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A01638 A golden chaine of divine aphorismes written by John Gerhard Doctor of Divinitie and superintendent of Heldburg. Translated by Ralph Winterton fellow of Kings Colledge in Cambridge; Loci communes theologici. English Gerhard, Johann, 1582-1637.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1632 (1632) STC 11769; ESTC S103039 111,208 568

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onely true God blessed for ever 59 In brief thus GOD is Jehovah Elohim that is one Divine Essen●e of Three Persons The Holy and undivided Trinitie in Vnitie CHAP. IV. Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the PERSON and OFFICE of CHRIST 1 AS saving as the knowledge of Christ our Saviour is so acceptable ought the explication of the doctrine of Christ be unto us 2 Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 true God and true Man 3 Therefore whether a man denie Christs Divinitie or Christs Humanitie it is a matter of like danger 4 He is God by eternall generation of the Father He is Man by assumption of the flesh from his Mother 5 For the Word brought not flesh with him down from heaven but assumed the true Humane nature from the bloud of Marie being purified 6 This Assumption farre exceeds the course of nature and the reach of mans understanding For it was wrought by the Holy Ghost after a peculiar manner 7 Not after the manner of men but by a wonderfull overshadowing 8 That a Virgin should conceive without the seed of man That a Virgin should be the Mother of a most holy ofspring That a Virgin should bring forth God This exceeds the bounds of Nature but not the operation of the Holy Ghost 9 The Word assumed the Humane nature not onely true but also entire that is both perfect and free from all stain of sinne 10 But he assumed it into the Vnitie of his Person And therefore the Assumption of the Flesh is the very Personall Vnion of the Word and the Flesh. 11 One Person did not assume another But the second Person of the Trinity assumed the Humane nature 12 Therefore in Christ God is not one and Man another But one and the same is God and Man 13 In Christ there is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one person and another that is two Persons But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one thing and another that is two Natures 14 For so must we hold a Du●litie of Natures that we deny not the most neare and indissoluble Vnitie of Person 15 It is said by the Ancients That the Person onely of the Sonne was incarnate 16 In which manner of speaking the name of Person is not opposed to the divine nature of the Sonne but to the Person of the Father and the Holy Ghost 17 For elsewhere it is said and that truly That all the Divinitie was incarnate but yet onely in on● of the Persons 18 The Person of the Word the divine Nature of the Word do not really differ 19 The Divinitie is entire and perfect in each Person 20 Therefore inasmuchas one of the Persons was incarnate all the Divinitie is said truly to be incarnate to wit in that one Person of the Word 21 The Vnion of the divine and humane Nature in Christ is Personall but not of Persons It is an Vnion of Natures but not Naturall 22 It is also an Vnion inseparable both in respect of time and place 23 For the Flesh which the Word once assumed he shall never put off 24 The Nature which he once united unto himself that doth he never put off 25 The humane Nature assumed doth neither consist by it self nor subsist of it self nor is it without subsistence but having a subsistence in another 26 It hath a subsistence after no ●light manner being supported in the Word but by a most plenarie communication of the whole Person of the Word 27 Therefore since the Incarnation neither must the Person of the Word be said to be without the Flesh nor the Flesh without the Person of the Word 28 What God hath joyned together and what is joyned together in God let no man separate or put asunder 29 Neither must we judge it to be a bare and naked Peristasis approximation or neare position of the united Natures but a most intimate and neare Perichoresis Conjunction or Vnion 30 To note the Vnitie of Person the Ancients say That this Vnion was made indivisibly inseparably indistractibly 31 To note the Dualitie of Natures they say That this Vnion was made without confusion without conversion without alteration without mutation 32 The Flesh remains finite even in this Vnion Therefore there is not an exequation or coextension of Natures 33 The Flesh is made partaker of an infinite subsistence by the Vnion Therefore there is no separation of the Natures through distance of places 34 By reason of this Hypostaticall Vnion it is truely said The Sonne of God is the Sonne of Mary and again The Sonne of Mary is the Sonne of God God is Man and Man is God 35 And these Propositions are fitly called Personall 36 For their foundation consisteth in the Personall Vnion and all their force veritie proprietie and connexion is to be judged by the Personall Vnion of the two Natures 37 Neither can they neither ought they to be referred to Logicall rules seeing that the Incarnation of the Word farre exceeds the understanding of Men and Angels 38 These are not therefore Regular Propositions for they go farre beyond the rules of reason and Logick 39 Neither are they to be called Figurative For the Sonne of God is the Sonne of Man not in a figure but truely and properly 40 Upon the Personall Vnion follows the Communication of properties 41 For seeing that the Deitie and Attributes of God are the self-same thing and the Humanitie hath its own properties nearly pertaining to its Nature Therefore the Vnion of the divine and humane Nature in Christ brings with it a certain Communication of Properties 42 For the two Natures do not subsist apart one from the other but they are united into one Person 43 Therefore neither do they apart or alone each what is proper to its own nature but the Person doth all according to the Properties of each Nature 44 Hence it is that the Properties of one Nature are attributed to the Person in the Concrete 45 The Ancients call this Communication of properties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and most usually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mutuall reciprocation when each makes that its own which is proper to the other 46 The name of the Person is put in the place of the Subject in these Propositions to vindicate the unitie of the Person 47 And words of distinction are added in the Praedicate sometimes expressely but they are alwaies implied and to be understood to prove the distinct Properties of the Natures 48 These Propositions are Reciprocall that is As well that which is divine is praedicated of man as that which is humane is praedicated of God 49 For the Vnion is equall The humane Nature is as well united unto the divine as the divine Nature unto the humane 50 The Sonne of Man is Creatour of Heaven and Earth The Sonne of God suffered Both these are most true 51 Creation is not competent to the Humanitie assumed by condition of Nature but yet it is most truely attributed unto the Sonne
of Man by reason of the Identitie of Person 52 Suffering in like manner is not competent to the Divinitie by condition of Nature but yet by reason of that intimate and ineffable Vnion of Natures it pertaineth to the Sonne of God no lesse then if the divine Nature it self had suffered 53 For the Word by assuming the humane Nature into the Vnity of Person appropriated Personally unto himself all the Properties thereof 54 That is expressed thus by Vigilius Lib. 2. contr Eut. God suffered not in the Propertie of Nature but in the Vnitie of Person 55 Again that Personall Vnion was made for the Office of the Mediatour 56 In which one Nature doth not rest idle or else privately worketh and apart the other doing nothing or somewhat else But each Nature worketh by Communication with the other 57 From hence it is that the names of this Office are competent to Christ and are praedicated of Christ according to both Natures 58 For the actions of both Natures do concurre to one common effect or perfection and the action is of both God and Man 59 The ancients call it a Coenopoeia or a making common and a Periphrasis or Circumloquution 60 Thirdly in the Office of Mediatour the humane Nature doth not onely the actions of the Humanitie but because it is enriched with divine energies by reason of the most pure Vnion unto the Word Therefore it both is also is called the organ or instrument of the Deitie not separated or divided but Personally united in which with which and by which the Word worketh in the Office of the Mediatour Damasc 3. Orthod fid cap. 17. 61 The Divine Nature in Christ inasmuchas it is most perfect was nothing enriched in this union but there was a great addition made unto the Humane Nature inasmuchas besides above and beyond its own Essentiall Properties it hath received Divine excellencies in and from this Hypostaticall union which excellencies it retaineth for ever 62 The Ancients call it Super-exaltation glorification participation of divine dignitie participation of divine power melioration riches ascent 63 That this collation of excellencies upon Christ was according to the Humane Nature the Scripture doth evidently witnesse and all the godly of old with great consent approve 64 When as therefore such things are said to be conferred by the Father upon the Sonne in time we must understand that they are conferred according to the Humane Nature 65 That so the relation may be between the Father giving and the Sonne receiving in time not in respect of the Divine Nature according to which he is Essentially one with the Father and doth likewise the same things that the Father doth Joh. 5.19 but in respect of the Humane Nature which is capable and hath need of these things 66 Now there are conferred immense and infinite gifts indeed to wit All power divine glorie all the treasures of wisdome a quickning efficacie power to execute judgement present rule in heaven and earth 67 Neither yet must we here once think of or imagine a naturall effusion of divine properties But as the Vnion is Personall so likewise is the Communication Personall 68 The Divinitie of the Word suffred no falling off of its own properties neither are those properties made proper to the flesh by this communication 69 But the Divine Nature of the Sonne retaining its own properties within the most neare complexure of the Person and notwithstanding assuming the Humane Nature unto the communion and Vnitie of the Person assumeth also the same Nature unto the communication of the divine properties that is In and with the Humane Nature and by it as by an Hypostaticall organ or instrument exerteth or sheweth forth its properties 70 Therefore the foundation of that Communication consisteth properly in the Assumption 71 For the Humane Nature did not assume the Divine But the Word is the Person assuming and in it and by it is the Humane Nature assumed 72 The union of the Natures is equall but so that in this union the Word is truely said to assume and the Flesh to be assumed 73 And therefore although the union of the Natures is equall yet the condition of the Natures united is unequall 74 That the Flesh is glorified by the Majestie of the Deitie assuming that I know and confesse But That the Deitie suffred any injurie by the Flesh assumed that I deny August cont Fel. c. 11. 75 To conclude That communication was made in the very first moment of the Incarnation forasmuch as it is an Essentiall consequent of the union 76 Yet the state of his Exinanition or emptying of himself interceded for us and for our salvation 77 For Christ our Mediatour that he might suffer and die for us in the dayes of his flesh shewed not forth the full light of the glorie and Majestie communicated unto him according to his Humane Nature 78 I say He did not shew it forth and yet I do not say that he was altogether without it He emptied himself not by laying aside his glorie and power altogether but by withdrawing the use of his splendour and glorie 79 To this State of his Exinanition or emptying of himself pertain his Conception his Being born in the wombe his Nativitie his Increase in Age and Wisdome his Obedience in the form of a servant even unto the death of the crosse and after that his Buriall 80 After the Exinanition followed Christs glorious Exaltation to which pertain his Descent into Hell his Resurrection from the Dead his Ascending into Heaven and his Sitting at the right hand of God 81 All which pertain to the Office of Mediatour for which that wonderfull Vnion was made of the Divine and Humane Nature and which also Christ fulfilleth according to both Natures 82 The diversitie or dualitie of Natures in Christ and the Vnitie of Person was available unto this That what was needfull for the redemption of man if the Humane Nature could not the Divine might effect and what was not beseeming the Divine Nature in any wise that the Humane Nature might do or suffer 83 And so he was not to be one and another but one and the same both perfect God and perfect Man that by the Humane Nature he might pay what was due and by the Divine Nature effect what was expedient Anselm 2. Cur Deus Homo cap. 18. 84 Bare Man could not satisfie and God owed nothing Therefore God was made Man that he which owed nothing for himself might make satisfaction for us 85 This Office of a Mediatour Christ so executeth that he is unto us both a Prophet a Priest and a King 86 The Propheticall office consisteth in the Revelation of the Gospell and in the institution and conservation of the Ministerie 87 The parts of his Priestly office are Satisfaction and Intercession 88 The Kingdome of Christ is considered either in this life or in the other 89 In this life is the Kingdome of Power and Grace That is his
That he thereby might learn Conformitie He gave his Law a Light for man to see T●e Way to Life and blest Eternitie Do this and live Do this and Life is due But no man living ever this could do No man but one And that ●e this might do As he was Man so was ●e God most true God sent his Sonne as he had Promised According to the Time determined He was Conceiv'd and Borne and Liv'd and Died All without sinne And we are justified He did fulfill the Law which none could do And freed us from the Curse to us most due He by his Life for us hath merited Eternall Life to be inherited And by his Death which he once suffered From Death for ever us delivered But that we may these benefits partake We must Repent and all our Sinnes forsake We must by Faith in Christ be Justified And by the Holy Spirit Sanctified Now to this end Christ left his Testament The Gospell and a Twofold Sacrament And sent his Spirit for to Sanctifie Those whom hereafter he will Glorifie Heare and obey Christs will and Testament Wash and be clean Receive his Sacrament Obey the inward Calling of the Spirit Be Constant And Eternall Life inherit READER I have presented to thine eye The Summe of Gerhards whole Divinitie The Contents of each Chapter in this Book The First Chapter containeth the Summe of all the rest Chapter Concerning Page 2 The Holy Scripture 1 3 God and his Attributes 18 4 The Person Office of Christ. 33 5 The Creation and the Angells 52 6 The Providence of God 66 7 Election and Reprobation 81 8 The Image of God in Man before his fall 91 9 Originall sinne 105 10 Free-will 122 11 The Law 136 12 The Gospell 150 13 Repentance 174 14 Faith 197 15 Good Works 217 16 The Sacraments 239 17 Baptisme 260 18 The Lords Supper 283 19 The Church 306 20 The Ecclesiasticall Ministerie 324 21 The Civill Magistracie 345 22 Wedlock 361 23 Our latter end or The foure last things 37● CHAP. I. A DESCRIPTION OR REPRESENTATION of the Theologicall places or Heads of Divinitie contained in this book together with their order and connexion 1THe onely and proper Principle of Divinitie is the word of God 2 For God came forth from the secret throne of his Majesty and manifested himself unto men in the word 3 At sundrie times and in diverse manners God spake in time past unto the fathers by the Prophets In these last dayes he hath spoken unto us by his Sonne and his Apostles Hebr. 1.1 2. 4 That word of God was first preached by the Prophets and Apostles and afterwards the chief and necessarie heads of divine revelation were penned by them according to the will of God Iren. lib. 3. cap. 1. 5 Therefore the undoubted word of God cannot at this day any where be found but in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 6 From this word of God floweth Theologie and is busied about it propounding unto us the oracles of God Rom. 3.2 7 Now Theologie is as the name it self imports A doctrine concerning God 8 And by this doctrine men are instructed concerning the essence and will of God unto their salvation 9 And this is life eternall To know the onely true God and Jesus Christ which came in the flesh John 17.3 10 The doctrine concerning the Essence of God is absolved in this question What God is to wit Jehova Elohim One in Essence three in Persons 11 For God hath so manifested himself that in the divine Essence being but one and that undivided there are three Persons neither more nor lesse to wit the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost 12 The Father is the first Person neither made nor created nor begotten nor proceeding 13 The Sonne is the second Person not made nor created but begotten of the Father from all eternitie 14 Who in the fulnesse of time took upon him our humane nature in which and through which he payed the price of our redemption 15 The Holy Ghost is the third person not made nor created nor begotten but proceeding from the Father and the Sonne from all eternity 16 We must judge of the Will of God by his decrees made from all eternitie 17 Whereof there are two more principall The decree of Creation and the decree of Reparation or as the Greek words signifie Creation and Recreation Formation and Reformation 18 What those decrees were the fulfilling of them in time doth declare 19 For what God doth and in what manner he doth in time the same thing and in the same manner he decreed to do from all eternitie 20 The reason of which assertion depends upon the immutabilitie of Gods will 21 Creation made in time is the manifestation of the decree concerning the creation of all things made from all eternitie 22 And it is the production of the Angels Men and all other creatures in the six first dayes of the world wrought by God the Father through the Sonne in the Holy Ghost to his own glorie 23 A great part of the Angels fell away from God The rest being confirmed in goodnesse do laud and praise God and are ministring Spirits for the good of men 24 Our first parents Adam and Eve in like manner at the instigation of Satan transgressed the law of God which was written in their hearts and proclaimed by the mouth of God 25 So then by this fall of theirs the image of God was quite defaced in them and their nature was corrupted with sinne 26 Whereupon their posterity also were and are to this day born stark-naked of originall righteousnesse and in a miserable manner corrupted with sinne 27 Through the contagion whereof all the powers and faculties in the soul of man are so infected that there is little or no light of Reason left and scarce any power at all in the will even about external things 28 God who is omniscient could not but know that our first parents would fall and therefore of his infinite mercie he made a decree concerning the Reparation or Redemption of man from all eternity 29 What that decree was the fulfilling of the same in like manner doth declare He sent in time his Sonne to be our Redeemer and Mediatour Therefore he decreed to send him from all eternitie 30 God by his word offereth the benefits of a Mediatour unto all and applieth them unto those that beleeve Therefore from all eternitie he decreed to offer them unto all by the word and to apply them unto those that beleeve 31 This decree in Scripture is called Predestination of which we must not judge but à posteriori that is by the manifestation thereof 32 For the fulfilling of the decree concerning the Reparation of man God hath appointed the Word and the Sacraments 33 The Word is reduced to two chief heads the Law and the Gospel 34 The Law is the doctrine of works Therefore it manifesteth unto us the corruption of our nature
way of Inherence 31 Immortalitie was a part of that divine Image For God created man to be immortall and made him to be an Image of his own Eternitie Wisd. 2.23 32 That death of the body unto which we are all subject since the fall of Adam is not the naturall condition of man But it is derived upon us as a punishment for the wickednes of his transgression 33 It is not a debt due unto our nature as it was at first created by God but it is our just merit and wages for falling away from God 34 At what time man opened the gate of sinne unto Satan knocking death entred in upon him and so passed upon all men Rom. 5.12 35 That immortalitie unto which man was created as likewise the whole Image of God was a naturall and internall propertie of the humane nature 36 In the body there was a most exact harmonie of all the qualities and it was governed by the soule which was created after the Image of God unto immortalitie 37 As therefore since the fall VVee are by nature the children of wrath Ephes. 2.3 So before his fall the first man was by nature the Son of grace and life 38 But the Degree of Immortalitie which was in our nature at the first institution and the degree that shall be at the perfect restitution are farre different the one from the other 39 The Immortalitie of the first man was That hee had power not to die but the Immortalitie of the Elect shall be hereafter That they cannot die August 6. de Gen. ad lit cap. 25. 40 And further seeing that Immortalitie is a part of the divine Image from hence it is apparant That even in the body of man there is some glimpse of the divine Image 41 The comlinesse of the clay did argue also the beauty of the soul. Bern. Serm. 24. Sup. Cant. Col. 564. 42 If any one ask whether Eve was made after the Image of God or no we answer that the name of Image is taken two wayes 43 Primarily and properly the Image of God was resplendent in the conformitie of the soule and all the powers faculties of man with the Law of God which was common to both sexes saving the diversitie of degrees 44 Secundarily the Image of God was resplendent in that externall priviledge of Dominion and rule the eminencie whereof properly belonged unto the man 45 And that there might be nothing wanting to mans felicity beside the grace of soule and body God added also the grace of place for he gave him his dwelling-place in Paradise 46 Man was created by God partly Spirituall and partly Corporeall Therefore God gave unto him also a twofold Paradise both a Spirituall and a Corporeall 47 The Corporeall or Terrestriall Paradise was a Type and School of the Spirituall and Celestiall Paradise that is great tranquillitie and joy in the minde of man 48 If any man be desirous that we should show unto him in what part of the earth the Corporeall Paradise was situate That we will doe if he will first plainly show unto us the situation of the earth as it was before the floud 49 That the garden of Paradise is yet extant and to be seen then will wee beleeve when any man can bring us a bough or a branch from thence or else demonstrate it unto us upon a good foundation 50 It is certain that Henoch and Elias live in Paradise But in what Paradise Not the Terrestriall but the Celestiall where Christ promised the good thief that hee should be Luk. 23.43 51 There were two trees especially which were a great grace to the garden of Paradise to wit the tree of Life the tree of Knowledge of good and evill Gen. 2.9 52 In the tree of Life there was set before man a Preservative against sicknesse and old age as also a Type of eternall beatitude 53 The tree of Knowledge was mans Temple and Altar and the service which he was to have performed unto God was To abstain from the fruit thereof 54 After mans fall it was so called from the Event For by tasting of the fruit thereof man learnt by wofull experience what a great good he had deprived himself of by reason of his sinne and what a great evil he drew upon himself by his disobedience 55 As concerning the question about the production of souls whether by way of Propagation or by a dayly and immediate Creation we do not dislike the modestie of those which say That it is sufficient for them to beleeve and know whither they shall come by living a godly life although they be ignorant from whence they came August 10. de Gen. ad lit cap. 23. 56 Let me be ignorant of the originall of my soul if so be that I can come to the knowledge of the propagation of originall sinne and the redemption of souls Aug. Epist. 157. ad Optat. 57 If by the Image of God we understand according to the Scripture phrase true righteousnesse and holinesse The Holy Ghost witnesseth that we have lost it and we finde it true by wofull experience 58 For what is Originall sinne but the losse and want of the di●vine Image which succeeded in the place of Originall righteousnesse 59 This doctrine concerning the Image of God leads us as it were by the hand that so we may come to the knowledge of Gods mercy and our own misery and further establisheth our hope 60 All laud and praise be given to God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost To the Father which created us in Adam after his own Image to the Sonne which merited for us the renewing of that Image and to the Holy Ghost by whom this Image beginneth again to be renewed in us CHAP. IX Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning ORIGINALL SINNE That is The Fall of our first parents and the corruption of nature which followed thereupon and is propagated unto their posteritie 1 THe first man continued not in the integritie and perfection wherein he was created and therefore it descended not upon his posteritie by any right of inheritance 2 He followed the deceitfull perswasion of the Serpent and so fell into sinne and the transgression of Gods commandment 3 In that naturall Serpent the infernall Serpent lay lurking 4 So then the Serpent which by his subtiltie deceived our first parents was disguised For there was a Divell in the shape of a Serpent 5 He sets upon the woman first being the weaker and not to be compared with man for the gift and endowment of wisdome 6 By a treacherous and deceitfull question about the meaning of Gods commandment he sollicits her to a very dangerous kinde of doubting 7 Outwardly with a faigned voice he propounds a question unto her Inwardly he wounds her soul with venomous darts and inspires into her the poison of doubting 8 Afterwards being grown more audacious and bold by reason of his successe he turns Eve● doubting into
an open deniall 9 He accuseth God of Envie and Malice being himself more malicious By a faigned pretence and promise of divine excellency and wisdome he deceived her being himself most remote from divine wisdome 10 The Causes then of our first Fathers fall were the Devill seducing and himself freely and willingly consenting 11 We must not in any case make God to have an hand or beare a part in mans fall because God is good and the authour of nothing but that which is good 12 As God created man at the first so it was his will that he should alwaies have continued And therefore God did not by any secret decree or command force him to fall 13 God is not the authour of that thing whereof he is the punisher and avenger The iniquitie which he punisheth is not of his doing Fulgent lib. 1. ad Monim 14 God gave unto man before his fall a perfect power that hee might have not fallen and an entire will that if he would he might have had no will to fall and further he added a most severe commination of death that so he might have been kept from falling 15 Man was not created that he should have a will to sinne and yet he was set in that libertie that he might have a will but he was also furnished with such light that if he would he might have had no such will 16 For God hath no need of the righteousnesse of the upright and straight or the iniquitie of the crooked and perverse August 11. de Gen. ad lit Cap. 7. 17 No perfection is added unto God by his externall works which are but the prints and footsteps of his inward perfection 18 Incredulitie and unbelief according to the order that Moses hath set down in his description was the first sinne of man 19 As long as the word and faith is retained in the heart there is no proud swelling or lifting up of ones self against God 20 Whatsoever was first for order of internall intention certainly incredulitie was the first sin for order in the act of externall commission 21 Neither had the minde of man being illuminated with such divine light as it was ever turned away from God by pride unlesse first it had made a secession or revolting from the word 22 The Apostle denies that Adam was deceived 1. Tim. 2.14 which wee must understand of the manner and order of being deceived 23 Though wee should grant that Adam was not deceived by another yet he was deceived by himselfe 25 It is an idle question to ask whether of the two sinned more grievously Adam or Eve They sinned both unlike indeed for Sex but alike for Pride Aug. 11. de Gen. ad lit cap. 35. 26 The opening of their eyes which followed immediately upon their fall was nothing else but the sense of their sin and the sting of a terrified conscience 27 They saw that they were naked that is bestripped of the robe of integritie innocencie with which they were invested at their first creation They knew before their fall that they were naked but their nakednesse was such as was neither shamefull nor disgracefull 28 They felt after their fall that their flesh was incited to lust and that the law of their members was shamefully repugnant to the Law of their minde 28 What great darknesse seized upon their understanding presently after their fall it is apparant from hence in that they thought with fig leaves to hide themselves from his sight whose eyes are much clearer then the sunne 29 Fain would they have been concealed from him from whom nothing can be concealed and hide their flesh from his sight who is the beholder of the heart August 11. de Gen. ad lit cap. 34. 30 With their blindnesse of minde there was also joyned the trembling of heart For they were affrighted with the shaking of a leafe who before were delighted with the presence and conference of God 31 They are called before Gods Tribunall or Judgement-seat and before him their cause is examined and so punishment follows close upon their sinne 32 This sinne of our first parents corrupted and putrified the humane nature which was all in them and no part in any other Anselm conc virg cap. 2. 33 Adam was and in him were we all Adam was undone and in him are we all undone Ambros. in cap. 15. Luc. 34 If the parents lands be confiscate their children lose their inheritance 35 From a corrupted root spring forth evil fruits from an impure fountain flow forth filthy waters and of parents which are leprous children also are begotten which are leprous 36 Even so of our first parents being destitute of originall righteousnesse and infected with the pollution of sinne such children are begotten as they themselves that is destitute of righteousnesse and infected with sinne 37 For Adam begat a sonne not after the Image of God but in his own likenesse that is corrupted with sinne 38 The Personall sinne of Adam corrupted his Nature and the corruption of Nature is by carnall generation propagated unto the person of his ofspring 39 Adam sinned not as a private man but as the lump masse and head of all mankinde 40 As his Nature so likewise the corruption of his Nature is propagated unto his posteritie As his sinne so also the guilt which is a consequent of his sinne 41 And this is that which we call Originall sinne which whosoever they be that deny or extenuate they detract exceedingly from the grace of God 42 They which plead so much for Nature are enemies unto Grace 43 Concerning this Originall sin not onely the most cleare oracles of the Holy Ghost beare witnes but also all Actuall sins the grievous weight and burden of divers calamities and death it self and likewise regeneration which is necessarie for all men towards the attainment of eternall life 44 Therefore vain and frivolous is that which is said by Pelagius That sinne came into the world by imitation not by propagation 45 For death which is the wages of sinne raigned even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression Rom. 5.14 46 And we are by nature the children of wrath and not by imitation as the Apostle teacheth Ephes. 2.3 47 This sinne is called Originall not from the originall of the universall nature or the humane nature but from the originall of every person descended from Adam since his fall 48 Moreover it is called Originall in reference to Actuall sinnes whereof it is the common head and fountain 49 As for the quidditie of the thing it is not onely the privation of originall righteousnesse but it is also the position of a vitious qualitie and guilt which is a consequent or follower of them both 50 Hence it is that from ou● parents we are damned before we are born Bern. in Med. cap. 2. Col. 1190. 51 Evill concupiscence in which the power and force of originall sinne doth chiefly appeare is
the Soule into nothing but the departing of the Soule out of the House of the Body The Soule cannot be destroyed Matth. 10.28 11 The Scripture maketh mention but of two receptacles of Soules separated from their bodies The one of the godly the other of the wicked 12 Away then with Purgatorie away with that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or night and sleeping of Soules betweene the Day of Death and the Day of Judgement Away with Pythagoras his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Transmigration of Soules away with Apparitions of Soules 13 For there is no middle place where one can be out of Punishment if he be not in the Kingdome no place where one can be out of the Divells companie if he hath not Fellowship with Christ. August de Pecc Mor. Remiss Cap. 2. 14 Before the Vniversall Resurrection the greater world shall passe away and after that shall follow the Vniversall Judgement 15 Many of the ancients were of opinion that the World should passe away by the Change of Qualitie onely and not by the Abolition of Substance 16 But the Scripture useth words very Emphaticall Heaven and Earth shall passe away Matth. 24.35 Luk. 22.33 17 The Key which is to open our Graves and the Pledge of our Resurrection is the Resurrection of Christ our Head 18 The Resurrection of our bodies is confirmed by manifest Testimonies of the Holy Spirit in the Scripture and they are often repeated 19 The Preludes or forerunners of our Resurrection are the particular examples of those which were raised up againe to life in the Old and New Testament whom Tertullian calls the Candidates of immortalitie 20 Man was at the first both in Body and Soule created for immortalitie The Body is the Soules instrument by which it worketh in actions good or bad The body of the godly is the Temple of the Holy Ghost Yea our bodies are fed with the quickning Body and Bloud of Christ. And how then can they alwayes remaine in the Grave 21 God is the Authour of our Resurrection But Christ is the Finisher thereof in and with his humane nature assumed 22 Not onely all flesh but even the same flesh that was shall be raised up againe 23 Their change in a moment which shall be found alive upon Earth at the last day shall be to them in stead of Death and Resurrection from the dead 24 Neither shall Christ onely raise us up but he shall be also our Judge Joh. 5.27 The Father hath given him authoritie to exequute Judgement 25 Christ when he cometh to Judge the world shall appeare in the same nature which he united unto himself by his Incarnation That Flesh shall sit Judge which stood before the Judge That Flesh shall Judge which was it self formerly Judged 26 This Vniversall Judgement Gods Truth Justice do require 27 The exact Forme Manner and Proceeding in Judgement at the last day Experience it self will then better teach then any humane understanding can now conceive 28 Let us whilst we are here pray unto God with sighes and grones to be delivered from the Sentence of Condemnation in that day Let us now heare the Voice of Invitation that then we may heare the Voice of Consolation 29 After Sentence is once passed immediately followes Execution Then shall they which are set at the right hand of the Judge enter into Life everlasting and they which are on the left shall be cast into Everlasting fire Matth. 25.34.41 30 The Blessednesse of eternall Life comprehendeth in it the Privation and Absence of all Evill and the Presence and Fruition of all Good 31 Wee shall be Freed and delivered from all Sinne and from all Punishment due unto sinne 32 Our vile Body shall be fashioned like unto Christ his glorious Body Philip. 3.21 But there shall be great difference in glorie 33 We shall see God Without end we shall Love him alwayes Without loathing and praise him evermore Without being wearied August 22. de Civit. Dei cap. 30. 34 Vision shall succeed in the place of Faith Fruition in the place of Hope and Charitie here onely Inchoate shall be there Consummate 35 God shall be fulnes of Light to the Vnderstanding superabundance of Peace to the Will and continuance of Eternitie to the Memorie Bern. Serm. 11. Super. Cant. Col. 519. 36 The Saints shall Rejoyce for the Pleasantnesse of Place which they shall possesse for the sweet Companie with whome they shall raigne for the Glorie of their Bodies which they shall put on for the World which they have contemned and for Hell which they have escaped Bonavent in Dioet Cap. 50. 37 Let us then Pant and Breathe for earnest desire after that Life whose King is the Trinitie whose Law is Charitie and whose Measure is Eternitie 38 Neither shall our Being be subject unto Death nor our Knowledge unto Errour nor our Love unto Offence Sphinx Phil. pag. 5. 39 We shall see God face to face we shall heare him speake immediately unto us 40 The Elect shall have Wisdome in the highest degree Righteousnesse in full perfection Joy which is everlasting and shall Sing Prayse and Glorie unto God without end 41 All the Elect Salvation shall see But Glorie in a different degree 42 It hath not at any time entred into the heart of man to conceive what glorie God hath prepared for his Elect. 1 Cor. 2.9 And if his Heart is not able to conceive it much lesse is his Tongue able to expresse it 43 To the Eternall Life of the blessed is opposed the Eternall Death of the damned which in the Revelation is called the Second Death 44 The life of the damned shall be to be alwayes dying and the death of the damned to be alwaies living If it be life why doth it kill and if it be death why doth it endure 45 The damned shall so live that they shall be alwayes dying and so dye that they shall be alwayes living Bern. in Med. Devot Cap. 3. Col. 193. 46 In the Flesh shall they be tormented with Fire and in the Soule with the Worme of Conscience Ibid. 47 It is the Eternitie of the Punishments which beyond all measure increaseth their torments laying upon them a weight unsupportable 48 For to be tormented without end this is that which goes beyond all the bounds of desperation Isidor Clar. Orat. 12. 49 Grievous is the Torment of the damned for the Bitternesse of th● Punishments But it is more grievous for the Diversitie of the Punishments But most grievous for the Eternitie of the Punishments Dionys. in 18. Apocalyps fol. 301. 50 The Gate shall be shut upon them Matth. 25.10 Understand the Gate of Indulgence the Gate of Mercie the Gate of Hope the Gate of Consolation and the Gate of Good Works 51 To be for ever deprived of the beatificall vision of God goes beyond all the Punishments in Hell 52 Being squeezed under the unsupportable weight of Punishments they shall wish they had no being but it shall be all in vaine They shall desire to die but death shall ●lee from them Revel 9.6 53 They shall roare for the very disquietnesse of heart they shall rage for madnesse and gnash their teeth There shall be weeping for griefe and gnashing of teeth for madnesse Bern. Ser. 8. in Psal. 91. 54 Of all which some have a tast even in this Life 55 The Companie of the Divells and the Qualiti● of the Place do exc●edingly increase the Torments of the Damned 56 Neither shall the Torments of the Damned be onely Eternall but they shall also be Without all Intermission at any time The smoake of their Torments ascendeth up for ever and ever Revel 14.11 57 As in Heaven one is more glorious then another So likewise in Hell one shall be more miserable then another August in Enchirid. Cap. 3. 58 We are very curious to know where Hell is But we are not so carefull to learne how we may escape it Our thoughts were better spent in meditating upon it 59 When we sit downe to eat and drink and when we rise from table againe when we lye downe to sleepe and when we rise up againe at all times and in all places it is very good to thinke upon Hell 60 For To thinke upon Hell preserves a man from falling into it Chrysost. Hom. 44. in Matth. 61 Doest thou think to quench the flames of Hell by not speaking of it or Doest thou think thou kindlest the flame thereof by speaking of it Whether thou speakest of it or no the flame is alwayes there alike Idem in Homil 2. in 2. Thess. 62 He deliver us from eternall death who himself died for us He bring us unto eternall Life who himselfe is the Prince of Life blessed for ever To whome with the Father and the Holy Spirit be all honour and glorie World without end Amen FINIS