Selected quad for the lemma: nature_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
nature_n ghost_n holy_a trinity_n 3,214 5 9.7060 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

good Those two kind of properties which are said to be in God differ from those properties which are given to men and Angels In God they are infinite unchangeable and perfect even the Divine essence it selfe and therefore indeed all one and the same but in men and Angels they are finite changeable and imperfect meere qualities divers they receiving them by participation onely not being such of themselves by nature It is hard to observe an accurate methode in the enumeration of the Attributes Zanchie Doctor Preston and Mr. Storke have handled some few of them none that I know hath written fully of them all CHAP. III. GOd in respect of his nature is a Spirit that is a substance or essence altogether incorporeall This the Scripture expressely witnesseth John 4. 24. 2 Cor. 3. 17. An understanding Spirit is either created or uncreated Created Spirit as the soule of man or an Angell Psal. 104. 4. 1 Cor. 6. ult uncreated God Whatsoever is affirmed of God which is also communicable to the creatures the same must be understood by a kinde of excellencie and singularity above the rest Angels are Spirits the soules of men are spirits but God is a spirit by a kind of excellency or singularity above all spirits the God of spirits Num 16 22. the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. the Authour of spirits and indeed the spirit of spirits The word spirit in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hebrew Ruach is used chiefely of God and secondarily of the creatures when it is used of God it is used either properly or metonymically properly and so first essentially then it signifieth the Godhead absolutely as I●hn 4. 24. or more restrictively the divine nature of Christ Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. secondly personally for the third person in the Trinity commonly called the Holy spirit or Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 11. I● the word be taken metonymically it signifieth sometimes the effects of grace either the common graces of Gods spirit propheticall 1 Sam. 10. 6. 10. miraculous or the sanctifying graces Ephes. 5. 13. Reasons 1. God is a spirit because a spirit is the best highest and purest nature God being the most excellent and highest nature must needs be a spirit too 2. God is a most simple and noble being therefore must needs be incorporeall Angels and Souls have a composition in them their essence and faculties are distinguished they are compounded of Subject and Accidents their nature and qualities or graces but Gods holinesse is his nature 3 God is insensible therefore a Spirit Spirits are not subject to senses John 1. 18. This confutes 1. Tertullian who held God to be Corporeall then he should consist of matter and forme 2. The Anthropomorphites who ascribed to God the parts and members of a man they alleage that place Gen. 1. 27. But some thinke the soule is the onely subject and seat in which the Image of God is placed grant that it was in the body likewise it being capable of immortality yet a man was not said to be made after the Image of God in respect of his corporall figure but in respect of knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse Ephes. 4. 23. Col. 3. 10. not in respect of his substance but qualities Ob. God is said to have members face hands eyes in some places of Scripture and yet in others he is said not to be a body but a Spirit and consequently to have no hands nor eyes Sol. The word hand and eye is taken figuratively for the power of seeing and working which are actions that men performe with the hand and eye as an instrument and so it is attributed to God because he hath an ability of discerning and doing infinitely more excellent then can be found in man Sometimes againe those words are taken properly for members of the body of some such forme fashion making so they are not to be attributed unto God who because he hath no body cannot have an hand an eye A body is taken three wayes 1. For every thing which is opposite to a fancy and notion and so what ever hath a being may be called a body in this sence Tertullian attributes a body to God 2. For that thing which hath some composition or change so God onely is incorporeall 3. More strictly for that which consists of matter and forme so Angels are incorporeall 3. This shewes the unlawfulnesse then of painting the Godhead Cajetane disliked it Bellarmine argues thus Man is the Image of God but man may be pictured therefore the Image of God may be pictured Man is not the Image of God but in the faculties of his soule which cannot be pictured therefore the Image of God cannot be pictured Although the whole man may be said Synecdochically to be pictured yet is not man called the Image of God in his whole but in a part which is his reasonable and invisible soule which cannot be pictured 1. We must call upon God and worship him with the Spirit our Saviour Christ te●cheth us this practicall use John 4. 24. Blesse the Lord O my soule Psal. 103. whom I serve in the Spirit saith Paul The very Heathen made this inference Si Deus est animus sit pura mente colendus 2. God though invisible in himselfe may be knowne by things visible He that seeth the Sonne hath seene the Father John 14. 9. We should praise God as for other excellencies so for his invisibility 1 Tim. 1. 17. 2. Learn to walk by faith as seeing him who is invisible Heb. 11. 27. 3. Labour for pure hearts that we may see God hereafter 4. Here is comfort against invisible Enemies we have the invisible God and invisible Angels to help us 3. God hath immediate power over thy Spirit to humble and terrifie thee He is the Father of Spirits he cannot onely make thee poor sick but make thy conscience roare for sinne it was God put that horrour into Cain Judas Spira's spirits He is a Spirit and so can deale with the Spirit 2. Take heed of the sinnes of the heart and spirit pride unbeleefe insincerity 2 Cor. 7. 1. 1 Thess. 5. 23. such as not onely arise from but are terminated in the spirit These are first most abhorred by God He is a Spirit and as he loveth spirituall performances so he hates spirituall iniquities 6 Gen. He punisht the old world because all the imaginations of the thoughts of their hearts were evill 2. Most contrary to the Law of God which is chiefely Spirituall 3. Sinne is strongest in the spirit as all evill in the fountaine Matth. 15. 19. 4. Spirituall evill make us most like the Devils who are Spirituall wickednesses All sinne is from Satan per modum servitutis these per modum imaginis God is most Simple Ens Simplicissimum Simplicity is a property of God whereby he is voide of all composition mixtion and division being all
mystery of the Trinity is necessary to be known and believed of all that shal be saved it was not so plainly revealed to the Jewes of old as it is to us in the new Testament a perfect and full knowledge of this mystery is not attainable in this life Although Trinity in its native signification signifie the number of any three things yet by Ecclesiasticall custome it is limited to signifie the three Persons in the Trinity This is not meant as if the Essence did consist of three Persons as so many parts and therefore there is a great difference between Trinity and Triplicity Trinity is when the same Essence hath divers waies of subsisting and Triplicity is when one thing is compounded of three as parts they are three not in respect of Essence or Divine attributes three Eternals but three in respect of personall properties as the Father is of none the Sonne of the Father and the holy Ghost of both three Persons but one God as to be to be true to be good are all one because Transcendents Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa the outward workes which concerne the creature belong to one person as wel as the other as to create govern but opera ad intra sunt divisa the personall properties or internall workes are distinguished as the Father begets the Sonne is begotten of the Father and the holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Sonne There is in the Trinity alius alius another and another but not aliud aliud another thing and another thing as there is in Christ the Father is another person from the Sonne but yet there is the same nature and Essence of them all They differ not in their natures as three men or three Angels differ for they differ so as one may be without the other but now the Father is not without the Sonne nor the Sonne without the Father so that there is the same numericall Essence The Father in some sence is said to be the onely God John 17. 3. that is besides the Divine nature which is common to the three persons there is not another God to be found the word alone is opposed to all faigned Gods to every thing which is not of this Divine nature so when it is said None knoweth the Father but the Sonne and the Sonne but the Father that excludes not the Holy Ghost which searcheth the hidden things of God but all which are not of that Essence Though there be no inequality in the persons yet there is an order not of dignity but of beginning The Father in the Sonne by the holy Ghost made the world not as if there were so many partiall causes much lesse as if God the Father were the Principall and these Instrumentall but onely meere order Persona divina est essentiae divinae subsistentia incommunicablis Wendelinus The Essence considered with the manner of subsisting is called a Person A Person is such a subsistence in the Divine nature as is distinguished from every other thing by some speciall or personall property or else it is the God-head restrained with his personall property Or it is a different manner of subsisting in the Godhead as the nature of man doth diversly subsist in Peter JAmes John but these are not all one It differs from the essence as the manner of the thing from the thing it selfe and not as one thing from another one person is distinguisht from another by its personall property and by its manner of working The personall property of the Father is to beget that is not to multiply his substance by production but to communicate his substance to the same The Sonne is said to be begotten that is to have the whole substance from the Father by communication The Holy ghost is said to proceed or to be breathed forth to receive his substance by proceeding from the Father and the Sonne joyntly in regard of which he is called the Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Sonne both Gal. 4. 6. The Father onely begetteth the Sonne onely is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedeth both procession and generation are ineffable In the manner of working they differ for the Father worketh of himselfe by the Sonne and through the holy Ghost the Sonne worketh from the Father by the Holy Ghost the holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Sonne by himselfe There is so one God as that there are three persons or divers manners of being in that one Godhead the Father Sonne and the holy Ghost 1 Whatsoever absolutely agrees to the Divine nature that doth agree likewise to every person of the Trinity 2 Every person hath not a part but the whole Deity in it selfe A person is one entire distinct subsistence having life understanding will and power by which he is in continuall operation These things are required to a person 1 That it be a substance for accidents are not persons they inhere in another thing a person must subsist 2 A lively and intelligent substance endued with reason and will an house is not a person nor a stone or beast 3 Determinate and singular for mankind is not a person but John and Peter 4 Incommunicable it can not be given to another hence the nature of man is not a person because it is communicable to every particular man but every particular man is a person because that nature which he hath in particular can not be communirated to another 5 Not sustained by another therefore the humane nature of Christ is not a person because it is sustained by his Deity 6 It must not be the part of another therefore the reasonable soule which is a part of man is not a person That there are three persons in the Deity viz. Father Sonne and holy Ghost is manifest by expresse testimonies of Scripture Genes 1. 1. Gods created and v. 26. Psalm 33. 6. there three are named the Word the Lord and the Spirit Esay 6.3 Holy Holy Holy But this truth is most clearly taught in the new Testament Matth. 3. 16. Luke 3. 22. The first person in the Trinity utters his voice from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne the Sonne is baptized in Jordan the holy Ghost descends in the shape of a Dove upon Christ. Pater auditur in voce Filius manifestatur in homine Spiritus Sanctus dignoscitur in columba Aug. tract 6. in Joh. Adde to this the History of Christs transfiguration described Matth. 17. 5. Marke 9. 7. Luke 9. 35. In which likewise the voice of the Father was heard from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne the Sonne is transfigured the Holy Ghost manifests himselfe in a bright cloud Matth. 28. 19. The Apostles are commanded to baptize in the Name of Father Sonne and holy Ghost Cameron thinks that is the most evident place to prove the Trinity But that is as ●pposite a place as any for this purpose 1 John 5.
ought to blesse God that is to observe and know his blessednes and for to doe two things to him 1 To applaude it 2 To expresse and acknowledge it In Scripture-phrase to blesse signifieth two things 1 To praise a person for those things which are praise-worthy in him as Gods name is said to be above all blessing and praise Blesse the Lord O my soule and all that is within me blesse his holy Name 2 To wish well to it that my soule may blesse thee before it die pronounce and wish thee blessed We cannot pronounce any blessing upon God nor bestow any benefit upon him He is too excellent to receive any thing by way of promise or performance from us but we must performe these two things viz. wish well to him speake well of him Wish well to him that is acknowledge his exceeding happinesse and will that he may be ever what he is as we know he ever wil be For to wish a thing continue being that is is possible and to wil Gods eternall blessed and glorious being that is one of the most excellent acts of the creature and in doing so we blesse God so much as a creature can blesse him Perfect happinesse is not to be had here but so much happines as can be had here is to be had in him he can give himselfe to those which seeke him in some degrees and then are they in some degrees happy he can give himselfe to them in the highest degree and then they are in the highest degree happy according as he doth communicate himselfe to us more or lesse so are we more or lesse happy 1 We have little mind to wish well to God or rejoyce in his welfare or to acknowledge and speake of it 2 We should stir up our selves to blesse God and say how blessed art thou and blessed by thy Name We should set our minds and our tongues aworke to set forth to our selves and others his exceeding great excellencies When we see and know excellent abilities in any man we cannot but be oft talking with our selves and others of his great worth so we seeing and knowing the infinitenesse of God must be often telling our selves and others what we do know by him thereby to stirre up our selves and others more and more to know him and we must declare before the Lord his goodnesse and his loving kindnesse to the sonnes of men 3 We must learne to seeke happinesse where it is even in God and in his favourable vouchsafing to be ours and to give himselfe to us It is not possible for the creature to be happy and enjoy it selfe unlesse it enjoy the best and greatest good whereof it is capable and which will fully satisfie all the longings and inclinations of it We should 1. see our misery that being alienated from God must needs be miserable till this estrangement be removed 2 Set our selves to get true blessednesse by regaining this union and communion with God the fountaine of all blisse and hate sinne which onely separates between God and us and hinders us from enjoying the Blessed God 3 We should place all our happinesse in him and in him alone for he is not onely the chiefe but the sole happinesse we should use the world but enjoy him Psalm 16. 11. we should use the meanes which may bring blessednesse Psalm 1. 1. Matth. 5. 3 to 12. if we live holily we may looke for happinesse All the promises in the Scripture belong to godly men they shall be blessed here and hereafter who serve God in sincerity We must expect and looke for happinesse onely in our union with and fruition of him Austin alledgeth out of Varro 288 severall opinions of Philosophers concerning felicity Blessednesse is the enjoying of the Soveraigne Good now what that is we must judge by these two Characters it must be 1. Optimum the best otherwise it wil not sistere appetitum give us content we wil be ever longing 2. Maximum the most compleat otherwise it wil not implere appetitum we shall not be satisfied therewith God is Optimus Maximus Happinesse it the summe of all our desires and the ayme of all our endeavours Perfect Blessednesse consisteth in the immediate fruition of the chiefe perfect and al-sufficient good even God himselfe The good to be de●ired simply for it selfe is God onely who being the first cause of all things the first essentiall eternall infinite unchangeable and onely good must needs be the chiefe good and therefore the last end intended by man given by God who being not onely desired but enjoyed of necessity must fully satisfie the soule that it can goe no further not onely because the subject is infinite and so the mind can desire to know no more but also because fulnesse of all good that can be wished is to be found in God Therefore our happinesse is compleat and perfect when we enjoy God as an object wherein the powers of the soule are satisfied with everlasting delight This may suffice to have spoken concerning Gods Essence and Attributes by which it appeares that God is farre different both from all faigned Gods and from all creatures The consideration of the Divine persons followeth for in one most simple nature of God there are distinct persons CHAP. XVI Of the Trinity or distinction of Persons in the Divine Essence WE cannot by the light of nature know the mystery of the Trinity nor the incarnation of Jesus Christ. But when by faith we receive this doctrine we may illustrate it by reason The similies which the Schoolmen and other Divines bring drawn from the creature are unequall and unsatisfactory since there can be no proportion between things Finite and Infinite Two resemblances are much used in Scripture the Light and the word The Light which was three daies before the Sunne Gen. 1. and then condensed into that glorious body and ever since diffused throughout the world is all one and the same light So the Father of lights which inhabiteth light which none can approach Jam. 1. 17. and the Sunne of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. in whom all the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelleth bodily and the holy Ghost the Spirit of illumination are all one and the same God Again it is the same thing that the mind thinketh and the word signifieth and the voyce uttereth so is the Father as the mind conceiving the Sonne as the word conceived or begotten the holy Ghost as the voice or speech uttered and imparted to all hearers and all one and the same God A studious Father meditating on the mysterie of the Trinity there appeared unto him a child with a shell lading the Sea into a little hole he demanding what the child did I intend said the child to empty the Ocean into this pit It is impossible said the Father as possible said the child as for thee to comprehend this profound mystery in thy shallow capacity The
1. p. 74 Preaching whether it be divinely inspired as well as the word written l. 1. p. 25 Predestination what it is l. 3. p. 4 5 Predictions the truth of the Scriptures predictions proves it to be of God l. 1. p. 14 15 The difference betweene the predictions of the true Prophets and those of the Heathen l. 1. p. 15 Prescience what it is in God l. 2 p. 67 Properties of the Scripture l. 1 p. 130 to 171 Proverbs why so called and who best expounds them l. 1. p. 55 56 Providence that there is a Providence l. 3. p. 125 What providence is the extent of it l. 3. p. 125 126 The kinds of it l. 3. p. 127 128 The degrees and parts of it l. 3 p 128 129 Psalmes how called and divided by the Hebrews l. 3. p. 54 55 The chiefest part of Scripture and often quoted in the new Testament ibid. Who best interprets the Psalms ibid. Pure the Scripure is pure and holy l. 1. p. 136 137 138 R RAine what it is the usefulnesse of it l. 3. p. 50 51 52 Rainbow the cause of it and what the colours in it signifie l. 3. p. 52 Reading all are commanded to read the Scriptures l. 1. p. 32 33 What reading of the Scriptures is l. 1. p. 35 36 It may be the instrument of regeneration ibid. How the Scripture is to be read l. 1. p. 36 37 The Papists will not suffer the Scriptures to be read by the people l. 1. p. 303 Religion not a humane invention l. 2. p. 131 Reprobation what and the object of it l. 3. p. 10 Reveale God re●●aled his will three waies to our fathers l. 1 p. 7 8 We must now expect no further revelation l. 1. p. 65 Revelation why so called l. 1. p. 81 The subject of the Booke it is Canonicall l. 1. p. 81 Difficult l. 1. p. 82 83 Who best interpret it l. 1. p. 83 Rivers their originall and use l. 3. p. 59 Romans that Epistle is an Epitome of Christian Religion l. 1. p. 73 Who best interpret it ibid. How we may most profitably read it l. 3. p. 11 Rule the Scripture is the rule of faith and life l. 1. p. 132 133 134 Ruth why so called and who best expound it l. 1. p. 50 S SAmuel why so called and who best expounds both books l. 1. p. 50 51 Scripture the rule of Divinity l. 1. p 7 The rule of faith and life l. 1 p. 132 133 134 VVhy it is called Scripture and the divers Epithites given to it l. 1. p. 8 The authority of the Scripture l. 1. p. 8 to 25 The description of Scripture l. 1. p. 11 It was no device of mans brain l. 1. p. 25 It hath its authority from it selfe not the Church l. 1. p. 25 to 31 The Scriptures are to be read by the common people l. 1. p. 30 to 35 It crosseth humane wisdome l. 2. p. 14 VVho contemne and unreverently handle the Scriptures l. 1. p. 39 40 41 What parts of Scripture have been questioned l. 1. p. 65 66 75 79 80 Some titles and Subscriptions are not part of Scripture p. 66 Whether any bookes of the Scripture be lost l. 1. p. 116 117 Sea the largenesse and usefulnesse of it l. 3. p 60 to 63 Sence of Scripture what it is l. 1 p. 171 172 173 Septuagint Translation l. 1 p. 96 97 Ship the materials and uses of it l. 3. p. 65 Simple God is most Simple l. 2 p. 26 27 Soule its excellency l 2. p. 10 It is Immortall l. 3. p. 117 118 Spirit God is a Spirit l. 2 p. 23 24 Consectaries of it l. 1. p. 25 26 Starres their nature and usefulnesse l. 3. p. 74 Sunne the name nature and usefulnesse of it l. 3. p. 70 71 Syriack Translation l. 1. p. 98 T TEmptation how Gods temptations and Satans differ l. 3. p. 112 Testament why the Scripture is called a Testament l. 1. p. 34 The Scripture is distinguished into the books of the old and new Testament l. 1. p. 44 The Bookes of the old Testament were written in Hebrew ibid. Of the new in Greek l. 1. p. 62 63 The Books of the old Testament how divided l. 1. p. 45 47 The new Testament how divided and who best expounds it l. 1. p. 62 The number of the Bookes both of the old and new Testament l. 1. p. 46 Theology what it is l. 1. p. 2 Thessalonica the chiefe City in Macedonia l. 1. p. 74 Who best interprets the Thessalonians ibid. Thunder what it is l. 3. p. 45 A great worke of God and the use of it l. 3. p. 45 46 47 Timothy what it signifieth who best interprets both the Epistles l. 1. p 74 Titus what it signifieth like the first to Timothy who best expounds it ibid. Traditions what they signifie l. 1. p. 150 151 153 The severall kinds of them p. 155 Reasons against the Popish Traditions l. 1. p. 153 154 The Papists arguments for Traditions answered l. 1 p. 158 159 160 Translate the Scriptures ought to be translated into vulgar tongues l. 1. p. 33 34 Vulgar Translation is very faulty l. 1. p. 122 123 124 Trees their nature and usefulnesse l. 3. p. 68 to 71 Trees of life and of knowledge of good and evill why so called l. 3. p. 122 123 Trinity There are three distinct Persons in the Trinity l. 2 p. 126 to 132 True The Scripture is True and certaine l. 1. p. 131 132 God is True l. 2. p. 94 95 96 97 V VErsion The severall Versions of Scripture l. 1. p. 94 95 96 Vertues what in God and man l. 2. p. 78 79 Vulgar whether the Vulgar Latine be Authenticall l. 1. p. 122 123 It is very faulty l. 1. p. 123 to 127 W WAter the use of that Element l. 3. p. 36 37 Will what it is and what in God l. 3. p. 68 69 Winds are a great worke of God l. 3. p. 53 54 Wisdom what it is God is most wise l. 2. p. 64 65 66 Word why the Scripture is called the Word and why the Word of God l. 1. p. 8 Works the Workes of God divided l. 3. p. 1 2 Wrong sin wrongs God divers waies l. 2. p. 75 76 Z ZEchary why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 61 Zephany why so called and who best expounds him ibid. FINIS * Quia de advisamento ●ssensu consilij nostri pro quibusdam or dui●s urgentibus negotijs nos Statum d●fensionem Regni nostri Angliae Ecclesiae concernentibus ●uoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitatem Westmonasterium tertio die Novemb●is proximo teneri ordinavimus Jer. 7. 25. and 35. 15. * Those Gentlemen of the House and others that live neere Westminster may heare 500 Sermons yearly at least one every Morning and foure every Sabbath Foxe in his Booke of Martyrs Speeds Chronicle Chap. 24. p. 858. * Jer. 9. 3. Jude 3. v.