 28. For God our heauenly Father promised it at that time and hath no doubt and doth performe it still and so will doe to the end of the world and for euer in glorifying his owne name and the praise of his mercies through the sufferings of his Sonne And the rather because euen then when our Sauiour was in one part of his most grieuous trouble and discomfort God sent his Angel to comfort him so that howsoeuer the hatred which was due to our sinnes fell vpon him yet it was vnpossible that God should not loue and tender him for his owne sake Whereby also we may comfort our selues to beleeue that although we may be sondry times troubled in our soules in our praiers and euery other way for our triall yet for our Sauiours sake God will heare our troubled praiers and support vs in all our distresses if we be desirous to submit our wills to his will as our Sauiour did It may well be comfortable to vs that when the enemies of our Sauiour came into the garden to apprehend him they were not able to stand before him but fell downe backward much lesse had they beene able to apprehend and take him in deede saue that our Sauiour for obedience sake to God and for the loue which he did beare to vs and our saluation he did of his owne accord yeeld himselfe and therewithall by his diuine authority set his weake Disciples at liberty at the same time vntill they should be made more fit to endure such trialls as they were for their parts in some respectes to be exercised with though our Sauiour onelie and alone suffered for our redemption and saluation IT is comfortable to consider that at the examination of our Sauiour before the high Priest the witnesses which came forth against him were confounded and had nothing in truth to accuse him of worthy the least blame For hereby it is made the more cleare vnto vs that hee died for our sinnes and not for any of his owne It is very comfortable that at the same time our Sauiour plainely professed himselfe to be the naturall and very true Sonne of God and that hee will assuredly come againe in glory to iudge the world Yea that hee doth this alb●it he knewe that his aduersaries would be inraged thereby and euen from thence take the occasiō of putting him to death For hereby these comfortable Articles of our faith are singularly confirmed vnto vs. That silence also which our Sauiour vsed in some part of this examination before the high Priest as also afterward at some seasons before Pilate and Herod hath matter of comfort in it in that hee being as the sheepe dumbe before the shearer as the Prophet Isaiah prophesied of him that hee should be he did euen thereby also shewe himselfe willing to offer vp himselfe in sacrifice to God for vs what meanes so euer were sometime offered of getting fauour with Pilate or Herod against the wicked Iewes or with the Iewes themselues insomuch as he sought no fauour at their hands Of the which silence of our Sauiour thus writeth Beza worthily well saying Felix itaque felix inquam pretiosum silentium quo nobis os aperitur non solum vt Deum alloquamur sed vt magna cum fiducia clamemus Abba Pater Rom. 8.18 Gal. 4.6 Tantum ab est vt illo nos oporteat offendi That is O happy yea I say O happie and pretious silence whereby our mouth is opened not onely so that we may speake vnto God but that with great assurance we may crie Abba Father So farre off is it that we should be offended at him herein ANd that we may proceed according to the order of the holy History It is very comfortable that albeit Peter fel lamentably in this first examination yet we cannot but behold a very gratious fruite
him That is to say not so as we should linger after his bodily presence but rather that we should be carefull to knowe and imbrace him spiritually and with the armes of our faith For seeing Mary Magdalene was to doe so while yet our Sauiour was vpon the earth and not ascended vp into heauen then much more ought wee now as well as all other euer since his ascension so to doe that wee may say in truth with the Apostle Paul in the 2. Epistle to the Cor chap 5. verse 16. Henceforth knowe we no man after the flesh yea though we had knowne Christ after the flesh yet now henceforth knowe we him no more to wit in any carnall or weake manner but according to his diuine grace and godly power c. in a more cleare measure So that they who at this day dote after a reall presence of the body of our Sauiour Christ either in Sacrament or other wise they doe shewe themselues to bee altogether farre otherwise minded then our Sauiour himselfe would haue them to be We are all of vs to lift vp our minds to him in the heauens whither he is long since ascended and not to looke to haue him bodily with vs on earth as he taught Mary Magdalene immediately after his resurrection in that he said vnto her as we see here Touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father c. Neuertheles we are herewithall to vnderstand that our Sauiour had a more particular intent in the same wordes namely to signifie thus much vnto Mary that she for her part should haue a further time of filling her minde with the comfort of his humane presence for a few dayes before he would ascend leaue this world And therefore that she should for the present without any further delay so much the more willingly leaue him now and hast with all speed to his Disciples to doe that message which it pleased him to send vnto them by her For so it followeth as we haue already seene Goe to my brethren saith our Sauiour to Mary and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and to you● Father and to my God and your God Now the message is the last thing to be considered concerning this first appearance of our Sauiour Wherein sundry most high points and the same also most sweet and comfortable to all true beleeuers are to be reuerendly weighed of vs. And first of all this message thus committed by our Sauiour to a woman though to bee deliuered in a priuate manner as it is a great honour to Mary and as a blessed fruit of her former godly care and reuerend regard toward our Sauiour as was said before so is it a gentle kind of reproofe vnto the negligence vnbeliefe of those most choise Disciples of our Sauiour to whom he sendeth her Secondly this message sent by Mary concerning the ascension of our Sauiour conta●neth in it a proofe of his resurrection which must needes goe before his ascension as well as it is a prediction and foreshewing of the ascension it selfe Thirdly this message sent by our Sauiour to his Disciples vnder the name of brethre● it decla●●th the most deare and admirable loue of our Sauiour vnto them Wherein also is bewraied the like his affection in generall toward all the elect of God as wee may plainely perceiue by comparing that which we read Mat 12.48.49.50 Heb 2.11.12 with the words of this message For in those places our Sauiour extendeth the name of brethren to all the adopted children of God whosoeuer doe heare and keepe his word This is also an euident confirmation of that which the Euangelist Iohn hath written ch 13.1 that those whō our Sauiour loueth he loueth to the end Yea that he loueth them so that nothing can alienate ●is loue from them For as we knowe great were the infirmities of his Disciples in their forsaking of him c. And therefore whereas our Sauiour doth most graciously passe by al their grea●est weaknesses and failings in good dutie though hee might haue taken iust occasion to haue vtterly reiected and forsaken them this sheweth vndoubtedly that his loue was most constantly and vnremoueably confirmed toward them Blessed be his most holy name therefore for euer and euer Amen Fourthly in that our Sauiour in the wordes of this most sweete message calleth God his Father and his God hee speaketh therein as hee is in our nature a mediator betwixt God and vs and thereby pointeth vs vpward to behold the supreame cause of all our happines and wel-fare And in that he calleth him the Father and God of his Disciples and so consequently the Father and God of all true beleeuers hee teacheth vs all with good assurance of faith to call God our Father and so sheweth what are the singular effects of his mediation on our behalfe euen our adoption reconciliation peace and saluation with all other blessed fruites and benefites whatsoeuer both the most tender and fatherly mercies and also the almightie power of God our heauenly Father either is able of himselfe or willing for his Sonne our Lord Iesus C●rists sake to bestow vpon vs. To this God therefore our heauenly Father together with his Sonne our Sauiour and the holy Ghost our Comforter be all eternal glorie and praise Amen Fiftly our Lord Iesus Christ in sending this his message so earnestly and with all expedition to the comforting of his Disciples who were at this time in great heauines as we reade Marke chap 16.10 he sheweth and professeth plainely thereby that he is exceedingly desirous that both they and euery true Disciple of his should both knowe and beleeue and also enioy and hold firmely this great prerogatiue that we are by his meanes the children of such a Father and the seruants of such a God as God our heauenly Father is Finally as the Disciples of our Sauiour to whom Mary was sent yea notwithstanding they were the Apostles elect of our Sauiour were to receiue this message gladly and thankefully euen from the mouth of a priuate woman so yea much rather ought we from the mouth of the poorest publike minister of the word of God receiue gladly and dutifully the same message in their preaching thereof and euery other point and Article of the whole ambassage of the Gospel of Christ and of God That which is furthermore to be considered concerning the comforts and fruites of the ascension of our Sauiour it shall by the grace of God be more fully laid open when we come to that Article Hetherto of the first appearance of our Sauiour Christ for the first proofe and confirmation of his most holy and blessed resurrection Now as touching the performance of this message deliuered by our Sauiour to Mary it is expressed by the Euangelist Iohn verse 18. of this 20. chap For saith he Mary Magdalene came and tould the Disciples that she had seene the Lord that he had spoken these things vnto her And
childe Exod. 4.24 For baptisme is to vs Christians the same in proportion which circumcision was to the people of Israell And furthermore as it is a comfortable helpe for the strengthening of the faith of those that hauing truly desired it doe enioy it so no doubt the want of it through the negligence of any beleeuer cannot but minister a very great temptation to the weakening and disturbing of the peace of his faith so long as hee should want it euen so often as he should thinke of these words of our Sauiour Hee that shall beleeue and be baptized so neerely ioyning baptisme with faith as he doth though not as the cause of saluation yet as a testimonie and pledge of it to euerie true beleeuer And thus as Maister Caluine well concludeth this point Baptisme is necessarie though not simply yet for obedience sake Non simpliciter necessarium dicimus sed tantum obedientiae nostrae respectu And againe Non tanquam dimidia salutis causa sed vt testimonium Not as the halfe cause of saluation but as a testimony or pledge of it But from the former part of your answer there seemeth a great doubt to arise For seeing our Sauiour determining who shal be baptized saith they are such as are first to be taught and then also are to beleeue and so to be baptized how commeth it to passe that wee our ●elues haue beene baptized while we were Infants and that we doe baptize our children likewise while they are yet very new borne babes and so cannot be such as haue beene taught or be capable of any instruction and therefore much lesse doe actually beleeue Question What warrant can we haue for this Answer Though it was necessarie that at the first publishing of the Gospell to such people as were altogether heathenish that is prophane and vnbeleeuing they should be brought to knowledge and so to the faith of the mysterie of godlines because otherwise the Sacrament thereof must needes haue beene prophaned and of no vse and profit vnto them Yet so soone as any beleeued the Lord did not onely receiue themselues into his holy couenant of grace and mercy through Iesus Christ But also their children And therevpon haue they euen from the Apostles times to this day beene admitted to be partakers of the signe and seale of the couenant Explication and proofe This in deede hath beene the perpetuall vse of the Church of Christ euen from the primitiue imbracing of the Gospell amongst the Gentiles And the same also hath beene done vpon very good ground insomuch as the parents being sanctified to God their children also are accepted of God as holy vnto him as the Apostle Paule teacheth 1. Cor. 7.17 Neither may it be thought that the couenant of God entred with the Gentiles in the daies of the Gospell is lesse fauourable and gratious then was his couenant with the Israelites in the time of the law and before And therfore seeing when the Lord tooke Abraham into his couenant he did take in his children and whole posterity also with him and for a comfortable testimonie and proofe thereof commanded that the signe of his couenant should be imprinted in their flesh as wee reade Genes 17.7.8.9 c. Wee likewise perswade our selues from the same ground that God admitting at the first beleeuing parents into his most gratious couenant doth therewithall also admit their children into the same and that they may and ought now in the time of the Gospell be as lawfully baptized as euer the children of the Iewes were to be circumcised in the time of the law But therewithall this must be as firmely acknowledged that all Christian parents stand as strictly bound so soone as God giueth aptnes of vnderstanding to teach them the mysterie of their Christian baptisme to wit into whose name they haue beene baptized and to what end that they may know the gre●tnes of Gods mercy towards them in this behalfe euen more and more from time to time and the straight bond of their duty and obedience to God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost insomuch as the Father of his free grace and mercy hath adopted them in his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ to be his children in whom also he hath reconciled them to himselfe washing away their sinnes through his bloud and sanctifying them vnto himselfe by his spirit euen by the holy Ghost These things I say doe all Christian parents first who bring their children to baptisme and also all Minist●rs of the Gospell who doe baptize them and all other who are any way specially interessed in the holy action stand as strictly bound to teach and to bring them vp or procure as much as lieth in them that they may be brought vp in the holy nurture and information of the Lord as they are bound vnder paine of damnation to know beleeue and practise the same good duties themselues Lest their children through their default for want of knowledge or hauing knowledge doe for want of conscience fall away from the couenant of their baptisme to prophanenes and vngodlines and so bring vpon themselues a double condemnation The one because they are sinfull by nature the other because they refuse that mercie which is offered vnto them by the free grace and fauour of God And the rather doe we stand thus strictly bound to teach our children the holy mysterie of baptisme into the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost that is into the name of one onely true GOD three distinct persons because wee cannot otherwise rightly knowe God nor how to beleeue in him nor what the fruite and efficacie of our baptisme is nor any thing at all what true Christianitie doth meane But what if our children doe die before they come to yeeres of discretion or it may be before they come to be baptized at all Question What is to be said in this case Answer God of his infinite mercie knoweth as well how to take them into his heauenly Kingdome as to admit them into his gratious couenant here vpon earth euen as seemeth best to his godly wisedome Explicatiō It is very true And therein are wee to rest and to quiet and comfort our selues as they that haue learned to sowe in hope Yea further wee are to leaue secret thinges to the Lord and to account thinges reuealed a sufficient contentment to vs and our children in all things whatsoeuer may concerne our selues or them And thus much shall for the present time suffice concerning the more generall and common effects of the ministerie of the Gospell and also touching this point of the baptisme of children as an appurtenance thereunto This onely added that no infant of any Infidell Iewe or Turke may lawfully be baptized at this day no more then in the Apostles time vntill the pa●ents one of them at the least haue imbraced the faith and doe make a holy profession of it and accordingly desire baptisme
wide open for the preaching of the Gospell to euerie people and Nation vnder heauen 4 Fourthly by the power of the resurrection of our Sauiour wee are quickened to newnesse and holinesse of life 5 Moreouer by the vertue of the same we are strengthened and confirmed to all holy constancie in the faith and seruice of the Gospel vnder the blessed hope of immortalitie and heauenly glory 6 Furthermore we haue by it a setled cōfort against the vncertainty of our fraile transiterie life yea against all the troubles of it and against death it selfe and all the terrors and dismayings thereof seeing our Sauiour hath perfectly vanquished and ouercome them for vs. 7 And yet more then these the resurrection of our Sauiour is a reall confirmation that our bodies though they must die in corruption weakenesse and dishonour as naturall bodies for a finall conuiction and farewell of sinne yet they shall by the sauing power of the resurrection of our Sauiour Christ bee raised vp againe and made spirituall bodies incorrupt and glorious neuer to returne to corruption againe 8 The resurrection of our Sauiour is also an euidence that be is ordained of God to be the iudge of the world 9 Finally it is a most pregnant confirmation and application of all the fruits and benefits which he hath purchased for vs by his death and by all other his manifold sufferings going before the same Explication and proofe The resurrection of our Sauiour is indeede as the sealing vp of all these fruits and benefites vnto vs and therefore it may well be exceedingly comfortable vnto vs and his whole Church For as our Sauiour died not in the state of a priuate man but in the behalfe of the Church so also did hee not rise againe so much for himselfe as for the benefit of it But let vs see some proofes of holy Scriptures for these things For the proofe of the first part of this answer we may read Rom. 1.3 4. And 1. Pet. 1.21 where the resurrection of our Sauiour is alledged for a proofe that he who is our Sauiour is the Sonne of God And that it is furthermore a proofe that he is the promised Messias it is euident in that it is an accomplishment of the former prophesies which were giuen forth thereof as we saw before and may iustly here call to minde againe Psal 16. Isai 53.8 c. and chap. 55.3 Our Sauiour himselfe also before his death foretolde the same as a signe and confirmation thereof Matth. 12.39.40 Iohn 2.18.19 Reade also chap. 20.9 And in the Law the scape goate and the liue sparrow let loose may well be accounted figures of the resurrection and so the resurrection an accomplishing of the same as the slaine goate and killed sparrow were figures of his death Leuit. 14.4 5 6 7. And chap. 16.5 6 7 8 9 10. as was obserued once before For the proofe of the second part reade Rom. chap. 4. verses 22 23 24 25 26 where note that the Apostle affirming that our Sauiour being deliuered to death for our sinnes is risen againe for our instification hee maketh the imputation of his righteousnesse and our iustification one and the same thing So that to be iustified in the sight of God is to haue the righteousnesse of our Sauiour Christ imputed to vs who hath perfectly fulfilled it on our behalfe euen as he was perfectly sanctified of God himselfe to that end according as it is nearely lincked with it Rom. chap. 1. verses 3 4. alledged before Declared mightily to be the Sonne of God touching the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead And as we reade 1. Tim. 3.16 God manifested in the flesh iustified in the the spirit Yea all the places alledged before to shew that our Sauiour was raised vp from the dead and exalted by the hand of God himselfe they are so many proofes that by his holy verdict his iustice is fully satisfied and that our Sauiour hath procured our perfect Quietus est from all our sinnes For if any one of our sinnes had not been fully satisfied for by him who was made sinne for vs or if any thing had beene wanting touching our Sauiour his owne holinesse and righteousnesse God would neuer haue raised him vp nor acknowledged vs to bee made the righteousnesse of God in him But now our Sauiour being declared to be perfect iust holy by the spirit of righteousnes sanctificatiō bearing witnes thervnto by his resurrectio on our behalfe as before wee are hereby assured that we haue our full discharge whenas otherwise wee should haue beene still in our sinnes 1. Cor. 15. verses 17 18. Reade also Act. 13.37 38 39. And Rom. 10.4 5 6 7 8 9. And 1. Pet. 21. A good conscience looketh to the resurrection of our Sauiour for the setling of the peace of it And Philip. 3 8 9 10. This is that vertue of our Sauiour which the Apostle Paul so highly valueth aduanceth that in comparison of it he counteth all things dung and meere losse Yea this is that life which he liued in Christ or rather which Christ liued in him according as it is said The iust shall liue by faith to wit in the apprehension of Christs righteousnesse thus manifested by his resurrection to be their owne through the most gratious imputation of God Gal. 2.19 20 21. Rom. 1.17 For the proofe of the third part of the answer reade Iohn 7.38 39. and chap. 20. verse 21. the ordination of the Apostleship and ministery of the Gospel Reade also Luke 24.47.48 49 Acts 2.17 18 32 33. And 2. Tim. 1.9 10 11. These things indeede were not performed till after the ascension neuerthelesse the resurrection made way and was as the first step vnto it For the proofe of the fourth part reade Rom 6.4 5. 2. Cor. 5.14 15. Eph. 1.19 c. and chap. 2.1 Acts 3.26 and chap. 5.31 Colos 2.12 13. and chap 3.1 c. This rising vp to newnesse of life is called the first resurrection Reuel 20.5 And it is the way to attaine vnto the second For let vs note well that albeit God doth fauourably behold vs in Christ onely for our perfect iustification before him yet this is no dispensation to vs that we should continue in sinne but it calleth for sanctification at our hands without the which no man shall see the Lord as we reade Heb. 12.14 And it is also necessary for vs to the end that from the fruits of our sanctification we may haue the comfortable perswasion of our iustification Rom. 6.1 c. And that we are elect and chosen to saluation 2. Pe 1 10. Yet so as we must in no part relie vpon our owne holinesse or works which will alwaies be failing and vnperfect but on our Sauiour alone by whom we are iustified For proofe of the first part reade 1. Pet. 1.3 4 5 c. Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who according to
a sleepe in Christ are perished The Apostle speaketh in way of supposition but in truth it is not so seeing it is most certaine as hee declareth that our Sauiour is risen againe And therefore there is not onely an assured ground of the resurrection of the body heereafter but also of the present felicitie of the Saints departed euen from the very time of their bodily death Neuerthelesse to them which doe not beleeue that our Sauiour is risen it is all one as if hee were not risen at all saue that they must one day yea doe alreadie begin to feele the punishment of their infidelitie concerning this article as one the chiefe among the rest VVofull therefore is the state of the vnbeleeuing Iewes to this day whosoeuer of them imbrace the wicked fable of their vnbeleeuing and blasphemous auncestors Beliefe in God the Son who ascended vp into heauen of whom wee reade Matthew The ground of the article 28.12.13.14.15 who as much as lay in them smothered the light of his resurrection and led many into this damnable heresie of denying the same Miserable also was the condition of Hymeneus and Philetus of whom wee reade 2. Timothy 2.17.18 who like enough from this euill ground of doubting of the resurrection of our Sauiour or at the least not considering the right vse and end of his resurrection denied the resurrection to come saying that it is past already Likewise miserable were the Corinthian heretikes who denied that our Sauiour rose againe they imbracing as it is very like that wicked and blasphemous fable of the Iewes Onely Cerinthus acknowledgeth this Epiph. lib. 1. Tom. 2. cap. 28. more then those Iewes that our Sauiour shall rise againe at the last day and so addeth one grosse error to another Moreouer the fable of the Gnostici is to be condemned of vs in that they would haue vs beleeue that our Sauiour was not onely by the space of forty dayes after his resurrection heere on earth but euen whole 18. moneths that is a yeere and halfe which must needes falsifie the holy storie touching the time of the ascension of our Sauiour and also of the sending of the holie Ghost vpon the Apostles and of the beginning of their preaching and therfore is in no wise to be indured of vs but earnestly reiected as a most erroneous computation But what shal we say of the family of H.N. their most false Prophet H N. himselfe all their diuelish leaders and guides most hereticall aboue all other who in the light of the Gospell and after the most lightsome discouerie of all former heresies do yet renue the same againe and that also in the most fantasticall and absurd course that may be peruerting all things according to their feeble and braine-sicke allegories both conception birth life sufferings and resurrection of our Sauiour Christ as if there were no historicall truth at all to be greatly regarded in any of these excellent articles of our Christian faith But blessed be the Lord our GOD and our Lord Iesus Christ to be blessed for euer who by his faithfull seruant and true Minister of his Gospell M. Knewstub hath so vnmasked and confuted this notorious and monstrous heretike H. N. that none can be deceiued by his delusions henceforth but they that are willing to be seduced For whose blessed labours as wee haue great cause to blesse and praise God in Christ Iesus so let vs intreate the same our God and most gratious and heauenly Father that by his and all other good meanes and helpes both of writing and preaching the which hee of his infinite mercie hath vouchsafed vs euery one of vs that are the Schollers of our Sauiour Christ may learne to be sound in the faith and so continue to the end to the glory of the same our good God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ and to our owne euerlasting saluation through the grace of the holy Ghost guiding and confirming vs all in the whole truth of the Gospell Amen Thus much concerning the first degree of the exaltation of our Sauiour Christ Beliefe in God the Sonne who ascended vp into Heauen Question NOw let vs proceede to the next degree Which is that How followeth it in the articles of our beliefe Answer Question He ascended vp into heauen What ground of holy Scripture haue you for the ground and warrant of this article Answer The Euangelist Marke recordeth it briefly in these words chap. 10 ver 19. So after the Lord had spoken vnto them he was receiued into heauen The Euangelist Luke is somewhat more large chapter 24.51.52.53 after this manner 51. And it came to passe saith he that as he blessed them he departed from them that is Luke 24. he remoued himselfe some distance from them and was carried vp into heauen 52. And they that is his Apostles worshipped him and returned to Ierusalem with great ioy 53. And they were continually in the Temple praising and landing God Amen But in the first chap. of the Acts the Apostles verses 9.10 11. hee is yet more large then thus saying Acts. 1. 9. And when he had spoken these things while they beheld he was taken vp for a cloud tooke him vp out of their sight 10. And while they looked stedfastly toward heauen as he went behold two men stoode by them in white apparell 11. Who also said Ye men of Galile why stand ye looking vp into heauen This Iesus which is taken vp from ye into heauen shall so come as ye haue seene him goe into heauen In these places we haue in deede the historicall record of this article of our faith Explication as it was fulfilled by our Sauiour in the time and season thereof not onlie according to the former and more ancient prophesies Psal 68.18 compared with Eph. 4.7.8 And Psal 110.1 compared with Matth. 22.41 c. insomuch as the sitting of our Sauiour at the right hand of God there prophesied of includeth the ascension And Dan. 7.13.14 where the ascension and sitting at the right hand of God are ioyntlie fore-told But not onely thus was this fulfilled but also by the more late predictions of our Sauiour himselfe at sundrie times before his death as Iohn 3 12.13 more darkly to Nicodemus And to the Iewes more commonly chap. 6.62 And chap. 7.33.34 And chap. 8.21 And to his Disciples more priuately and apart in most sweete and comfortable manner though for the present they did not so conceiue of his speech chap 14.2.3.4.5 And verse 28.29 And chap 16.4.5 16.17 c. But most plainely to Marie Magdalen after his resurrection chap 20.17.18 Iesus as the Euangelist writeth sayeth vnto her Touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father but goe to my bretheren and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God And Marie Magdalen as Saint Iohn writeth further Came and shewed the Disciples that shee had seene
who chapter 12.35 though not in the historicall order of the time sheweth the occasion of these words For whereas our Sauiour had as wee reade propounded this exhortation to watchfulnes in these wordes Let your loines be girded about and your lights burning And ye your selues like vnto men that waite for their Master when hee shall returne from the wedding that when hee commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediatly Blessed are those seruants whom the Master when hee commeth shall finde waking Verily I say vnto you hee will gird himselfe about and make them to sit downe at table and will come forth and serue them Now if hee come in the second watch or come in the third watch and shall finde them so blessed are those seruants Then followeth that of the housholders watching against the comming of the thiefe as we haue seene alreadie from the report of the Euangelist Matthew Which after the Euangelist Luke hath set downe verses 29 4● of this 1● chapter then it followeth thus verse 41. c. Then Peter saide vnto him Master tellest thou this parable vnto vs or euen to all And the Lord saide Who is a faithfull Steward and wise whom the Master shall make ruler ouer his houshold to giue them their portion of meate in season Blessed is that seruant c. as we haue seene before how it followeth in S. Matthew But S. Luke continueth the speech of our Sauiour further then S. Matthew doth as it followeth in the 47 48. verses in these words And that seruant that knew his Masters will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes But he that knew it not and committed things worthie of stripes shall be beaten with few stripes For vnto whomsoeuer much is giuen shall much be required and they will aske the more of him to whose trust they haue committed much So then by comparing Matthew with Luke we see that whereas our Sauiour requireth diligent preparation and watchfulnesse of all christians and therewith wisedome also from his word that they be neither ignorant nor slothfull as he signifieth by the girding vp of their loines after the maner of that countrie when any were ready to take their iourney and by the lights burning in their hands lest they should loose their right way by occasion of Peters question he applieth this admonition chiefly to the Ministers of the word whom hee compareth to the Stewardes of the house in whom is required speciall wisedome to the ordering of their Masters affaires and speciall faithfulnesse in the performance of those duties which they stand bound vnto according to that of our Sauiour at another time Be ye wise as serpents and simple as Doues and as the Apostle Paul writeth in the name of our Sauiour Christ 1. Cor. ch 4.1.2 Let a man so thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God And as for the rest it is required of the disposers that euery man may be found faithfull Whereunto also our Sauiour in this text annexeth a warrant of blessing and reward to all faithfull seruants and of curse and punishment to all wicked and vnfaithfull ones who shall haue their portion with hypocrites and vnbeleeuers Yea and this our Sauiour sheweth to be equall euen among men and therefore wee cannot thinke that either the iustice or mercie of God the Father of the ●hole family both in heauen and in earth is inferiour but rather infinitely exceeding both in the one respect and also in the other that is in the grieuousnes of punishment vpon transgressors and in the bountifulnes of the reward of his mercie vpon those that be dutifull and obedient The vse of this parable therefore is answerable to the former for to admonish all sorts but specially the Ministers of the word to be diligent and faithfull in their callings against the comming of the Lord that then they may receiue from the mercifull hand of God a most blessed reward according to that 1. Peter 5.4 When as on the contrarie the most fearefull wrath and vengeance of God shall fall sodainly vpon all the wicked which shall not regard the iudgement of the Lord specially vpon such as being in place and office of guiding and admonishing others be themselues most out of frame and as vnwatchfull as any of the rest as the Lord complaineth against the Shepheards of Israell Ezek. 34. verse 4. And yet so as our Sauiour giueth to vnderstand that not onely such carelesse blinde and vnconscionable guides shall be punished but also such as will suffer themselues to be misled by them and doe contrarie to the admonition of the Lord in that behalfe willingly following the●r euill example For if the blinde leade the blinde both fall into the ditch as our Sauiour telleth vs in another place Matth. 15.14 Thus much briefly of the second parable concerning the Master of a Familie that goeth from home and tarrieth somewhat longer then he was looked for NOw like vnto this is the next parable as it followeth in the Euangelist Matthew though set downe vnder the name and example of women yea of tender virgines or damsells Let vs heare the wordes of our Sauiour Quest How doe they followe from the beginning of the xxv Chapter Ans 1. Then saith our Sauiour the kingdome of heauen shal bee likened vnto tenne Virgines which tooke their Lampes and went to meete the Bride-groome 2. And fiue of them were wise and fiue foolish 3. The foolish tooke their Lampes but tooke no oyle with them 4. But the wise tooke oyle in their vessels with their Lampes 5. Now while the Bride-groome turried long all slumbred and slept 6. And at midnight there was a cry made Behold the Bride-groome commeth goe out to meete him 7. Then also those Virgines arose and trimmed their Lampes 8. And the foolish saide vnto the wise giue vs of your oyle for our Lampes are out 9. But the wise answered saying we feare lest there wil not be enough for vs and you but goe ye rather to them that sell and buy for your selues 10. But while they went to buy the Bride-grome came and they that were ready went in with him to the wedding and the gate was shut 11. Afterward came also the other Virgines saying Lord Lord open to vt 12. But he answered and saide verily I say vnto you I knowe ye not 13. Watch therefore for yee knewe neither the day nor the houre when the Sonne of man will come Explicatiō Here we haue a third parable like to the former and of like vse For that was of seruants whose dutie was saide to be to watch and attend their maisters comming from the wedding this is of Virgines appointed to atend vpon the Bride-groome to the mariage supper Wherein notwithstanding our Sauiour frameth his parable according to the custome which was among the people which was not onely to haue their mariage
with him and the holy Angels here hee telleth the wicked that they shall haue their fellowship with the Diuel and his wicked Angels The comparison thus touched let vs now consider of the latter part of the sentence more simply in the owne nature according to the seuerall parts or members of it We may consider of them in this order First who the persons be that shall be condemned Secondly what the punishment is wherevnto they are to bee adiudged The persons are saide to be such as are Cursed and they are no doubt accursed of God Neuertheles our Sauiour doth not call them the Cursed of the Father or the cursed of God as he had saide of the godly that they are the blessed of the Father The reason may be for that no man is simply cursed of God but by reason of his corruption and sinne whereby he maketh himselfe iustly subiect to the curse of God For sinne is the proper and immediate cause of that curse which falleth vpon any And the curse is the next forerunner of condemnation For this cause therefore it may by good reason be conceiued that our Sauiour Christ spareth the name of God or of the Father though hee had vsed it before that euery man might finde the cause of the curse in himselfe and the cause of blessing to be in the free grace and mercy of God who is the onely true and proper fountaine thereof Furthermore touching the persons of whom this sentence shall be principally pronounced by the course and tenure of it it is euident that they are and shall be such as be professours of the Gospell both Iewe and Gentile yet hypocriticall Christians because of their hypocrisie are more accursed then they that neuer heard of the Gospell according to the saying of our Sauiour that it shall be easier for them of Sodom and Gomorrha at the day of iudgement then for such Thus much for the Persons The punishment is to be considered first in two seuerall parts and degrees and then in some further amplifications of it setting forth both the certaintie of it and also the most hideous and wofull vncomfortablenesse of it The first part of the punishment is a seperation from Christ and from the ioyes and glory of his heauenly kingdome for euer Departye from me saith our Sauiour As though hee should say Howsoeuer yee haue presumed to boast of my name and to promise to your selues the kingdome of heauen as wee knowe that the wicked are readie both to thinke and to speake that they looke to be saued as well as the best yet saith our Sauiour Depart from me ye haue no part in me or in my comming or with my redeemed And as he saide before to the foolish virgins I knowe yee not so doth he speake to the same effect here in this place This therefore shall be the first degree of the punishment that it shall be a frustrating of all hope of happines for euer It may be called the punishment of depriuation or losse of the greatest good that might possibly be obtained The second part or degree of the punishment may be called the punishment of feeling or smart yea of the enduring of the greatest euill or woe that can befall any creature This latter part of the punishment is called fire for the sharpnes of it yea it shall be fire of such a kind as God shall make a fit executioner of his most seuere wrath For let vs not deceiue our selues God is able as easily to doe both the one and the other as hee hath alreadie giuen to euerie creature that nature and disposition which they doe presently enioy The same punishment is said to be euerlasting because it shal be such a firie vengeance as shall alwaies torment and burne and yet neuer either consume and wast it selfe or the matter which it shall burne This euerlasting fire shall not onely torment the body but also the soule Yea the soule not onely by the body but properly and in the owne nature For it shall be such a fire as shall torment the spirituall nature of the very diuels themselues Herein therefore doth their iudgement exceed all humane iudgements that euer were or can be For the most grieuous of them are but bodily they cannot touch the soule they are but temporall they cannot be prolonged for euer nay they cannot extend further then the terme of the naturall life O therefore whatsoeuer the iudgement of man shall be of vs or vpon vs let vs be careful I beseech you that we may escape this most heauie and euerlasting punishment which shall proceed from the most terrible iudgment of the diuine Maiestie of the eternall God We doe not without cause pitie those that run on in their sinnes as it were hasting a pace to this destruction Let vs learne to pitie our selues And when we shall doe so let vs magnifie the goodnes of the Lord our God and heauenly Father in this behalfe acknowledging that he hath herein shewed on vs his inestimable pitie and compassion For otherwise wee should be as careles as any other are But let vs proceed to such further amplifications of this punishment as the words of our Sauiour doe point vs vnto to wit the certaintie of it the most wofull and hideous vncomfortablenes of it The certaintie of it is argued from the cause in that our Sauiour saith that it is prepared for the wicked yea no doubt euen as certainly as God hath prepared heauen for his elect children according to the saying of our Sauiour in the 3 of Iohn He that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie to wit if he harden his heart in his vnbeliefe against the doctrine of the Gospel In the last verse of the 30 chap of the Prophet Isaiah the Lord threatening the destruction of the enemies of his Church he alluding to a doolefull place neare vnto Ierusalem where through outragious superstition parents did most vnnaturally burne and torment their children vnder pretence of sacrificing them to God as wee read 2. Chron 28 3 ch 33.6 And Ier 7.31 the Lord I say in that place of the Prophet Isaiah alluding to that doolful place of cruel superstitiō he describeth the most doolfull destructiō of the enemies of his church for euer in these words Tophteh or as the name of the same place is called Topheth Ier 7 31. alledged euen now and likewise 2. King 23.10 it is saith the Lord prepared of olde it is euen prepared for the King hee hath made it deepe and large the burning thereof is fire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a riuer of brimstone doth kindle it Whence it grewe that Hell the place of the eternall torment of the wicked was of the godly the haters of this horrible idolatrie from the name of the possessor of that place who was the sonne of Hinnom called the vallie of Hinnom according to that saying of our Sauiour Mat 5.22 Whosoeuer shall say Foole
may see an almightie power ascribed to the holy Ghost yea euen the almightie power of God seeing none is almightie but he alone And next vnto this who can doubt of the infinite perfection and fulnes of his holines considering that he is in this respect in a speciall manner and in way of a most chiefe excellencie in himselfe aboue all Spirits called the holy Ghost as was obserued in the beginning And in respect of all the elect the Spirit of sanctificatton because all their holines is wrought by him Rom 1 4. And 1. Peter 1 2. And 2. Thes 2.13 Hee is also a most pure and cleane Spirit infinitely contrarie to all vncleane Spirits of men 1. Cor 6 11. and verses 17 18.19.20 And Gal 5 16. c and to the wicked Angels branded by the reprochfull name of vncleane or foule Spirits Marke 1.23 c c 27. And chap 5 2. c. Let vs now come to the rest Question What proofe haue you that the holy Ghost is infinite in all perfection of wisdome Answer In this respect saith the Prophet Isaiah who hath instructed the Spirit of the Lord and who was his counseller or taught him Explicatiō proofe So saith he indeed chap 40.13 And seeing he hath done all things in excellent wisedome without the aduise or counsell of any creature in any point it is plaine that he hath all perfection in and of himselfe The same also may appeare with like euidence and plainnes from the testimonie of Saint Paule 1. Cor 2.9.10 The things saith he which eye hath not seene nor eare hath heard c. God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God c. Which things also saith the same Apostle as it followeth we speake not in wordes which mans wisedome teacheth but which the holy Ghost teacheth comparing spirituall things with spirituall things And againe chap 12. verse 4. c. after that he hath reckoned vp the manifold gifts and graces which God bestoweth vpon his Church wisedome knowledge discerning of spirits c. Hee concludeth that there are diuersities of gifts but the same spirit as was alledged before This spirit giueth our Sauiour gifts aboue measure as wee haue seene alreadie and the Church of Christ all aboundance from his fulnesse teaching them in all wisedome c. And therefore he must needes be in himselfe infinite in wisedome Now that we may proceed Question What proofe haue you that the holy Ghost is likewise infinite in all perfection and constancie or vnchangeablnes in truth Answer In this respect he is called the spirit of truth yea that spirit of truth which is incomparable and pierles euen the very truth it selfe Explicatiō proofe It is our Sauiours owne testimonie Iohn chap 14.17 and chap 16.13 And the testimonie of his faithfull Apostle Iohn 1. Epistle 5 6. The spirit is truth And therefore also is it affirmed that those things which the spirit hath foretold must needs be performed according to that saying of the Apostle Peter Act 1.16 This Scripture must needes haue beene fulfilled which the holy Ghost spake by the mouth of Dauid c. Moreouer Ephes 1 13.14 The faithfull are sealed with the holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance vntill the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of his glory And ch 5.9 The fruit of the spirit is in all truth And 1. Ioh 5 7. he is a ioynt witnes of the truth together with the Father and the Sonne and of equall authoritie and credite therein with them Question And is he also of the same perfection of diuine goodnes and mercy with them He is so Answer and thorefore is called the Spirit of grace and compassion or as some translate of supplication and introatie Explicatiō proofe So we read Zech chap 12.10 and Heb 10.29 And the holy Ghost is so called because he both giueth grace and also certifieth vs of that grace and fauour and of that pitie and compassion which both the Father and the Sonne beare toward vs yea and stirreth vs vp and teacheth vs howe to intreate the same For as the Apostle saith Rom 5. verse 5. The loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. And chap 8.16 The Spirit beareth witnes with our Spirit that we are the children of God And in the same cha verse 26. The Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we knowe not what to pray as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh requests for vs with fighes which cannot be expressed c. Moreouer Gal 5.22 Loue ioy long suffering gentlenes and goodnes are the fruites of the Spirit in vs. And Ephes 5 9. The fruite of the Spirit is in all goodnes And therefore the holy Ghost himself is in himselfe most good and gracious And so we read Nehem 9.20 and Psal 143.10 He is called the good Spirit of God And 2. Cor 3 6. The Spirit giueth life And verse 17 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is libertie And therefore also hee is in himselfe most free working and distributing all things as it pleaseth him 1 Cor 12. verse 11. There is one special attribute of the diuine nature or Godhead yet behind namely righteousnes or iustice Question What proofe haue you therefore that the holy Ghost is infinite in al perfection of iustice together with the Father and the Sonne Answer In the 30. chap of Isaiah verse 1. Woe to the rebellious children saith the Lord who take counsell but not with me and couer with a couering but not by my Spirit that they may lay sinne vpon sinne c. Explication proofe Here it is plaine that the Spirit of God can abide no iniquitie no more then either of the other persons in the God-head And beside our Sauiour himself rehearseth it for a diuine propertie of the holy Ghost to rebuke the world of sinne which is vnrighteousnes and to shewe where true righteousnes is to be found namely in Christ through faith and not in mans own corrupt and sinfull nature or workes In which respect the Apostle Paul saith that our Sauiour was iustified in the Spirit 1. Tim 3 16. without whose righteousnes apprehended by faith through the Spirit none can be iustified in the sight of God 1 Cor 6 11. Neither can we without the sanctifying grace of the same Spirit through Christ performe any dutie of righteousnes For it is the fruite of the spirit alone which is in all righteousnes Ephes 5 9. And they onely Who are led by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God Rom 8 14. And 1. Cor 12 3. No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost As touching the rest they prouoke the Spirit of God against themselues to their destruction Isai 63 10. They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit therfore was God turned to
ought to be the estate and condition of euery true Church of Christ throughout the whole world This Church of God therefore generally considered is but one as the Apostle sheweth by the similitude of the naturall bodie the which though it haue many members is yet but one bodie Song of Songs ch 6. v. 8. And Ioh. 10.16 Now whereas there are diuers kindes of bodies First naturall such as euery man carrieth about him now Secondly spirituall such as the faithfull shall haue indued with far more excellent gifts at the resurrection from the dead 1. Cor. 15.44 Thirdly politike bodies such as are ciuill corporations whereof the King of the Nation is the head in a borrowed sense or metaphorically 1. Sam. chap. 15.17 Fourthly Mysticall bodies as for example the Churches of God spiritually vnited to our Sauiour Christ the onely immediate head and vitall quickener and gouernour thereof Hence it is the more manifest what manner of body the Church is by how much the similitude wherevnto it is compared is more distinctly expressed So then the Church of God to speake generally as we began to say is but one mysticall and spirituall bodie how many members soeuer it haue being considered either in particular Churches whether nationall as wee vse to speake or in cities or in country townes and villages or whether it be considered in regard of singular persons and therefore is called Catholike or Vniuersall Furthermore it is so called not onely to note thereby the calling of the Gentiles to the fellowship of the faith and couenant of Gods grace with the beleeuing Iewes who from the time of Moses were the onely peculiar people of God aboue all other of the Nations Ephes 2.16 and 3.6 but also to the end that vnder this name of catholike or vniuersall might be comprehended the whole number of the elect whomsoeuer God hath ordeined to saluation from the beginning of the world to the end of the same as well such as be called alreadie as such as are to be called in euery age of the world and the same also out of euery nation farre and neare and out of euery estate and condition of people noble or vnnoble rich or poore learned or vnlearned young or olde man or woman and all according to the free grace of God without respect of person Yea the Church hath this generall name giuen vnto it that it might not onely comprehend that part of the Church which is called the militant part here on earth but also that part which is alreadie partly and in some measure triumphant in heauen According to that which we reade Ephes 3.15 God is the Father of the whole familie in heauen and in earth Reade also chap. 1. verses 9 10 11. And Colos 1.19 20 21 22. Heb. 12.22 c. And Gal. 4.26 This then is that which the holy Apostle saith in our text that in the one only body of the Church of God here on earth both Iew Gentile bond free c are conteined as the seuerall members thereof The which as was said we may proportionably extend to the whole Church most generally taken that all is but one c. Reade also Acts 2. verse 39. The promise is made to you and to your children and to all that are a farre off euen as many as the Lord our God shall call Likewise Ephes 2.13 c. And Gal. 3. at the end of the chapter And Colos 3.11 Neither Grecian nor Iew circumcision nor vncircumcision neither Barbarian nor Scythian neither bond nor free none of them are excepted from hauing their part in Christ either because they are of this or that nation of this or that condition and calling c. Reade also Acts 10.34 35. Of a truth saith the Apostle Peter I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons But in euery nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him And Reuel 5.9 Thou hast redeemed vs to God by thy blood out of euery kindred and tongue and people and nation c. And chap. 7.9 I beheld saith Saint Iohn and lo a great multitude which no man could number of all nations and kindreds and people and tongues stood before the throne and before the lambe clothed with long white robes and palmes in their hands c. And verse 14 c. These were they which came out of great tribulation c. This vniuersality of the Catholike Church is according to the ancient promise of God made to Abraham that in his seede all the nations of the world should be blessed It is also according to that more ancient and propheticall prayer of Noah Gen. 9.27 God perswade Iapheth that he may dwell in the tents of Shem. And yet before that according to that most ancient promise of God euen from the beginning of the world Gen. 3.15 The seede of the woman shall breake the Serpents head Yea God as a most prouident Father knowing that fraileman would fall into sinne and so be the iust cause of his owne miserie and ruine it pleased him of his infinite goodnesse and mercie in the secret of his owne counsel and purpose to ordaine him a remedie euen before the foundations of the world were laid 1. Pet. 1.20 Herein therefore God hath dealt with mankinde after the manner of wise and louing Parents who knowing that their young children are subiect to burning or skalding c will alwaies haue some thing prepared afore hand which may be ready with them to helpe at any time of neede Yet that which man doth vpon an vncertaine feare God did of certaine knowledge without any doubt what would ensue By reason that the Church is thus Catholike and vniuersall in the generall acception of it therfore is it made a matter of faith not that we should beleeue in the Church but because it is to be beleeued of vs according to the holy Scriptures that God hath such a Church as may iustly be so termed And because also it is so firmely founded established in our Sauiour Christ according to the most sure stable counsel of God that nothing no not the gates of Hell shal euer be able to preuaile against it Mat. 16.18 Read also Ps 125. and Ier. 33.17 18 c. to the end of the chapter Moreouer 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his c. And that this vniuersall Church consisting both of Iew Gentile is founded vpon our Sauiour Christ it is euident Ephes 2.18 For as the holy Apostle saith there wee both that is both Iew and Gentile haue through him an entrance vnto the Father by one Spirit And verse 22. In whom we are also built together to be the habitation of God by the Spirit By the Spirit saith the Apostle and that also through faith to remoue all conceit of any bodily commixtion or confusion of the Church or members thereof with Christ bodily and likewise to
to be more loth to offend his blessed Maiestie yea to be by all meanes more studious to please him in all things as was well answered before Now touching the last branch that is for the proofe of the assurance of forgiuenes of sinnes to all such as are thus qualified yea though through infirmitie they sinne in many things read 1. Iohn 2.1 If any man sinne wee haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous Read also Heb. 13.8 and ch 6.10 c. to the end of the chapter And Rom. 3.25.26 ch 11.29 Our sinnes are many in deede and exceeding great but Gods mercies are more greater as euery true sorowfull soule may safely comfort it selfe Thus much of the Duties NOw to conclude this Article what is the danger of not beleeuing it and of not yeelding due fruites of repentance from the Comfort of it Question Answer They that beleeue not the forgiuenes of sinnes yea the daily and continuall forgiuenes of them with acknowledgement and bewailing of the same from day to day they can beleeue nothing to their sound consolation and comfort insomuch as they make the death of our Lord Iesus Christ of no powerfull effect vnto them Likewise for want of repentance and amendment of life all such debar themselues from all comfortable perswasion of forgiuenes Yea they doe make themselues iustly subiect to the wages and forfeiture of sinne which is the eternall destruction both of body and soule in he●l Explication and proofe To the end we may auoide this danger all hereticall errours against the true beliefe of this Article must be carefully auoided of vs. These errours are such as either concerne the Author of the forgiuenes of sinnes which is God or the meaning of the words how farre they are to be extended or the cause wherefore God forgiueth sinnes or the fruite and effect thereof First therefore in so much as God onely forgiueth sinnes the errour of those that attribute a subordinate power of forgiuenes to the Pope of Rome or to anie other mortall sinfull man is to be reiected as a blasphemie against God For as touching the power of the Ministery of the word and keies of the kingdom of heauen committed vnto the lawfull Ministers thereof that is to say first and principally to the holy Apostles then after them to others according to the wil of God Mat. 16.19 ch 18. ve 18. Ioh. 20. ve 23. this consisteth only in the ministerial publishing pronouncing of forgiuenes to all repenting sinners and that in the name and authority of God alone they being meerely his seruants therein And whereas it is required that euery man should forgiue his neighbour this is to be vnderstood as touching the wrong done particularly to the party offended and to the staying of all malitious desire of reuenge and of all cursed and vncharitable imprecation c but not touching the guiltines of the sinne and offence done against God For in this respect it belongeth onely to him to say Surely I haue pardoned I wil not destroy Iob ch 34.31 Reade also Psa 51.4 Against thee against thee onely I haue sinned saith King Dauid And Psa 130.8 With the Lord is mercy c. And he will redeeme Israel from all his iniquitie No Popish confession or pennance of theirs is auaileable herevnto Secondly the errour of those is to be reiected of vs who either restraine the word Sinnes onely to sinnes vnwillingly cōmitted as the Basilidian heretikes are said to haue held or else to those sinnes that go before baptisme as though all that follow must at the least in some part be otherwise satisfied for as Papists teach or to those that went before the falling back of any after that they haue bin baptized and haue once obtained forgiuenes as the Cathari and Nouatians and some other haue held or to those that went before the falling away of any before they haue takē holy orders as the Luciferians restrained the sinnes which they accounted pardonable Likewise the Popish error of restraining the word of forgiuenes to eternall paines is also to be reiected For seeing no punishment to satisfaction is due but in respect of sin imputed by what right may any be inflicted to that end if sin be already freely pardoned forgiuen for that satisfactions sake which our Sauiour hath made and which God hath accepted for our full discharge In which respect also we are to reiect their deuise of purgatory pains to cōtinue after this life as long as they of their bloody mercy list thēselues to determine Thirdly the heretical error of the same popish Deceiuers is to be reiected in that they do ascribe forgiuenes of sinnes at the least in some part to the operatorie working vertue of the Sacraments to the merit of mans own works like as also the Messalians Euchetae did to their works praiers And like to the Heracleonites and Helcosaites who ascribed forgiuenes to anointing and to other their ceremonies Fourthly insomuch as God of his most free grace and infinite mercy forgiueth vs all our sins to this end that we should not come into condemnation but haue our present entrance into the assured hope of euerlasting life glory yea to a present enioying of it by faith as our Sauiour himselfe assureth all such as heare his word beleeue in him that sent him Ioh. ch 5. ver 24. We are therefore confidently to cast away all doubtings of forgiuenes as touching our selues all that do truly beleeue and also all feares of purgatorie fire which the Popish Seducers scare and confound their Disciples withall And as we are to beware of these foure sorts of errors to hold firmely that all sins are pardonable yea freely perfitly pardonable here in this life to all those that shall truly beleeue repent so let vs take heed of foure sorts of people especially who are dangerous examples among vs. The first is the Popish sort of deceiuers whose errours against this Article we haue touched alreadie The second is of such as dreame of a perfection of their owne inherent righteousnes here in this life so as they need not saue for modesties sake or rather in an hypocritical pretence aske forgiuenes of sinnes Such as are some of the Anabaptists and Family of loue The third sort is of such as aske forgiuenes of their owne sins but wil not forgiue those whom they are offended withall Of whō our Sauiour saith that they seeke forgiuenes in vaine Math. 6.14.15 The fourth sort is of secure and carelesse men who lie in their sinnes without any conscience or remorse for them as Atheists and Libertines Let none of these think vnlesse they repent them of these their grieuous sins that euer they shall finde pardon forgiuenes with the Lord howsoeuer they shall acquite assoile themselues as if no euill should come vnto them Thus much concerning the Article of the forgiuenes of sinnes