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A44334 The works of Mr. Richard Hooker (that learned and judicious divine), in eight books of ecclesiastical polity compleated out of his own manuscripts, never before published : with an account of his life and death ...; Ecclesiastical polity Hooker, Richard, 1553 or 4-1600.; Gauden, John, 1605-1662.; Walton, Izaak, 1593-1683.; Travers, Walter, 1547 or 8-1635. Supplication made to the councel. 1666 (1666) Wing H2631; ESTC R11910 1,163,865 672

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assenteth unto all things and from the other nothing which Deity doth work is hid so that by knowledge and assent the Soul of Christ is present with all things which the Deity of Christ worketh And even the Body of Christ it self although the definite limitation thereof be most sensible doth notwithstanding admit in some sort a kinde of infinite and unlimited Presence likewise For his Body being a part of that Nature which whole Nature is presently joyned unto Deity wheresoever Deity is it followeth That his Bodily Substance hath every where a Presence of true Conjunction with Deity And for as much as it is by vertue of that Conjunction made the Body of the Son of God by whom also it was made a Sacrifice for the sins of the whole World this giveth it a presence of force and efficacy throughout all Generations of Men. Albeit therefore nothing be actually infinite in substance but God onely in that he is God nevertheless as every number is infinite by possibility of addition and every line by possibility of extension infinite so there is no stint which can be set to the value or merit of the Sacrificed Body of Christ it hath no measured certainty of limits bounds of efficacy unto life it knoweth none but is also it self infinite in possibility of Application Which things indifferently every way considered that gracious promise of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ concerning presence with his to the very end of the World I see no cause but that we may well and safely interpret he doth perform both as God by essential presence of Deity and as Man in that order sense and meaning which hath been shewed 56. We have hitherto spoken of the Person and of the presence of Christ. Participation is that mutual inward hold which Christ hath of us and we of him in such sort that each possesseth other by way of special interest property and inherent copulation For plainer explication whereof we may from that which hath been before sufficiently proved assume to our purpose these two Principles That every original cause imparteth it self unto those things which come of it and whatsoever taketh Being from any other the same is after a sort in that which giveth it Being It followeth hereupon that the Son of God being Light of Light must needs be also Light in Light The Persons of the Godhead by reason of the Unity of their substance do as necessarily remain one within another as they are of necessity to be distinguished one from another because two are the issue of one and one the Off-spring of the other two onely of three one not growing out of any other And sith they all are but one God in number one indivisible Essence or Substance their distinction cannot possibly admit Separation For how should that subsist solitarily by it self which hath no substance but individually the very same whereby others subsist with it seeing that the Multiplication of Substances in particular is necessarily required to make those things subsist apart which have the self-same General Nature and the Persons of that Trinity are not three particular Substances to whom one General Nature is common but three that subsist by one substance which it self is Particular yet they all three have it and their several ways of having it are that which maketh their Personal distinction The Father therefore is in the Son and the Son in him they both in the Spirit and the Spirit in both them So that the Fathers first Off-spring which is the Son remaineth eternally in the Father the Father eternally also in the Son no way severed or divided by reason of the sole and single Unity of their Substance The Son in the Father as Light in that Light out of which it floweth without separation the Father in the Son as Light in that Light which it causeth and leaveth not And because in this respect his eternal Being is of the Father which eternal Being is his Life therefore he by the Father liveth Again sith all things do accordingly love their Off-spring as themselves are more or less contained in it he which is thus the onely begotten must needs be in this degree the onely Beloved of the Father He therefore which is in the Father by eternal Derivation of Being and Life from him must needs be in him through an eternal Affection of love His Incarnation causeth him also as man to be now in the Father and the Father to be in him For in that he is Man he receiveth Life from the Father as from the Fountain of that Ever-living Deity which in the Person of the Word hath combined it self with Manhood and doth thereunto impart such life as to no other Creature besides him is communicated In which consideration likewise the love of the Father towards him is more then it can be towards any other neither can any attain unto that perfection of love which he beareth towards his Heavenly Father Wherefore God is not so in any nor any so in God as Christ whether we consider him as the Personal Word of God or as the Natural Son of Man All other things that are of God have God in them and he them in himself likewise Yet because their Substance and his wholly differeth their coherence and communion either with him or amongst themselves is in no sort like unto that before mentioned God hath his influence into the very Essence of all things without which influence of Deity supporting them their utter annihilation could not chuse but follow Of him all things have both received their first Being and their continuance to be that which they are All things are therefore partakers of God they are his Off-spring his influence is in them and the Personal Wisdom of God is for that very cause said to excel in nimbleness or agility to pierce into all intellectual pure and subtile spirits to go through all and to reach unto every thing which is Otherwise how should the same Wisdom be that which supporteth beareth up and sustaineth all Whatsoever God doth work the hands of all three Persons are joyntly and equally in it according to the order of that connexion whereby they each depend upon other And therefore albeit in that respect the Father be first the Son next the Spirit last and consequently nearest unto every effect which groweth from all three nevertheless they all being of one Essence are likewise all of one Efficacy Dare any man unless he be ignorant altogether how inseparable the Persons of the Trinity are perswade himself that every of them may have their sole and several Possessions or that we being not partakers of all can have fellowship with any one The Father as Goodness the Son as Wisdom the Holy Ghost as Power do all concur in every particular outwardly issuing from that one onely glorious Deity which they all are For that which moveth God to work is Goodness and
infinite and eternal Being which Angels and glorified Saints do intuitively behold we on Earth apprehend principally by Faith in part also by that kinde of knowledge which groweth from experience of those effects the greatness whereof exceedeth the powers and abilities of all Creatures both in Heaven and Earth God is glorified when such his excellency above all things is with due admiration acknowledged Which dutiful acknowledgment of Gods excellency by occasion of special effects being the very proper subject and almost the onely matter purposely treated of in all Psalms if that joyful Hymn of Glory have any use in the Church of God whose Name we therewith extol and magnifie Can we place it more fitly then where now it serveth as a close or conclusion to Psalms Neither is the Form thereof newly or unnecessarily invented We must saith St. Basil as we have received even so Baptize and as we Baptize even so Believe and as we Believe even so give Glory Baptizing we use the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Confessing the Christian Faith we declare our Belief in the Father and in the Son and in the Holy Ghost Ascribing Glory unto God we give it to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the token of a true and sound understanding for matter of Doctrine about the Trinity when in ministring Baptism and making Confession and giving Glory there is a conjunction of all three and no one of the three severed from the other two Against the Arians affirming the Father to be greater then the Son in honor excellency dignity majesty this form and manner of glorifying God was not at that time first begun but received long before and alledged at that time as an argument for the truth If saith Fabadius there be that inequality which they affirm then do we every day blaspheme God when in Thanksgivings and offerings of Sacrifice we acknowledge those thing common to the Father and the Son The Arians therefore for that they perceived how this did prejudice their cause altered the Hymn of Glory whereupon ensued in the Church of Antioch about the year Three hundred forty nine that jar which Theodoret and Sozomen mention In their Quires while they praised God together as the manner was at the end of the Psalms which they sung it appeared what opinion every man held for as much as they glorified some the Father And the Son And the Holy Ghost some the Father By the Son In the Spirit the one sort thereby declaring themselves to embrase the Sons equality with the Father as the Council of Nice had defined the other sort against the Council of Nice his inequality Leontiuos their Bishop although an enemy to the better part yet wary and subtile as in a manner all the heads of the Arians Faction were could at no time be plainly heard to use either form perhaps lest his open contradiction of them whom he favored not might make them the more eager and by that mean the less apt to be privately won or peradventure for that though he joyned in opinion with that sort of Arians who denied the Son to be equal with the Father yet from them he dissented which thought the Father and the Son not onely unequal but unlike as AEtuis did upon a frivolous and false surmise that because the Apostle hath said One God of whom one Lord by whom one Spirit in whom his different manner of speech doth argue a different Nature and Being in them of whom he speaketh Ou● of which blinde collection it seemeth that this their new devised Form did first spring But in truth even that very Form which the Arians did then use saving that they chose it to serve as their special mark of Recognisance and gave it secretly within themselves a sinister construction hath not otherwise as much as the shew of any thing which soundeth towards impiety For albeit if we respect Gods glory within it self it be the equal right and possession of all three and that without any odds any difference yet touching his manifestation thereof unto us by continual effects and our perpetual acknowledgment thereof unto him likewise by vertuous Offices Doth not every tongue both ways confess That the brightness of his Glory hath spred it self throughout the World By the Ministery of his onely begotten Son and is In the manifold Graces of the Spirit every way marvellous Again That whatsoever we do to his Glory it is done In the power of the Holy Ghost and made acceptable By the Merit and Mediation of Jesus Christ So that glory to the Father And the Son or glory to the Father By the Son saving onely where evil mindes do abuse and pervert most holy things are not else the voices of Error and Schism but of sound and sincere Religion It hath been the Custom of the Church of Christ to end sometimes Prayers and Sermons always with words of glory wherein as long as the Blessed Trinity had due honor and till Arianism had made it a matter of great sharpness and subtilty of Wit to be a sound believing Christian men were not curious what Syllables or Particles of speech they used Upon which confidence and trust notwithstanding when St. Basil began to practise the like indifferency and to conclude Publick Prayers glorifying sometime the Father with the Son and the Holy Ghost sometime the Father by the Son in the Spirit whereas long custom had enured them unto the former kindealone by means whereof the latter was new and strange in their ears This needless experiment brought afterwards upon him a necessary labor of excusing himself to his Friends and maintaining his own act against them who because the Light of his Candle too much drowned theirs were glad to lay hold on so colorourable matter and exceeding forward to traduce him as an Author of suspicious Innovation How hath the World forsaken that course which it sometime held How are the judgments hearts and affections of men altered May we not wonder that a man of St. Basils authority and quality an Arch-Prelate in the House of God should have his Name far and wide called in question and be driven to his painful Apologies to write in his own defence whole Volumes and yet hardly to obtain with all his endeavor a pardon the crime laid against him being but onely a change of some one or two syllables in their usual Church Liturgy It was thought in him an unpardonable offence to alter any thing in us as intolerable that we suffer any thing to remain unaltered The very Creed of Athanasius and that sacred Hymn of Glory then which nothing doth sound more heavenly in the ears of faithful men are now reckoned as superfluities which we must in any case pare away left we cloy God with too much service Is there in that Confession of Faith any thing which doth not
their Form of Administration Upon their Force their necessity dependeth So that how they are necessary we cannot discern till we see how effectual they are When Sacraments are said to be Visible Signs of Invisible Grace we thereby conceive how Grace is indeed the very end for which these Heavenly Mysteries were instituted and besides sundry other Properties observed in them the matter whereof they consist is such as signifieth Figureth and representeth their End But still their efficacy resteth obscure to our understanding except we search somewhat more distinctly what Grace in particular that is whereunto they are referred and what manner of operation they have towards it The use of Sacraments is but onely in this life yet so that here they concern a far better life then this and are for that cause accompanied with Grace which worketh Salvation Sacraments are the Powerful Instruments of God to Eternal Life For as our Natural Life consisteth in the Union of the Body with the Soul so our Life Supernatural in the Union of the Soul with God And for as much as there is no Union of God with Man without that mean between both which is both it seemeth requisite that we first consider how God is in Christ then how Christ is in us and how the Sacraments do serve to make us partakers of Christ. In other things we may be more brief but the weight of these requireth largeness 51. The Lord our God is but one God In which Indivisible Unity notwithstanding we adore the Father as being altogether of himself we glorifie that Consubstantial Word which is the Son we bless and magnifie that Co-essential Spirit eternally proceeding from both which is the Holy Ghost Seeing therefore the Father is of none the Son is of the Father and the Spirit is of both they are by these their several Properties really distinguishable each from other For the Substance of God with this property to be of none doth make the Person of the Father the very self-same Substance in number with this property to be of the Father maketh the Person of the Son the same Substance having added unto it the property of proceeding from the other two maketh the Person of the Holy Ghost So that in every Person there is implied both the Substance of God which is one and also that property which causeth the same Person really and truly to differ from the other two Every Person hath his own subsistence which no other besides hath although there be others besides that are of the same Substance As no man but Peter can be the person which Peter is yet Paul hath the self-same Nature which Peter hath Again Angels have every of them the Nature of pure and Invisible Spirits but every Angel is not that Angel which appeared in a Dream to Ioseph Now when God became Man lest we should err in applying this to the Person of the Father or of the Spirit St. Peters confession unto Christ was Thou art the Son of the Living God and St. Iohns Exposition thereof was made plain That it is the Word which was made Flesh. The Father and the Holy Ghost saith Damascen have no Communion with the Incarnation of the Word otherwise then onely by approbation and assent Notwithstanding for as much as the Word and Deity are one Subject we must beware we exclude not the Nature of God from Incarnation and so make the Son of God incarnate not to be very God For undoubtedly even the Nature of God it self in the onely Person of the Son is incarnate and hath taken to it self Flesh. Wherefore Incarnation may neither be granted to any Person but onely One nor yet denied to that Nature which is common unto all Three Concerning the cause of which incomprehenble Mystery for as much as it seemeth a thing unconsonant That the World should honor any other as the Saviour but him whom it honoreth as the Creator of the World and in the Wisdom of God it hath not been thought convenient to admit any way of saving man but by man himself though nothing should be spoken of the Love and Mercy of God towards Man which this way are become such a Spectacle as neither Men nor Angels can behold without a kinde of Heavenly astonishment we may hereby perceive there is cause sufficient why Divine Nature should assume Humane that so God might be in Christ reconciling to himself the World And if some cause be likewise required why rather to this end and purpose the Son then either the Father or the Holy Ghost should be made man Could we which are born the children of wrath be adopted the Sons of God through Grace any other then by the Natural Son of God being Mediator between God and us It became therefore him by whom all things are to be the Way of Salvation to all that the Institution and Restitution of the World might be both wrought by one hand The Worlds Salvation was without the Incarnation of the Son of God a thing impossible not simply impossible but impossible it being presupposed That the Will of God was no otherwise to have it saved then by the Death of his own Son Wherefore taking to himself our Flesh and by his Incarnation making it his own Flesh he had now of his own although from us what to offer unto God for us And as Christ took Manhood that by it he might be capable of death whereunto he humbled himself so because Manhood is the proper subject of compassion and feeling pity which maketh the Scepter of Christs Regency even in the Kingdom of Heaven be amiable he which without our Nature could not on Earth suffer for the sins of the World doth now also by means thereof both make intercession to God for sinners and exercise domnion over all men with a true a natural and a sensible touch of Mercy 52. It is not in mans ability either to express perfectly or conceive the manner how this was brought to pass But the strength of our Faith is tried by those things wherein our wits and capacities are not strong Howbeit because this Divine Mystery is more true then plain divers having framed the same to their own conceits and fancies are found in their Expositions thereof more plain then true In so much that by the space of Five hundred years after Christ the Church was almost troubled with nothing else saving onely with care and travel to preserve this Article from the sinister construction of Hereticks Whos 's first mists when the light of the Nicene Council had dispelled it was not long ere Macedonius transfered unto Gods most holy Spirit the same blasphemy wherewith Arius had already dishonored his co-eternally begotten Son not long ere Apollinarius began to pare away from Christs Humanity In refutation of which impieties when the Fathers of the Church Athanasius Basil and the two Gregories had by their painful
travels sufficiently cleared the truth no less for the Deity of the Holy Ghost then for the compleat Humanity of Christ there followed hereupon a final conclusion whereby those Controversies as also the rest which Paul●n Samosatenus Sabellius Phatinus A●tius Ennomius together with the whole swarm of pestilent Demi-Arians had from time to time stirred up since the Council of Nice were both privately first at Rome in a smaller Synod and then at Constantinople in a general famous Assembly brought to a peaceable and quiet end Sevenscore Bishops and ten agreeing in that Confession which by them set down remaineth at this present hour a part of our Church Liturgy a Memorial of their Fidelity and Zeal a soveraign preservative of Gods people from the venemous infection of Heresie Thus in Christ the verity of God and the compleat substance of man were with full agreement established throughout the World till such time as the Heresie of Nesterius broached it self Dividing Christ into two Persons the Son of God and the Son of Man the one a Person begotten of God before all Worlds the other also a Person born of the Virgin Mary and in special favor chosen to be made intire to the Son of God above all men so that whosoever will honor God must together honor Christ with whose Person God hath vouchsafed to joyn himself in so high a degree of gracious respect and favor But that the self-same Person which verily is Man should properly be God also and that by reason not of two Persons linked in Amity but of two Natures Humane and Divine conjoyned in one and the same Person the God of Glory may be said as well to have suffered death as to have raised the dead from their Graves the Son of Man as well to have made as to have redeemed the World Nestorius in no case would admit That which deceived him was want of heed to the first beginning of that admirable combination of God with Man The Word saith St. Iohn was made flesh and dwelt in us The Evangelist useth the plural number Men for Manhood us for the nature whereof we consist even as the Apostle denying the Assumption of Angelical Nature saith likewise in the plural number he took not Angels but the Seed of Abraham It pleased not the Word or Wisdom of God to take to it self some one Person amongst men for then should that one have been advanced which was assumed and no more but Wisdom to the end she might save many built her House of that Nature which is common unto all she made not this or that Man her Habitation but dwelt in us The Seeds of Herbs and Plants at the first are not in act but in possibility that which they afterwards grow to be If the Son of God had taken to himself a Man now made and already perfected it would of necessity follow that there are in Christ two Persons the one assuming and the other assumed whereas the Son of God did not assume a mans person into his own but a mans nature to his own Person and therefore took Semen the Seed of Abraham the very first original Element of our Nature before it was come to have any Personal Humane subsistence The Flesh and the Conjunction of the Flesh with God began both at one instant his making and taking to himself our flesh was but one act so that in Christ● there is no Personal subsistence but one and that from everlasting By taking onely the nature of man he still continueth one Person and changeth but the manner of his subsisting which was before in the meer glory of the Son of God and is now in the habit of our flesh For as much therefore as Christ hath no personal subsistence but one whereby we acknowledge him to have been eternally the Son of God we must of necessity apply to the Person of the Son of God even that which is spoken of Christ according to his Humane nature For example according to the flesh he was born of the Virgin Mary baptized of Iohn in the River Iordan by Pilate adjudged to die and executed by the Jews We cannot say properly that the Virgin bore or Iohn did baptize or Pilate condemn or the Jews crucifie the Nature of Man because these all are Personal Attributes his Person is the subject which receiveth them his Nature that which maketh his Person capable or apt to receive If we should say that the Person of a Man in our Saviour Christ was the subject of these things this were plainly to intrap our selves in the very snare of the Nestorians Heresie between whom and the Church of God there was no difference saving onely that Nestorius imagined in Christ as well a Personal Humane subsistence as a Divine the Church acknowledging a substance both Divine and Humane but no other Personal subsistence then Divine because the Son of God took not to himself a mans person but the nature onely of a man Christ is a Person both Divine and Humane howbeit not therefore two persons in one neither both these in one sense but a Person Divine because he is personally the Son of God Humane because he hath really the nature of the Children of Men. In Christ therefore God and Man There is saith Paschasius a twofold substance not a twofold Person because one Person distinguisheth another whereas one nature cannot in another become extinct For the Personal Being which the Son of God already had suffered not the Substance to be Personal which he took although together with the Nature which he had the Nature also which he took continueth Whereupon it followeth against Nestorius That no Person was born of the Virgin but the Son of God no Person but the Son of God baptized the Son of God condemned the Son of God and no other Person crucified which one onely point of Christian Belief The infinite north of the Son of God is the very ground of all things believed concerning Life and Salvation by that which Christ either did or suffered as Man in our behalf But for as much as St. Cyril the chiefest of those Two hundred Bishops assembled in the Council of Ephesus where the Heresie of Nestorius was condemned had in his Writings against the Arians avouched That the Word or Wisdom of God hath but one Nature which is Eternal and whereunto he assumed Flesh for the Arians were of opinion That besides Gods own Eternal Wisdom there is a Wisdom which God created before all things to the end he might thereby create all things else and that this Created Wisdom was the Word which took Flesh. Again for as much as the same Cyril had given instance in the Body and the Soul of Man no farther then onely to enforce by example against Nestorius That a visible and an invisible a mortal and an immortal Substance may united make one Person the words of Cyril were in process of time so
interchangeably one anothers room so that for truth of speech it skilleth not whether we say That the Son of God hath created the World and the Son of Man by his Death hath saved it or else That the Son of Man did create and the Son of God die to save the World Howbeit as oft as we attribute to God what the Manhood of Christ claimeth or to Man what his Deity hath right unto we understand by the Name of God and the Name of Man neither the one nor the other Nature but the whole Person of Christ in whom both Natures are When the Apostle saith of the Jews that they crucified the Lord of Glory and when the Son of Man being on Earth affirmeth That the Son of Man was in Heaven at the same instant there is in these two speeches that Mutual Circulation before-mentioned In the one there is attributed to God or the Lord of Glory Death whereof Divine Nature is not capable in the other Ubiquity unto Man which Humane Nature admitteth not Therefore by the Lord of Glory we must needs understand the whole Person of Christ who being Lord of Glory was indeed crucified but not in that nature for which he is termed the Lord of Glory In like manner by the Son of Man the whole Person of Christ must necessarily be meant who being Man upon Earth filled Heaven with his glorious presence but not according to that nature for which the title of man is given him Without this Caution the Fathers whose belief was sincere and their meaning most sound shall seem in their Writings one to deny what another constantly doth affirm Theodoret disputeth with great earnestness that God cannot be said to suffer But he thereby meaneth Christs Divine Nature against Apollinarius which held even Deity it self possible Cyril on the other side against Nestorius as much contendeth That whosoever will deny very God to have suffered death doth forsake the Faith Which notwithstanding to hold were Heresie if the Name of God in this Assertion did not import as it doth the Person of Christ who being verily God suffered death but in the Flesh and not in that substance for which the Name of God is given him 54. If then both Natures do remain with their properties in Christ thus distinct as hath been shewed we are for our better understanding what either Nature receiveth from other to note That Christ is by three degrees a Receiver First In that he is the Son of God Secondly In that his Humane nature hath had the honor of Union with Deity bestowed upon it Thirdly In that by means thereof sundry eminent Graces have flowed as effects from Deity into that Nature which is coupled with it On Christ therefore is bestowed the Gift of Eternal Generation the Gift of Union and the Gift of Unction By the Gift of Eternal Generation Christ hath received of the Father one and in number the self-same substance which the Father hath of himself unreceived from any other For every beginning is a Father unto that which cometh of it and every off-spring is a Son unto that out of which it groweth Seeing therefore the Father alone is originally that Deity which Christ originally is not for Christ is God by being of God Light by issuing out of Light it followeth hereupon That whatsoever Christ hath common unto him with his Heavenly Father the same of necessity must be given him but naturally and eternally given not bestowed by way of benevolence and favor as the other gifts both are And therefore where the Fathers give it out for a rule That whatsoever Christ is said in Scripture to have received the same we ought to apply onely to the Manhood of Christ Their Assertion is true of all things which Christ hath received by Grace but to that which he hath received of the Father by Eternal Nativity or Birth it reacheth not Touching Union of Deity with Manhood it is by Grace because there can be no greater Grace shewed towards Man then that God should vouchsafe to unite to Mans nature the Person of his onely begotten Son Because the Father loveth the Son as Man he hath by Uniting Deity with Manhood given all things into his hands It hath pleased the Father that in him all Fulness should dwell The name which he hath above all names is given him As the Father hath life in himself the Son in himself hath life also by the gift of the Father The gift whereby God hath made Christ a Fountain of Life is That conjunction of the Nature of God with the Nature of Man in the Person of Christ which gift saith Christ to the Woman of Samaria if thou didst know and in that respect understand who it is which asketh water of thee thou wouldst ask of him that he might give thee Living Water The Union therefore of the Flesh with Deity is to that Flesh a gift of Principal Grace and Favor For by vertue of this Grace Man is really made God a Creature is exalted above the dignity of all Creatures and hath all Creatures else under it This admirable Union of God with Man can inforce in that higher Nature no alteration because unto God there is nothing more natural then not to be subject to any change Neither is it a thing impossible That the Word being made Flesh should be that which it was not before as touching the manner of subsistence and yet continue in all Qualities or Properties of Nature the same it was because the Incarnation of the Son of God consisteth meerly in the Union of Natures which Union doth adde Perfection to the Weaker to the Nobler no alteration at all If therefore it be demanded what the Person of the Son of God hath attained by assuming Manhood surely the whole sum of all is this to be as we are truly really and naturally Man by means whereof he is made capable of meaner offices then otherwise his Person could have admitted the onely gain he thereby purchased for himself was to be capable of loss and detriment for the good of others But may it rightly be said concerning the Incarnation of Jesus Christ That as our Nature hath in no respect changed his so from his to ours as little alteration hath ensued The very cause of his taking upon him our Nature was to change it to better the Quality and to advance the condition thereof although in no sort to abolish the Substance which he took nor to infuse into it the Natural forces and Properties of his Deity As therefore we have shewed how the Son of God by his Incarnation hath changed the manner of that Personal subsistence which before was solitary and is now in the Association of Flesh no alteration thereby accruing to the Nature of God so neither are the Properties of Mans nature in the Person of Christ by force and vertue of the
Civil Magistrate being termed Head by reason of that Authority in Ecclesiastical Affairs which hath been already declared that themselves do acknowledge to be lawful It followeth that he is a Head even subordinated of Christ and to Christ. For more plain explication whereof unto God we acknowledge daily that Kingdom Power and Glory are his that he is the immortal and invisible King of Ages as well the future which shall be as the present which now is That which the Father doth work as Lord and King over all he worketh not without but by the Son who through coeternal generation receiveth of the Father that Power which the Father hath of himself And for that cause our Saviours words concerning his own Dominion are To me all Power both in Heaven and in Earth is given The Father by the Son did create and doth guide all wherfore Christ hath Supream dominion over the whole universal World Christ is God Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the consubstantial Word of God Christ is also that consubstantial Word which made man As God he saith of himself I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end he which was and which is and which is to come even the very Omnipotent As the consubstantial Word of God he hath with God before the beginning of the World that glory which as he was Man he requireth to have Father glorifie thy Son with that glory which with thee be enjoyed before the World wa● Further it is not necessary that all things spoken of Christ should agree to him either as God or else as Man but some things as he is the consubstantial Word of God some things as he is that Word incarnate The Works of Supream Dominion which have been since the first beginning wrought by the power of the Son of God are now most properly and truly the Works of the Son of Man the Word made Flesh doth sit for ever and reign as Soveraign Lord over all Dominion belongeth unto the Kingly Office of Christ as Propitration and Mediation unto his Priestly Instruction unto his Pastoral and Prophetical Office His Works of Dominion are in sundry degrees and kindes according to the different conditions of them that are subject unto it he presently doth govern and hereafter shall judge the World intire and wholly and therefore his Regal power cannot be with truth restrained unto a proportion of the World only Notwithstanding forasmuch as all do not shew and acknowledge with dutiful submission that Obedience which they owe unto him therefore such as do their Lord he is termed by way of excellency no otherwise than the Apostle doth term God the Saviour generally of all but especially of the Faithful these being brought to the obedience of Faith are every where spoken of as men translated into that Kingdom wherein whosoever is comprehended Christ is the Author of eternal Salvation unto them they have a high and ghostly fellowship with God and Christ and Saints as the Apostle in more ample manner speaketh Aggregated they are unto Mount Sion and to the City of the living God the Celestial Ierusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels and to the Congregation of the first born which are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all and to the Spirits of just and perfect men and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament In a word they are of that Mystical body which we term the Church of Christ. As for the rest we account them Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and that live in the Kingdom of Darkness and that are in this present World without God Our Saviours Dominion is therefore over these as over Rebels over them as over dutiful and loving Subjects which things being in holy Scriptures so plain I somewhat muse at that strange position That Christ in the Government of his Church and Superiority over the Officers of it hath himself a Superiour which is the Father but in governing of Kingdoms and Common wealths and in the Superiority which he hath over Kingdoms no Superiour Again That the Civil Magistrates Authority commeth from God immediately as Christs doth and it subordinate unto Christ. In what Evangelist Apostle or Prophet is it found that Christ Supream Governour of the Church should be so unequal to himself as he is Supream Governor of Kingdoms The works of his Providence for the preservation of Mankinde by upholding Kingdoms not only obedient unto but also obstinate and rebellious against him are such as proceed from Divine Power and are not the works of his Providence for safety of God's Elect by gathering inspiring comforting and every way preserving his Church such as proceed from the same Power likewise Surely if Christ as God and Man hath ordained certain means for the gathering and keeping of his Church seeing this doth belong to the Government of that Church it must in reason follow I think that as God and Man he worketh in Church Regiment and consequently hath no more there any Superiours than in the Government of the Common-wealth Again to be in the midst of his wheresoever they are assembled in his Name and to be with them to the World's end are comforts which Christ doth perform to his Church as Lord and Governour yea such as he cannot perform but by that very Power wherein he hath no Superiour Wherefore unless it can be proved that all the works of our Saviours Government in the Church are done by the mere and onely force of his Human nature there is no remedy but to acknowledge it a manifest errour that Christ in the Government of the World is equal to the Father but not in the Government of the Church Indeed to the honour of this Dominion it cannot be said that God did exalt him otherwise than only according to that Human nature wherein he was made low For as the Son of God there could no advancement or exaltation grow unto him And yet the Dominion whereunto he was in his Human nature lifted up is not without Divine Power exercised It is by Divine Power that the Son of man who sitteth in Heaven doth work as King and Lord upon us which are on Earth The exercise of his Dominion over the Church Militant cannot choose but cease when there is no longer any Militant Church in the World And therefore as Generals of Armies when they have finished their Work are wont to yield up such Commissions as were given for that purpose and to remain in the state of Subjects and not as Lords as concerning their former authority even so when the end of all things is come the Son of man who till then reigneth shall do the like as touching Regiment over the Militant Church on the Earth So that between the Son of man and his Brethren over whom he reigneth now in this their War fare there shall be then as touching the exercise of that Regiment no such difference they not warfaring
Earth pine away as Children at the withered Brests of their Mother no longerable to yield them relief What would become of Man himself whom these things now do all serve See we not plainly that obedience of Creatures unto the Law of Nature is the stay of the whole World Notwithstanding with Nature it cometh sometimes to pass as with art Let Phidias have rude and obstinate stuff to carve though his art do that it should his work will lack that beauty which otherwise in fitter matter it might have had He that striketh an Instrument with skill may cause notwithstanding a very unpleasant sound if the string whereon he striketh chance to be uncapable of harmony In the matter whereof things natural consist that of Theophrastus takes place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Much of it is oftentimes such as will by no means yield to receive that impression which were best and most perfect Which defect in the matter of things natural they who gave themselves unto the contemplation of nature amongst the Heathen observed often But the true original cause thereof Divine Malediction laid for the sin of Man upon these Creatures which God had made for the use of Man this being an Article of that saving truth which God hath revealed unto his Church was above thereach of their meerly natural capacity and understanding But howsoever these swervings are now and then incident into the course of Nature nevertheless so constantly the Laws of Nature are by Natural Agents observed that no man denieth but those things which Nature worketh are wrought either always or for the most part after one and the same manner If here it be demanded What that is which keepeth Nature in obedience to her own Law we must have recourse to that higher Law whereof we have already spoken and because all other Laws do thereon depend from thence we must borrow so much as shall need for brief resolution in this point Although we are not of opinion therefore as some are that Nature in working hath before her certain exemplary draughts or patterns which subsisting in the bosom of the Highest and being thence discovered she fixeth her eye upon them as Travellers by Sea upon the Pole-star of the World and that according thereunto she guideth her hand to work by imitation Although we rather embrace the Oracle of Hippocrates That each thing both in small and in great fulfilleth the task which destiny hath set down And concerning the manner of excecuting and fulfilling the same What they do they know not yet is it in shew and appearance as though they did know what they do and the truth is they do not discern the things which they look on Nevertheless for as much as the works of Nature are no less exact then if she did both behold and study how to express some absolute shape or mirror always present before her yea such her dexterity and skill appeareth that no intellectual Creature in the World were able by capacity to do that which Nature doth without capacity and knowledge it cannot be but Nature hath some Directer of infinite knowledge to guide her in all her ways Who the guide of Nature but onely the God of Nature In him we live move and are Those things which Nature is said to do are by Divine Art performed using Nature as an Instrument nor is there any such Art or Knowledge Divine in Nature her self working but in the guide of Natures work Whereas therefore things natural which are not in the number of Voluntary Agents for of such onely we now speak and of no other do so necessarily observe their certain Laws that as long as they keep those Forms which give them their Being they cannot possibly be apt or inclinable to do otherwise then they do seeing the kindes of their operations are both constantly and exactly framed according to the several ends for which they serve they themselves in the mean while though doing that which is fit yet knowing neither what they do nor why It followeth that all which they do in this sort proceedeth originally from some such Agent as knoweth appointeth holdeth up and even actually frameth the same The manner of this Divine Efficiency being far above us we are no more able to conceive by our Reason then Creatures unreasonable by their Sense are able to apprehend after what manner we dispose and order the course of our affairs Onely thus much is discerned that the Natural Generation and Process of all things receiveth order of proceeding from the setled stability of Divine Understanding This appointeth unto them their kindes of working the disposition whereof in the Purity of Gods own Knowledge and Will is rightly termed by the name of Providence The same being referred unto the things themselves here disposed by it was wont by the Ancient to be called Natural Destiny That Law the performance whereof we behold in things natural is as it were an authentical or an original Draught written in the bosom of God himself whose Spirit being to execute the same useth every particular nature every meer natural agent onely as an Instrument created at the beginning and ever since the beginning used to work his own will and pleasure withal Nature therefore is nothing else but Gods Instrument In the course whereof Dionysius perceiving some sudden disturbance is said to have cryed out Aut Dens natura patitur aut mundi machina dissolvitur Either God doth suffer impediment and is by a greater then himself hindred or if that be impossible then hath he determined to make a present dissolution of the World the execution of that Law beginning now to stand still without which the World cannot stand This Workman whose servitor Nature is being in truth but onely One the Heathens imagining to be moe gave him in the Skie the name of Iupiter in the Air the name of Iune in the Water the name of Neptune in the Earth the name of Vesla and sometimes of Ceres the name of Apollo in the Sun in the Moon the name of Diana the name of AEolus and divers other in the Winds and to conclude even so many Guides of Nature they dreamed of as they saw there were kindes of things natural in the World These they honored as having power to work or cease accordingly as men deseived of them But unto us there is one onely Guide of all Agents Natural and he both the Creator and the Worker of all in all alone to be blessed adored and honored by all forever That which hitherto hath been spoken concerneth Natural Agents considered in themselves But we must further remember also which thing to touch in a word shall suffice That as in this respect they have their Law which Law directeth them in the means whereby they tend to their own perfection so likewise another Law there is which toucheth them as they are sociable parts united into one Body A Law which bindeth them each to
amongst Men are never framed as they should be unless presuming the Will of Man to be inwardly obstinate rebellious and averse from all obedience unto the Sacred Laws of his Nature In a word unless presuming Man to be in regard of his depraved minde little better then a wilde beast they do accordingly provide notwithstanding so to frame his outward actions that they be no hindrance unto the common good for which Societies are instituted unless they do this they are not perfect It resteth therefore that we consider how Nature findeth out such Laws of Government as serve to direct even Nature depraved to a right end All men desire to lead in this world an happy life The life is led most happily wherein all Vertue is exercised without impediment or let The Apostle in exhorting men to contentment although they have in this world no more then very bare Food and Rayment giveth us thereby to understand that those are even the lowest of things necessary that if we should be stripped of all those things without which we might possibly be yet these must be left that destitution in these is such an impediment as till it be removed suffereth not the minde of Man to admit any other care For this cause first God assigned Adam maintenance of Life and then appointed him a Law to observe For this cause after Men began to grow to a number the first thing we read they gave themselves unto was the Tilling of the Earth and the Feeding of Cattle Having by this mean whereon to live the principal actions of their life afterward are noted by the Exercise of their Religion True it is that the Kingdom of God must be the first thing in our purposes and desires But in as much as a righteous life presupposeth life in as much as to live vertuously it is impossible except we live Therefore the first impediment which naturally we endeavor to remove is penury and want of things without which we cannot live Unto life many implements are necessary mo if we seek as all men naturally do such a life as hath in it joy comfort delight and pleasure To this end we see how quickly sundry Arts Mechanical were found out in the very prime of the World As things of greatest necessity are always first provided for so things of greatest dignity are most accounted of by all such as judge rightly Although therefore Riches be a thing which every Man wisheth yet no Man of judgment can esteem it better to be Rich then Wise Vertuous and Religious If we be both or either of these it is not because we are so born For into the World we come as empty of the one as of the other as naked in Minde as we are in Body Both which necessities of Man had at the first no other helps and supplies then onely domestical such as that which the Prophet implieth saying Can a Mother forget her childe Such as that which the Apostle mentioneth saying He that careth not for his own is worse then an Infidel Such as that concerning Abraham Abraham will command his sons and his houshold after him that they keep the way of the Lord. But neither that which we learn of our selves nor that which others teach us can prevail where wickedness and malice have taken deep root If therefore when there was but as yet one onely family in the World no means of instruction Humane or Divine could prevent effusion of blood How could it be chosen but that when Families were multiplied and encreased upon Earth after Separation each providing for it self Envy Strife Contention and Violence must grow amongst them For hath not Nature furnished Man with Wit and Valor and as it were with Armor which may be used as well unto extream evil as good Yea were they not used by the rest of the World unto evil Unto the contrary onely by Seth Enoch and those few the rest in that Line We all make complaint of the iniquity of our times not unjustly for the days are evil But compare them with those times wherein there were no civil Societies with those times therein there was as yet no manner of Publick Regiment established with those times wherein there were not above eight righteous persons living upon the face of the Earth And we have surely good cause to think that God hath blessed us exceedingly and hath made us behold most happy days To take away all such mutual grievances injuries and wrongs there was no way but onely by growing unto Composition and Agreement amongst themselves by ordaining some kinde of Government publick and by yielding themselves subject thereunto that unto whom they granted authority to rule and govern by them the peace tranquillity and happy estate of the rest might be procured Men always knew that when Force and Injury was offered they might be Defenders of themselves they knew that howsoever men may seek their own commodity yet if this were done with injury unto others it was not to be suffered but by all men and by all good means to be withstood Finally they knew that no man might in Reason take upon him to determine his own right and according to his own determination proceed in maintenance thereof in as much as every man is towards himself and them whom he greatly affecteth partial And therefore that strifes and troubles would be endless except they gave their common consent all to be ordered by some whom they should agree upon Without which consent there were no reason that one Man should take upon him to be Lord or Judge over another because although there be according to the opinion of some very great and judicious Men a kinde of Natural Right in the Noble Wise and Vertuous to govern them which are of servile disposition nevertheless for manifestation of this their right and mens more peaceable contentment on both sides the assent of them whom are to be governed seemeth necessary To Fathers within their Private Families Nature hath given a supream power for which cause we see throughout the World even from the first Foundation thereof all men have ever been taken as Lords and Lawful Kings in their own houses Howbeit over a whole grand multitude having no such dependency upon any one and consisting of so many Families as every Politick Society in the World doth impossible it is that any should have compleat lawful power but by consent of men or immediate appointment of God because not having the Natural Superiority of Fathers their power must needs be either usurped and then unlawful or if lawful then either granted or consented unto by them over whom they exercise the same or else given extraordinarily from God unto whom all the World is subject It is no improbable opinion therefore which the Arch-Philosopher was of That as the chiefest person in every houshold was always as it were a King so when numbers of
or Rites as publickly are established is when there ariseth from the due consideration of those Customs and Rites in themselves apparent reason although not alwayes to prove them better than any other that might possibly be devised for who did ever require this in man's Ordinances yet competent to shew their conveniency and fitness in regard of the use for which they should serve Now touching the nature of religious Services and the manner of their due performance thus much generally we know to be most clear that whereas the greatness and dignity of all manner of Actions is measured by the worthiness of the Subject from which they proceed and of the Object whereabout they are conversant we must of necessity in both respects acknowledge that this present World affordeth not any thing comparable unto the publick Duties of Religion For if the best things have the perfectest and best operations it will follow that seeing Man is the worthiest Creature upon earth and every Society of Men more worthy than any Man and of Societies that most excellent which we call the Church there can be in this World no work performed equal to the exercise of true Religion the proper operation of the Church of God Again forasmuch as Religion worketh upon him who in Majesty and Power is infinite as we ought we account not of it unless we esteem it even according to that very height of Excellency which our hearts conceive when Divine sublimity it self is rightly considered In the powers and faculties of our Souls God requireth the uttermost which our unfeigned affection towards him is able to yield So that if we affect him not farr above and before all things our Religion hath not that inward perfection which it should have neither do we indeed worship him as our God That which inwardly each man should be the Church outwardly ought to testifie And therefore the Duties of our Religion which are seen must be such as that affection which is unseen ought to be Signs must resemble the Things they signifie If Religion bear the greatest sway in our Hearts our outward religious Duties must shew it as farr as the Church hath outward Ability Duties of Religion performed by whole Societies of men ought to have in them according to our power a sensible Excellency correspondent to the Majesty of Him whom we worship Yea then are the publick Duties of Religion best ordered when the Militant Church doth resemble by sensible means as it may in such cases that hidden Dignity and Glory wherewith the Church Triumphant in Heaven is beautified Howbeit even as the very heat of the Sun it self which is the life of the whole World was to the people of God in the Desert a grievous annoyance for ease whereof his extraordinary Providence ordained a Cloudy Pillar to over-shadow them So things of general use and benefit for in this world What is so perfect that no Inconvenience doth ever follow it● may by some accident be incommodious to a few In which case for such private Evils remedies thereare of like condition though publick Ordinances wherein the Common good is respected be not stirred Let our first Demand be therefore That in the External Form of Religion such things as are apparently or can be sufficiently proved effectual and generally fit to setforward Godliness either as betokening the greatness of God or as beseeming the Dignity of Religion or as concurring with Celestial Impressions in the mindes of men may be reverently thought of some few rare casual and tollerable or otherwise curable Inconveniences notwithstanding 7. Neither may we in this Case lightly esteem what hath been allowed as fit in the judgment of Antiquity and by the long continued practise of the whole Church from which unnecessarily to swerve Experience never as yet hath found it safe For Wisdom's sake we reverence them no less that are young or not much less then if they were stricken in years And therefore of such it is rightly said That the ripeness of Understanding is gray Hair and their Vertues old Age. But because Wisdom and Youth are seldom joyned in one and the ordinary course of the World is more according to Iob's Observation who giveth men advice to seek Wisdom amongst the Antient and in the length of Dayes Understanding therefore if the Comparison do stand between Man and Man which shall hearken unto other sith the Aged for the most part are best experienced least subject to rash and unadvised Passions it hath been ever judged reasonable That their Sentence in matter of Counsel should be better trusted and more relyed upon than other mens The goodness of God having furnished men with two chief Instruments both necessary for this life Hands to execute and a Mind to devise great things the one is not profitable longer than the vigour of Youth doth strengthen it nor the other greatly till Age and Experience have brought it to Perfection In whom therefore Time hath not perfected Knowledge such must be contented to follow them in whom it hath For this Cause none is more attentively heard than they whose Speeches are as Davids were I have been Young and now am Old much I have seen and observed in the World Sharp and subtile discourses of Wit procure many times very great applause but being laid in the Ballance with that which the habit of sound Experience plainly delivereth they are over-weighed God may endue Men extraordinarily with Understanding as it pleaseth him But let no Man presuming thereupon neglect the Instructions or despite the Ordinances of his Elders sith he whose gift Wisdom is hath said Ask thy Father and he will shew thee thine Antients and they shall tell thee It is therefore the Voyce both of God and Nature not of Learning only that especially in matters of Action and Policy The sentences and judgements of Men experienced aged and wise yea though they speak without any proof or demonstration are no less to be hearkned unto than as being Demonstrations in themselves because such Mens long Observation is as an Eye wherewith they presently and plainly behold those Principles which sway over all Actions Whereby we are taught both the Cause wherefore Wise-mens Judgments should be credited and the Mean how to use their Judgments to the increase of our own Wisdom That which sheweth them to be Wise is the gathering of Principles out of their own particular Experiments And the framing of our particular Experiments according to the Rule of their Principles shall make us such as they are If therefore even at the first so great account should be made of Wise mens Counsels touching things that are Publickly done as time shall add thereunto continuance and approbation of succeeding Ages their Credit and Authority must needs be greater They which do nothing but that which men of Account did before them are although they do amiss yet the less faulty because they are not the Authors of
Divine Majesty their most convenient answer was that The best Temples which we can dedicate to God are our sanctified Souls and Bodies Whereby it plainly appeareth how the Fathers when they were upbraided with that defect comforted themselves with the meditation of Gods most gracious and merciful nature Who did not therefore the less accept of their hearty affection and zeal rather than took any great delight or imagined any high perfection in such their want of external Ornaments which when they wanted the cause was their only lack of ability ability serving they wanted them not Before the Emperour Constantines time under Severus Gardian Philip and Galienus the state of Christian affairs being tolerable the sonner Buildings which were but of mean and small estate contented them not spacious and ample Churches they erected throughout every City No Envy was able to be their hindrance no practise of Satan or fraud of men available against their proceedings herein while they continued as yet worthy to feel the aide of the arm of God extended over them for their safety These Churches Dioclesian caused by solemn Edict to be afterwards overthrown Maximinus with like authority giving leave to erect them the hearts of all men were even rapt with Divine joy to see those places which tyrannous impiety had laid waste recovered as it were out of mortal calamity Churches reared up to an height immeasurable and adorned with far more beauty in their restauration than their Founders before had given them Whereby we see how most Christian minds stood then affected we see how joyful they were to behold the sumptuous stateliness of Houses built unto Gods glory If we should over and besides this alledge the care which was had that all things about the Tabernacle of Moses might be as beautiful gorgeous and rich as Art could make them or what travel and cost was bestowed that the goodliness of the Temple might be a Spectacle of admiration to all the world this they will say was figurative and served by Gods appointment but for a time to shadow out the true everlasting glory of a more Divine Sanctuary whereinto Christ being long fithence entred it seemeth that all those curious exornations should rather cease Which thing we also our selves would grant if the use thereof had been meetly and only mystical But sith the Prophet David doth mention a natural conveniency which such kind of bounteous Expences have as well for that we do thereby give unto God a testimony of our chearful affection which thinketh nothing too dear to be bestowed about the furniture of his Service as also because it serveth to the world for a witness of his Almightiness whom we outwardly honour with the chiefest of outward things as being of all things Himself incomparably the greatest Besides were it not also strange if God should have made such store of glorious Creatures on Earth and leave them all to be consumed in Secular vanity allowing none but the baser sort to be imployed in his own service To set forth the Majesty of Kings his Vicegerents in this world the most gorgeous and rare treasures which the world hath are procured We think belike that he will accept what the meanest of them would disdain If there be great care to build and beautifie these corruptible Sanctuaries little or none that the living Temples of the Holy Ghost the dearly redeemed Souls of the people of God may be edified huge expences upon Timber and Stone but towards the relief of the poor small devotion Cost this way infinite and in the mean while Charity cold we have in such case just occasion to make complaint as Saint Ierom did The walls of the Church there are ●now contented to build and to underset it with goodly Pillars the Marbles are polished the Roofs shine with Gold the Altar hath Precious Stones to adorn it and of Christs Ministers no choyce at all The same Ierom both in that place and elsewhere debaseth with like intent the glory of such Magnificence a thing whereunto mens affections in those times needed no spu●r thereby to extoll the necessity sometimes of Charity and Alms sometimes of other the most principal Duties belonging unto Christian men which Duties were neither so highly esteemed as they ought and being compared with that in question the directest Sentence we can give of them both as unto me it seemeth is this God who requireth the one as necessary accepteth the other also as being an honourable work 16. Our opinion concerning the force and vertue which such Places have is I trust without any blemish or stain of Heresie Churches receive as every thing else their chief perfection from the end whereunto they serve Which end being the publick worship of God they are in this consideration Houses of greater Dignity than any provided for meaner purposes For which cause they seem after a sort even to mourn as being injured and defrauded of their right when places not sanctified as they are prevent them unnecessarily in that preheminence and honour Whereby also it doth come to pass that the Service of God hath not then it self such perfection of grace and comeliness as when the dignity of place which it wisheth for doth concurr Again albeit the true worship of God be to God in it self acceptable who respecteth not so much in what place as with what affection he is served and therefore Moses in the midst of the Sea Iob on the Dunghil Ezechias in Bed Ieremy in Mire Ionas in the Whale Daniel in the Den the Children in the Furnace the Thief on the Cross Peter and Paul in Prison calling unto God were heard as S. Basil noteth manifest notwithstanding it is that the very majesty and holyness of the place where God is worshipped hath in regard of us great vertue force and efficacy for that it serveth as a sensible help to stirr up devotion and in that respect no doubt bettereth even our holiest and best actions in this kind As therefore we every where exhort all men to worship God even so for performance of this Service by the people of God assembled we think not any place so good as the Church neither any exhortation so sit as that of David O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness 17. For of our Churches thus it becometh us to esteem howsoever others rapt with the pang of a furious zeal do pour out against them devout blasphemies crying Down with them down with them even to the very ground For to Idolatry they have been abused And the places where Idols have been worshipped are by the Law of God devote to utter destruction For extentions of which Law the Kings that were godly as Asa Jehosaphat Ezechia Josia destroyed all the High places Altars and Groves which had been erected in Juda and Israel He that said Thou shalt have no other gods before my face hath
taken as though it had been his drift to teach That even as in us the Body and the Soul so in Christ God and Man make but one Nature Of which Error Six hundred and thirty Fathers in the Council of Chalcedon condemned Eutiches For as Nestorius teaching rightly That God and Man are distinct Natures did thereupon mis-infer That in Christ those Natures can by no conjunction make one Person so Eutiches of ●ound belief as touching their true Personal Copulation became unsound by denying the difference which still continueth between the one and the other Nature We must therefore keep warily a middle course shunning both that distraction of Persons wherein Nestorius went awry and also this latter confusion of Natures which deceived Eutiches These Natures from the moment of their first combination have been and are for ever inseparable For even when his Soul forsook the Tabernacle of his Body his Deity forsook neither Body nor Soul ● it had then could we not truly hold either that the Person of Christ was buried or that the Person of Christ did raise up it self from the dead For the Body separated from the Word can in no true sense be termed the Person of Christ nor is it true to say That the Son of God in raising up that Body did raise up himself if the Body were not both with him and of him even during the time it lay in the Sepulchre The like is also to be said of the Soul otherwise we are plainly and inevitably Nestorians The very Person of Christ therefore for ever one and the self-same was onely touching Bodily Substance concluded within the Grave his Soul onely from thence severed but by Personal Union his Deity still inseparably joyned with both 53. The sequel of which Conjunction of Natures in the Person of Christ is no abolishment of Natural Properties appertaining to either Substance no transition or transmigration thereof out of one substance into another Finally no such mutual infusion as really causeth the same Natural Operations or Properties to be made common unto both Substances but whatsoever is natural to Deity the same remaineth in Christ uncommunicated unto his Manhood and whatsoever natural to Manhood his Deity thereof is uncapable The true Properties and Operations of his Deity are To know that which is not possible for Created Natures to comprehend to be simply the highest cause of all things the Well-spring of Immortality and Life to have neither end nor beginning of days to be every where present and inclosed no where to be subject to no alteration nor passion to produce of it self those effects which cannot proceed but from infinite Majesty and Power The true Properties and Operation of his Manhood are such as Irenaus reckoneth up If Christ saith he had not taken flesh from the very Earth he would not have coveted those earthly nourishments wherewith bodies which be taken from thence are fed This was the Nature which felt hunger after long fasting was desirous of rest after travel testified compassion and love by tears groaned in heaviness and with extremity of grief even melted away it self into bloody sweats To Christ we ascribe both working of Wonders and suffering of Pains we use concerning him speeches as well of Humility as of Divine Glory but the one we apply unto that Nature which he took of the Virgin Mary the other to that which was in the beginning We may not therefore imagine that the properties of the weaker Nature have vanished with the presence of the more glorious and have been therein swallowed up as in a Gulf. We dare not in this point give ear to them who over-boldly affirm That the Nature which Christ took weak and feeble from us by being mingled with Deity became the same which Deity is that the Assumption of our Substance unto his was like the blending of a drop of Vinegar with the huge Ocean wherein although it continue still yet not with those properties which severed it hath because sithence the instant of their conjunction all distinction and difference of the one from the other is extinct and whatsoever we can now conceive of the Son of God is nothing else but meer Deity Which words are so plain and direct for Eutiches that I stand in doubt they are not his whose name they carry Sure I am they are far from truth and must of necessity give place to the better advised sentences of other men He which in himself was appointed saith Hilary a Mediator to save his Church and for performance of that Mystery of Mediation between God and Man is become God and Man doth now being but one consist of both those Natures united neither hath he through the Union of both incurred the damage or loss of either lest by being born a Man we should think he hath given over to be God or that because he continued God therefore he cannot be Man also whereas the true belief which maketh a man happy proclaimeth joyntly God and Man confesseth the Word and Flesh together Cyril more plainly His two Natures have knit themselves the one to the other and are in that nearness as uncapable of confusion as of distraction Their coherence hath not taken away the difference between them Flesh is not become God but doth still continue Flesh although it be now the Flesh of God Tea of each Substance saith Leo the Properties are all preserved and kept safe These two Natures are as causes and original Grounds of all things which Christ hath done Wherefore some things he doth as God because his Deity alone is the Well-spring from which they flow some things as Man because they issue from his meer Humane nature some things joyntly as both God and Man because both Natures concur as Principles thereunto For albeit the Properties of each Nature do cleave onely to that Nature whereof they are Properties and therefore Christ cannot naturally be as God the same which he naturally is as Man yet both Natures may very well concur unto one effect and Christ in that respect be truly said to work both as God and as Man one and the self-same thing Let us therefore set it down for a rule or principle so necessary as nothing more to the plain deciding of all doubts and questions about the Union of Natures in Christ that of both Natures there is a Co-operation often an Association always but never any Mutual Participation whereby the Properties of the one are infused into the other Which rule must serve for the better understanding of that which Damascene hath touching cross and circulatory speeches wherein there are attributed to God such things as belong to Manhood and to Man such as properly concern the Deity of Christ Jesus the cause whereof is the Association of Natures in one Subject A kinde of Mutual Commutation there is whereby those concrete Names God and Man when we speak of Christ do take
therefore That to save the World it was of necessity the Son of God should be thus incarnate and that God should so be in Christ as hath been declared 55. Having thus far proceeded in speech concerning the Person of Jesus Christ his two Natures their Conjunction that which he either is or doth in respect of both and that which the one receiveth from the other sith God in Christ is generally the Medicine which doth cure the World and Christ in as is that Receipt of the same Medicine whereby we are every one particularly cured In as much as Christs Incarnation and Passion can be available to no mans good which is not made partaker of Christ neither can we participate him without his Presence we are briefly to consider how Christ is present to the end it may thereby better appear how we are made partakers of Christ both otherwise and in the Sacraments themselves All things are in such sort divided into Finite and Infinite that no one Substance Nature or Quality can be possibly capable of both The World and all things in the World are stinted all effects that proceed from them all the powers and abilities whereby they work whatsoever they do whatsoever they may and whatsoever they are is limited Which limitation of each Creature is both the perfection and also the perservation thereof Measure is that which perfecteth all things because every thing is for some end neither can that thing be available to any end which is not proportionable thereunto and to proportion as well excesses as defects are opposite Again for as much as nothing doth perish but onely through excess or defect of that the due proportioned measure whereof doth give perfection it followeth That measure is likewise the preservation of all things Out of which premises we may conclude not onely that nothing created can possibly be unlimited or can receive any such accident quality or property as may really make it infinite for then should it cease to be a Creature but also that every Creatures limitation is according to his own kinde and therefore as oft as we note in them any thing above their kinde it argueth That the same is not properly theirs but groweth in them from a cause more powerful then they are Such as the Substance of each thing is such is also the Presence thereof Impossible it is that God should withdraw his Presence from any thing because the very Substance of God is infinite He filleth Heaven and Earth although he take up no room in either because his Substance is immaterial pure and of us in this World so incomprehensible that albeit an part of us be ever absent from him who is present whole unto every particular thing yet his Presence with us we no way discern further then onely that God is present which partly by Reason and more perfectly by Faith we know to be firm and certain Seeing therefore that Presence every where is the sequel of an infinite and incomprehensible Substance for what can be every where but that which can no where be comprehended To enquire whether Christ be every where is to enquire of a Natural Property a Property that cleaveth to the Deity of Christ. Which Deity being common unto him with none but onely the Father and the Holy Ghost it followeth That nothing of Christ which is limited that nothing created that neither the Soul nor the Body of Christ and consequently not Christ as Man or Christ according to his Humane Nature can possibly be every where present because those phrases of Limitation and Restraint do either point out the principal subject whereunto every such attribute adhereth or else they intimate the radical cause out of which it groweth For example when we say that Christ as Man or according to his Humane Nature suffered death we show what Nature was the proper subject of Mortality When we say that as God or according to his Deity he conquered Death we declare his Deity to have been the cause by force and vertue whereof lie raised himself from the Grave But neither is the Manhood of Christ that subject whereunto Universal Presence agreeth neither is it the cause original by force whereof his Person is enabled to be everywhere present Wherefore Christ is essentially present with all things in that he is very God but not present with all things as Man because Manhood and the parts thereof can neither be the cause nor the true subject of such Presence Notwithstanding somewhat more plainly to shew a true immediate reason wherefore the Manhood of Christ can neither be every where present nor cause the Person of Christ so to be we acknowledge that of St. Augustine concerning Christ most true In that he is personally the Word he created all things in that he it naturally Man he himself is created of God and it doth not appear that any one Creature hath Power to be present withall Creatures Whereupon nevertheless it will not follow that Christ cannot therefore be thus present because he is himself a Creature for as much as onely Infinite Presence is that which cannot possibly stand with the Essence or Being of any Creature as for Presence with all things that are sith the whole Race Mass and Body of them is Finite Christ by being a Creature is not in that respect excluded from possibility of Presence with them That which excludeth him therefore as Man from so great largeness of Presence is onely his being Man a Creature of this particular kinde whereunto the God of Nature hath set those bounds of restraint and limitation beyond which to attribute unto it any thing more then a Creature of that sort can admit were to give it another Nature to make it a Creature of some other kinde then in truth it is Furthermore if Christ in that he is Man be every where present seeing this cometh not by the Nature of Manhood it self there is no other way how it should grow but either by the Grace of Union with Deity or by the Grace of Unction received from Deity It hath been already sufficiently proved that by Force of Union the Properties of both Natures are imparted to the Person onely in whom they are and not what belongeth to the one Nature really conveyed or translated into the other it hath been likewise proved That Natures united in Christ continue the very same which they are where they are not united And concerning the Grace of Unction wherein are contained the Gifts and Vertues which Christ as Man hath above men they make him Really and Habitually a Man more excellent then we are they take not from him the Nature and Substance that we have they cause not his Soul nor Body to be of another kinde then ours is Supernatural endowments are an advancement they are no extinguishment of that Nature whereto they are given The Substance of the Body of Christ hath no Presence neither can have but onely
efficient cause in the work of Baptism What if the Ministers Vocation be a Matter of perpetual necessity and not a Ceremony variable as times and occasions require What if his calling be a principal part of the Institution of Christ Doth it therefore follow that the Ministers authority is of the Substance of the Sacrament and as incident into the nature thereof as the Matter and the Form it self yea more incident For whereas in case of necessity the greatest amongst them professeth the change of the Element of Water lawful and others which like not so well this opinion could be better content that voluntarily the words of Christs Institution were altered and Men baptized in the Name of Christ without either mention made of the Father or of the Holy Ghost nevertheless in denying that Baptism administred by private persons ought to be reckoned of as a Sacrament they both agree It may therefore please them both to consider That Baptism is an Action in part Moral in part Ecclesiastical and in part Mystical Moral as being a duty which men perform towards God Ecclesiastical in that it belongeth unto Gods Church as a publick duty Finally Mystical if we respect what God doth thereby intend to work The greatest Moral perfection of Baptism consisteth in mens devout obedience to the Law of God which Law requireth both the outward act or thing done and also that Religious affection which God doth so much regard that without it whatsoever we do is ●tateful in his sight who therefore is said to respect Adverbs more then Verbs because the end of his Law in appointing what we shall do is our own Perfection which Perfection consisteth chiefly in the vertuous disposition of the Minde and approveth it self to him not by doing but by doing well Wherein appeareth also the difference between Humane and Divine Laws the one of which two are content with Opus operatum the other require Opus operantis the one do but claim the Deed the other especially the Minde So that according to Laws which principally respect the heart of Men Works of Religion being not religiously performed cannot Morally be perfect Baptism as an Ecclesiastical work is for the manner of performance ordered by divers Ecclesiastical Laws providing That as the Sacrament it self is a gift of no mean worth so the Ministery thereof might in all circumstances appear to be a Function of no small regard All that belongeth to the Mystical Perfection of Baptism outwardly is the Element the Word and the serious Application of both unto him which receiveth both whereunto if we add that secret reference which this action hath to li●e and remission of sins by vertue of Christs own compact solemnly made with his Church to accomplish fully the Sacrament of Baptism there is not any thing more required Now put the Question Whether Baptism Administred to Infants without my Spiritual Calling be unto them both a true Sacrament and an effectual instrument of Grace or else an act of no more account then the ordinary Washings are The sum of all that can be said to defeat such Baptism is That those things which have no Being can work nothing and that Baptism without the power of Ordination is as a Judgment without sufficient Jurisdiction void frustrate and of no effect But to this we answer That the Fruit of Baptism dependeth onely upon the Covenant which God hath made That God by Covenant requireth in the elder sort Faith and Baptism in Children the Sacrament of Baptism alone whereunto he hath also given them right by special priviledge of Birth within the bosom of the holy Church That infants therefore which have received Baptism compleat as touching the Mystical Perfection thereof are by vertue of his own Covenant and Promise cleansed from all sin for as much as all other Laws concerning that which in Baptism is either Moral or Ecclesiastical do binde the Church which giveth Baptism and not the Infant which receiveth it of the Church So that if any thing be therein amiss the harm which groweth by violation of holy Ordinances must altogether rest where the Bonds of such Ordinances hold For that in actions of this nature it fareth not as in Jurisdictions may somewhat appear by the very opinion which men have of them The nullity of that which a Judge doth by way of Authority without Authority is known to all men and agreed upon with full consent of the whole World every man receiveth it as a general Edict of Nature whereas the nullity of Baptism in regard of the like defect is onely a few mens new ungrounded and as yet unapproved imagination Which difference of generality in mens perswasions on the one side and their paucity whose conceit leadeth them the other way hath risen from a difference easie to observe in the things themselves The exercise of unauthorised Jurisdiction is a grievance unto them that are under it whereas they that without Authority presume to Baptize offer nothing but that which to all men is good and acceptable Sacraments are food and the Ministers thereof as Parents or as Nurses at whose hands when there is necessity but no possibility of receiving it if that which they are not present to do in right of their Office be of pity and compassion done by others shall this be thought turn Celestial Bread into Gravel or the Medicine of Souls into Poyson Jurisdiction is a yoke which Law hath imposed on the necks of men in such sort that they must endure it for the good of others how contrary soever it be to their own particular appetites and inclinations Jurisdiction bridleth men against their wills that which a Judge doth prevails by vertue of his very Power and therefore not without great reason except the Law hath given him Authority whatsoever he doth vanisheth Baptism on the other side being a favor which it pleaseth God to bestow a benefit of Soul to us that receive it and a Grace which they that deliver are but as meer Vessels either appointed by others or offered of their own accord to this Service of which two if they be the one it is but their own honor their own offence to be the other Can it possibly stand with Equity and Right That the faultiness of their presumption in giving Baptism should be able to prejudice us who by taking Baptism have no way offended I know there are many Sentences found in the Books and writings of the Ancient Fathers to prove both Ecclesiastical and also Moral defects in the Minister of Baptism a bar to the Heavenly benefit thereof Which Sentences we always so understand as Augustine understood in a case of like nature the words of St. Cyprian When Infants baptized were after their Parents revolt carried by them in arms to the Stews of Idols those wretched Creatures as St. Cyprian thought were not onely their own ruine but their Childrens also Their Children whom this their Apostasie prophaned did lose
less repugnant to the grounds and principles of Common right than the fraudulent proceedings of Tyrants to the principles of just Soveraignty Howbeit not so those special priviledges which are but instruments wrested and forced to serve malice There is in the Patriark of Heathen Philosophers this Precept Let us Husbandman nor no Handy-craftsman be a Priest The reason whereupon he groundeth is a maxim in the Law of Nature● It importeth greatly the good of all men that God be reverenced with whose honour it standeth not that they which are publickly imployed in his service should live of base and manuary Trades Now compare herewith the Apostle's words Ye know that these hands have ministred to my necessities and them that are with me What think we Did the Apostle any thing opposite herein or repugnant to the Rules and Maxims of the Law of Nature The self-same reasons that accord his actions with the Law of Nature shall declare our Priviledges and his Laws no less consonant Thus therefore we see that although they urge very colourably the Apostles own Sentences requiring that a Minister should be able to divide rightly the Word of God that they who are placed in Charge should attend unto it themselves which in absence they cannot do and that they which have divers Cures must of necessity be absent from some whereby the Law Apostolick seemeth apparently broken which Law requiring attendance cannot otherwise be understood than so as to charge them with perpetual Residence Again though in every of these causes they infinitely heap up the Sentences of Fathers the Decrees of Popes the antient Edicts of Imperial authority our own National Laws and Ordinances prohibiting the same and grounding evermore their Prohibitions partly on the Laws of God and partly on reasons drawn from the light of Nature yet hereby to gather and inferr contradiction between those Laws which forbid indefinitely and ours which in certain cases have allowed the ordaining of sundry Ministers whose sufficiency for Learning is but mean Again the licensing of some to be absent from their Flocks and of others to hold more than one onely Living which hath Cure of Souls I say to conclude repugnancy between these especial permissions and the former general prohibitions which set not down their own limits is erroneous and the manifest cause thereof ignorance in differences of matter which both sorts of Law concern If then the considerations be reasonable just and good whereupon we ground whatsoever our Laws have by special right permitted if onely the effects of abused Priviledges be repugnant to the Maxims of Common right this main foundation of repugnancy being broken whatsoever they have built thereupon falleth necessarily to the ground Whereas therefore upon surmise or vain supposal of opposition between our special and the principles of Common right they gather that such as are with us ordained Ministers before they can Preach be neither lawfull because the Laws already mentioned forbid generally to create such neither are they indeed Ministers although we commonly so name them but whatsoever they execute by vertue of such their pretended Vocation is void● that all our grants and tolerations as well of this as the rest are frustrate and of no effect the Persons that enjoy them possess them wrongfully and are deprivable at all hours finally that other just and sufficient remedy of evils there can be none besides the utter abrogations of these our mitigations and the strict establishment of former Ordinances to be absolutely executed whatsoever follow albeit the Answer already made in discovery of the weak and unsound foundation whereupon they have built these erroneous collections may be thought sufficient yet because our desire is rather to satisfie if it be possible than to shake them off we are with very good will contented to declare the causes of all particulars more formally and largely than the equity of our own defence doth require There is crept into the mindes of men at this day a secret pernicious and pestilent conceit that the greatest perfection of a Christian man doth consist in discovery of other mens faults and in wit to discourse of our own profession When the World most abounded with just righteous and perfect men their chiefest study was the exercise of piety wherein for their safest direction they reverently hearkened to the Readings of the Law of God they kept in minde the Oracles and Aphorismes of wisdom which tended unto vertuous life if any scruple of conscience did trouble them for matter of Actions which they took in hand nothing was attempted before counsel and advice were had for fear left rashly they might offend We are now more confident not that our knowledge and judgement is riper but because our desires are another way Their scope was obedience ours is skill their endeavour was reformation of life our vertue nothing but to hear gladly the reproof of vice they in the practice of their Religion wearied chiefly their knees and hands we especially our ears and tongues We are grown as in many things else so in this to a kinde of intemperancy which onely Sermons excepted hath almost brought all other duties of Religion out of taste At the least they are not in that account and reputation which they should be Now because men bring all Religion in a manner to the onely Office of hearing Sermons if it chance that they who are thus conceited do imbrace any special opinion different from other men the Sermons that relish not that opinion can in no wise please their appetite Such therefore as preach unto them but hit not the string they look for are rejected as unprofitable the rest as unlawful and indeed no Ministers if the faculty of Sermons want For why● A Minister of the Word should they say be able rightly to divide the Word Which Apostolick Canon many think they do well observe when in opening the Sentences of holy Scripture they draw all things favourably spoken unto one side but whatsoever is reprehensive severe and sharp they have others on the contrary part whom that must always concern by which their over-partial and un-indifferent proceeding while they thus labour amongst the people to divide the Word they make the Word a mean to divide and distract the People 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to divide aright doth note in the Apostle's Writings soundness of Doctrine onely and in meaning standeth opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the broaching of new opinions against that which is received For questionless the first things delivered to the Church of Christ were pure and sincere Truth Which whosoever did afterwards oppugn could not chuse but divide the Church into two moyeties in which division such as taught what was first believed held the truet part the contrary side in that they were teachers of novelty etred For prevention of which evil there are in this Church many singular and well devised remedies as namely the use of subscribing to the Articles
that respect meet before men to be acknowledged particularly But in Sins between Man and God there is no necessity that Man should himself make any such open and particular recital of them to God they are known and of us it is required that we cast not the memory of them carelesly and loosly behind our backs but keep in mind as near as we can both our own debt and his grace which remitteth the same Wherefore to let pass Jewish confession and to come unto them which hold confession in the ear of the Priest commanded yea commanded in the nature of a Sacrament and thereby so necessary that Sin without it cannot be pardoned let them find such a Commandment in holy Scripture and we ask no more Iohn the Baptist was an extraordinary person his Birth his Actions of Life his Office extraordinary It is therefore Recorded for the strangeness of the Act but not set down as an everlasting Law for the World That to him Ierusalem and all Iudea made confession of their Sins Besides at the time of this confession their pretended Sacrament of Repentance as they grant was not yet instituted neither was it Sin after Baptism which Penitents did there confess When that which befel the seven sons of Seeva for using the name of our Lord Jesus Christ in their conjurations was notisied to Jews and Grecians in Ephesus it brought an universal fear upon them insomuch that divers of them which had believed before but not obeyed the Laws of Christ as they should have done being terrified by this example came to the Apostle and confessed their wicked deeds Which good and vertuous act no wise man as I suppose will disallow but commend highly in them whom Gods good Spirit shall move to do the like when need requireth Yet neither hath this example the force of any general Commandment or Law to make it necessary for every man to pour into the ears of the Priest whatsoever hath been done amiss or else to remain everlastingly culpable and guilty of Sin in a word it proveth Confession practized as a vertuous act but not commanded as a Sacrament Now concerning St. Iames his Exhortation whether the former branch be considered which saith Is any sick among you let him call for the Ancients of the Church and let them make their prayers for him or the latter which stirreth up all Christian Men unto mutual acknowledment of faults amongst themselves Lay open your minds make your confessions one to another is it not plain that the one hath relation to that gift of healing which our Saviour promised his Church saying They shall lay their hands on the sick and the sick shall recover health relation to that gift of healing whereby the Apostle imposed his hands on the Father of Publius and made him miraculously a sound man relation finally to that gift of healing which so long continued in practice after the Apostles times that whereas the Novatianists denyed the power of the Church of God in curing Sin after Baptism St. Ambrose asked them again Why it might not as well prevail with God for spiritual as far corporal and bodily health yea wherefore saith he do ye your selves lay hands on the diseased and believe it to be a work of benediction or prayer if haply the sick person be restored to his former safety And of the other member which toucheth mutual confession do not some of themselves as namely Caje●an deny that any other Confession is meant then only that which seeketh either association of Prayers or reconciliation or pardon of wrongs is it not confessed by the greatest part of their own retinue that we cannot certainly affirm Sacramental Confession to have been meant or spoken of in this place Howbeit Bellarmine delighted to run a course by himself where colourable s●●ifts of wit will but make the way passable standeth as formally for this place and not less for that in St. Iohn than for this St. Iohn saith If we confess our Sins God is faithful and just to forgive our Sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness doth St. Iohn say If we confess to the Priest God is righteous to forgive and if not that our Sins are unpardonable No but the titles of God just and righteous do import that he pardoneth Sin only for his promise sake And there is not they say any promise of forgiveness upon confession made to God without the Priest Not any promise but with this condition and yet this condition no where exprest Is it not strange that the Scripture speaking so much of Repentance and of the several duties which appertain thereunto should ever mean and no where mention that one condition without which all the rest is utterly of none effect or will they say because our Saviour hath said to his Ministers Whose sins ye retain c. and because they can remit no more than what the offenders have confest that therefore by vertue of his promise it standeth with the Righteousness of God to take away no mans Sins until by auricular confession they be opened unto the Priest They are men that would seem to honour Antiquity and none more to depend upon the reverend judgement thereof I dare boldly affirm that for many hundred years after Christ the Fathers held no such opinion they did not gather by our Saviours words any such necessity of seeking the Priests Absolution from Sin by secret and as they now term it sacramental confession Publick confession they thought necessary by way of Discipline not private confession as in the nature of a Sacrament necessary For to begin with the purest times it is unto them which read and judge without partiality a thing most clear that the ancient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Confession defined by Tertullian to be a Discipline of humiliation and submission framing mens behaviour in such sort as may be fittest to move pity the confession which they use to speak of in the exercise of Repentance was made openly in the hearing of the whole both Ecclesiastical Consistory and Assembly This is the reason wherefore he perceiving that divers were better content their sores should secretly fester and eat inward then be laid so open to the eyes of many blameth greatly their unwise bashfulness and to reform the same perswadeth with them saying Amongst thy brethren and fellow servants which are partakers with thee of one and the same nature fear joy grief sufferings for us was common Lord and Father we have all received one spirit why shouldest thou not think with thy self that they are but thine own self wherefore dost thou avoid them as likely to insult over thee whom thou knowest subject to the same haps At that which grieveth any one part the whole body cannot rejoyce it must needs be that the whole will labour and strive to help that wherewith a part of it self is molested St. Cyprian being grieved with the dealings
seemeth even injurious to both if we should admit those surmised reservations of temporal wrath in God appeased towards reconciled Sinners As a Father he delights in his Childrens conversion neither doth he threaten the Penitent with wrath or them with punishment which already mourn but by promise assureth such of indulgence and mercy yea even of plenary Pardon which taketh away all both Faults and Penalties There being no reason why we should think him the lesse just because he sheweth him thus mercifull when they which before were obstinate labour to appease his wrath with the pensive meditation of Contrition the meek humility which Confession expresseth and the deeds wherewith Repentance declareth it self to be an amendment as well of the rotten fruit as the dryed leaves and withered root of the tree For with these duties by us performed and presented unto God in Heaven by Jesus Christ whose blood is a continual sacrifice of propitiation for us we content please and satisfie God Repentance therefore even the sole vertue of Repentance without either purpose of shrift or desire of absolution from the Priest Repentance the secret Conversion of the heart in that it consisteth of these three and doth by these three pacifie God may be without hyperbolical terms most truly magnified as a recovery of the Soul of man from deadly sickness a restitution of glorious light to his darkned minde a comfortable reconciliation with God aspiritual nativity a rising from the dead a day-spring from out the depth of obscurity a redemption from more than the AEgyptian thraldom a grinding of the old Adam even into dust and powder a deliverance out of the prisons hell a full restauration of the Seat of Grace and Throne of Glory a triumph over Sin and a saving Victory Amongst the works of Satisfaction the most respected have been alwayes these three Prayers Fasts and Alms-deeds by Prayers we lift up our Souls to him from whom sinne and iniquity hath withdrawn them by Fasting we reduce the body from thraldom under vain delights and make it serviceable for parts of vertuous conversation by Alms we dedicate to Charity those worldly Goods and Possessions which unrighteousness doth neither get nor bestow well The first a token of piety intended towards God the second a pledge of moderation and sobriety in the carriage of our own Persons the last a testimony of our meaning to do good to all men In which three the Apostle by way of abridgement comprehendeth whatsoever may appertain to sanctimony holynesse and good life as contrariwise the very masse of general corruption throughout the world what is it but only forgetfulnesse of God carnal pleasure immoderate desire after worldly things prophaness licentiousnesse covetousnesse All offices to Repentance have these two Properties there is in performance of them painfulnesse and in their nature a contrarietie unto sinne The one Consideration causeth them both in holy Scripture and elsewhere to be termed Judgement or Revenges taken voluntarily on our selves and to be furthermore also Preservatives from future Evils in as much as we commonly use to keep with the greater care that which with pain we have recovered And they are in the other respect contrary to sinne committed Contrition contrary to the pleasure Confession to the errour which is the mother of Sinne and to the deeds of Sinne the works of Satisfaction contrary therefore they are the more effectual to cure the evil habit thereof Hereunto it was that Saint Cyprian referred his earnest and vehement Exhortation That they which had fallen should be instant in Prayer reject bodily Ornaments when once they had stripped themselves out of Christ's Attire abhorr all Food after Satan's morsels tasted follow works of Righteousnesse which wash away Sinne and be plentiful in Alms-deeds wherewith Souls are delivered from death Not as if God did according to the manner of corrupt Iudges take some money to abate so much in the punishment of Malefactors These duties must be offered saith Salvianus not in confidence to redeem or buy out Sinne but as tokens of meek submission neither are they with God accepted because of their value but for the affections sake which doth thereby shew it self Wherefore concerning Satisfaction made to God by Christ onely and of the manner how Repentance generally particularly also how certain special works of Penitency both are by the Fathers in their ordinary phrase of speech called Satisfactory and may be by us very well so acknowledged enough hath been spoken Our offences sometimes are of such nature as requireth that particular men be satisfied or else Repentance to be utterly void and of none effect For if either through open repine or crooked fraud if through injurious or unconscionable dealing a man have wittingly wronged others to enrich himself the first thing evermore in his Case required ability serving is Restitution For let no man deceive himself from such Offences we are not discharged neither can be till recompence and restitution to man accompany the penitent Confession we have made to Almighty God In which case the Law of Moses was direct and plain If any sinne and commit a Trespasse against the Lord and deny unto his Neighbour that which was given him to keep or that which was put unto him of trust or doth by robbery or by violence oppress his Neighbour or hath found that which was lost and denyeth it and swears falsly for any of these things that a man doth wherein he sinneth he that doth thus offend and trespasse shall restore the robbery that he hath taken or the thing he hath got by violence or that which was delivered him to keep or the lost thing which he found and for whatsoever he hath sworn falsly adding perjury to injury he shall both restore the whole sum and shall adde thereunto a fift part more and deliver it unto him unto whom it belongeth the same day wherein he offereth for his Trespasse Now because men are commonly over-slack to perform this Duty and do therefore deferr it sometime till God have taken the Party wronged out of the World the Law providing that Trespassers might not under such pretence gain the Restitution which they ought to make appointeth the Kindred surviving to receive what the Dead should if they had continued But saith Moses if the Party wronged have no Kinsman to whom this dammage may be restored it shall then be rendered to the Lord himself for the Priest's use The whole order of proceeding herein is in sundry traditional Writings set down by their great Interpreters and Scribes which taught them that a Trespasse between a man and his Neighbour can never be forgiven till the Offender have by Restitution made recompence for wrongs done yea they hold it necessary that he appease the Party grieved by submitting himself unto him or is that will not serve by using the help and mediation of others In this case say they for any man to shew himself unappeasable and
unable to be resisted when it cometh yet not utterly impossible for a time in whole or in part to be shunned Neither doe we much fear such evils except they be imminent and near at hand nor if they be near except we have an opinion that they be so When we have once conceived an opinion or apprehended an imagination of such evils prest and ready to invade us because they are hurtful unto our nature we feel in our selves a kinde of abhorring because they are thought near yet not present our nature seeketh forthwith how to shift and provide for it self because they are evils which cannot be resisted therefore she doth not provide to withstand but to shun and avoid Hence it is that in extream fear the Mother of Life contracting herself avoiding as much as may be the reach of evil and drawing the heat together with the spirits of the Body to her leaveth the outward parts cold pale weak feeble unapt to perform the functions of Life as we see in the fear of Balthasar King of Babel By this it appeareth that Fear is nothing else but a perturbation of the minde through an opinion of some imminent evil threatning the destruction or great annoyance of our Nature which to shun it doth contract and deject it self Now because not in this place onely but otherwhere often we hear it repeated Fear not it is by some made a question Whether a man may fear destruction or vexation without sinning First the reproof wherewith Christ checketh his Disciples more than once O men of little Faith wherefore are ye afraid Secondly the punishment threatned in Revelat. 21. viz. the Lake and Fire and Brimstone not onely to Murtherers unclean Persons Sorcerers Idolaters Lyers but also to the fearful and faint-hearted this seemeth to argue That Fearfulness cannot but be finne On the contrary side we see that he which never felt motion unto sinne had of this affection more than a slight feeling How clear is the evidence of the Spirit That in the days of his Flesh be offered up Prayers and Supplications with strong cryes and tears unto him that was able to save him from death and was also heard in that which he feared Heb. 5.7 Whereupon it followeth that Fear in it self is a thing not sinful For is not Fear a thing natural and for mens preservation necessary implanted in us by the provident and most gracious Giver of all good things to the end that we might not run head-long upon those mischiefs wherewith we are not able to encounter but use the remedy of shunning those Evils which we have not ability to withstand Let that People therefore which receive a benefit by the length of their Prince's days the Father or Mother which rejoyceth to see the Off-spring of their Flesh grow like green and pleasant Plants let those Children that would have their Parents those men that would gladly have their Friends and Brethrens dayes prolonged on earth as there is no natural-hearted man but gladly would let them bless the Father of Lights as in other things so even in this that he hath given man a fearful heart and settled naturally that affection in him which is a preservation against so many ways of death Fear then in it self being meer Nature cannot in it self be Sin which Sin is not Nature but thereof an accessary deprivation But in the matter of Fear we may sin and do two wayes If any man's danger be great theirs is greatest that have put the fear of danger farthest from them Is there any estate more fearful than that Babylonian Strumpet's that sitteth upon the tops of seven Hills glorying and vaunting I am a Queen c. Revel 18.7 How much better and happier are they whose estate hath been always as his who speaketh after this sort of himself Lord from my youth have I born thy yoke They which sit at continual ease and are settled in the lees of their security look upon them view their countenance their speech their gesture their deeds Put them in fear O God saith the Prophet that so they may know themselves to be but men Worms of earth dust and ashes frail corruptible feeble things To shake off security therefore and to breed fear in the hearts of mortal men so many admonitions are used concerning the power of Evils which beset them so many threatnings of calamities so many descriptions of things threatned and those so lively to the end they may leave behind them a deep impression of such as have force to keep the heart continually waking All which doe shew that we are to stand in fear of nothing more than the extremity of not fearing When fear hath delivered us from that pit wherein they are sunk that have put farr from them the evil day that have made a league with death and have said Tush we shall feel no harm it standeth us upon to take heed it cast us not into that wherein Souls destitute of all hope are plunged For our direction to avoid as much as may be both extremities that we may know as a Ship-master by his Card how farr we are wide either on the one side or on the other we must note that in a Christian man there is First Nature Secondly Corruption perverting Nature Thirdly Grace correcting and amending Corruption In fear all these have their several operations Nature teacheth simply to wish preservation and avoidance of things dreadful for which cause our Saviour himself prayeth and that often Father if it be possible In which cases corrupt Nature's suggestions are For the safety of Temporal life not to stick at things excluding from eternal wherein how farr even the best may be led the chiefest Apostle's frailty teacheth Were it not therefore for such cogitations as on the contrary side Grace and Faith minisheth such as that of Iob Though God kill me that of Paul Scio cui credidi I know him on whom I do rely small evils would soon be able to overthrow even the best of us A wise man saith Solomon doth see a plague coming and hideth himself It is Nature which teacheth a Wise man in fear to hide himself but Grace and Faith doth teach him where Fools care not to hide their heads but where shall a Wise man hide himself when he feareth a Plague coming Where should the frighted Childe hide his head but in the bosom of his loving Father where a Christian but under the shadow of the Wings of Christ his Saviour Come my People saith God in the Prophet Enter into thy Chamber hide thy self c. Isa. 26. But because we are in danger like chased Birds like Doves that seek and cannot see the resting holes that are right before them therefore our Saviour giveth his Disciples these encouragements before-hand that Fear might never so amaze them but that always they might remember that whatsoever Evils at any time did beset them to him they should still repair for comfort counsel and succour For
their assurance whereof his Peace he gave them his Peace he left unto them not such Peace as the World offereth by whom his name is never so much pretended as when deepest treachery is meant but Peace which passeth all understanding Peace that bringeth with it all happinesse Peace that continueth for ever and ever with them that have it This Peace God the Father grant `for his Son's sake unto whom with the Holy Ghost three Persons one Eternal and Everliving God be all Honour and Glory and Praise now and for ever Amen A Learned and Comfortable SERMON Of the certainty and perpetuity of FAITH in the ELECT Especially of the Prophet Habakkuk's FAITH HABAK. 1. 4. Whether the Prophet Habakkuk by admitting this cogitation into his minde The Law doth fail did thereby shew himself an Unbeliever WEE have seen in the opening of this clause which concerneth the weakness of the Prophet's Faith First what things they are whereunto the Faith of sound Believers doth assent Secondly wherefore all men assent not thereunto and Thirdly why they that doe doe it many times with small assurance Now because nothing can be so truly spoken but through mis-understanding it may be depraved therefore to prevent if it be possible all mis-construction in this cause where a small errour cannot rise but with great danger it is perhaps needful ere we come to the fourth Point that something be added to that which hath been already spoken concerning the third That meer natural men do neither know nor acknowledge the things of God we do not marvel because they are spiritually to be discerned but they in whose hearts the light of Grace doth shine they that are taught of God why are they so weak in Faith why is their assenting to the Law so scrupulous so much mingled with fear and wavering It seemeth strange that ever they should imagin the Law to fail It cannot seem strange if we weigh the reason If the things which we believe be considered in themselves it may truly be said that Faith is more certain than any Science That which we know either by sense or by infallible demonstration is not so certain as the Principles Articles and Conclusions of Christian Faith Concerning which we must note that there is a certainty of evidence and a certainty of adherence Certainty of evidence we call that when the minde doth assent unto this or that not because it is true in it self but because the truth is clear because it is manifest unto us Of things in themselves most certain except they be also most evident our perswasion is not so assured as it is of things more evident although in themselves they be lesse certain It is as sure if not surer that there be spirits as that there he men but we be more assured of these than of them because these are more evident The truth of some things is so evident that no man which heareth them can doubt of them as when we hear that a part of any thing is less than the whole the minde is constrained to say This is true If it were so in matters of Faith then as all men have equal certainty of this so no Believer should be more scrupulous and doubtful than another But we finde the contrary The Angels and Spirits of the Righteous in Heaven have certainty most evident of things spiritual but this they have by the light of glory That which we see by the light of Grace though it he indeed more certain yet it is not to us so evidently certain as that which sense or the light of Nature will not suffer a man to doubt of Proofs are vain and frivolous except they be more certain than is the thing proved and do we not see how the Spirit every where in the Scripture proving matters of Faith laboureth to confirm us in the things which we believe by things whereof we have sensible knowledge I conclude therefore that we have less certainty of evidence concerning things believed than concerning sensible or naturally perceived Of these who doth doubt at any time Of them at somtime who doubteth not I will not here alledge the sundry confessions of the perfectest that have lived upon earth concerning their great imperfections this way which if I did I should dwell too long upon a matter sufficiently known by every faithful man that doth know himself The other which we call the certainty of adherence is when the heart doth cleave and stick unto that which it doth believe This certainty is greater in us than the other The reason is this The faith of a Christian doth apprehend the words of the Law the promises of God not onely as true but also as good and therefore even then when the evidence which he hath of the Truth is so small that it grieveth him to feel his weakness in assenting thereto yet is there in him such a sure adherence unto that which he doth but faintly and fearfully believe that his Spirit having once truly tasted the heavenly sweetness thereof all the world is not able quite and clean to remove him from it but he striveth with himself to hope against all reason of believing being setled with Iob upon this unmoveable resolution Though God kill me I will not give ever trusting in him For why This lesson remaineth for ever imprinted in him It is good for me to cleave unto God Psal. 37. Now the mindes of all men being so darkned as they are with the foggy damp of original corruption it cannot be that any man's heart living should be either so enlightned in the knowledge or so established in the love of that wherein his Salvation standeth as to be perfect neither doubting nor shrinking at all If any such were what doth lett why that man should not be justified by his own inherent righteousness For Righteousness inherent being perfect will justifie And perfect Faith is a part of perfect Righteousness inherent yea a principal part the root and the Mother of all the rest so that if the Fruit of every Tree be such as the Root is Faith being perfect as it is if it be not at all mingled with distrust and fear what is there to exclude other Christian vertues from the like perfections And then what need we the righteousness of Christ His Garment is superstuous we may be honourably cloathed with our own Robes if it be thus But let them beware who challenge to themselves a strength which they have not left they lose the comfortable support of that weakness which indeed they have Some shew although no soundness of ground there is which may be alledged for defence of this supposed-perfection in certainty touching matters of our Faith as first that Abraham did believe and doubted not secondly that the spirit which God hath given us to no other end but only to assure us that we are the Sons of God to embolden us to call upon him as our Father to open our eyes
and to make the truth of things believed evident unto our mindes is much mightier in operation than the common light of nature whereby we discern sensible things wherefore we must needs be more sure of that we believe than of that we see we must needs be more certain of the mercies of God in Christ Jesus than we are of the light of the Sun when it shineth upon our faces To that of Abraham He did not doubt I answer that this negation doth not exclude all fear all doubting but onely that which cannot stand with true Faith It freeth Abraham from doubting through Infidelity not from doubting through Infirmity from the doubting of Unbelievers not of weak Believers from such a doubting as that whereof the Prince of Samaria is attainted who hearing the promise of sudden Plenty in the midst of Extream Dearth answered Though the Lord would make windows in Heaven were it possible so to come to pass But that Abraham was not void of all doubting what need we any other proof than the plain evidence of his own words Gen. 17. 17. The reason which is taken from the power of the Spirit were effectual if God did work like a natural Agent as the fire doth inflame and the Sun enlighten according to the uttermost ability which they have to bring forth their effects But the incomprehensible wisdom of God doth limit the effects of his power to such a measure as seemeth best unto himself Wherefore he worketh that certainty in all which sufficeth abundantly to their Salvation in the life to come but in none so great as attaineth in this life unto perfection Even so O Lord it hath pleased thee even so it is best and fittest for us that feeling still our own Infirmities we may no longer breathe than pray Adjuva Domine Help Lord our incredulity Of the third Question this I hope will suffice being added unto that which hath been thereof already spoken The fourth Question resteth and so an end of this Point That which cometh last of all in this first branch to be considered concerning the weakness of the Prophet's Faith is Whether he did by this very thought The Law doth fail quench the Spirit fall from Faith and shew himself an Unbeliever or no The Question is of moment the repose and tranquillity of infinite Souls doth depend upon it The Prophet's case is the case of many which way soever we cast for him the same way it passeth for all others If in him this cogitation did extinguish Grace why the like thoughts in us should not take the like effect there is no cause Forasmuch therefore as the matter is weighty dear and precious which we have in hand it behoveth us with so much the greater chariness to wade through it taking special heed both what we build and whereon we build that if our Building be Pearl our Foundation be not Stubble if the Doctrine we teach be full of comfort and consolation the ground whereupon we gather it be sure otherwise we shall not save but deceive both our selves and others In this we know we are not deceived neither can we deceive you when we teach that the Faith whereby ye are sanctified cannot fail it did not in the Prophet it shall not in you If it be so let the difference be shewed between the condition of Unbelievers and his in this or in the like imbecillity and weakness There was in Habakkuk that which Saint Iohn doth call the seed of God meaning thereby the first grace which God powreth into the hearts of them that are incorporated into Christ which having received if because it is an adversary to Sinne we do therefore think we sinne not both otherwise and also by distrustful and doubtfull apprehending of that which we ought stedfastly to believe surely we do but deceive our selves Yet they which are of God do not sinne either in this or in any thing any such sinne as doth quite extinguish Grace clean cutt them off from Christ Jesus because the seed of God abideth in them and doth shield them from receiving any irremediable wound Their Faith when it is at strongest is but weak yet even then when it is at the weakest so strong that utterly it never faileth it never perisheth altogether no not in them who think it extinguished in themselves There are for whose sakes I dare not deal slightly in this Cause sparing that labour which must be bestowed to make it plain Men in like agonies unto this of the Prophet Habakkuk's are through the extremity of grief many times in judgement so confounded that they finde not themselves in themselves For that which dwelleth in their hearts they seek they make diligent search and enquiry It abideth it worketh in them yet still they ask where Still they lament as for a thing which is past finding they mourn as Rachel and refuse to be comforted as if that were not which indeed is and as if that which is not were as if they did not believe when they doe and as if they did despair when they do not Which in some I grant is but a melancholly passion proceeding onely from that dejection of minde the cause whereof is in the Bod● and by bodily means can be taken away But where there is no such bodily cause the minde is not lightly in this mood but by some of these three occasions One that judging by comparison either with other men or with themselves at some other time more strong they think imperfection to be a plain deprivation weakness to be utter want of Faith Another cause is they often mistake one thing for another Saint Paul wishing well to the Church of Rome prayeth for them after this sort The God of Hope fill you with all joy of Believing Hence an errour groweth when men in heaviness of Spirit suppose they lack Faith because they finde not the sugred joy and delight which indeed doth accompanie Faith but so as a separable accident as a thing that may be removed from it yea there is a cause why it should be removed The light would never be so acceptable were it not for that usual intercourse of darkness Too much honey doth turn to gall and too much joy even spiritual would make us Wantons Happier a great deal is that man's case whose Soul by inward desolation is humbled than he whose heart is through abundance of Spiritual delight lifted up and exalted above measure Better it is sometimes to go down into the pit with him who beholding darkness and bewailing the loss of inward joy and consolation cryeth from the bottom of the lowest hell My God my God why hast thou forsaken me than continually to work arm in arm with Angels to fit as it were in Abraham's bosom and to have no thought no cogitation but I thank my God it is not with me as it is with other men No God will have them that shall walk in light to feel now and then