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A09026 The grounds of diuinitie plainely discouering the mysteries of Christian religion, propounded familiarly in diuers questions and answeres: substantially proued by scriptures; expounded faithfully, according to the writings of the best diuines, and euidently applyed by profitable vses, for the helpe and benefite of the vnlearned which desire knowledge. To the which is prefixed a very profitable treatise, containing an exhortation to the study of the word, with singular directions for the hearing and reading of the same. By Elnathan Parr minister of the word, at Palgraue in Suffolke.; Grounds of divinitie. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1614 (1614) STC 19314; ESTC S103147 128,560 328

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Esa 49.15 yet the Lord will not forget thee Yea Esa 54.10 the Mountaines shall remoue and the Hils fall downe but my mercy shall not faile nor my couenant of peace fall away saith Ichouah who hath compassion Thus much of Diuine Attributes Mat. 3.16.17 28.19 1. Ioh. 5.7 Deut. 6.4 Esay 44.4 1. Cor. 8.6 Eph. 4.5 1. Tim. 2.5 now of relation of Persons Q. You said that God is the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost are there not then three Gods Ans No These are three Persons subsisting in the Diuine Essence I beleeue there is but one God Ex. That there is one God 3 Persons is a Mystery propoūded in the Scriptures to our faith to beléeue not to our reason to dispute and discusse Wée know it is so because God hath so reuealed but the reason of it wée are not capable of and therefore wée must bée wise vnto sobriety admiring with humble acknowledgement this great Mistery Wée may not bée ignorant of it nor curious in inquiring into that which is not manifested both are very hurtful This then must bée holden that the God-head or Essence of God is one vndiuided the Persons onely distinguished not Essentially for euery one hath the whole Essence of the God-head and is that onely true God nor onely rationally but really and yet in a manner incomprehensible vnknown of vs. The Father is that God so is the Son so is the Holy Ghost Not thrée Gods nor thrée Eternals but One As Athanasius excellently in his Créed Neither aforencr after other And yet the Father is not the Sonne nor the Sonne the Father neither of these the Holy Ghost nor the Holy Ghost either of them but really distinguisht one from another in regard of their Persons So that the Father is another Person from the Sonne not another thing or another God c. Wée must beléue the Essence to bée one the persons to bée three neither confounding the Persons nor diuiding the Substance Vse Bee exceeding carefull rightly to vnderstand these things For as August wee cannot liue well vnlesse wee beleeue well of God And againe Errour is no where more dangerous seeking and study no where more painefull Finding no where more profitable If we conceiue amisse heere to whom are our prayers directed to whom our Worship Not to the true God but to the frame of our owne braines When wee pray therefore sometimes naming the Father sometimes the Sonne sometimes the Holy Ghost wee direct our prayers to the Diuine Essence and together to the three Persons Because we beleeue and professe not onely that the three Persons are the true God but that euery Person is not a part of that one Diuine Essence but the whole Diuine Essence that is the onely true God besides whom there is no other They that call vpon one of the Persons as separate from the rest erre from the true God according to that of our Sauiour The Lord eulighten vs. Ioh. 5.23 Q. What meane you by these words Essence and Person Ans Essence is the Nature common to the three Persons being the same vndiuided and whole in euery of them subsisting by it selfe A Person is a Subsistance in the Diuine Nature or that one Essence which being referred to the other Persons is distinguished from them by an incommunicable Property And this is the sacred and secret mystery of the Trinity in Vnity and Vnity in Trinity for euer to be adored Expl. These words Essence Person as also Trinity Vnity are not all in the Scriptures but the things signified by them are which tearmes the Church hath béene driuen by a necessity of speaking to finde out and to vse to auoyde the snares of Heretickes who vnder the words of the Church in time past hidde their hereticall prauities and so by their likely spéech conueyed their poyson to the vnskilfull As the Church acknowledged God to be one so the Heretickes but in a diuers sence The Church one in Essence the Heretickes not so but one in consent and will c. And therefore the Church out of the common vsuall maner of speaking vpon this necessitie borrowed certaine tearmes to defeat the Heretickes which tearmes it hath taken not as though these or any other could fully expresse this mystery but that it might not wholy be concealed of the which an Emperour spake well and modestly Gratian to Ambr. We speake of these things not as we ought but as we can Neither doth the Church vse these tearmes Essence Person in their common and vsuall meaning wholly as namely The Essence of man is a thing communicable but it is an vniuersall Name which truely exsisteth not by it selfe but is onely a collection of the minde and therein conceiued But Essence Diuine as it is communicable so also it truely is and subsisteth and is not an imaginary thing as the former nor an vniuersall name as the Philosophers speake of the humane Essence but the Diuine nature subsisting indéede being common to the thrée Persons and whole in euery one So also of the word Person In men what a person is we vnderstand as Peter Iohn and Paul are 3. persons to whom is common one humane nature So Father Sonne and Holy-ghost are thrée Persons to whom is common the Diuine nature but here is wonderfull difference First the Diuine nature common to the thrée Persons truly subsisteth so doth not the humane Secondly The thrée Diuine Persons differ not in substance but the thrée humane Persons doe substantially differ so that one whole is wholy distinct from an other Thirdly In the humane Persons there is a difference betwéene them in time as one yonger then another In dignity one more worthy then another In will one contradicteth another In works one laboureth more then another but there is none of these things in the Diuine Persons Fourthly In humane Persons it followeth not Iohn 14.10 where one is that there the other should be Paul is at Rome Peter at Antioch but in the Diuine it is otherwise Iohn 8.29 where one is there are all for their common and vndiuided Essence These things are after an vnspeakeable manner Vse That as wee reuerently thinke of this wonderfull mystery so that wee wisely speake of it not taking to our selues liberty to vse new formes of speaking or to swarue from the receiued custome approued by the Church according to the Scriptures but that as duetifull children wee tie our selues to her wholesome language For as Saint Hierome said Heresie breedeth out of words improperly vttered And Saint Augustines caueat is singular If thou canst not find what God is yet take heede to thinke of God that which he is not This doctrine of the true God one in Essence three in Persons is most religiously to be learned kept professed maintained and taught in the Church both for the glorie of the True God and also to distinguish vs from Iewes Turkes and Infidells and for our owne
and of his Office Of his Person these thrée things must necessarily be beleeued according to the Scriptures First that he is that onely true God Secondly that he is very man partaking of our flesh and bloud with all generall not personall infirmities of our Nature being in all things like vnto vs yet without sinne Heb 2.14 and 4.15 1. Pet. 1.19 and 2.22 And therefore wee reade that he was hungry thirsty weary c. And if you aske how he could partake of our nature and yet haue no sinne you must remember that he was conceiued by the Holy-Ghost and borne of the virgin Mary The Holy-Ghost sanctifying a part of the substance of the Virgins Luk. 1. 2 Body to be the Body of Christ so that we beleeue he was not begotten by man by whom corruption and sinne is propagated and deriued vnto vs. Thirdly that he is God and Man in one Person figured by the Arke which was of Gold and precious Wood that would not rot noting by the Gold the Deity of Christ and by the precious Wood his Humanity without sinne This Personall vnion of these two Natures in Christ was thus The Sonne of God being from euerlasting a Person subsisting in the Holy and vndiuided Trinity did assume or take into the Vnty of his Person a Humane Nature consisting of Body and Soule so soone as euer it beganne to be hauing no Subsistence out of his Person but being destitute of all Personality in it selfe so that it becomes the very Body and Soule of the Sonne of God and whatsoeuer is proper to either Nature which are not by this meanes either in Essence or Operations confounded is indifferently and truely spoken of the Person As to make it plaine to the simple In our selues vnderstanding and knowledge are effects and workes of the Soule eating sleeping c. are workes proper to the Body Neither doth the Soule eate or sleepe or the Body vnderstand or know Yet wée say well and truely that Peter or Paul consisting of this body and soule vnderstand know eate stéepe c. because these two Natures the body and soule are vnited in their person And for this cause looke what is well or ill done by the body or any part of it or by the soule or any part of it is accounted to the whole Person making the Person guilty or not guilty good or bad As if the Tongue blasphemeth it is said the Person blasphemeth or if there be euill motions in the minde yet the whole Person is guilty So in some sort is it in this Personall Vnion of these two Natures of Christ As To know all things to be present euery where are Proprieties of his Diuine Nature To kéep the Law to die and to bléed are Proprieties of the Humane Nature of Christ Now wée may not say that the Humane Nature of Christ knoweth all things is omnipotent c. Nor that the Diuine Nature is obedient bléedeth dyeth c. And yet in regard of the Personall Vnion of these two Natures in Christ we say that the Person which hath these two Natures which is Christ the Sonne of God knoweth all things is present euery where bléedeth dyeth c. and looke what is done or suffered by either of the Natures is truely done and so accomited by the whole Person So that if you 〈◊〉 who fulfilled the Law who dyed for vs we may say the second Person in the Trinity euen God though not according to his Diuine but Humane Nature as speaketh the Holy Ghost notably Act. 20.28 God by his Owne Bloud purchased the Flocke of his Elect. Whereby I beleeue and that most infallibly and truly that whatsoeuer Christ did for my saluation is Gods own deed euen the immediate worke of the second Person in the Trinity Yet heere one thing must be remembred that though the body and soule of Peter make the person of Peter yet the Humane and Diuine Nature of Christ make not his Person for he was a Person from euerlasting and cannot bee a Humane Person but is still a Diuine Person though he could not be a Mediator or execute that Office without the Humane Nature so assumed This is that wonderfull Mystery of our Sauiour IESVS CHRISTS Incarnation Wherein concurred propounded to our Faith not to our Reason three the greatest Miracles that euer were First that a Virgine conceiued and brought forth a Child remainings Virgine Secondly that Adams flesh and Adams sin were parted Thirdly and principally this vnsearchable Mystery of the Personall Vnion of the God-head and Man-hood of Christ Quest But was it necessary that our Mediator should be God and Man and that in one Person as you haue declared Ans Yes verely for by this meanes he could die for vs and ouercome death and deserue for vs by his obedience the pardon of our sinnes and eternall life Expli Two things necessarily required that our Mediatour should be God First the greatnesse of the euill to the which we were subiect Secondly the greatnes of the good that we stood in néed of Our euill was foure-folde First the heinousnesse of sinne Secondly the anger of God Thirdly the power of death Fourthly the tyranny of the Diuell Our good which we wanted Foure folde also First the restoring of the Image of God Secondly the pardon of sinne Thirdly deliuerance from Death and Satan Fourthly eternall life But to take away the Euill Marke 2.7 Hos 13.14 Reuel 1.18 Zach 3.2 Ro. 16.20 Psal 51.10 Rom. 6.23 c. Ro. 5.17 18 Hebr. 2.14 and bestow the Good none is able to do but God Therfore it was necessary that our Mediatour should be God Two Reasons also there are why he must necessarily be man first the Iustice of God required that in that nature which offended satisfaction should be made secondly that he might haue somthing to offer which could not be his Godhead therefore he must be Man Euery high Priest must offer somewhat therefore a Body was ordained him Hebr. 8.3 Heb. 10.5 Hebr. 9.26 that he might offer himselfe Two reasons also may be alleaged why he must be God and Man in one person First that he might be a fit Mediator betwéene God and Man as it were indifferent and equally affected to either side for an Vmpiere or Wards-man may not be partiall If he had béene onely God wée might haue thought that he would not enough haue respected our misery If he had béene onely Man not enough the iustice of God Therefore he is to be God and Man deare vnto both and accounting both deare vnto him carefull that Gods iustice be not impeached and that our misery be relieued Secondly that the workes performed in the flesh of the Sonne of God might be of an infinite price to satisfie for our sinnes by which an infinite Maiesty was offended which could not be if the Person vndertaking our Redemption had not béene God and Man in one Person He was Man that he might haue
power onely to the Scriptures and therefore we must exclude all vnwritten Traditions or Decrées of men though neuer so holy and learned from being this Rule or any part thereof Therefore we are forbidden to adde Deut. 4.2 Reu. 22.18 19. or take from the written word of God Beléeuest thou the Scriptures They say thou shalt not adde to them And therefore Tertullian saith When we beléeue wée beléeue this first that there is nothing more which we ought to beléeue Vse 2. This bindeth all to all reuerence in reading Prou. 1.7 Psa 25.14 1. Pet. 4.11 speaking hearing of the word because of the Author which is God and to all care to know vnderstand beléeue and obey the same because to this purpose it is giuen vs as a most perfect Rule by God himselfe Q. The holy Scriptures are Diuine and Canonicall in themselues Esay 8.20 Deut. 5.32 Ioh. 5.39 2. Pet. 1.19 Gal. 6.16 2. Iohn 10 Iohn 7.17 1. Cor. 2.10.11.12 1. Ioh. 2.27 5.10 but how do we know that they be so Ans We know that they are so both by the testimony of themselues for so the old Testament testifieth of it selfe the new of the old and of it selfe and also by the witnesse of the Holy Ghost in our hearts Expli There are two principall arguments of the Diuinity of the Scriptures to vs 2. Sam. 23 2. Luk. 1.70 2 Tim. 3.16 2. Pet. 1.21 1. Cor. 2.13 the first is their owne voyce witnessing that they are of God as often this is repeated in the Prophets Thus saith the Lord. And this is the chiefest Argument euen the very voice of God himselfe of which we may safely collect thus If the Scriptures be true when they speake of things to come then also when they speake of things present The second argument is like vnto the first and it is the testimony of the Holy Ghost which as it inspired the holy men to write so also it teacheth the children of God to beléeue the Scriptures 2. Pet. 1.21 1. Cor. 2.10 for if faith be the gift of God as it is then also to beléeue the Scriptures to be the word of God The first of these is to perswade others and our selues the other chiefly to satisfie our our selues which also is alwaies agréeable to the Scriptures and is to be examined by the same Vnto these two you may adde also their miraculous preseruation notwithstanding the rage of all Iulians and Diuels the diuine vocation mission and life of the Writers the Maiesty of the stile the purity of the Doctrine their power vpon the conscience for the confounding and breaking of the stubborne and for the raising conuerting and comforting of the broken and such like Vse This serues to confute the Papists who hold that the only chiefe argument whereby we are perswaded of the authority of the Scriptures is the testimony of the Church we willingly acknowledge that the Church is a meanes whereby wee come to the knowledge of the Scriptures but not that for the which only we beléeue them to be diuine The Scriptures are a Rule 1. Tim. 3.15 the office of the Church is to keep to vse this Rule Now as the worke-man which vseth a Rule giues not that power to it wherby it iudgeth the dimensions but it hath it of its owne nature by an inward essentiall property as it is a Rule so also the Scriptures haue not this power of the Church though the Church haue power skill to vse the same And therfore our Sauiour when question was whether he were the Messiah or no resteth not on the witnesse of Iohn Iohn 5.36 Ibid. Vers 37. Verse 39. but vpon greater and better witnesse this witnesse was his workes the witnesse of his Father and of the holy Scriptures So when the Tessalonians receiued the preaching of Paul as the word of God 1. Thes 2.13 it was not the testimony of any Church nor the worthinesse of Paul a meane poore man but the very force of the word it selfe which bowed their hearts The testimony of the Church is to be reuerenced is good but not infallible The testimony of the Scriptures themselues is better and infallible The Church is to be proued by the Scriptures not the scriptures only by the Church Yea the Papists to proue the infallibility of the Church flie to the Scriptures And vniuersally Mat. 16.18 1. Tim. 3.15 the authority prouing is greater more certaine more knowne then the conclusion proued by the same Yea if we should belieue the Scriptures onely for the authority of the Church which is in conclusion the Pope his Prelates then first they should be Iudges in their own cause which is vnequall Secondly there could be no certainty of Faith or Religion because the Church hath varied diuersly in her iudgement of the Canon Thirdly why may not the Turkes perswade themselues that their testimony of their Alcoran is as sufficient as ours of the Scriptures Fourthly this is to subiect the Word of God to the will of Man yea God to man so that God shall not be beleeued to speake to vs nor we beleeue him when he speaks vnlesse it please the Church that is the Pope and his Prelates yea there shal be no more difference betweene God the Diuel truth lying the sacred and diuine Scriptures and the Alcoran of the Turkes then the Church shall thinke fit which is most horrible blasphemy The Lord open the eies of our Aduersaries the Papists to consider it Q. How do these holy Scriptures set forth and describe God or what do you beleeue God to be according to the Scriptures Ans I beleeue by the Scriptures that God is a Spirit being of himselfe and giuing being to all things Infinite Eternall Almighty Knowing all things c. Wisedome Goodnesse Mercy Truth Iustice it selfe c. The Father the Son and the Holy Ghost The Creator and Preseruer of all things The Redeemer and Sanctifier of his Church Expl. None must imagine that I haue set downe all that can be said of God for there are many other particulars in the holy Scriptures but these are the heads neither can the knowledge of Men Angels expresse fully the amplitude of his essence and glory Though that so much as is auaileable for vs to know himselfe hath reuealed in his word for it is most true that a learned man said Ramus God cannot be defined without his owne logicke This is not a Definition but a Description taken out of the Scriptures consisting of thrée parts first of Attributes secondly of Relations and proprieties of persons Thirdly of Actions and Effects which are generall as Creation Prouidence speciall belonging only to his Church which are principally two Redemption and Sanctification Of these I purpose according as God enableth to enquire in order according to the Scriptures and first I will briefly expound the Atributes as they are alleaged We
the conscience may be called a brideling or a restraining Conscience as if question be whether the Sabaoth may bee broken thus The commandement of God may not be broken but to breake the Sabaoth is to breake the commandement of God therefore breake it not saith conscience Thus by experience we féele within vs before we do a thing a certaine power pushing vs backe or egging vs forward or we séeme to heare a voyce in our breasts bidding or forbidding vs. And when we do contrary to the motion and monishing of conscience we are said to wound and to sin against our consciences which is grieuous Now remember how the Conscience determineth of Actions So also of Thoughts and Words Vse 1. Looke well to thy conscience and examine it for a good conscience is not of Nature but of Grace by Faith Rom. 5.1 through the bloud of Christ For it is the bloud of Iesus applied by Faith Heb. 9.14 which purgeth the conscience both from the guiltinesse and filthinesse thereof Content not thy selfe then though thy conscience be quyet and trouble thée not for it may so be and yet be starke nought Bee sure that the quietnesse thereof bee grounded on the righteousnesse of Christ and the assurance of the pardon of thy sinnes Else when it stirreth and awakeeth it will be like a Lyon ready euen to rend out thy throat Call therefore thy conscience to her office here which if shée discharge and being rightly informed excuse thée thou mayest truly haue boldnesse before God Otherwise euen as a man that hath the gout is not healed because for a little time he féeleth it not beat and fret so neither doth the quietnesse of conscience argue the health and goodnesse thereof vnlesse it be quieted by the blood of Iesus Better thy conscience accuse here then in the day of Iudgement when though it sléepe now it will vnlesse it be preuented most certainely accuse and confound For the nature of it is alwaies to take Gods part though it be against it selfe Make then thy concience thy friend against that day when a good conscience will be more woorth then a whole world The remembrance of which time made Paul endeuoure to haue a cleare conscience before God and men Acts 24.16 Vse 2. If thou once gettest a good conscience kéepe it with all diligence For as a good conscience is a continuall feast Prou. 4.23 Pro. 15.15 2. Cor. 1.12 Yea a very heauen vpon earth so an euil and guilty conscience is an vnspeakeable torment yea a very hell for a wounded spirit who can beare If a man haue a good conscience Pro. 14. he cannot want comfort in the middest of the fire But if a man were in Paradise as Adam with an euill conscience hee must néedes want comfort for as the shadow followes the body so doth an euill conscience follow the vnrepentant sinner alwaies dogging him and crying fearefully against him Thou hast sinned thou shalt be damned driuing into most fearefull agonies and passions euen vnto finall desperation as in Iudas if the mouth be not stopped by the merites of Christ The Heathen thought that those who liued ill were haunted with furies and fiends Surely this is the fiend euen thy euill conscience gnawing vpon thy heart and stinging as a Scorpion neither canst thou auoyde it but onely by faith in Christ Kéepe therefore thy good conscience if thou hast it as the chiefest Iewell which thou shalt doe if thou obserue these Rules First cherish Faith for it is the root of a good conscience Secondly auoyd all sinne for as a moat in the eye so sinne troubleth the peace of conscience and as water queucheth fire so sinne putteth out the goodnesse thereof And therefore when Abigaile would perswade Dauid from bloody reuenge she vseth an argument from preseruing the peace of conscience and perswadeth him Thirdly walke in the continuall practise of righteousnesse which that wée may be able to do namely both to auoyde sin Heb. 13.18 to liue honestly A fourth thing must bee done which is the right enforming of the conscience that it be able to discerne good from euil and mistake not one for an other for as an vnskilfull Pilote that knoweth not the coast easily maketh shippewracke and as a bad guide soone bringeth into danger so a conscience not instructed in the truth For if thou doubtest and doest doubtingly thou sinnest though the action be lawfull in it selfe yet not to thée for whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 If thy conscience erre taking that to be good which is euill thou canst not but sinne for if thou dost according to thy erring conscience thou sinnest in doing contrary to the commandement of God If thou doest it not thou sinnest also because thou dost against conscience and there is no way to helpe out of these briers but to enforme the conscience in the truth which is by the word of God the rule of conscience by which it appeareth that all such which neglect the word of God 1. Corin. 14 24 25. must néedes haue corrupt and dangerous consciences Vse 3. Neuer sinne in hope of secrecie for thou canst not lie hidde though thou couldst conceale thy faults from al men yea from the diuell yet there is a bird in thy breast which will tell tales and bewray all the conscience is a thousand witnesses happy is he which hath it to witnesse for him before God Quest What meane you when you say that man was created in the Image and likenesse of God Ans I meane that neere likenes wheby Adam resembled God which consisted partly in the immortality of his soule partly in his dominiō ouer the creatures but principally in the gifts of his minde Colos 3.10 Ephe. 4.24 knowledge holines and righteousnes Expli Herein consists the chiefe happinesse of man to be like his Creator for God made not man like other things made but like himselfe like I say hauing some sparkes of excellency as representations of the Diuine Nature though this likenesse be such that there remaines an vnspeakeable distance betwéene God and man euen in his greatest perfection Though the feature of the body bee most beautifull yet herein we place no part of the Image of God though wee confesse that euen as the lanthorne is illustrated by the candle within it euen so the body is made in some sort resplendent by the brightnesse of the Soule within in which the Image of GOD chiefly resideth And yet to speake properly we say not that the Soule but that the whole man was made according to Gods Image This Image not to say any thing of the spirituall Essence and Immortalitie of the Soule was partly in the dominion granted ouer the Creatures which dominion was not direct for God is onely the soueraigne Lord but profitable consisting in his dwelling and the vse and benefit of the Creatures yet the extent of this onely to the inferiour creatures as