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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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diuinity in questions answers which order of instruction is ancient in the Church as may appeare by the practise of Augustine Iunilius many worthy writers since before them The matter of this booke is very profitable being the sūme substance or a body of Theology For what point of piety may not be learned out of this booke do you desire to know the Doctrine of one God the trinity of persons Christ crucified the holy Ghost and the Scriptures of God Here you haue that doctrine set downe would you be acquainted with the creation of the world the natures either of Angels or mankind or mariage or diuorce Behold in this booke you may see them all Is it the gouernment of the world the doctrine of sin the power of freewil the law the gospel the agreement or disagreement of the old and new Testament which you are willing to learne here is a teacher fit to instruct you Here you haue a Synopsis of Faith repentance iustification sanctification of a Christians works christian liberty of prayer predestination of the Resurrection last iudgement of eternall life eternal death Here you may read of the true Church of the nature of Vowes of the Sacrametns of the old new Testament and the office both of Magistrates subiectes And concerning these questions whatsoeuer is material in Luther Melancton Caluin Peter Martyr Zanchius Hipperius Hemingius Vrsinus and the rest it is here set before you in one viewe How necessary it is for young men especially young noble men to read such bookes the seasoning of their tender years with piety the future good which may come by this to posterity doth easily proue If young Alexander will bee studious of philosophy why shal not young Theodosius be studious in diuinity if he said to his master mallem singulari disciplina quam potentia praestare why should not you say mallemus Christiana disciplina quam potentia praestare But as Alexander was offended with his tutor Aristotle in making cōmon those acroamatical books in which he alone desired to excell so many I feare me will be offended with mee in making this booke familiar to all which many would haue to be reserued for Diuines If any be scandalized at this labour of mine it is an offence taken not giuen I desire with Moses that all people might prophecie and since the Iesuites by their late inuented Catechismes haue made thousandes skilfull in errours why should not we who are Christians labour by institutions to make ten thousands skilfull in the trueth We commend them who bring vs either commodities or drugs or delites or fashions or fruites or trees from forraine countries and shall we discommend them who to the building of our Church do bring from other countries euen the gold of Ophir Now right Honorable hauing finished this booke I am bold to present it to your most Honorable patronage and as that most Reuerend father the late Archbishoppe of Canterburie commended to vs students of our Vniuersitie Caluins Institutions so do I commend vnto you Bucanus Institutions You haue both of you bin two worthy members of our two Vniuersities and the one The Lord of Cranborne is now in and of that famous Colledge of Saint Iohn the Euangelist where I haue bin fellow now neere eighteene yeares If it please your Honors to pardon my boldnesse to peruse diligently mine Epistle and to be as willing to read this excellent booke as Alphonsus did Tully Erasmus did Terence Bishop Iewell did Horace the Lady Iane did Plato and Antoninus the Emperour did read all good bookes I haue all that I desire or expect The God of Heauen so blesse you that whether you trauaile abroad or stay in this Kingdome you may so by your Christian Tutors bee seasoned with pietie in your youth that learning with those young children to sing an Hosanna a Math. 21 9. to Christ in your life you may after this life ended with the blessed Saints sing Halleluiah b Reuel 19.10 to him in the Highest Heauens London Saint Martins in the fieldes March 3. 1606. Your Honours to commaund Robert Hill To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader as the writings of God doe testifie that Antichrist shall be consumed by a breath so the writings of men do also testifie that the same Antichrist shall be weakned by rags The breath which shall consume him is the preaching of the Gospell the rags which shall weaken him are printed papers If he be burned by the one blesse God for good preachers if decaied by the other thanke painfull writers That these two are the meanes which must ruinate Antichrist we may see by the practise of our Antichristian aduersaries For though they haue many who declame against vs yet will they suffer none to preach Iesus Christ and though they haue many to write against vs Read the inhibition of preaching and Printing by Queene Mary in the booke of martyrs yet few will they suffer to read their owne controuersies That they want Christ preached behold their miserie that we haue him preached see our felicitie that their people dare not reade bookes marke the tyrannie of the pope that we haue libertie to read so manie worthie bookes note the goodnes of God and care of our gouernors To this end authoritie permits manie excellent bookes daily to be published and though much reading be a wearinesse to the flesh and manie bookes bring confusion to students yet as the stomacke must be preserued by varietie of meates so the minde must bee cherished with varietie of writers That thou mayest be moued to read old diuinitie in a new fashion I haue published in English this excellent discourse which because it is the quintessence of the best writers of our age I doubt not but it wil be welcom vnto thee If thou lookest for order few bookes more methodicall if for matter few more Iudiciall if for breuitie few more compendious if for plainnes few more perspicuous if for vse few more pretious And if either emulation amongst Stationers hinder not the sale as it doth the sale of many excellent bookes or the delite of vaine bookes do not hinder thee from reading it as it doth many from the best things I doubt not but thou shalt haue cause to say of this worthie man as Salomon saith of a worthie woman many Doctors haue done learnedly but thou surmountest them all Buy this truth but sell it not read this booke but forget it not Thou shall buy much for little cost and read much to thy great gaine Thus I commend thee to the grace of God and my selfe to the grace of thy prayers Thine and the Churches in the Lord. Robert Hill A Table of all the Common Places and their seuerall heads handled in this excellent Booke in which are answered one thousand fiue hundred and seauenty Questions The 1. Place OF God and page 1. The blessed Trinitie page 7.
good 1 Thess 5.21 1 Cor. 14.34 And seeing the office of preaching is not permitted to women as neither the administration of the Lords Supper Why should they take vpon them to baptise Also the ancient Church appointed that baptisme should onely be celebrated in the Church or congregation of the faithfull in which place the Apostle plainly chargeth women to be altogither silent much lesse then would he that they should administer the Sacraments Therfore do they twise offend when they administer baptisme in that feined case of necessitie in that they baptise without any commandement nay against the commandement of God and besides they tye to the externall action eternall saluation which is to be sought in the death of Christ that couenant of his grace onely As for that example of Zephora who circumcised her sonne it is eyther to be held as a rash vnlawful act of a foolish and angry woman or as a singular action not to be followed For the Angell was well pleased that the child was circumcised not because she did circumcise him The same may be iudged if any priuate or lay man as they call it should take to himselfe the administration of Baptisme Heb. 5.4 No man taketh that honour vpon him but hee that is called of God as Aaron was Neither doe wee admit that case of necessitie if it compell vs to violate the orders prescribed of God For wee hold this Theoreme Not the priuation but the contempt of Baptisme doth condemne Besides the baptisme of weomen was not long since absolutely condemned in the fourth Councill of Carthage Can. 100. Neither is Augustine to bee allowed in his writing that If a Lay man vpon vrgent necessitie do baptise it is either no sinne at all or a veniall sin No doubt but care should bee had that the Infant may bee baptized by the lawfull and fit Minister but if that may not bee obtained it is to be commended to God that he may Baptise it with the baptisme of his spirit For wee must beleeue that the childrē of faithful Parents be alreadie baptized with the baptisme of the ✿ Flaminis spirit being within the Couenant VVhether forasmuch as Peter Act 10.34.48 preached the Gospell to Cornelius but baptized him not and Paule also did the same as we read 1. Cor. 1.16 Doth it follow therefore that they whose helpe the Apostles vsed in bapzing the faithfull were Lay men No indeede but they were either Euangelists or Elders or Deacons whom for the most part the Apostles tooke with them who sometimes also administred the word of whom at that time there was a great companie Moreouer they did it not of themselues but by the commaundement of the Apostles therefore it was not they but the Apostles that baptized by their hands For he that doth any thing by the ministery of others may be said in a sort to doe it himselfe And whereas Paule in the place before alledged saith that he was sent not to baptise but to preach the Gospell it is to bee taken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Comparatiuely For it signifieth that hee had not receiued of God peculiarly or principally the office of baptizing but of preaching the Gospell which manner of speaking we find Ier. 7.22 I spake not c. Neither doth he extenuate the dignitie and fruite of baptisme that whereas few had in Charge the office of teaching many might baptize and many might bee taught at once together but baptisme could not bee administred but in order by one and one therefore Paul who excelled in the gift of preaching was instant intēded vpon the most necessary work leauing that to others which they could more easily performe Whether may that baptisme be allowed which is administred by Hereticks or Papists If it bee meant of such hereticks as denie the principles of heauenly Doctrine and vtterly corrupt the essentiall forme of baptisme as the Arrians Somosatenians Manichaeans and Macedonians which are not sincere in the Doctrine of the Trinitie baptizing so in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holie Ghost that they denie neuerthelesse that the sonne and holie Ghost are coeternall coessentiall of equal honour with the Father or that the sonne of God did truely assume the humane nature then such baptisme is not to hee ratified but to be accursed For the essentiall forme being once taken away the matter it selfe is also taken away And therfore it is to bee thought that such are not so much to be rebaptised but as that indeede they should rather be first consecrated with true baptisme who being conuerted to the knowledge of the trueth desire to bee ingraffed into the Orthodoxall Church And this agreeth with the decree of the Nicen Councill But we must iudge otherwise of the baptisme of some other hereticks as the Nouatians and Donatists who deliuered the true doctrine of the Trinitie or of Papists who are out of the way of truth in some part of doctrin who possesse the place of pastors vse the publick ministerie either by cōmon error by long sufferance or by force though they be not to bee accounted as truly called Wherein although there be many things needlesse and superstitious yet stil Christ is retained held at least in title to be the matter it selfe the chiefe head and essentiall forme of the institution and the natiue meaning without idolatry of the words of Baptisme I baptize thee in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost is retained Moreouer it pleased God in mercie to conserue a remnant of his Church in the middest of Popery it selfe euen as the Israelites continued the vse of Circumcision though they embraced a false and impious seruice of God and the vowes are made in the name of Christ and not of Anti-christ or of any Idoll Therefore that baptisme is not void but of value force for it is the Ministerie of those person but of the Church as yet couerd or hidden in popery They I graunt did sprinkle the head or body but Christ baptized inwardly And therefore such Baptisme is neither to be annihilated neither doth it require Anabaptisticall rebaptizing But forasmuch as they teach wickedly in other matters they giue iust cause why the faithfull should necessarily depart from them as it is written 1. Iohn 5.21 Fly Idols VVhether may they that are truely instructed in Christian Religion with good conscience bring their children to bee baptized of Popish Priests No. 1. It is one thing the validitie of a thing receiued another thing to seeke that is falsly and many waies superstitiously administred 2. Because we should giue no occasion by our example to approue and confirme the corruptions both of the Doctrine and of the Sacraments as also of the superstitious worship of the false and vnlawfull calling of the Ministers of Antichrist for that wee must abstaine from all appearance of euill and from communicating with the sins
a God Which is the booke of Scripture That which by way of excellencie is called the Bible namely the writings of the old and new Testament wherof the holy Ghost is the immediate author Of which booke the Psalmist speakes in the 19. Psal 8. 2. Sam. 22.2 2. Pet. 1.21 The Law of the Lord is perfect conuerting the soule the testimonie of Iehouah is sure and giueth wisedome to the simple How many wayes hath the Lord reuealed himselfe in the bookes of the Scripture 1. By the word or by certaine oracles 2. By sundrie testimonies added vnto the word By what oracles Gen. 1.31 God sayd God created God saw that all which he had cr●ated was very good By what testimonies 1 By that admirable worke of Creating the whole world of nothing a Gen. 1.1 2. By famous miracles as namely by deliuering the children of Israel out of Egypt Exod. 20.2 By leading them through the red sea without wetting of their feete b Exod. 14.21.22 By feeding them without anie ordinarie bread for the space of fortie yeares in the wildernesse c Exod. 16.4.13.14 15. Deut. 8.3 By causing the Sunne to stand still Iosua 10.13 And by causing the Sunne to go backward at the prayers of king Hezechiah 2. King 20 11. By raising of the dead d 2. King 4.33 11.21 Mat. 9.25 Luk. 7 15. Ioh. 11.43.3.44 1. Kin. 17.22 And by many other wonderfull workes and miracles 3. By diuerse visions whereby the Lord did offer himselfe to be seene of men in visible formes and likenesses In which manner he appeared vnto Adam both before and after his fall to Noah before and after the floud to Abraham ten times to Isaac twice to Iacob seuen times to Moses often and so to diuerse others 4. By foretelling of things to come by the Prophets and by the euent of the same 5. By promising and exhibiting of Christ the Messias Ioh. 1.18 No man hath seene God at anytime the Sonne who is in the bosome of the Father he hath reuealed him And therefore Christ saith to Philip Ioh. 14.9 He that seeth me seeth the Father 6. By the inward liuely and effectuall reuelation of the holy Ghost which is onely bestowed vpon the Elect. What then is that is reported Psal 14.1 The foole hath said in his heart There is no God This is answered Psal 10.11 That such denie not so much the being of God as the prouidence of God Againe they that take from God his iudgement denie in truth that there is a God And howsoeuer some haue in word denied that there is a God yet in deed they haue witnessed that they thought the contrarie which is plaine out of Suetonius in the life of Caligula But no man hath seene God at any time Why we see not our soule yet we haue a soule we see not the fountaines of waters yet there are fountaines we see not the wind yet there is a wind and we see not God yet there is a God inuisible in himselfe but in his works though obscurely and vnperfectly visible to vs. What things are we to know concerning God 1. What God is 2. What a God he is or how he is affected towards vs. What is God For the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is either deriued of a verbe that signifieth to runne because God runneth through all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 currere vel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cernere or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 timor God is Iehouah Elohim or else of a word that signifieth to behold because he beholdeth all things or else of a word that signifieth to feare because men are moued for feare to worship him And God is an Essence spirituall incomprehensible almightie immortall infinite loue it selfe mercie it selfe iustice it selfe holinesse it selfe puritie it selfe goodnesse it selfe wisedome it selfe long suffering it selfe and bountifulnesse it selfe which is the Father who from all eternitie begat the Sonne coeternall with himselfe and of the same substance with the Father and the Sonne not made nor created but begotten of the Father from all eternitie and the holy Ghost proceeding from them both the Father and the Sonne the Creator and conseruer of all things the Redeemer and sanctifier of the Elect a Ioh. 4.24 1. Tim. 1.17 Iam. 1.17 Ap. 1.8 Ier. 23.24 1 Joh 4.8.16 Exod. 34.6.7 Mat. 5.44 Which is no definition for he that is supersubstantiall and incomprehensible cannot be defined but such a description as sufficiently containeth all such things as in this life are necessarie for vs to know for the seruice of God and our saluation Is there one God onely or whether be there more One onely Deut. 6.4 Heare ô Israel the Lord thy God is one God alone b 1. Sam. 2.2 Esa 41.4 44.6 Mark 12 32. And so 1. Cor. 8.4 We know that an Idol is nothing in the world and that there is no other God but one alone c Ephes 4.6 1. Timoth. 2.5 And seeing the true God is most high and most infinite actually therefore there can be no moe but one God because there can be no more but one that is aboue all neither any moe but one infinite And this one God is manifested to vs by such testimonies as cannot deceiue to wit by miracles prophecies and other things which by his omnipotent nature may be done How is God said to be one Neither by a genus nor species but in essence and in number or in regard of his nature because there is one onely essence of God and that indiuisible Why doth the Scripture make mention of Elohim Gods ioyning that word as well with the plurall as singular number Not to the end that it should make a multitude of Gods or deuide the essence but to distinguish the persons because though there be one person of the Father another person of the Sonne and another of the holy Ghost yet the Father is not another thing or another God distinct from the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Son is not another thing or another God distinct from the Father and the holy Ghost neither is the holy Ghost another thing or another God distinct from the Father and the Sonne because the nature of God is but one and indiuisible although the Father be one the Son another and the holy Ghost another And therefore they are not of diuers natures of another and diuers substance not conioyned or knit together in one substance as men which haue one common essence not only of the like substance but of one and the same substance hauing the same essence the same eternitie the same will the same operation the same power and the same glorie Phil. 2.6 How many wayes is the name of God taken in the Scriptures Two wayes properly for the substance essence and nature and improperly Now it is taken properly or for the essence when it is taken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the distinction of any one of
the Diuinitie is present with the humanitie by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 circumstance and combination but not by personall vnion Therfore he denied that Marie was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother of God or brought forth God and affirmed that man not God was crucified of the Iewes 6. Eutyches heresie contrary to the former for he taught that the humane nature after the vnion was endued with the proprieties of the Diuinitie 7. Of the Manichees who auouched that Christ had but one onely will not two a diuine and humane will 8. Of the Vbiquitaries who attribute to the humanitie of Christ the essentiall properties of the Diuinitie altogether forgetting that saying He that taketh away the proprieties taketh away the nature and on the contrary He that attributeth the proprieties attributeth the nature and of whatsoeuer the Essence cannot be affirmed no more can the essentiall proprieties thereof be affirmed of the same Of the office of Christ How manifold is the office of Christ THreefold Propheticall Priestly Kingly as it is expressed Heb. 2.10 What is his Propheticall office It is that office whereby he hath reuealed to mankind the Gospell that is the secret counsell of the Father concerning the redemption of mankind by the Word by the holy Ghost by the Sacraments both by himselfe as also by the Ministers of the word Ioh. 1.18 Ephes 4.10.11 Shew some testimonies Deut. 18.18 I will raise a Prophet like you c. Esa 61.1 He hath sent me that I should preach the Gospell to the poore Math. 17.5 This is that my welbeloued Son in whom I am well pleased heare him For this cause he is called a Pastor a Esa 40..1 John 10.11 the publisher of peace b Zach. 9.10 Ephes 2.17 the most faithfull witnesse of God c Iohn 3.32 Reu. 1.5 which office he doth execute vntill the end of the world d Ephes 4.11 What is his Priestly office It is that whereby he is Mediator betweene God and man or that whereby he hath set himselfe a Mediator betweene God and men e 1. Tim. 25. Heb. 11.24 which agreeth to no man saue to Christ alone f Heb. 2.17 How many parts be there of this office Two his satisfaction whereby he fulfilled the law g Mat 5.17 Rom. 10.4 and paid the ransome for the sins of the world h Mat. 20.28 In respect of which part of his office he is called a Redeemer i Mat. 20.28 Gal. 3.13 and a Sauior k Esa 25.8.9 53.4.5.6 Iohn 3 17 1. Pet. 2.24 and a Lambe or a sacrifice l Esa 53.7 Ioh. 1.29.36 Reuel 13.8 And his intercession whereby Christ doth instantly desire that his sacrifice may continually preuaile with God his Father for the reconciliation of his elect m Rom. 8.24 Heb 7.25 According to which nature is Christ a Mediator and a Priest According to neither of them asunder but according to both his diuine and humane ioyntly together n Gen. 3.15 22.18 Dan. 9.17 2. Cor. 5.15 Heb 4.15 9.14 1. Because he is in one and the same person the same God man 2. Because he was after the order of Melchisedech without father as man and without mother as God 3. Because he must be partaker of them both that he might reconcile God to man and man to God as Irenaeus saith It was necessary by reason of his habitation with both that he should reduce both into loue and concord and procure that God should receiue man and that man should be restored to God 4. Because the workes of the Mediator are of him that is both God and man that God might accept them 5. Because none could satisfie Gods iustice but God none ought but man Was Christ Mediator before his Incarnation He was because in the foreknowledge predestination and acceptance of God the two natures were reputed as vnited and with him things done and to be done present and to come are all one Thus Heb. 13.8 Iesus Christ is to day yesterday and the same for euer So 1. Pet. 1.20 And as the Lambe is said to be slaine from the beginning of the world Apoc. 13. so the prayers then powred out for the Church in Gods acceptation may be said to be made How doth the Sonne make intercession to the Father Surely as a person but yet as man but so as that the dignitie of those prayers issue from the excellencie of his Diuinitie which in Christ is personally vnited with his humanitie Have you any pregnant testimonie concerning the Priesthood of Christ Psal 110.4 The Lord hath sworne and it shall not repent him Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech who was a type of Christ a Heb. 7.3 as were Aaron also and Isaac b Gen. 22.6.9 May the Ministers of the Gospell be called Priests They may but onely in two respects 1. Because they together with others are ingrafted into Christ and so farre forth as they be true Christians 2. Because they teach the Gospel and sacrifice men themselues and offer them vp a liuing sacrifice vnto God by the Gospell For this cause Paul testifieth of himselfe that he had offered a sacrifice when he had sacrificed the Gentiles by the Gospel that they might be an acceptable sacrifice vnto God being sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Yet in no place in the new Testament the name of Priest is attributed peculiarly to the Ministers of the Gospell because Christ hath no copartners of his Priesthood What is the Kingly office of Christ It is that whereby he doth according to both natures wittingly and willingly moderate rule and gouerne the whole world Shew some plaine testimonies concerning this office Psal 2.6 He hath set his King vpon his holy mountaine Mat. 28.18 All power is giuen me in heauen and in earth Ioh. 13.3 All things are giuen me of my Father And for this cause he is called the eternall King c Esa 9.7 Psal 45.7 Luke 1.33 the King of righteousnesse d Heb. 7.2 the King of Kings e Reu. 7.2 How manifold is the administration of this office It is two-fold in this world Generall or powerfull whereby he rules all creatures by his power Speciall or of grace whereby he doth in speciall manner and peculiarly rule defend and gouerne his Church and doth enrich it here on earth and glorifie it in heauen In which respect he is also properly called a King f Psal 2.9 1. Because he hath redeemed his Church which Satan had inuaded g Psal 20. 2. Because he hath vanquished the prince of darknesse 3. Because he doth defend and make blessed all those that flie vnto him Who are citizens of this kingdome and what be the lawes The citizens are Christians so called of the King Act. 11.26 1. Pet. 2.3 the lawes are the word of God the enemies are sinne Satan hell death and the rewards are the things of this
and a better life What be the benefites or the effects of this kingdome of grace Righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost h Rom. 14.17 that is peace ioy happinesse light the knowledge of God begunne indeede here but made perfect in heauen or in the kingdome of glorie whereby it is manifest that this kingdome is not earthly but spirituall and heauenly i Ioh. 18.6.36 Which be the parts of the kingly office of Christ Two Vocation and Iudgement Vocation or calling by the word of truth and that double 1. whereby in generall Christ inuiteth all men indifferently to the embracing of his Gospell hauing appointed the ministery of the word to that end and purpose k Mat. 22.14 2. Speciall whereby by the labour of his Ministers he doth effectually illuminate and call vnto the knowledge of himselfe the elect by the inward operation of his spirit in his time appointed l Rom. 8.30 The other part of his kingly office is Iudgement m Ioh. 5.17 which he exerciseth after two maner of wayes 1. In this life both toward the elect partly in iustifying them or absoluing them from their sins which is the office of a Iudge partly by defending them against all kind of enemies as also toward the reprobate afflicting them with temporall punishments or else killing them with the word and moreouer by casting forth superstitions and brideling the furie of Satan and vngodly men n Psal 110.12 2. In the world to come by summoning both of them before his Tribunall seate and giuing sentence according to his word 3. By glorifying his elect and adiudging the wicked to eternall punishment Seeing the kingdome of Christ is eternall Psal 45.7 o Mat. 16.27 25.31.32 c. Why is it said that in the last day 1. Cor. 15.24 he shal render vp the kingdome to God euen the Father Not because he shall vtterly depriue himselfe of his kingdome but because that the manner of administration which Christ vseth for the gathering and preseruing of his Church in this world shall then cease What things are contrary to the doctrine of the office of Christ 1. The error of Stancarus who referred those things which belong to the whole person as to be Mediator to the humane nature apart and of Osiander who ascribed the office of a Mediator to the Diuinitie alone 2. The error of the Papists concerning the authoritie of the Pope of the Church of Councels in deuising new articles of our faith and expounding of scriptures and bringing in mens traditions into the Church The same mens error concerning the merites of workes satisfactions and the sacrifice of the Masse substituted into the roome of Christ and of the priesthood and sacrifice wherein most blasphemously they say they offer vp Christ for the quicke and the dead and of inuocation and intercession of Saints 3. The errour of the Popes supremacie of Christ his Vicarship whereof he hath no need 4. The error of the Iewes who dreame of Christ his earthly kingdome The third common Place concerning the holy Ghost To what things in the Scriptures is this name Spirit attributed SOmetime to things created sometimes to the Creator whence we may make a double spirit one created another vncreated but yet by proportion because the word Spirit doth principally agree to the Creator and to the things created lesse principally When it is attributed to the creatures it is vsed two wayes sometimes it signifies the substance sometimes the qualitie The substance either bodily but by a metaphor as Iohn 3.8 The Spirit that is the wind bloweth where it listeth or else spiritually and that either the soule as Psal 33.6 Into thine hands O Lord I commend my spirit that is my soule Act. 7.59 Lord Iesu receiue my spirit or else the Angels and those either good Heb. 1.14 the Angels are called ministring spirits or else as Luke 11.26 The vncleane spirit taketh to himselfe seuen other spirits worse then himselfe When it signifieth a qualitie it is vsed sometime for the opinion and affection as Math. 5.3 Blessed are the poore in spirit or else for the breathing and motion of the mind whether it be good which proceedeth from the good spirit of God or euill which is stirred vp by the euill and vncleane spirit as also from our owne euil will And hence it is that the gifts of God are called the spirit but by a metonymie as when Elizeus saith Let thy spirit be double vpon me 2. King 2.9 And when God saith vnto Moses Num. 11.17 I will take of thy spirit and giue it to the Elders And that either in speciall as Esa 11.2 The Spirit of wisedome for the gift of wisedome infused by the holy Ghost c. Ephes 1.17 The Spirit of meeknesse for meeknesse which the holy Ghost infuseth into the hearts of the faithfull so the Spirit of faith 2. Corint 4.17 and the Spirit of loue 2. Tim. 1.7 So on the contrary the spirit of couetousnesse the spirit of giddinesse the spirit of drunkennesse Esa 10.14 the spirit of slumber of fornication b Esa 29.10 Hos 4.12 are vsed for those vices Or else in generall all the gifts of the holy Ghost but those especially which in times past in the beginning of the preaching of the Gospell were bestowed vpon the beleeuers for the confirmation of the heauenly doctrine c 2. Cor. 11.4 Besides this word Spirit signifieth a qualitie when it is opposed against the flesh and againe it signifies another qualitie when it is opposed to the letter What doth the Spirit signifie then when it is opposed to the flesh It signifieth the grace of regeneration that is whatsoeuer in man either the mind or the will or in the affections is regenerate and renewed by the holy Ghost as Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Now the flesh being opposed against the spirit signifieth whatsoeuer is not as yet regenerate in vs to wit the pronenesse of the affection and carnall qualitie of the flesh and sinne d Joh. 3.6 which striueth against the spirit so that one and the selfe same faithfull man so long as he liueth here may be said to be both flesh and spirit as Paule sheweth by his owne example e Rom. 7. But what doth the word Spirit signifie when it is opposed to the letter It signifieth the power and efficacie of the holy Ghost ingrauing in our hearts the righteousnesse of Christ and by that meanes the law of God it selfe and bowing our hearts to the obedience thereof as it is 2. Cor. 3.6 The letter killeth but the spirit giueth life that is the bare law considered without Christ without the operation and efficacie of the holy Ghost killeth by the corruption of our nature but the Gospell by the Spirit of Christ which it hath ioyned with it giueth life Sometimes also Paule calleth the externall signe in the ceremonies the letter being
the Lord doth manifest his power by him h Exo. 18.17 2. Againe he is called water Iohn 3.5 Vnlesse a man be borne a new of water and the spirit he shall not enter into the kingdome of God And 7.18 He that beleeueth in me as saith the Scripture riuers of water of eternall life shall flow out of his belly Now this he spake of the spirit because it cooleth vs it quencheth our spirituall thirst i Ioh. 4.14 it watereth vs being emptie of all the iuice of life and maketh vs fruitfull it washeth away all the filthinesse of our hearts and like water is poured into the beleeuers as it is said I will poure out of my Spirit Ioel 2.28 and Esa 44.3 3. He is called fire as Math. 3.11 He that shall come after me he shall baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire From the effect because he purgeth out all the drosse inflameth vs to the feare of God to loue and kindnesse both of God and our neighbour and hath other effects like vnto fire 4. He is called Seed 1. Iohn 3.9 He which is borne of God hath his seed in himselfe because by his power as it were by seed the faithfull are renewed and are made new men that being dead to sinne they may liue to God 5. He is called the annointing b 1. Ioh. 2.27 Psal 45.8 and the Oile of gladnesse the speech being borrowed from the custome of annointing which was vsed in time of the law to signifie the fragrant smell and spirituall sweetnesse of the gifts of the spirit What doth the holy Ghost dwell in the hearts of the beleeuers onely by his gifts or also by his Essence Yea euen by his Essence yet not extensiuely or as it were a part of the essence of things as the Manichees and others dreamed but intensiuely so farre forth as he is euery where present as he is God and in the efficacie of his presence Rom. 8.11 The Spirit of him that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwelleth in you And Ioh. 14.23 Christ saith We shall come vnto him and make our abode with him For we may not thinke that he bestowes his gifts so vpon vs that he himselfe should be in another place but he is present with his gifts both to the whole Church and euery particular elect gouerning and quickning them both within and without 1. C●●int 6.19 Your body is the temple of the holy Ghost which is in you And ● Cor. 13.13 The communion of the holy Ghost be with you all What doctrines are contrary to this 1. The heresie of the Pneumatomachoi who denie the holy Ghost who do of set purpose oppose themselues and impugne the holy Ghost of which stamp was Samosatenus who called the holy Ghost the power of God hauing no person and the simple action of God in the hearts of men 2. Macedonius who affirmed the holy Ghost to be not a Lord but a seruant and a Minister and that he was not the Creator but a creature and by the name of Spirit was onely signified those new motions which God stirreth vp in the regenerate abusing that place Psal 51.12 Create a new heart in me O God and renue a right spirit in my bowels Where the name of Spirit is vsed for the created gifts of the Spirit 3. Seruetus who imagined that the holy Ghost was nothing else but the power of God infused into euery creature whereby they moue and liue which Philosophers call Nature 4. The errour of the latter Grecians who denied that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Sonne 5. The blasphemie of Campanus and certaine other Anabaptists who cried out that the holy Ghost tooke his beginning as soone as Christ was glorified abusing that testimonie Iohn 7.39 As yet the holy Ghost was not giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified Where it is manifest that the Euangelist speaketh not of the person but of those admirable gifts which were powred out vpon the Apostles in the day of Pentecost as also in that saying of the Disciples of Iohn Act. 19.2 Yea we haue not so much as heard whether there be any holy Ghost or not 6. The errour of those who denied him to be adored with one and the same faith and inuocation with the Father and the Sonne The fourth common Place of the holy Scripture What is the holy Scripture called THe Scripture putting one name for another is vsed for the writings of the Prophets and Apostles which the companie of the faithfull doth religiously vse for the instruction in godlinesse And it is called holy because being deliuered of God it containeth holy things necessary vnto eternall life And in the same sense it is called the written word of God and the vnappealable Iudge of all controuersies in religion a Esa 8.20 Luk. 16.29.31 Who is the Author of it God himselfe who did commit his will vnto writing by men called immediatly of himselfe and inspired by the holy Ghost as * As his penmen and publike notaries his seruants at hand 2. Pet. 1.21 For the Prophesie was not at any time brought by the will of man but the holy men of God spake as they were moued by the holy Ghost Hereupon all the Prophets do with one accord repeate this The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it Esa 58.14 These things saith the Lord Ezec. 12.25.28 2. Tim. 3.16 The whole scripture was giuen of God by inspiration 1. Cor. 2.13 Which things we speake not in the words which mans wisedome teacheth but which the holy Ghost teacheth Wherupon depend the adiuncts of the Scripture as the authority the excellency the truth and fulfilling of them which is as necessary as it must needs be that God is true Whence also it comes to passe that the Scripture alone is to be beleeued for it selfe of it selfe is worthy to be beleeued neither is it subiect to the censure addition diminution or alteration of Angels or men a Deut. 12.32 Reu. 22.18 It alone is without all error b Mar. 16.24 and we are bound to beleeue it alone vpon the bare affirmation thereof by it alone all opinions which all men shall reade c Deu. 17.9.10 Esa 8.20 Mal 2.7 Act. 17.2 are to be confirmed and to be decided d Iosu 1.8 Iob. 5.39 Act. 17.11 This alone is perfect and containeth all things necessary vnto life eternall e Psal 19.8 Luke 16.29 Ioh. 15.15 Act. 20.20.27 2. Tim. 3.16 17 Lastly it is firme and constant f 2. Pet. 1.19 How manifold is it Two-fold for it is deuided into the old and new Testament or into the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles which is contained in the Canonicall bookes Which bookes be called Canonicall All those which being indited by the holy Ghost were either written or allowed by the Prophets and Apostles that these alone might be the rule and direction of faith and good workes by which all other doctrines are to be weighed
resemblances of vertues which although they are praised in the courts and iudgement places of men yet before the heauenly tribunall they are of no moment to deserue righteousnesse Yea more they are sins because whatsoeuer is done without faith that is without acknowledgment trusting in the Mediator is sinne Rom. 14.23 Therefore what kind of will is remaining in a man not regenerate A will altogither euill namely which doth with a prone inclination make hast to sinne for man is not depriued of will but of the soundnesse and goodnesse of his will Therefore Bernard speaketh thus Simply to vvill commeth from mans nature to vvill vvickedly commeth from corrupt nature to vvill vvell from supernaturall grace But doth not mans vvill freely encline to euill If free be opposed to compulsion or violent constraint in this case man is caried to commit sinne freely that is of his owne accord voluntarily and with earnest desire and so there is in him free vvill to euill a Iam. 1.14 Pruu 2.24 But if free be opposed to seruitude or necessitie certainly man enclineth to euill not freely but necessarilie and so mans will is seruile and thrall but so as this necessitie and slauerie is voluntarie So the will of a man vnregenerate is a Seruant and it is also free in diuers respects a seruant because of the necessitie of sinning free in regard of his will Iohn 8.34 Whosoeuer committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne and verse 38. If the sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed Therefore if he shall not make free the will shall be a seruant not free and therefore more truly it shall be called seruile or slauish vvill not free vvill For by whomsoeuer a man is ouercome to him he becommeth slaue 2. Pet. 2.19 but if a man become slaue vnto sinne he is no longer free Hovv stands the vvil of man in his conuersion is it meerrly passiue or actiue also In respect of grace which commeth from without a man and preuenteth him the will in as much as it is not yet begonne to be regenerate is meerely passiue as the clay in the hand of the Potter a Rom. 9.21 because all his strength concerning spiritual and heauenly things is extinct by which he might prepare himselfe to grace or of himselfe receiue it being offered or by his naturall strength turne vnto God or wil desire or follow after that which is good acceptable to God for we are all dead in sin b but the dead man is only passiue in respect of his quickening yea moreouer the will is not only dead but also it is stubborne of it selfe and of it selfe and by it selfe q Epes 2.1 Colos 3 12 it cannot choose but resist being not moued kindled by God c Iohn 6. Therefore Dauid faith Psal 51.12 Create in me O God a cleane heart But in respect of the time in which the conuersion it selfe is wrought the will is not like a stocke but whilest it is healed and cured by the holy Ghost it is also actiue that is the will in the act of conuersion is not idle and void of all sense and motion as an Image but followeth the holy Ghost who draweth it For at the same instant God cause vs both by grace to will and to will indeed that is he mooueth and bendeth our wils and causeth vs to will indeed but yet so as all the whole efficacie of the action dependeth vpon Gods spirit Heereupon Aagustine lib. de Gratia lib. arbitrio cap. 2. It is certaine that we will when we will but he causeth vs to will who worketh in vs to will Therfore Phil. 2.13 It is God who worketh in vs both the wil the deed where Will is not vnderstood of the substance of the will but of a newe qualitie How is that to be vnderstood which Christ speaketh Ioh. 6.44 No man commeth to me except the father draw him Not so as if the will in the act of conuersion that is when the party conuerted is begon to be drawē by the word holy spirit did like an enemie make resistance neither is the case alike as when euil spirits vse the members of bodies possessed by them For we do not beleeue against our wils because faith is a knowledge in the mind and an assent in the heart but because of vnwilling God maketh vs willing of resisting consenting of sluggish lasie persons God maketh vs to become runners In which sense is that saying of Chrysostome to be taken God indeed draweth saith he but he draweth so as the partie is willing Act. 26.19 I was not disobedient to the heauenly vision What therefore be the causes of our conuersion The efficient cause and effectuall by it selfe is one namely the Holy Ghost of which it is saide Ezech. 36.26 I will giue you a newe heart a newe spirit wil I put in the middest of you and I will take the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you a fleshie heart and will make you to walke in my commaundements The instrumentall cause or meanes is the word of God Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God by which word being read heard and thought vpon the Holy Ghost becommeth regularlie effectuall enlightning the minde and turning the will The subiect of Conuersion is the vnderstanding and will of man which notwithstanding is saide also to concurre not to the conuersion but in the conuersion because no conuersion is wrought without the thing to be conuerted but in that regard that it is mooued not of it selfe but by the Holy Ghost that being driuen forward thereby it worketh of vnwilling becōming willing it willeth For the will is not onely the subiect of Gods operation which the spirit of God worketh in the elect but it is also such an instrument which beeing renewed and mooued by the Holie Ghost doth it selfe also worke together with it and mooueth it selfe What manner of free will is there in a man regenerate It is partly to good partly to euill How to good Because the Holy ghost reneweth by the word of God mans nature onely in part and therefore that will which before was seruant becommeth free only in part that is because a new l●ght and knowledge of God is kindled in the minde and in the will and heart new inclinations and motions agreeing with gods law that so man being caused by God to worke may himselfe also worke As Iohn 6.45 Euerie one that hath heard and learned of the father commeth vnto mee Phil. 2.13 It is God who worketh in you both the will and the deede How is there in them a free will to euill 1. Because Regeneration is onely begunne in this life not perfected by regeneration is to bee vnderstoode a a 1. Cor 13 9 12. 2 Cor. 11 9 renewing of minde will and affections and the reliques of the flesh or of sinne do alwaies remaine
gazing into heauen this Iesus vvhich is taken vp from yov into heauen shall so come as ye haue seene him goe into heauen And Paule beareth record of it Ephe. 4.8 VVherfore the scripture saith Psa 69.19 When he ascēded vp on high he led coptiuitie captiue and gaue gifts vnto men Novv in that he ascended vvhat is it but that he had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth He that descended is euen the same that ascended farre aboue all heauen's that he might fill all things See 1. Tim. 3.16 Heb. 4.14 9.24 What must be vnderstood by ascension Not a changing of one condition or estate into another or a vanishing out of sight but properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a motion from one place to another and that from the lower to the higher For they are said to ascend who remoue from a lower place to a higher 2. King 2.12 And Elias ascended by a whirlewind into heauen And Psal 139.8 If I ascend into heauen thou art there But figuratiuely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or attributing that to God which belongeth to man it is spoken of God Gen. 17.22 God went from the sight of Abraham And Psal 47.16 God is gone vp with triumph euen the Lord with the sound of the trumpet But also Iohn 3.13 in the first part of the verse to ascend into heauen signifieth allegorically to be endued with the light of spirituall vnderstanding Is the word Ascension vsed properly or figuratiuely in this place Properly without question as it may manifestly be proued out of diuers formes of speeches which the Euangelists haue vsed for better declaration sake for Mar. 16.19 saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is he was taken vp and on high into heauen Luk. 24.51 saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was remoued from them or went away from them But it is plaine how by the word of going away is signified a remouing into another place And the same Euangelist giueth to vnderstand whither he went away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was caried vp into heauen He was caried saith he which againe certainly noteth a motion from place to place Act. 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was lifted vp and Nubes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a cloud tooke him vp out of their sights Not because of himselfe he became inuisible but because he went higher and further off then his Disciples sight could reach Moreouer the Apostles do follow him with their eyes and sight as farre as they can whilest he did not vanish away out of their sight but stil went vp on his way For while he was going 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth remouing from place to place they stood stedfastly with their eyes vp to heauen Which had beene a foolish part of thē if they had not seene him caried on high To conclude the Angels helping the defect of the Apostles sight do testifie that Christ was taken vp by them into heauen and that he should so come as they had seene him going into heauen Hereupon the Greeke Fathers do call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the assumption or taking vp of Christ in the flesh and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his ascension or going vp By the examination of these things which haue beene said it followeth that the ascension of Christ is not an act vndivisible or momentanie but devisible and distinguished by parts of his motion and going forward and by times and places by which he was caried vp from a lower place to a higher namely from earth vnto heauen Seeing in that saying of Paule Ephes 4.10 he that descended is also the same that ascended the word of descending doth figuratiuely signifie the humiliation of Christ why is not also the word of ascending taken figuratiuely for the same Christs exaltation glorification Because when Christ descended from heauen he descended without changing his place at what time he was God onely and not man but by that his descension was made man but when he ascended into heauen he ascended with changing of place when he was God and man Who ascended Christ who is both God and man the same who was borne man of the virgin Marie who suffered and died who rose againe and after his resurrection stayed fortie daies with his Disciples vpon the earth He I say and no other descended He that descended is euen the same that ascended Ephes 4.9 Therefore the whole Christ did really ascend because the same Christ was true God and true man but in respect of his humanitie he in his bodie ascended properly and locally from earth into heauen euen as before he had ascended truly and by a locall motion out of the graue into the land of the liuing Therfore in respect hereof it is said by Marke being taken or receiued vp and of Luke in the Acts being lifted vp For these things do not agree to the Diuinitie or Godhead of which it is said Ierem. 23.24 I fill heauen and earth but by a communication of properties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is said of the whole person of Christ which is onely proper to one part of his nature And as Theodoretus saith Those things which are proper to the nature are communicated to the whole person Who is the efficient cause or author of Christs ascension Christ himself who by the Almighty power of his Godhead did carie vp his humane nature bring it into heauen but because the diuine power of the Father and Sonne is all one this remouing into heauen as also the raysing of him vp againe is ascribed also to the power of the Father Act. 2.33 By the right hand that is by the power and vertue of God he hath beene exalted and hath receiued of his father the promise of the holy Ghost and cap. 5.30 The God of our fathers hath raised vp Iesus vvhom ye slevv and hanged on a tree Him I say hath God lift vp vvith his right hand to be a Prince and a Sauiour But his humane nature hauing gotten agility and nimblenes of body by the resurrection mouing it selfe by the appointment and commaund of the Godheed went vpon high and ascended truely and properly and therefore it may be called a ministring or seruing cause of the ascension From vvhence is the reason and certaintie of the ascension to be taken From the adiuncts or circumstances namely of time the place from vvhence the manner of his ascension the place vnto vvhich and the vvitnesses VVhat time did he ascend On the fortieth day after his resurrection after that he had spoken to his Disciples concerning the kingdome of God that is after he had enstructed them more fully of the things pertaining to saluation and had confirmed and assured them concerning his resurrection and the truth of his bodie so as they could no longer doubt of it From vvhat place did he ascend Luke in the Gospell cap. 24.50 saith that the Disciples were led forth by Christ vnto
he is here lo he is there And Paule bids that we shew forth the Lords death till he come 1. Cor. 11.26 What therefore is that which Paule saith Ephes 4.10 that Christ ascended aboue all heauens that he might fulfill all things The meaning is that he might poure out vpon the Church which consisteth both of Iewes and Gentiles his gifts and benefits by the holy Ghost a Ioh. 14.16 For so is the word of fulfilling taken b Isa 33· 5. Ierm 31 25 And this particle answereth to that which he said before out of Psalm 68.19 Hee ascended vp on high and gaue gifts to men the similitude being taken from Princes who after victorie obtained doe shew their liberalitie to all their people 1. Serm. de aduentu eyther by solemne feastes or largesses and gifts Or vnderstand it so as Bernard hath obserued that he might fulfill all things namely which were foretold and which were required to our saluation What witnesses were there of his ascension The Angels for it was fit that he who in his conception natiuite temptation death and resurrection had vsed the ministerie testimonie of Angels should now also vse the same for witnesses when he was to performe the greatest worke pertaining to his diuine maiestie 1 That he might mitigate their griefe which his Disciples tooke at their separation from their meekest Lord and Master by the promise of his future comming 2 That when the sight of the Apostles fayled they might shew the way into heauen as Chrysostome saith homilia de ascension● Domini 3 That they might teach that though he was absent in bodie yet he would defend his seruants by his spirit and protect them by the ministerie of Angels Besides this witnesse of the Angels the Disciples also were witnesses Who were the foretellers of this ascension Dauid a thousand yeares before it fell out saw this triumph in the Spirit and sang a song of victorie to Christ triumphing a Psal 68.5 Enoch the sonne of Iared the seuenth man from Adam a man verie godly and a Prophet was taken vp into heauen and did figure this ascension b Gen 5.24 Heb. 11.5 being suddenly made of mortall immortall and translated into eternall blessednesse c 1. Cor. 15 52. 1. Thes 4 17 But chiefely Elias being caried vp into heauen by a whirle wind on a fierie Chariot and horses that is which shined with light like fire d 2. King 2.11 was a notable testimonie and example not onely of the Lords ascension but also of eternall life For that which the Lord saith Iohn 3.13 No man ascendeth vp into heauen but he that hath descended from heauen the sonne of man which is in heauen is to be vndestood of the proper vertue of his ascension and his aduancement aboue all creatures But how doth the ascension of Elias differ from Christs ascension As a shadow differeth from a bodie or a picture from a quicke man For 1 Elias was translated into heauen without the panges of death that God by this publicke testimonie might auow and ratifie his doctrine and by this meanes might reclaime the Israelites from Idolatrie to sincere religion and pietie But Christ before he ascended suffered and died but he reuiued and manifested the glorie of his resurrection by ascending and confirmed also whatsoeuer was said or done by him 2 Elias ascended by the ministerie of Angels in a fiery chariot In homil ascensionis because as Gregorie saith Pure man needs the helpe of other things neither could he ascend into heauen by himselfe whom the impuritie of his flesh did oppresse and keepe downe Bvt Christ was caried vp into heauen not in a chariot but by his owne power without the ministerie of Angels because he who had made all things was by his owne power caried aboue all things 3 Elias left vnto Eliseus his cloke the gifts of the spirit doubled vpon him but Christ compassed his Disciples with his cloke that is he put vpon them power from aboue filling them with the gifts of the holy Ghost and gaue vnto them power to worke miracles double to his greater then his own a Ioh. 14.12 not in nature but in number and efficacie or with greater effect I say with greater power not of the Disciples but of their maister who wrought in them but especially the conuersion of the Gentiles vnto Christ by the preaching of the Gospell 4 Elias was made a Citizen of heauen but vnto a Christ alone is giuen a name aboue all names and he is become so much more excellent then Angels by how much he hath obtained a more excellent name then they haue Ephes 1.21 Phil. 2.9 Heb. 1.4 What is the end of this Triumph 1 That he might seale vnto vs the worke of our redemption being now complete and perfected and might testifie that eternall righteousnesse was brought vnto vs. For which cause Augustine calleth it the confirmation of the Catholike faith To the same effect is that Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things namely all the oracles and prophecies which were extant of him such as was the foretelling of his ascension and which it behoued to be fulfilled to accōplish the work of our redemption 2 That he might giue a cleare testimonie of his Godhead by which mans nature was caried on high 3 That hauing ouercome death he might obtaine that glorie in his humanitie which before the foundations of the world were laid was prepared for him a Ioh. 17.5 For then Christs glory was made most apparant when as the new guest who was both God and man was entertained in heauen which then the Angels had not seene from beginning of the world To the same purpose is that which is said Psal 24.7 Ye Princes open your gates that the king of glorie may enter in 4 That he might prouide for vs a mansion and abode in the heauens and might put vs in certaine hope that our soules being separated from our bodies should go vnto him and that we also may ascend into heauen in bodie also at the last day for where the head is there also must the members be Iohn 14.3 What are the effects and fruits of the Lords ascension 1 Captiuitie was led captiue Christ triumphed ouer Sathan death sinne and hell of which it is said Coloss 2.15 And he hath spoiled principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same crosse 2 The sending of the Comforter that is the holy Ghost and that visibly namely on the fiftieth day after his resurrection Act. 2.1 c. Which the Apostles should not haue receiued vnlesse Christ in his bodie had departed from them Iohn 16.7 Then a visible powring out of diuers giftes of the same spirit vpon the Church Epist ad Dardanum And to this effect is that saying Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things not in his
not referred to a qualitie but to the relation which consisteth in a flowing out and respect rather then in the place of abode And besides it is now so imputed vnto vs as hereafter liuing with Christ in heauen wee shall really be clothed with the righteousnes of Christ and shall liue by that life of Christ which is now onely begunne in vs and shall be perfected hereafter How doth the righteousnesse of the law and the righteousnesse of the Gospell differ Not in matter or forme but in the efficient the subiect and the end Not in matter because both of them are obedience performed vnto God Not in forme because the rule of both is the law of God for God acknowledgeth no other righteousnesse but that that agreeth with this law And therfore Rom. 3.30 The law is established by faith both because the righteousnes of Christ is the full performance of the law as also because we are by faith clothed with the spirit of Christ which working in vs we doe begin to will and to doe things appertaining to God and so by him the obedience of the law is begun in vs and Rom. 8.3.4 God sent his sonne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the law i. that verie thing which the law requireth namely the fulfilling of righteousnesse and the perfect integritie of our abilitie all which we doe freely attaine by Christ apprehended by faith might be fulfilled in vs that is to say indeed in himselfe and as I may so say by application for by faith he and his righteousnesse are made ours and Gal. 4.4 Christ was made vnder the law that is subiect vnto the law both by doing and suffering that hee might redeeme those that were vnder the law i. which were subiect vnto the lawe But they differ in the subiect and efficient because the righteousnesse of the law is performed in and by that man who by the same is accompted righteous of which sort there is none but Christ himselfe The righteousnesse of the Gospell is a perfect fullfilling of the lawe performed not in or by that man who is thereby accompted righteous but by another namely Christ which performance notwithstanding is accompted to come from the man himselfe And therefore Rom 10.5 c. The righteousnesse which is by the Lawe standeth thus The man that doth these things shall liue in them Leuit. 18.5 But the righteousnes that is of faith promiseth free saluation If thou shalt beleeue in thy heart and confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and that the Father hath raised him from the deade thou shalt bee saued They differ also in the end for the end of the righteousnesse of the Gospell is the glory of the mercie and iustice of God but the end of the righteousnesse of the Lawe is rather the glory of men a Rom. 3.26 27 4.12 Ephes 1.6 because man should haue whereof to boast himselfe VVhat thing is there agreeable vnto Iustification or of the like nature with it Regeneration or the giuing of the holy Ghost or Sanctification Viuification Renouation or the infusion of grace by little and little decaying and altering our corrupt nature eyther also inherent righteousnes which being communicated vnto vs by the holy Ghost doth shew it selfe outwardly by workes and whereby wee are iust not before God but before men and are by him acknowledged and accompted for iust and it appeareth by the mortification of sinne or the olde man and renouation of the new i. by the hatred of sinne and loue of righteousnesse and zeale of good works and it is vsually called inchoated or begunne obedience Whereof 1. Iohn 3.7 He that doth righteousnes is righteous and Apoc. 22.11 He that is righteous let him be more righteous Can Regeneration be separated from Iustification No but yet they may be distinguished neyther are the two benefits of Iustification and Sanctification euer to be confounded as of Iustification he saith Psalm 32.2 Blessed is he to vvhom the Lord imputeth not sinne and of renouation he addeth And in vvhose spirit there is no guile For as in orignall sinne which we haue from Adam there are two things namely the guilt and imputation of that sinne and disobedience as it is said Rom. 5.12 In vvhom namely in Adam vve haue all sinned and that which followed that namely the priuation of righteousnesse So if the opposition be true betweene Christ Adam as contrarie causes and then betweene sinne and righteousnesse as contrarie effectes for after the like and selfe same manner righteousnesse is by Christ as sinne was by Adam it must needes be that we must haue both the imputed and the inherent righteousnesse But in the former consisteth the true Iustification of vs before God because that onely is perfect and maketh a quiet conscience a Rom. 5.1 in the other consisteth our Innouation wherein we must of necessity daily profit but yet not rest vpon it before God seeing it is but imperfect b Rom. 7.18 Doe Iustification and sanctification agree in nothing They agree 1. in the efficient cause For God is the authour of both through the merit of Iesus Christ 2. in the instrumentall cause which is faith the instrument of Iustification by receiuing it the instrument of sanctification not by effecting it c 1. Tim. 1.5 3 In the scope and end for they both tend to one end Iustification as the cause sanctification as the waye Ephes 2.10 vve are created in Christ to good vvorkes vvhich God hath prepared that vve should vvalke in them Is there any difference betweene Iustification and the giuing of the holy Ghost Yes euen as Luk. 15.20 the prodigall sonne is reconciled to his father onely of his meere mercie wherewithall his Fatherly heart is inflamed not for all the ornaments which are bestowed vpon the partie reconciled Which is the difference betweene Iustification and Renouation They differ in beeing 1. In forme for Iustification is the remission of sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and imputation of righteousnesse or acceptation of the person to life eternall of Gods mercie for the lambe of Gods sake that taketh away the sinnes of the world But Renouation is by the Holie Ghost dwelling in the hearts of those that are iustified and kindling new motions agreeable vnto the will of God and reducing them from impure qualities vnto pure qualities So that the giuing of the holy Ghost is not a part of iustification but an appendice or part of this so great benefit a sealing vp and testifying of iustification receiued for the Mediators sake according to that Ephe. 1.13.14 In vvhome vvhilest yee beleeue yee are sealed vvith the Holie spirite of promise vvho is the pledge of our inheritance 2. In subiect For the subiect of righteousnesse is not in vs but in Christ but the subiect of sanctification is the minde will affection and all the outward members a Rom. 6.19 Colloss 3 5 3. In the Obiect For iustification respecteth the
delectable because the elect shall enioy al their desires for whatsoeuer saith Bernard shall be delightfull will there bee present and there shall bee nothing to be wisht for that shall bee wanting there and they shall feele most excellent and sincere pleasure both in soule and bodie by the presence of Christ and dailie heholding of God Psal 16.11 Thou wilt shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore And 17.15 When I awake from the dead I shall bee satisfied with thine image For how great will the delight be in the beholding of that soueraigne good which is the storehouse of all good things and of all ioyes Hence proceedeth that eternall gladnesse or perpetuall and vnspeakable ioy which the holy Ghost shall stirre vp in the Elect and which none shall take from vs. Ioh. 16.22.5 A participation of Diuine nature that is not a powring out of the diuine essence but of diuine qualities into vs that is a cōmunication of Gods immortalitie glorie vertue wisdome iustice and image c 2 Pet. 14 which shall bee those white garments of the Saints the long white robes and garments of pure fine linnen and shining wherewith the elect shall be cloathed d Reue. 3.4.5 6.11 1.13 19.8 6. There shall be also a clarifying of bodies excellent beauty maiesty wherein they shall be made like to the glorious bodie of Christ Phil. 3.21 and the iust men shall shine as the sunne e Math. 13.43 and they shall glister as the brightnesse of the firmament Dan. 12 3. And they shall be as the Angels of God f Luk. 20 36 7 There shall be the Tryumph of the elect ouer the Diuel Death and Hel g Rom 16.20 Revel 20.10 14 Fellowship with al the blessed conuersation with the holy Angels perfect Loue of God and our neighbour Concord and exceeding quietnesse of all things for there they shall bee all of one minde because their will shal be none other but the will of God so that whatsoeuer they desire shal come to passe Melodie for there wee shall sing with quiers of Angels praising god without end for euer Last of all there shal be al the good gifts of body and soule such as neither the eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor heart of man imagined 1 Cor. 2 9. who then would not desire to passe through thither with Christ by death Shall the glorie of euerlasting life be commune to all the elect after an equall measure No but as God bestoweth his gift on the elect in this life not alike vnequally so wil he crowne those gifts of his in the elect with an vnequal measure of glory in heauen For that saying of Christ is proper to the Apostles Ye shall sit iudging the twelue tribes of Israel Mat 19 28. And Paule doubteth not but that there is a peculier crowne laide vp in store for him according to the proportion of his labours 1. Thes 2.19 and so Dan. 12.3 The wise saith he shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And the Scripture doth not onely promise life eternall to the faithfull but in the same a speciall reward to euerie of them a Math 19 29 2 Tim. 4.8 This is probably perceiued by the reason of the contrary b Math 11 22.24 Hither may bee also alluded that saying of Paule 1 Cor. 15 41 For one starre differeth from another starre in glorie When shall eternall life take beginning It is begun in the minds of the faithfull in this life already when the holy spirite by the preaching of the worde doth endue their mindes with the true knowledge of God and bendeth their will to a readie obedience of his commandements yea they feele an earnest peny therof haue a most true tast of it Eph. 1.4 whence floweth that hope which cannot faile the faithfull Ro 5.2.5 We greatly reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God And hope maketh not ashamed Finally we haue passed alreadie from death to life by faith in Christ c Ioh 5.24 1 Ioh. 3.14 because what we possesse through hope we know shal be as certainly as if it were in verie deed already bestowed on vs. Yet shal we attaine the full possession consummation therof afterward in the time that God hath ordained in which after the number of those that shal be saued is fulfilled Christ our redeemer will appeare vnto vs from heauen Doe the soules of the godly already separated from their bodies enioy a perfect and absolute happinesse It is sufficient for vs to knowe that presently after the departure from the bodie the spirit returneth vnto God which gaue it Eccl. 12.7 and after the dissolution or vncoupling of the soule from the bodie it is with Christ d Phil. 1.23 In Paradise e Luk. 23.43 in peace f wisd 3.3 in rest g Heb 4.11 in comfort h Luk. 16.25 in refreshing or ease i Wisd 4.7 in securitie k Ioh. 11.15 18 in the hand of God that no anguish at all may touch it so much as slightly l Wisd 3.1 in glorifying of the name of God Yet because they looke for a resurrection of their bodies a most plentifull fruition of all good things which God hath promised to all that loue him they cannot be said to bee in a perfect absolute but in an vnperfect happines 2 Tim 4 8. There is a crowne of righteousnes laid vp for me which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue me at that daie not to me only but vnto all them also that loue that his glorious appearing And Reue. 6.9 I saw vnder the Altar the soules of thē that were killed for the word of God they cryed with a loud voice saying How long Lord which are holy true doest not thou iudge auenge our bloud on thē that dwell on the earth Then long white robes were deliuered vnto euery one it was said vnto them that they should rest for a little vntil their fellow seruāts their brethren that should be killed euen as they were were fulfilled On the contrary 2. Pet. 2.9 saith that the vniust are so punished either with the losse of this life or with other punishments as that they are neuerthelesse reserued against the day of iudgement to be tormented with far sharper torments namely eternall punishments both in body soule What is the place of eternall life Not this earth or aerie or Elementarie Region which as yet death horror and sinne the power of darknesse and wicked spirits doe inhabit a Iob. 10.22 Eph. 6.12 2 8 and which at length shall be dissolued b 2 pet 3.10 But the heauen of heauens or the highest heauen whereinto Christ as he was man ascended being made higher then the
Gospel wherby are signified those things are done which went before in Christ Neither is therefore any change in God as there is none in the father of a family who commandeth not the same things in sommer and in winter How do the Sacraments of the old new Testament agree In the Author the end the generall parts in the thing signified in manner of Phrase For God is one and the same Author of the Sacraments of each Couenant a Heb. 1 ● There is the same end that they should bee signes of the fauour of God toward the Church There be the same parts for the Sacraments both of the newe as also of the Old Testament do consist of a signe and a thing signified and in them both the signe is one thing the thing signified another The thing signifyed or the substance is alone and the same Christ and the selfe same benefits of his namely remission of sins iustification regeneration and spirituall nourishment Rom. 4.11 Abraham receiued the signe of the righteousnesse which he had receiued in his foreskin 1. Cor. 10.2 3.4 All were baptized vnder Moses in the cloud and did all eate the meate to wit that wee doe and did all drinke of the same spirituall drinke And cap. 12.13 For by one spirit we haue all beene baptized into one bodie both Iewes and Gentiles both bond and free and wee haue all drunk into one spirit For the same thing which Circumcision did signify doth our baptisme now signifie that which the lamb did doth the Supper And therefore the fathers vnder the Law were partakers by faith of the same Christ and of the same gifts of his that we bee now vnder the Gospell they beleeued in the selfe same Christ and had the verie same promises b Heb. 11 2 c. And Iesus Christ the same yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 And the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Re. 13.8 And Augustine saith Whosoeuer did conceiue Christ in the Manna did eate the same spirituall meate that we doe Lastly the manner of speach in them both is the same to wit Sacramentall that is fytting and well agreeing to that argument Of what sort be the Sacramentall speeches Sometime they be proper to wit when that which belongeth to the signe is attributed to the signe or that which belongeth to the thing signifyed is ascribed to the thing distinctly or else when the vse and office is plainely expressed As Circumcision is the signe of the Couenant betweene mee and you Gen. 17 11. The bloud of the Lambe shall bee a signe to you of the Passeouer Exod. 12.13 Abraham receiued the signe of Circumcision and the seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4 11. Baptisme is that whereby the filth of the flesh is washed away 1. Pet. 3.21 But for the most part they are figuratiue when the names and effectes of the things signifyed are attributed to the signes And on the contrary when the names of the signes and their effectes are attributed to the thing signified by a Mutonimie or changing of the names And such phrases are in indeede vsuall in the holy Scripture and so be placed in the common vse of the Church and yet figuratiue which may be vnderstood by the nature conference of the words and things whereof the words speake or by the coherence of the parts Yet cleare because eloquent and manifest types do not obscure but illustrate an oration Now they are such because the nature and essence of a Sacracrament doth require the same which commonly is defined to bee a visible signe of sacred things And therefore if the words in the Sacraments be vnderstood nakedly without a trope simply they shall be no longer Sacraments because they shall bee no longer signes but the things themselues Now they are of the number of those which haue relation to another thing Therfore the trope is not in the things but in the words 1. Because of the analogie proportion and relation of the signe vnto the thing signified 2. Because of the similitude and comparison of the effects Whereupon Augustine saith that Sacraments from the likenesse of those things whereof they are Sacraments doe for the most part borow the names of the things themselues Quest vpon Leuit. 17 Whereupon also that Rule is to be kept the vse whereof is vsuall and much in the Scriptures The names and properties of things which be most diuerse because of some proportion similitude and likenesse of the effects are oftentimes changed and affirmed mutually one of another for instruction and admonition sake So Christ and a vine bee the names of diuerse things yet Christ doth tearme himselfe a Vine a Ioh. 15.1 for the likenesse of the effects Againe because of the pawne and certainty of the promise of God added to the signes as the Rainebowe or the bowe in the clouds is the Couenant of God b Gen. 9.9 Circumcision is the Couenant c Gen. 17 10 The Lambe is the passouer or the passing ouer of the Lord d Exod 12 11.27 So Baptisme is the lauer of Regeneration e Tit. 3 5 and the stipulation of a good conscience f 1 Pet. 3.21 The like speaches are vsed in the types and shadowes as Gal. 4.24 those two mothers Agar and Sara are two Testaments In the holy Supper the breade broken is the bodie of Christ the wine the bloud of Christ The cup is the New Testament in the blood of Christ Not because of the chāging of the signe into another thing as our Transubstantiaries would haue it Or the including of another thing in the signe as the Consubstantiaries say Not properly and of themselues but because by a Metonimie or changing of the name they are signes and testimonies pawnes yea euen meanes or instruments of the Holy Ghost in the lawfull vse whereof there is wrought through the free operation of the holy Ghost a true and not an imaginarie communication of the things which are promised in the word beeing added to the Sacraments no lesse certainly then the Minister of the Church doth certainely exhibite the sacred signes which are called Sacraments This Rule is also perpetuall in the nature of things that in the affirmation of things that bee diuerse one from another and affirming of one of them of another the speach must needes be euer tropicall or figuratiue in any kinde of things and neuer proper For as oft as in any proposition the verbe Substantiue est doth ioyne together things that bee diuerse which differ in their speciall formes then the affirmation is not proper but figuratiue As so often as the first substance or this singular Indiuiduum existing truely and actually without the minde is affirmed of another first substance such an affirmation is figuratiue But yet these figuratiue speaches must bee reduced to proper and bee explained by them as Circumcision is the Couenant that is to say it is the signe
of the Couenant whereby God doth testifie that he doth truely receiue the beleeuers into his Couenant How doe the Sacraments of the old and new Testament differ 1. By outward adiuncts and the circumstance of time For those continued vntill the time of Restitution for those things are said to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right which passe not with a certaine crooked turning course but are directed straight vnto their marke but these must endure vntill the end of the world or vntill the state of glorie in which all trueth shall clearely and perfectly bee made manifest and therefore there shall bee no neede of Sacraments a Heb. 9.19 2. In the manner or condition of their signifying for the Sacraments of the old Testament foretold Christ as it were to come but the Newe declare him as it were exhibited And ●●erefore they cannot possibly both stand together seeing the time to come can neuer bee the time past and the time past can neuer make the time to come to bee more ancient b Heb. 8.13 3. In the diuersitie or qualitie of the signes or in the signes and ceremonies which differ much for there bee some signes of the Olde and other of the Newe Testament 4. In the number measure of signifying vertue and easinesse 1 For ours saith Augustine are fewer in number whereas in the Old Testament the signes were more in number because the people of Israell were as yet vnder the gouernment of the Law and therefore as children vse to bee were kept vnder more figures and rites 2. Ours were better in regard of the profit 3. More excellent or manifest not in outward shew or worldly pompe but in the vnderstanding and signification of heauenly and diuine things 4. Ours are greater in force that is of greater efficacie to confirm our faith 5. More easie to bee done for there is nothing in Baptisme or the Supper of the Lord which is hard troublesome or bloudy But Circumcision and the Sacrifices were more troublesome bloudie and required greater paines Yet all this maketh not that our Sacraments and the sacraments of the ancient fathers should not be the same in substance What Doe not the Sacraments of the old Testament differ from ours in the effect because those did only shadowe forth and signifie grace which these offer present vnto vs No because in either testament there is the same grace of Christ yea the same Christ propounded And the Apostle testifieth that the old Fathers did eate the same spirituall meat with vs and drinke the same spirituall drink 1. Cor. 10.3 I say the same with vs not as some expound it only amongst themselues which is vnderstood by the purpose of the Apostle the tenour of the text the name of Christ and the word baptizing there vsed and receiued the seale of the righteousnesse which is of faith and therfore that they were made pa●takers of Christ which is righteousnesse to all that beleeue in all ages Rom. 4.11 And yet I grant that the sacraments of the fathers were figures pictures and shadowes of ours not in regard of the things themselues but in as much as they shadowed things more darkly and obscurely signified by them a 1 Cor. 10.6 In which respect they may be called types of ours but types not without trueth Why then doth Paul say Gal. 4.9 that the Sacraments of the Fathers were weake and beggerly and carnall Elements which were not able to sanctifie the conscience because of their weaknesse and vnprofitablenesse Heb. 7.19 9.10 1. Because he speaketh of them not simply as that they were naked elements which could offer or seale no grace but in some respect as now abrogated by Christ 2. Hee speaketh of them as he saw them receiued of the Iewes seuered from Christ and his promise that is as they are considered in themselues and by themselues seuered from the things signified in cogitation and as bare signes because the sanctification dependeth not of the signes either old or new but wholie and only of the vertue of the holy Ghost Did the Fathers eate the flesh of Christ seeing that as yet it had no beeing actually and corporally in the nature of things Yes because although it was not extant simply or actually in regard of his bodily substance yet in some respect namely as it was to bee giuen for the life of the world it was that spirituall meat which might no lesse bee eaten of them then that Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world is eaten now of vs by faith b Reu. 13.8 2. Because Iesus Christ is the same to day yesterday for euer Heb. 13.8 one and the same Sauiour of both Testaments In whome alone it pleased the Father to gather together all things Ephe. 1.10 3. Because those Fathers were indued with faith which maketh those things to be which are hoped for and doth demonstrate those things which are not seene Heb. 11.1 And therefore although in those ancient times the humane nature was not assumed of the word yet it was presēt to the faith of the godly in former times which did conioyne them then with Christ that should be borne So that that which had no beeing as yet in the order of nature yet neuerthelesse had euer a being by the force and efficacie of faith Therefore Christ saith Abraham sawe my day and reioyced Ioh. 8 56. But they did eate the flesh of Christ which should be giuen for them wee eate it being alreadie giuen for vs. The times are changed saith Augustine but faith is not shall bee giuen and is giuen shall come and is come in Ioh tract 4 these words differ saith hee but yet Christ is one and the same Doe the Sacraments giue remission of sins and doe they conferre or containe grace and are they ordained to iustifie and to regenerate or whether is grace tyed to the Sacraments No. 1. Because they are the signes not the causes of grace 2. That which is proper to God ought not to be bestowed on the creature 3. The subiect of grace is not the body but the spirit 4. No bodilie thing doth worke vpon spirituall things Againe not by the work done or as an efficient cause by them selues or their owne vertue working any thing or flowing from their essence as they speake in the schooles but ministerially or Instrumentally yet effectually so farre forth as they support nourish our faith Not by any inward power or vertue of their owne but by vertue of the principall agent or worker in that sence that Paul affirmeth the Gospel to be the vertue and power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 1.16 1. Tim. 4.16 he saith that the remedie of the holy Scripture doth saue a man not that there is any magicall vertue in the letters syllables or sound of the words for the Apostle saith Heb. 4.2 The word profited not them beeing not mingled with faith but because
it vseth these meanes helps and instruments to worke our saluation In which sense the Church is said to be sanctified and washed in the lauer of water thorough the word Ephe. 5.16 Tit. 3.5 Baptisme is called the Lauer of Regeneration Renonation And Act. 22.16 Be baptized washed from thy sins in calling vpon his name Hereupon Augustine hath this saying whence commeth this vertue to the water that it should touch the bodie in Ioh. Trac 80 and wash the heart but that the word causeth it not because it is spoken but because it is beleeued And that the grace of God ought not to bee tyed to the outward signes Peter teacheth speaking thus of Baptisme 1 Pet. 3.21 It saueth vs not that Baptisme whereby the filthinesse of the flesh is cast away but whereby it comes to passe that a good conscience maketh request to God by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ Cornelius receiued grace before Baptisme a Act. 10.5 For God vseth meanes and instruments to worke our saluation but yet so as hee worketh by his owne proper and inward vertue most freely when how and in whome hee will and doth not yeelde vp his power and vertue to the outward signes As also in that seuen times washing of Naaman the Syrian in Iordan was not placed the purging of him from his Leprosie which then the power of GOD alone wrought in him b 2. King 9 ●4 Hence it comes to passe that some receiue grace without the Sacrament as Abraham was iustified before Circumcision and the Theefe on the Crosse without Baptisme and the Lords Supper Some receiue the Sacraments and not grace because they want faith as Iudas of whom Augustine saith Hee receiued the bread of the Lord but not that bread which was the Lord. Others receiue both together as it were by a certaine coniunction of the thing with the signes as the faithfull who take the Supper worthily Whether doe the Sacraments imprint any stampe or anie spirituall worke in soule and that such as cannot be blotted out Not of themselues or their owne power nor yet by anie supernaturall verture inherent in them not by a reall and essentiall imprinting of some signe as the printing of a picture or signe is made in wax or money For the Scripture alloweth none such But yet God doth as it were marke out and seale vp his Sacramentally spiritually by them as instruments giuing the pledge of his spirit and the light of faith whereby they are made conformable to Christ and discerned from infidels and are marked out vnto the profession of Christ And this note in the purpose of God is such as cannot bee blotted out 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God is sure hauing this seale The Lord knoweth who are his And 2. Cor. 1.21 He which hath annointed vs is God and who hath sealed vs and giuen vs the pledge of his spirit And Ephe 1.13 In whom also yee beleeuing yee were sealed with the holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of the Inheritance And Chap. 4.30 Doe not yee greeue the holie spirit of God by whom yee are sealed And Ezech. 9.4 The markes of the letter Tau is saide to be made in the forehead of those men which sigh and mourne And Reuel 7.3 The seruants of God are marked in their foreheads as on the contrarie the children of perdition are saide to bee marked with the marke of the beast Reuel 13.16.17 To whome doth it belong to administer the Sacraments To them only to whom it is permitted to exercise the office of Preaching the Gospell According to that saying Goe yee forth teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father son and Holy Ghost Math. 28.28 and 1. Cor. 4.1 For the Sacraments bee the appurtenances of the Ministerie of the word of God and the seales of Gods promises which cannot lawfully be set too without the vnfolding of this word of God For neiher can their be an accessorie vnlesse their be a principall And it belongeth to the same man as the Chancelor vsing the Kings authoritie to write the tables of the Testament faithfully and to seale them with his seale Whence doe the Sacraments receiue their power and excellency From the institution of God so that that forme be obserued which he hath prescribed that by a publick person either rightly called or at the least by a common error vsing the publicke function and not of the manners merit and excellencie of the person working administring Phil. 1. But whether doe the Ministers to whom is committed the lawfull administration of the Sacraments and are called Gods fellow-morkers deliuer also with their hands the matter of the Sacrament No but they do outwardly giue the earthly signes and doe onely performe the outward dueties and God doth inwardly conferre the heauenly gifts represented by them giues increase because God alone doth Circumcise the heart a Deut. 30 And therefore this Circumcision is said to be made without hands b Col 2 11 And Iohn the Baptist confessed that hee indeede baptised them with water but the Lord Iesus did baptise them with the Holy Ghost and with fire Math. 3.11 And onely the heauenly father giueth that bread which is indeede heauenly Iohn 6.32 Otherwise sometimes that is ascribed to the Ministers of the word which belongeth to God alone For that is the nature of words which belong to one thing that that is attributed to the instrument which belongeth to the principall efficient cause Where and when ought the Sacraments to be admininistred In the assembly of the Church and vsually no where else to wit when the whole Church is gathered together or a great part thereof not out of the assembly of the Church Which ought to be the forme and manner of administration That those signes should bee vsed without change which Christ himselfe hath prescribed And that the words of the institution then also of the Lords promise be recited and explaned not in a strange but in a knowne speach before the Sacrament bee administred and deluered a Act 19.3 4.5 1 Cor. 11 23 For the Apostle doth expresly forbid 1. Cor. 14.19 to vse a strange language in the Church And such ceremonies ought to bee vsed which are not humane and receiued but appointed and commaunded by the authority of the son of God as also praiers and thanksgiuings After the example of Christ who commaunded the Church to doe this Doe ye this And Act. 22.16 Be thou baptised and be thou washed from thy sinnes in calling vpon the name of Iesus Now the comelines and dignitie of the Sacrament is to bee esteemed by the word of God Also the multitude and pompe of humane rites doth occupie the senses and the mindes and doth ouerturne the Ceremonies appointed by God To whom are the Sacraments to bee administred The Sacraments indeed are common to the godly and vngodly and also other outward things in the Church
word of God 3. The multitude and pompe of humane rites hath ouerthrowen the ceremonies ordeined by God 4. In those ceremonies spirituall efficacie and operation not bare signification is vsed without the word of God as may appeare by the consecrations of oyntments salt wax c. 5. They haue degenerated into superstition and abuse 6. They are falsly supposed and held to perteine to the integritie and trueth of Baptisme VVhat is the word in Baptisme The word of the Gospell the summe whereof Christs institution conteineth beeing conioyned with the promise of eternall life being in these words Baptize yee in the name of the Father the sonne and the holie Ghost whosoeuer beleeueth is baptized shall be saued Mat. 28.19 And the pronunciation of this forme plainely and clearely in our natiue speach that all may vnderstand it I Baptize thee in the name or into the name of the father and of the sonne and of the Holie Ghost which words in the Schooles are called the forme of baptisme But wee had rather call them the forme of words therefore Dydimus saith that Baptisme is vnperfect if any of th● three persons bee omitted For whereas in the Act. cap. 2.38 wee read that the Apostles baptized in the name or into the name of the Lord of Christ it is either spoken by Synecdoche as Ambrose thinketh and is of the same sence with the aforesaid forme because the father is in Christ the holy Ghost also whosoeuer beleeueth in the Son beleeueth likewise in the father in the holy Ghost a Io. 12.44 14.9.10.12 or in the name of Christ that is through the name commaundement of Christ that is as he had appointed and ordained as name is often taken for commaundement or the terme to which that is the end and scope and effect of baptisme is signified but not the forme of Baptizing so that the meaning is that he had baptized them into the name and profession or euen into the death of Christ and to haue incorporated them into Christ by baptisme and to haue consecrated and sealed them Christians vnto him as their Mediator but with the accustomed forme of baptisme What is it to be baptized in the name of the father the Son and the holy Ghost By this phrase is signified that by calling on the fathet the sonne and the holy Ghost he who is baptized his sins being forgiuen is receiued into the fauour of that God which is the Father sonne and holy Ghost and is adopted sealed ingrafted installed receiued and consecrated into the sheepefold familie inheritance power worship league fauour religion faith and communion of the father the sonne and the holy Ghost that is the true God in nature and essence one but in propertie of persons three which is the Author of saluation that wee might liue after his pleasure Therefore he saith not In the names but in the name least from hence occasion might be giuen of making three Gods In which sence this phrase is to bee taken as it is plaine by the words of Paul 1. Cor. 1.13 where he denyeth that he baptised any in his owne name So then by Baptisme wee are consecrated to GOD the Father because in him our Adoption and regeneration which followeth after it is established by the Holy Ghost VVhat is the internall matter of Baptisme The thing signified which is both the bloude and spirit of Iesus Christ which are correspondent to the water and also the Ingrafting and incorporating into Christ by the holy Ghost and consequently the imputation of the righteousnesse of Christ the remission or washing away of sins the Regeneration or spirituall second birth the renewing and sanctification of that man which is baptized The putting on of Christ as it were of a garment wirh which wee are couered a Gal. 3.8 Ephe. 5.26 Tit. 3.5 Likewise the fruite fellowship and participation of the death buriall resurrection of Christ b Rom. 6.4.5 Col. 2.1.3 Lastly our Adoption and entrance into the Church of God as it were an admittance into the societie of the Saints which thing signified may be also called the essentiall part and internall forme of Baptisme What is then the forme of Baptisme Of outward Baptisme that holy externall symbolical action which the Minister of the word of God vseth which consisteth first in the reciting declaring of the institution of the diuine promises anexed to baptisme or in signifying the lawful wholsome vse of baptisme Secondly in the confession of that faith into the which baptisme leadeth or in Catechisticall questions answers or in stipulation by which those that were to be baptized in times past did testify their Inward baptisme being then to be cōfirmed with the outward as Act. 8.31 c 1 Pet 3.21 But first especially in the sprinkling of water in the name of the Father the sonne and the Holy Ghost And last of all in prayers blessings giuing of thanks in a language knowne vnto the people that the congregation may be able to say Amen 1. Co. 14.16 for all these things are commaunded by Scripture and example as Preach the Gospell hee that beleeueth c. Mat. 24.19 Act. 22.16 and Bee thou baptized and wash away thy sinnes by calling on of the name of Iesus Now the Scripture hath not prescribed a set forme in certain words concerning those admonitions and prayers touching the institution and Doctrine of baptisme which the word of God deliuereth but hath left that free as circumstances may require for the better edifying of the Church so that the foundation be kept But the forme of inward baptisme is that inward action which is proper vnto Iesus Christ himselfe working by the Holy Ghost VVhat Analogie and agreement is there of the Signe with the thing signified in Baptisme Verie great for euen as the water doth wash the body and the filth thereof so the bloud of Christ by his merit doth wash away our sins and spirituall spots for his spirit doth sanctifie vs d Rom. 3 25 Tit. 3 5 1 Iohn 1 7. And like as euery generation cōsisteth of moyst watery matter Wherevpon some Philosophers as Thales haue said that water was the beginning of all things so our regeneration is by the holy Ghost in Baptisme who is often signified by the name of water for euen as water prepareth the earth to bring forth fruit and quencheth thirst So the holy Ghost that same which sate vpon the waters a Gen. 1.2 maketh vs fit for good workes and quencheth in vs the thirsting after terrene things and hereof good workes are called the fruites of the spirit b Gal. 5.22 and Christ saith who so thirsteth let him come to mee and drinke for hee that drinketh shall neuer thirst but this hee spake of the spirit which they that beleeue should receiue c Esa 51.1 Secondly the sprinkling with water doth plainly note the sprinkling of the bloud of Christ
for the remission of sinnes Ioh. 7 37 and imputation of righteousnesse but the staying vnder the water though but a while setteth as it were before our eyes the death buriall and mortification of our natural corruption the old Adam by the vertue of the death and buriall of Christ which is the first part of our regeneration d Rom 6.3 4 And the being taken out the reuiuing of the newe man and newnesse of life yea and proportionally our resurrection to come e Ibid. vers 4.5.13 VVhat change or coniunction is there of the signe and the thing signified in Baptisme Not any naturall for the outward signe is only the Ministers corporall action but the thing signified is spirituall and Gods worke namely to be washed with Christes bloud and regenerated with his spirit which is not to bee sprinkled with Christs bloud corporally either visibly or inuisibly but to bee receiued into Gods fauour by reason of his bloud shead that is by reason of Christs whole obedience and being grafted into his body to bee quickned by him through the working of the holy Ghost as it is said expresly of Christ Hee shall baptize you with the Holie Ghost and with fire f Mat. 3.11 Iohn 3.33 Notwithstanding for the fitnesse reference and trueth of the signe and thing signified and also for the promise made to those that vse them rightly there is a Sacramentall and Relatiue copulation by reason whereof the name and properties both of the signe and thing signified are changed Hereof Baptisme is called the Lauer of Regeneration and the water the bloud and spirit of Christ. Tit. 3.5 that is not onely the shadowe but a most certaine Testimonie that the baptized truely beleeuing are cleansed with the bloud of Christ regenerated by the holy Ghost Is the same man alwaies at one instant Baptized with water and the Holy Ghost No. 1. Because the promise of the spirit annexed to baptisme is not absolute but conditionall requiring faith and obedience 2. Because that God dealeth not in Baptisme by naturall reason as when a medicine being taken worketh with thee whether thou sleepest or wakest and fire warmeth whether thou thinkest of it or no. But as God is a most free agent sometimes the Baptisme of water is without the baptisme of the spirit as the Example of Simon Magus teacheth who although hee had an Historicall faith yet hee was not regenerated and the a Act. 8 12 baptisme of the spirit sometime goeth before sometime accompanieth and sometimes followeth the baptisme of water for both men and women when they beleeued by Philips preaching the things belonging vnto the kingdome of God and of Christ as also the Eunuch Cornelius and his friends were baptized by the Holy Ghost before they were baptized with water as appeareth by their faith and conuersion b Act. 8.13 but in infants to whom the kingdome of Heauen belongeth if wee respect Gods ordinance both Baptisme and Iustification and Regeneration do concurre out of the nature of that Couenant I will bee thy GOD and the God of thy seed Gen. 17.7 but the effect hereof is truely declared afterward in his time For the seede of the word and Sacraments lyeth as it were in the Earth couered and hid as long as the Lord seeth good to deferre grace Is Christ present after one manner both in baptisme and in the Supper He is alike present in the lawfull vse but yet the manner of his presence may be after a sort discerned for in baptisme hee is present as at the new birth In the Supper for the confirmation and nourishment of him that is newe borne But vnderstand this presence in respect of him that taketh it for nothing hath the reason of a Sacrament out of the vse instituted What is the manner of receiuing Baptisme The manner of receiuing the outward signes is naturall but of the things signified spirituall for the things themselues are effectually communicated vnto vs in respect of God that giueth the holy Ghost by the meanes of the lawfull administration of Baptisme But faith is that only gift of God whereby wee apply the substance of the Sacrament peculiarly vnto our selues Touching infantes they haue a singular priuiledge in respect of God Who are to be Baptized All men lyuing who are receiued or esteemed to be receiued into the Couenant of God without difference of sexe or nation a Act 10 47 and 11.17 and those who are of yeares which come vnto the Church and shewe their assent to the doctrine of the Gospell professe their faith in Christ and shewe forth the confession of their sinnes or repentance Mat. 3.6 and 28.19 Baptizing them that is to say those which haue giuen their names to the Gospel and haue professed themselues Disciples And Act. 2.41 They which receiued his word were baptised And Christ said first He that beleeueth afterward And is baptized Mar 16 16. So Simon Magus was admitted the Eunuch and others b Act. 8.13 37. 10 46.47 Or else the Infants of the faithfull c Gen. 17.7 Luk 18.16 and those which are begotten of Baptized parents but not of Infidels which are not in the Church and not the Children of the Baptized because their seed is contained in the couenant but not these other Act. 2.39 To you is the promise made and to your children Neither is it materiall whether the Infant bee borne of vnequall matrimonie that is whether one parent or both be faithfull and Christian for the Apostle calleth such children holie d 1 Cor 7.14 that is pure and separated for the Lord according to the forme of the Couenant Neither doth this hinder because al that are borne of faithful parents are not elected for we are not to enquire into the secret iudgements of God but probably we may duely coniecture that all which are borne of Christians are elected Are persons of yeares and infants to bee admitted vnto baptisme all after one sort No but they which are of yeares are not to be baptized before they be instructed in the faith of Christ as in the word which entereth the ignorant in Christ that is in the Rudimentes of Religion in the principles of Christianisme which is called Catechisme e Heb 6 1 Secondly when they are to be baptized they ought to confesse their faith before the Church of Christ Mat. 3.6 They were Baptized by Iohn in Iordan confessing their sins that is such as did testifie that they did earnestly embrace the Doctrine of free remission of their sinnes Such a confession was required in the antient Church of them which were able to be enstructed differing farre from that Popish shrift consisting in a proditorious enumeration of each euen secret sinnes Wherupon the Apostle 1. Pet. 3.21 calleth baptisme the answering of a good conscience hauing respect to the Interrogations of Catechists to which those which were to be instructed in the principall heades of Faith and of
to him which is not yet baptised and if it may not be giuen yet at least it ought to be required and procured by all meanes possible D● nupt et Concu l 2. c. 17 18 yet is it not so simply precisely absolutely necessarie that those which depart out of this life without it especially the Infants of Christians cannot be saued as Augustine beleeued and those also which make baptisme the first steppe of saluation and therefore exclude from saluation all those which want baptisme yea although there bee no contempt of Baptisme But we verie openly confesse that this is not our opinion Because so there is great iniurie done vnto the grace of God and to the power of his couenant in which hee promiseth that he will be the GOD of the faithfull and of their issue and that he will shew his mercie euen vnto a thousand generations Exod. 20.6 Secondly because it would be absurd that these Infants which in times past died in great numbers before the eight day of circumcision before which they might not bee circumcised according to the law of God or those which were not circumcised by the space of fortie yeares in the wildernesse Or the Christian Infants which died in times past before the feastes of Easter and Pentecost without the baptisme of water by no fault of theirs for at those Feastes Baptisme was administred in times past both these and the other being vnder the couenant it would I say bee absurd to thinke them depriued of saluation which cannot but be a great crosse to the conscience of the parents 3 Part. 9.68.4.2 if death should preuent their children baptisme Againe why should the children beare the punishment of anothers fault but this is the doctrine of Thomas Aquinas That children are neuerthelesse baptised vvith the baptisme of the spirit though they vvant the outvvard signe Thirdly Sacraments are not the cause but the Testimonies and seales of our saluation and doe not of themselues conferre grace Nor doth the priuation of the holy signe defraude the childe but the parents contempt or negligence of the same a Exod. 412 Iosu 5.3 Fourthly The conuerted thiefe wanted the visible Baptisme but not the thing signified which may likewise be said of Infants vnbaptised For that in the 17. of Genesis Let him that is not Circumcised be cut of from the people of God Was spoken of them of yeares and the meaning was hee that would not be circumcised the same is also to bee meant of the vnbaptised Likewise that in the third of Iohn Except a man bee borne againe of water and the Spirit hee cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Is not meant of Infants which could not receiue it as being preuented by death onely and not by any other fault but eyther of the ordinarie meanes which may not bee neglected when it may bee had or of Baptisme which if it bee not receiued indeede is yet receiued in desire as Thomas expoundeth it And as Ambrose saith of Valentinian that hee was baptised in desire and will though hee had neuer the outward ceremonie For as hee was comming to Ambrose to bee baptised hee died in the way Or else it is to bee vnderstood of the liuing water which is the Spirit that is of the vertue and efficacie of the holy Spirit which worketh that in the soule that water doth in the bodie And so the names of water and the Spirit may meane one thing as it in the third of Mathew Hee that followeth mee it is hee that baptiseth with the holy Ghost and with fire That is with the spirit which hath the office and nature of fire in regeneration the Baptisme of which spirit is absolutely necessarie to saluation And thus Augustine expoundeth this place Is Baptisme to be administred without exorcisme or coniuring out of the Diuell or blowing To exorcise is to adiure a man by holy things as by God or by Christ to doe a thing which men commonly call to coniure as the 26. Math. The high Priest saith vnto Christ I Coniure the by the liuing God to tell vs if thou bee Christ And the sonnes of Sceua in the 19. of Act. coniured the diuell by Iesus whom Paule preached Hence come Exorcistes and true Exorcisme which gift was peculiar to the holy Ghost by which the Apostles at the first and other faithfull draue diuels out of the possessed as we read in the Acts and Christ saith They shall cast out Diuels Mark 16. But yet without baptisme as Tertullian obserueth Therefore it is not to be retained first because when Christ instituted baptisme he did not command any to exorcise secondly for that the diuell is driuen out by Christ euen in baptisme for as Cyprian saith like as Scorpions and Serpents which are of force on drie land can do no hurt being flung into the water so an euil spirit can inhabit no longer in whom the spirit of God beginneth to dwell after baptisme and sanctifycation Thirdly for that the Apostles administred it without exorcisme Fourthly neither those that are possessed or the heathen worshippers of diuels are to be baptised but only they who are holy and partakers of the couenant of grace the members of Christ and to say that such are subiect to the diuels destroying power were verie absurd Fifthly that gift of exorcising ioyned with the gift of miracles was but for a time as that also was when many sicke people were healed by the annointing of the ministers of the Church and by inuocation of the name of Christ a Iam. 5.14 till such time as Christian religion was spred ouer all the world Sixtly for that exorcisme was neuer vsed at the circumcising of Infants But whereas the heathen did bring testimonie vnto the Church before their baptising as Tertullian witnesseth that they renounced the diuell and his Angels this was a publike testimony of repentance in them of yeares as also that blowing with clapped hands which he that was to be baptised performed did giue the Church thereby to vnderstand that hee renounced Sathan and his kingdome But in the Papacy it is done by the baptizer euen the face of Infant to be baptised and is therefore friuolous and to be reiected May Godfathers and Godmothers be vsed They may 1 Because the originall of it sprung from the Imitation of the baptising of those which were young in faith in the Primitiue Church who before their baptisme did not onely yeeld a reason of their faith but also produced Testators and witnesses of the same 2 The Scripture is not against it 3 It is a most ancient Ecclesiasticall custome 4 There is nothing in it that is euill or dishonest 5 It proceeds from charitie 6 It tendeth so farre to the Infants profit and saluation that no man is the worse for it 7 It maketh wholly for the edification of the Church 8 As a midwife is vsed to make the birth easie in child-bearing so in this spirituall
branch draweth not iuice from the vine except first it groweth with the vine and the members haue not sense and motion from the head except they sticke together with the head so except we bee partakers first of all of Christ himselfe we cannot be partakers of his gifts for he saith the Lord Which abideth not in mee is cast forth as a branch and withereth c Ioh. 15.6 and how shall hee not with him giue vs all things also d Rom. 8.32 And from the coniunction of Christ and vs the same Paule testifyeth that a communion followeth of his benefits 1. Cor. 1.30 saying Of him ye are in Christ Iesus where thou hast the coniunction of Christ and of vs then it followeth Who of God is made vnto vs wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption where you haue in the second place the participation of his benefits When as the Fathers doe plainely affirme that Christ is in vs corporally naturally by naturall participation by corporall vnion or according to the flesh and as waxe melted in in the fire is mingled with other wax likewise melted a Cyril vpō Ioh b. 10 Chap. 13 so by the communication of the bodie and bloud of Christ that he is in vs and we in him Whether doe they referre these sayings to the manner of the presence of the participation and vnion No. For the same Fathers doe decree that Christ is in heauen with his flesh in no other place The same doth Cyrill book 11. chap. 21. and 22. besides the manner of our vnion with Christ is spirituall not corporall but yet they looke to the terme or to the thing which is participated or to the obiect of this communication that is to the true and naturall bodie it selfe of Christ Neyther doe they vnderstand a participation which is made after a naturall manner but a true participation of the naturall bodie of Christ To whom although separated by space of places wee are ioyned spiritually by faith that wee may knowe that wholy in bodie and soule wee doe cleaue not onely to his Deitie but to the substance and nature of his flesh as members to the head and are engrafted by the bond of the spirit and by faith And also they doe teach that the foundation of this our coniunction with him is that nature by taking whereof he is made our brother and moreouer that we are vnited with Christ not only according to the spirit Nullum Simile q●atuor Pedibus cur rit but also according to the bodie To which also belongeth the permixtion of the waxe melted For no simile runneth with foure feete that is agreeth in all things For it is certaine that neyther our bodie nor the bodie of Christ is molten that they may be vnited together Therefore neither is there cause why wee should imagine any naturall touching but spirituall onely whereby as waxe to waxe so the flesh of Christ may be most streightly vnited to our flesh according to that They shall be two in one flesh that is to say Christ and the Church How are the faithfull said to be partakers of the diuine nature 2. Pet. 1.4 Not in respect of the nature or essence of God for he is incommunicable but of qualities and that of the greatest and most pretious gifts wherwith the regenerate are endewed by the holy Ghost which Peter calleth not the nature of God which is essentiall but the diuine nature being a created qualitie opposite to our old and vicious nature and affirmeth that it is promised of God to the faithfull and performed to them and comprehendeth those things which belong to life and religion and also that most blessed immortalitie when God shall be all in all his Whether is our soule onely without the bodie ioyned with the soule onely of Christ or also our flesh with the flesh of Christ Yea the whole person of euerie faithfull man is truly conioyned with the whole person of Christ 1 Because the whole person of Adam was coupled with the whole person of Eue. 2 Because not the soule alone of the faithfull man or the body alone is saued by Christ but both 3 Because our bodies are the members of Christ 4 Because the whole person of the Sonne of God tooke into the vnitie of himselfe whole man that is the whole humane nature not flesh alone nor soule alone but both together 5 Because whole Christ in his Deitie and humanitie that is in his soule and in his flesh is our head and our Sauiour But yet that coniunction of vs with Christ doth appertaine first of all to our soule and then it redoundeth to the bodie To which first is our minde and by consequence our flesh ioyned to the word or to the flesh First we are vnited to the flesh by faith and then zanch de incarnatione Christi by the flesh to his Deitie 1 Because as the scripture doth set forth Christ to vs first as man and then as God so first and sooner we know apprehend and vnderstand him as man then as God a Gen. 3.15 Deut 18.15 as Isaiah 7.14 where first it is said Behold the virgin shall conceiue and beare a sonne and 2. he shall be called Immanuell So the Euangelists and Apostles doe set forth Christ vnto vs first as man and then as God 2 Because like as wee are not vnited to God but by a Mediatour so neither to the Godhead of Christ but by his flesh in which hee performed the chiefe offices of a Mediatour For in his flesh was made redemption sinne destroyed the diuell conquered death ouercome eternall life and saluation obtained and the life which wholy flowed from the fulnesse of Christs Godhead as it were from a fountaine is not deriued into vs but in the flesh by the flesh of Christ as it were a pipe or instrument but yet inse●arably taken from the godhead by the vnitie of person a Rom● 5.12 As by one man commeth sinne So by one man righteousnesse hath abounded Iohn 6.53 Except ye eate the flesh of the sonne of man ye haue no life in you Vnlesse therefore a man doe lay hold vpon this pipe and be vnited to it truely hee cannot be partaker of the waters which flow from the fountaine Whereupon it behooueth vs in the exercise of faith and pietie to fasten and fixe the eyes of our minde immediately and especially vpon the humane flesh of Iesus Christ as it were vpon a vaile by which an ingresse was made into sanctum sanctorum that is the holy of holiest where the glorie of God shineth b Leuit. 16 2 12 Heb. 6.19 10.20 and moreouer to penetrate as it were into the sanctuarie it selfe to behold his deitie Seeing the end why we are vnited to the flesh of Christ is that being quickened by it we may liue a life eternall by what meanes is the flesh of Christ that is the humanitie quickening vs Not by habituall grace as they
speake in schooles but by grace onely of vnion not by any vertue ingrafted into the flesh it selfe as if the power of quickening were really powred forth into the flesh of Christ or this were adorned with it in it selfe or that life were in it selfe or quickening in it selfe for it is a propertie incommunicable of the godhead alone to quicken For as Cyril saith It agreeth to God alone to be able to quicken that which is void of life b De Recta Fide ad Reginas But first by reason of vnion because it is the proper flesh of the word quickening all things as speaketh the Synode of Ephesus eyther because the word is the fountaine and authour of life being life it selfe dwelleth in it not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is after operatiue maner as he is said to dwel in those that be his but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is in a bodily manner personally or because that flesh is so streightly vnited to the essentiall life that these two natures do make one subsistence or because this man is essentially God from whence it commeth to passe that the death of that flesh because it is the flesh of the sonne of God hath beene pretious inough to obtaine life for vs c Act. 20.28 And Cyrill saith that That the flesh is not quickening in it selfe but in the word Hypostatically vnited vnto it vppon Iohn 10 13 2 In regard of the merite of obedience whereby Christ a sacrifice being offered in his flesh giuen for vs vpon the Crosse obtayned eternall life for all beleeuers Iob. 6.51 My flesh is the living bread which I will giue for the life of the world 3 In respect of our copulation with Christ because we cannot come vnto God the fountaine of life and that eternall life but by that flesh of Christ comming betweene that is vnlesse by the efficacie of the holy Ghost we be made members of Christ engrafted into his flesh by faith Therefore that which is said Iohn 6.63 The flesh profiteth nothing is not to be vnderstood simply of the flesh of Christ but of carnall opinions not agreeing with the mysterie of the eating of Christs flesh Is it reall and true or doth this vnion of vs with Christ consist in the apprehension alone of the minde like as we doe comprehend and haue in mind things and substances in the phantasy and mind by formes that may be vnderstood but not that they are in verie deed vnited in vs If the things which are vnited and the truth of the vnion bee regarded truly it is reall true and essentiall but if the manner whereby it is done it is meerely spirituall 1 Because it is said concerning Christ the Church They shall be two in one flesh Ephe. 5.33 Now the vnion of man and wife into one flesh is reall and substantiall in regard of the mariage bond wherby according to gods ordinance they are bound so although the man be in the market and the wife at home he beyond the seaes she at home yet this vnion continueth 2 Because Christ is the head foundation of the Church but the vnion of the members with the head and betweene themselues is substantiall true and reall like as also of the foundation with the building yea with euerie stone built vpon it 3 Because Christ saith Iohn 15.5 I am the vine yee are the branches But the coniunction and incorporation of these is reall as also of an Oliue tree and the boughes set or engrafted into it 4 Because the flesh of Christ is meate indeed therefore like as bread is really and truly vnited to vs corporally because it is corporall meate to them which eate it with a corporal mouth so also truly and really but yet spiritually because it is spirituall meat the flesh of Christ is vnited to vs which eate it Seeing that the bodie of Christ is in heauen neyther shall returne from thence before the last day how can he be conioyned to vs really and indeed By the holy Ghost working in vs and by faith For if our sight in a moment of time doe touch the starres visually saith Augustine Epist 3. ad volusianum tract 50. in Iohn much more doth faith ioyne vs together with Christ himselfe and moreouer with his humane nature placed in heauen The same Father saith Fidem mitte in Coelum cum in terris tanquam praesentem tenuisti that is send faith into heauen and thou hast laid hold on him as it were present in earth There is a great distance betwixt the head and the foot the branches and roote the wife in England and her husband in Turkie yet are they all vnited together But faith is onely a conceiuing and imagination of a thing absent Therefore the bodie of Christ is not ioyned to vs in verie deed neyther is present to our faith in the Supper but by imagination or contemplation vehehement cogitation and assent The Antecedent is false and vngodly For if faith be onely an imagination and phantasie and a conceiuing of the minde then it differeth not from opinion being a naked action of the mind or a simple and strong conceipt and consent Neyther then doth it differ from historie all faith common to verie many reprobates yea to the diuels themselues a Iam. 2 19 Then surely that faith which imbraceth the Euangelicall promises in Christ and moreouer Christ himself shal not be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a ful assurance nor a sure trust or perswasion nor an apprehension frō which imagination yea theorie or contēplation do very farre differ Finally Faith shal not be the heauenly gift of God and supernaturall according to the working of his mightie power b Eph. 1.19 3 7 but naturall For the conceipt of the minde is naturall to a man All which things seeing they are absurd the Antecedent must be false And also the consequent false For if the spaces of times doe not let faith but that it apprehendeth things past and to come spiritually as present Then neither doth distance of places hinder it that it cannot spiritually both haue things present and apprehend them that are set farre a sunder by places For faith is that thing which maketh those things present which are hoped for and that which sheweth those things which are not seene c Heb. 11.1 Ioh. 8.56 Phil. 3.20 Wee haue a sure and stedfast anker of the soule entering euen into that which is within the vaile whether the forerunner is for vs entered in euen Iesus d Heb. 6 19. By what similitudes is this communion illustrated in the scriptures By verie many wherby notwithstanding the nature and manner of this communion is not declared but rather the effects which come from it to the beleeuers Therefore they are not to bee stretched further then the scope of the holy Ghost may suffer 1. The first is of Mariage by which the Church is made flesh of the
they be men of courage that is stout mightie or strong that is indued with authoritie fortitude and constancie of minde least they bee caried with perturbations yea they must be louers of all vertues especially of sobrietie chastitie and honest conuersation to this wee may referre that which is spoken of the election of Deacons Act. 6.3 Appoint yee brethren seauen men from amongst you men of good report full of the holy Ghost and wisdome whom wee may appoint to this buisinesse What titles are giuen to Magistrates in the Scriptures 1. They are called Elohim or Gods and sons of the most high a Exod. 22.28 Ps 82.1.6 not by nature but by office and dignitie that is as it were the Vicegerents and Images of God himselfe 2. Nourcing Fathers and nourcing mothers 3. Ministers of God 4. Sheepheards as Homer cals his Agamemnon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sheepheard of the people 5. Fathers as the same Homer cals the king 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gentle meeke and benigne father and the Senators among the Romanes were called patres conscripti neither was there in the common wealth any greater or more ancient honour then to bee called pater patria a father of the country Whence Zenophon saith that a good Gouernour differeth nothing from a good father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 8. wherefore Princes owe to their subiectes the loue and naturall affection of a father and as the sheepheard excels the sheepe so magistrates ought in goodnesse to excell the people else they are not worthy to rule ouer them in other writers they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guids which word also the Scripture vseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaders because they must in vertue goe before others 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adorners or orderers because they prescribe order to the multitude then which nothing is more beautifull 3. Episcopi watchmen and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 obseruers because they must diligently looke what each citizen doth they are called also in generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 keepers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helpers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sauiours with which title they are also stiled in the old Testament and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gouernours which word is taken from shippes for as a shippe tossed in a tempestuous sea cannot come safe to the hauen without the skill of a pilote so the commonwealth must needes bee ouerthrowne vnlesse it haue a skilfull Gouernor they are called also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratious Lords as Christ witnesseth Luk. 22.28 whence Pindarus saith that a milde and a good king is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratious to mortall men and a great friende and amongst the Egyptian kings two by name are termed Euergetae bountifull as Ptolomeus Euergêtes And Antiochus Euergêtes What is the office of the Magistrate 1. In generall that hee keepe and obserue both the tables of the Lawe a Sent. 17 17 and so first and principally kisse the sonne and doe him homage with due seruice and true reuerence 2. That hee erect according to the word of God and also defende and maintaine gods true worshippe and prohibit all false worship b Deut. 13 5 6 d 2. K. 23 2 4. and take away and remoue whatsoeuer may seeme to bee any hinderance to true Religion after the example of Ezechias e Dan. 3.29 Iosias and Nebuchadnetzar c 2 K. 18 4 3. Hee must bee helpefull to the Church with his counsell and substance and promote the ministerie of the word Psal 122.9 For the house sake of my God I will procure thy good and Isa 49.23 Thy Kings shall bee nursing fathers and thy Queenes nursing mothers Furthermore in humane matters he must execute iudgement and iustice that is to say hee must punishe the wicked defend and rewarde the good deliuer the afflicted out of the hands of the wicked helpe the orphane giue righteous iudgement to the poore fatherlesse and needie that haue none to helpe them f Gen. 9 6 Psal 82 3.4 72 2.12 he must bee a preseruer of peace But if neede so require he must defend his subiectes with armes and the Dominions that are committed to his trust by warre hee must bridle them that infring the peace defend his prouinces from Rapines and other annoyances and recouer those things that are iniuriously taken away So Alphonsus King of Naples his Symbole was the pellicane pecking bloud out of her breast with her bill to refresh her young ones with this inscription pro lege pro grege for the Lawe and for the Land hee must bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say hee must with a fatherly affection prouide foode for his subiectes as Ioseph did g Gen. 45 48 Lastly hee must gouerne the common wealth and guide his iudgements by lawes honest and agreeable to reason Doth the care of Religion belong to the Magistrates Yea Epist. 50. ad Bonif. for as Augustine saith Herein Kings serue the Lord as they are Kings when they doe those things which they could not doe except they were Kings that is when they publish and set forth Edicts and decrees for true Religion And if the care of Religion doe appertaine to euerie housholder as the father of the familie h Eph. 64 much more then to a Magistrate who is the father of all his subiects But the care of setting vp or restoring of Religion according to the prescript of Gods word and of maintaining the same doth then especially belong to the Magistrate when the Bishops are negligent or aduersaries to the Gospell but the administration of Religion belongeth to the Ministers of the word Wee see what the Scripture requireth of the Magistrate Psal 2.12 Kisse the sonne and serue the Lord in feare and Psalm 24.7 Lift vp your heads O yee gates and bee yee lift vp yee euerlasting doores that is Open your gates O yee Princes that the King of glorie may enter in Hee calleth the Empires themselues and so also Kings Princes and Magistrates Gates because in olde time Iudgemēt was giuen in the gates And therfore when Ioas was installed into his Kingdom he had the book of the Lawe of God giuen into his hands i 2 K 11.21 according to the commaundement Deut. 17.18 And for this cause especially the Magistrate is by the Apostle called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the minister and seruant of God k Rom 13.2 4.6 To this purpose tend the examples of Moses Dauid Iosias Ezekias Theodosius and others And these precepts belong to the whole Church and euery member thereof Mat. 7.15 Take heede of false Prophets or false teachers 1. Cor. 5.13 Take away the euill or wicked person from amongst you Gal. 1.8 If any man teach any other Gospell let him be accursed Further he is to see that all thing be done decently orderly in the
ignominiously punished that hence it may appeare he was despised of men and full of sorrowes according to Esais Prophecie cha 53.3 3. He is crucified Gal. 3.13 then which punishment there was at that time none more grieuous ignominious for as it is to be gatherd out of Ps 22.17 the words of Thomas Iohn 20.25 they being strongly stretched vpon the crosse were fastned vnto it with nailes driuē through their hāds feet afterwards being set vpright on high they ended their life in the horrible torments of all their nerues whole body also the death of the crosse was most abhominable pronounced accursed by gods own mouth b Deut 21 23. This curse would the son of god vndergo therby to free vs frō the curse we had deserued that it might appeaer that sin was most abhominable for which god would haue his son vndergo such punishment that euen as death by a tree entred into the world euē so by a tree of the crosse it might be takē out of the world To conclud that the truth might bee answerable to the figure for euen as the sacrifice was lifted vpon the Altar and offered c Lev. 1.9.13 Deut 2-27 so Christ was lifted vp from the earth into the ayre being hanged and killed vpon the Crosse because he must ouercome the powers of the aire Ephes 2.2 Also Iohn 3. 14. And as Moses lift vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the son of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but liue for euer He suffereth betwixt two the eues as a captaine of theeues that the Scripture might bee fulfilled Esa 53.13 He was committed among the transgressors and praied for sinners that he might suffer the punishment which we had deserued and might the second time make vs equall with the Angels in the kingdome of his father by the merit of which punishment hee also sanctified the infamous places appointed for punishment of malefactors as also the punishmēts themselues of malefactors least any man should think that the infamie of them should be any hindrance before God to them which beleeue in him or that they could bee any impediment to mans saluation He was crucified with his hands spread abroad that with the one he might call and inuite the Iewes with the other the Gentiles vnto him offering them his merit and likewise as one that should become iudged of all men should set some on his right hand some on the left 6. He hangeth aliue vpon the crosse three whole houres namely from the sixt houre to the ninth that is frō twelue of the clock after our count til three in the afternoone Which great ignominy of Christ is the reward of our arrogancie and also our greatest glory prize before God by which all our iniquitie is put away Therfore Paul Gal. 6.4 saith God forbid that I should glory in anie thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ 7. He hangeth naked that he might make satisfaction for the sin of our first parents who were disrobed spoyled of the garment of innocency also that he might cloath vs with his innocency glory immortality that he might enrich vs by his pouerty to conclude that such as the first man was dwelling in Paradise such might be the second man at his entrance into Paradise Also lots were cast vpon his garments which thing was also foretold Psal 22.19 that we might beleeue the euents of things shewing vs that this was he which should come 8. He feeleth thirst corporally cōming through the anguish and bitternesse of his griefe through the sense of Gods wrath as also spiritually through a most ardent desire of our saluation 9 In steed of Hippocras or some pretious wine that was wont to be giuen to them who were condemned to die that thereby they might be comforted Prouerb 31 6.7 he is made to drinke a most bitter drinke of vineger and gall mixed together that in him might be fulfilled that which long before was foretold by Dauid Psal 69.22 And that the second Adam might suffer punishment for that sweete iuyce which the first Adam sucked out of the forbidden apple 10 Men of all conditions reuile him the common people the Priests and Scribes the theefe vpon the crosse the souldiers scoffe at his prayers and wrest them to a verie wicked sense as though forsaking God he asked helpe of the creatures 11. He dieth else would the crucifying haue done no good vnlesse the soule had beene pulled away from the bodie because God had said In dying thou shalt die the death Gen. 2.17 12. His side is thrust through with a speare out of which ranne bloud by which the Church springeth and is quickned euen as Eua was formed out of Adams side and water wherewith the Church being new born is washed And from this wound as from a fountaine of life springeth the saluation of the Church comfort and expiation of all sins satisfaction and that washing or purifying which behooued to be done with the bloud is vnderstood to be now accomplished for without the shedding of bloud there is no remission of sinnes Heb. 9.22 Also by this wound the death of Christ was made manifest and certaine for the water which issued out of that wound of his side shewed that the weapon entered euen into the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely that skinne which being full of water encloseth the hart which being wounded it is necessarie that euerie creature so wounded should forthwith die At what time was he crucified At the feast of the Passeouer that he might shew himselfe truly to be that Pascall Lambe which was slayne for the sinnes of the world As the soule of Christ was separated from his bodie for the space of three daies was the Godhead likewise separated from them both or was the Godhead ioyned with the soule and seuered f●om the bodie Neyther saith Damascenus For the Godhead remayned vnseparable from both de Orthod fide and that which the word once tooke vpon him neuer afterwards left But how could it be that the diuine nature should continue vnited to the soule which was in Paradise and the bodie which was in the earth The diuine nature of the Sonne because it is both infinite and present in all places remained whole and vndeuided vnited to both together that is as well to the soule of Christ which was in Paradise as to the bodie which lay liueles in the earth For seeing the nature of God is most simple and so not to be parted or diuided God is not to be said to haue one part in heauen and an other in earth but he is whole in heauen and whole in earth not at seuerall times and by succession but both together which thing no created nature can doe Hence commeth the saying of Augustine It is proper to the whole Trinitie to be whole euerie where in spaces of places not diuided