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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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neither God nor man for things mingled together cannot retain the name of one of the simples as hony and oyle being mingled together cannot be called hony or oyle 2. The properties of the Godhead cannot agree to the properties of the Manhood nor the properties of the Manhood to the Godhead For as the Godhead cannot thirst no more can the Manhood be in all or many place at once therefore the Godhead was neither turned nor transfused into the Manhood but both the divine nature keepeth entire all his essentiall properties to it selfe so that the humanity is neither omnipotent omniscient omnipresent c. and the humane keepeth also his properties and actions though oft that which is proper to the one nature is spoken of the person denominated from the other which is by reason of the union of both natures into one person The glory of the Godhead being more plentifully communicated with the Manhood after his resurrection did it not then swallow up the truth thereof as a whole sea one drop of oyle No for these two natures continued still distinct in substance properties and actions and still remained one and the same Christ. Why did he not take the nature of Angels upon him Heb. 2. 16. Because he had no meaning to save Angels for that they had committed the sin against the holy Ghost falling maliciously into rebellion against God without temptation Are not the elect Angels any way benefited by the humane nature of Christ No his humanity only reacheth to sinfull mankind for if he had meant to have benefited Angels by taking another nature he would have taken their nature upon him How is it then said Eph. 1. 10. Col. 1. 20. that he reconciled things in heaven That is to be understood of the Saints then in heaven and not any way of the Angels although by the second Person of the Trinity the Angels were elected and are by him confirmed so that they shall stand for evermore Why was it requisite that our Mediatour should be Man was it not sufficient that he was God No it was further requisite that he should be man also because 1. Our Saviour must suffer and die for our sins which the Godhead could not doe 2. Our Saviour also must perform obedience to the law which in his Godhead he could not doe 3. He must be man of kin to our nature offending that he might satisfie the justice of God in the same nature wherein it was offended Rom. 8. 3. 1 Cor. 15. 21. Heb. 2. 14 15 16. For the righteousnesse of God did require that the same nature which had committed the sin should also pay and make amends for sin and consequently that onely nature should be punished which did offend in Adam Man therefore having sinned it was requisite for the appeasing of Gods wrath that man himself should die for sin the Man Christ Jesus offering up himself a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour unto God for us 1 Tim. 2. 5. Heb. 2. 9 10. 14. 15. Rom. 5. 12. 15. Eph. 5. 2. 4. It is for our comfort that thereby we might have free accesse to the throne of Grace and might find help in our necessities having such an high Priest as was in all things tempted like unto our selves and was acquainted with our infirmities in his own person Heb. 4. 15 16 5. 2. 5. As we must be saved so likewise must we be sanctified by one of our own nature that as in the first Adam there was a spring of humane nature corrupted derived unto us by naturall generation so in the second Adam there might be a fountain of the same nature restored which might be derived unto us by spirituall regeneration What comfort then have you by this that Christ is man Hereby I am assured that Christ is fit to suffer the punishment of my sin and being man himselfe is also meet to be more pitifull and mercifull unto men What by this that he is both God and man By this I am most certainly assured that he is able most fully to finish the work of my salvation seeing that as he is man he is meet to suffer for sin as he is God he is able to bear the punishment of sin and to overcome the suffering being by the one fit and by the other able to discharge the office of a Mediatour Mans nature can suffer death but not overcome it the divine nature cannot suffer but can overcome all things our Mediatour therefore being partaker of both natures is by the one made fit to suffer by the other able to overcome whatsoever was to be laid upon him for the making of our peace Are these his natures separated No verily for though they be still distinguished as hath been said in substance properties and actions yet were they inseparably joyned together in the first moment the holy Virgin conceived and made not two but one person of a Mediatour 2 Cor. 13. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 18. 1 Cor. 15. 27 28. The holy Ghost sanctifying the seed of the woman which otherwise could not be joyned to the Godhead and uniting two natures in one person God and man in one Christ Luc. 1. 35. 42. Rom. 9. 5. 1 Tim. 2. 5. Joh. 1. 14. a mystery that no Angel much lesse man is able to comprehend Why so For that the manhood of our Saviour Christ is personally united unto the Godhead whereas the Angels of much greater glory then men are not able to abide the presence of God Esa. 6. 2. Was this union of the body and soul with the Godhead by taking of the manhood to the Godhead or by infusing the Godhead into the manhood By a divine and miraculous assuming of the humane nature which before had no subsistence in it self to have his beeing and subsistence in the divine leaving of it one naturall personship which otherwise in ordinary men maketh a perfect person for otherwise there should be two Persons and two Sons one of the holy Virgin Mary and another of God which were most prejudiciall to our salvation What then is the personall union of the two natures in Christ The assuming of the humane nature having no subsistency in it selfe into the person of the Son of God Joh. 1. 14. Heb. 2. 16. and in that person uniting it to the Godhead so making one Christ God and man Mat. 1. 23. Can you shadow out this conjunction of two natures in one person by some earthly resemblance We see one tree may be set into another and it groweth in the stock thereof and becommeth one and the same tree though there be two natures or kind of fruit still remaining So in the Son of God made man though there be two natures yet both being united into one person there is but one Son of God and one Christ. What was the cause that the person of the Sonne of God did not joyn it self to a perfect person of man 1. Because that then there
yeers And finally that hee who was Davids Son should yet bee Davids Lord a case which plunged the greatest Rabbies among the Pharisees who had not yet learned this wisdome nor known this knowledge of the holy The untying of this knot dependeth upon the right understanding of the wonderfull conjunction of the divine and humane Nature in the unity of the Person of our Redeemer For by reason of the strictnesse of this personall union whatsoever may bee verifyed of either of those Natures the same may bee truely spoken of the whole Person from whethersoever of the Natures it bee denominated For the clearer conceiving whereof wee may call to minde that which the Apostle hath taught us touching our Saviour In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily that is to say by such a personall and reall union as doth inseparably and everlastingly conjoyn that infinite Godhead with his finite Manhood in the unity of the self-same individuall Person Hee in whom that fulnesse dwelleth is the PERSON that fulnesse which so doth dwell in him is the NATVRE Now there dwelleth in him not onely the fulnesse of the Godhead but the fulnesse of the Manhood also For wee beleeve him to bee both perfect God begotten of the substance of his Father before all worlds and perfect Man made of the substance of his Mother in the fulnesse of time And therefore wee must hold that there are two distinct Natures in him and two so distinct that they doe not make one compounded nature but still remain uncompounded and unconfounded together But Hee in whom the fulnesse of the Manhood dwelleth is not one and hee in whom the fulnesse of the Godhead another but hee in whom the fulnesse of both those natures dwelleth is one and the same Immanuel and consequently it must bee beleeved as firmly that hee is but one Person And here wee must consider that the divine Nature did not assume an humane Person but the divine Person did assume an humane Nature and that of the three divine Persons it was neither the first nor the third that did assume this Nature but it was the middle Person who was to bee the middle one that must undertake this mediation betwixt God and us which was otherwise also most requisite as well for the better preservation of the integrity of the blessed Trinity in the Godhead as for the higher advancement of Mankinde by means of that relation which the second Person the Mediator did beare unto his Father For if the fulnesse of the Godhead should have thus dwelt in any humane person there should then a fourth Person necessarily have been added unto the Godhead and if any of the three Persons beside the second had been born of a woman there should have been two Sons in the Trinity Whereas now the Son of God and the Son of the blessed Virgin being but one Person is consequently but one Son and so no alteration at all made in the relations of the Persons of the Trinity Againe in respect of us the Apostle sheweth that for this very end God sent his own SON made of a Woman that WE might receive the adoption of SONS and thereupon maketh this inference Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a SON and if a SON then an HEIRE of God through Christ intimating thereby that what relation Christ hath unto God by Nature wee being found in him have the same by Grace By nature hee is the onely begotten Son of the Father but this is the high grace hee hath purchased for us that as many as received him to them hee gave power or priviledge to become the Sons of God even to them that beleeve on his Name For although hee reserve to himselfe the preheminence which is due unto him in a peculiar manner of being the first born among many brethren yet in him and for him the rest likewise by the grace of adoption are all of them accounted as first-bornes So God biddeth Moses to say unto Pharaoh Israel is my Son even my first born And I say unto thee Let my son goe that hee may serve mee and if thou refuse to let him goe behold I will slay thy son even thy first born And the whole Israel of God consisting of Jew and Gentile is in the same sort described by the Apostle to bee the generall assembly and Church of the first born inrolled in heaven For the same reason that maketh them to bee Sons to wit their incorporation into Christ the self-same also maketh them to be first-bornes so as however it fall out by the grounds of our Common Law by the rule of the Gospel this consequence will still hold true if children then heirs heirs of God and joynt-heires with Christ. And so much for the SON the Person assuming The Nature assumed is the seed of Abraham Heb. 2. 16. the seed of David Rom. 1. 3. the seed of the Woman Gen. 3. 15. the WORD the second person of the Trinity being made FLESH that is to say Gods own Son being made of a Woman and so becomming truely and really the fruite of her wombe Neither did hee take the substance of our nature onely but all the properties also and the qualities thereof so as it might bee said of him as it was of Elias and the Apostles that hee was a man subject to like passions as wee are Yea hee subjected himself in the dayes of his flesh to the same weaknesse which we find in our own fraile nature and was compassed with like infirmities and in a word in all things was made like unto his brethren sin onely excepted Wherein yet wee must consider that as hee took upon him not an humane Person but an humane Nature so it was not requisite hee should take upon him any Personall infirmities such as are madnesse blindenesse lamenesse and particular kindes of diseases which are incident to some onely and not to all men in generall but those alone which doe accompany the whole Nature of mankinde such as are hungring thirsting wearinesse griefe paine and mortality Wee are further here also to observe in this our Melchisedec that as he had no Mother in regard of one of his natures so he was to have no Father in regard of the other but must bee born of a pure and immaculate Virgin without the help of any man according to that which is writen The Lord hath created a new thing in the earth A woman shall compasse a man And this also was most requisite as for other respects so for the exemption of the assumed nature from the imputation and pollution of Adams sin For sin having by that one man entred into the world every Father becommeth an Adam unto his childe and conveyeth the corruption of his nature unto all those whom hee doth beget Therefore our Saviour assuming the substance of our nature but
not by the ordinary way of naturall generation is thereby freed from all the touch and taint of the corruption of our flesh which by that means onely is propagated from the first man unto his posterity Whereupon hee being made of man but not by man and so becomming the immediate fruit of the womb and not of the loyns must of necessity bee acknowledged to be that HOLY THING which so was born of so blessed a Mother Who although shee were but the passive and materiall principle of which that precious flesh was made and the holy Ghost the agent and efficient yet cannot the man Christ Jesus thereby bee made the Son of his own Spirit Because Fathers doe beget their children out of their own substance the holy Ghost did not so but framed the flesh of him from whom himself proceeded out of the creature of them both the handmaid of our Lord whom from thence all generations shall call blessed That blessed womb of hers was the Bride-chamber wherein the holy Ghost did knit that indissoluble knot betwixt our humane nature and his Deity the Son of God assuming into the unity of his person that which before he was not and yet without change for so must God still bee remaining that which hee was whereby it came to passe that this holy thing which was born of her was indeed and in truth to bee called the SON of GOD. Which wonderfull connexion of two so infinitely differing natures in the unity of one person how it was there effected is an inquisition fitter for an Angelicall intelligence then for our shallow capacity to look after to which purpose also wee may observe that in the fabrick of the Ark of the Covenant the posture of the faces of the Cherubims toward the Mercy-seat the type of our Saviour was such as would point unto us that these are the things which the Angels desire to stoope and look into And therefore let that satisfaction which the Angel gave unto the Mother Virgin whom it did more specially concern to move the question How may this bee content us The power of the Highest shall overshadow thee For as the former part of that speech may informe us that with God nothing is impossible so the latter may put us in minde that the same God having overshadowed this mystery with his own vaile wee should not presume with the men of Bethshemesh to look into this Ark of his lest for our curiosity wee bee smitten as they were Onely this wee may safely say and must firmely hold that as the distinction of the Persons in the holy Trinity hindreth not the unity of the Nature of the Godhead although every Person intirely holdeth his owne incommunicable property so neither doth the distinction of the two Natures in our Mediatour any way crosse the unity of his Person although each nature remaineth intire in it self and retaineth the properties agreeing thereunto without any conversion composition commixtion or confusion When Moses beheld the bush burning with fire and yet no whit consumed he wondred at the sight and said I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burnt But when God thereupon called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said Draw not nigh hither and told him who he was Moses trembled hid his face and durst not behold God Yet although being thus warned we dare not draw so nigh what doth hinder but we may stand aloof off and wonder at this great sight Our God is a consuming fire saith the Apostle and a question wee finde propounded in the Prophet Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire who amongst us shall dwell with the everlasting burnings Moses was not like other Prophets but God spake unto him face to face as a man speaketh unto his friend and yet for all that when hee besought the Lord that he would shew him his glory hee received this answer Thou canst not see my face for there shall no man see me and live Abraham before him though a special friend of God and the father of the faithfull the children of God yet held it a great matter that he should take upon him so much as to speak unto God being but dust and ashes Yea the very Angels themselves which are greater in power and might are fain to cover their faces when they stand before him as not being able to behold the brightnesse of his glory With what astonishment then may wee behold our dust and ashes assumed into the undivided unity of Gods own Person and admitted to dwell here as an inmate under the same roofe and yet in the midst of those everlasting burnings the bush to remain unconsumed and to continue fresh and green for evermore Yea how should not wee with Abraham rejoyce to see this day wherein not onely our nature in the Person of our Lord Jesus is found to dwell for ever in those everlasting burnings but in and by him our own persons also are brought so nigh thereunto that God doth set his Sanctuary and Tabernacle among us and dwell with us and which is much more maketh us our selves to be the house and the habitation wherein he is pleased to dwell by his Spirit according to that of the Apostle Yee are the Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall be my people And that most admirable prayer which our Saviour himself made unto his Father in our behalf I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeve on me through their word that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the world may beleeve that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in mee that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me To compasse this conjunction betwixt God and us he that was to be our JESUS or Saviour must of necessity also be IMMANUEL which being interpreted is God with us and therefore in his Person to be Immanuel that is God dwelling with our flesh because he was by his Office to to be Immanuel that is he who must make God to be at one with us For this being his proper office to be Mediatour between God and men he must partake with both and being before all eternity consubstantiall with his Father he must at the appointed time become likewise consubstantiall with his children Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same saith the Apostle We read in the Romane history that the Sabines and the Romanes joyning battell together upon such
mercy of God in Christ whereby grace reigneth unto life through the obedience of one which is Jesus Christ. Rom. 5. 21. For there being three persons of the Trinity the Father sent his Son to accomplish the work of our Redemption and both of them send the Holy Ghost to work saving grace in our hearts and apply unto our soules the holinesse purchased by the Son of God What is promised therein The favour of God and everlasting salvation with the means thereof as Christ and in him Conversion Justification and Sanctification What is the condition on mans part The gift being most free on Gods part nothing is required on mans part but the receiving of grace offered which is done in those that are of capacity by Faith in Christ John 1. 12. 14 15. Acts 16. 31. whence followeth new obedience whereby the faithfull walk worthy of the grace received and this also is by Gods grace What then is the summe of the Covenant of grace That God will be our God and give us life everlasting in Christ if we receive him being freely by his Father offered unto us Jer. 31. 33. Acts. 16. 30 31. John 1. 12. How doth this Covenant differ from that of works Much every way for first in many points the Law may be conceived by reason but the Gospell in all points is farre above the reach of mans reason Secondly the Law commandeth to doe good and giveth no strength but the Gospell enableth us to doe good the Holy Ghost writing the Law in our hearts Jer. 31. 33. and assuring us of the promise that revealeth this gift Thirdly the Law promised life onely the Gospell righteousnesse also Fourthly the Law required perfect obedience the Gospell the righteousnesse of Faith Rom. 3. 21. Fifthly the Law revealeth sin rebuketh us for it and leaveth us in it but the Gospell doth reveale unto us the remission of sins and freeth us from the punishment belonging thereunto Sixthly the Law is the ministery of wrath condemnation and death the Gospell is the ministery of grace Justification and life Seventhly the Law was grounded on mans own righteousnesse requiring of every man in his own person perfect obedience Deut. 27. 26. and in default for satisfaction everlasting punishment Ezek. 18. 14. Gal. 3. 10. 12. but the Gospell is grounded on the righteousnesse of Christ admitting payment and performance by another in behalfe of so many as receive it Gal. 3. 13 14. And thus this Covenant abolisheth not but is the accomplishment and establishment of the former Rom. 3. 31. 10. 4. Wherein doe they agree They agree in this that they be both of God and declare one kind of righteousnesse though they differ in offering it unto us What is that one kind of righteousnesse It is the perfect love of God and of our neighbour What thing doth follow upon this That the severe Law pronounceth all the faithfull righteous forasmuch as they have in Christ all that the Law doth aske But yet those remaine transgressors of the Law They are transgressors in themselves and yet righteous in Christ and in their inward man they love righteousnesse and hate sin What are we to consider in the Covenant of Grace The condition 1. Of the Mediatour 2. And then of the rest of mankind In the former consisteth the foundation of this Covenant The performance whereof dependeth on Christ Jesus Acts 10. 43. 3. 24. Rom. 1. 3. 4. To the latter belongeth the application thereof for salvation unto all that will receive it 2 Cor. 5. 20. Mat. 6. 33. When was the Mediatour given 1. If we regard Gods decree from all eternity Eph. 1. 4. 2. If the vertue and efficacie of his Mediation as soon as need was even from the beginning of the world Rev. 13. 8. 3. If his manifestation in the flesh in fulnesse of time Gal. 4. 4. 1 Tim. 2. 6. from whence we reckon now 1643. yeares Who is this Mediatour between God and man Jesus Luk. 2. 11. Mat. 1. 21. 1 Tim. 2. 5. the Son of the Virgin Mary the promised Messias or Christ whom the Fathers expected the Prophets foretold John 1. 45. 8. 56. Whose life death Resurrection Ascension the Evangelists describe Joh. 1. 1. Act. 1. 1. Whose word preached unto this day subdueth the world 1 Tim. 3. 16. 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. Finally whom wee look for from heaven to bee the Judge of quick and dead Acts 10. 42. What doe the Scriptures teach us touching Christ our Mediatour Two things first his person Joh. 1. 14. 3. 33. Secondly his office Esa. 61. 1 2. Luk. 4. 18. What is his Person The second Person in the Godhead made man John 1. 14. What have we to consider herein First the distinction of the two natures Secondly the hypostaticall or personall union of both into one Immanuell What be those two natures thus wonderfully united in one person First his divine nature or Godhead which maketh the person Secondly his humane nature or Manhood which subsisteth and hath his existence in the person of the Godhead and so we beleeve our Saviour to be both the Son of God and the son of man Gal. 4. 4. Luk. 1. 31 32. Rom. 1. 3 4. 9. 5. 1 Tim. 3. 16. Mat. 26. 24. What say you of him touching his Godhead I beleeve that he is the only begotten Son of the most high and eternall God his Father His Word Wisdome Character and Image begotten of his substance before all worlds God of God Light of Light very God of very God begotten not made finally God coessentiall coeternall and coequall with the Father and the Holy Ghost Why call you him the onely begotten Sonne of God Because he is the alone Son of God by nature even the onely begotten of the Father full of grace and truth John 1. 14. 3. 18. For though others be the Sons of God by Creation as Adam was and the Angels Job 1. 6. Others by Adoption and Regeneration as the Saints and the man Christ Jesus in another respect by hypostaticall union yet none is his Son by naturall generation but the same Christ Jesus and that in regard of his Godhead not of his Manhood according to the Apostle who saith that he is without Father according to his Manhood and without Mother according to his Godhead Heb. 7. 3. But it seemeth that he is called the Sonne of God in respect of the generation of his humane nature wherein it is said that the Holy Ghost did that which Fathers doe in the naturall generation especially seeing he is therefore said to be the Sonne of the Highest Luk. 1. 35. He is the naturall Sonne of God onely in regard of the eternall generation otherwise there should be two Sonnes one of the Father and another of the Holy Ghost but he is therefore called the Sonne of the Highest for that none could be so conceived by the Holy Ghost but he that is the
it is a judiciall sentence opposed to condemnation Rom. 8. 34 35. Who shall lay any thing saith Paul to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth who shall condemn Now as to condemn is not the putting any evill into the nature of the party condemned but the pronouncing of his person guilty and the binding him over unto punishment so justifying is the Judges pronouncing the Law to be satisfied and the man discharged and quitted from guilt and judgement Thus God imputing the righteousnesse of Christ to a sinner doth not account his sins unto him but interests him in a state of as full and perfect freedom and acceptance as if he had never sinned or had himselfe fully satisfied For though there is a power purging the corruption of sin which followeth upon justification yet it is carefully to be distinguished from it as we shall further shew hereafter This for the name of Justification but now for the thing it selfe what is the matter first of our justification The matter of justification or that righteousnesse whereby a sinner stands justified in Gods sight is not any righteousnesse inherent in his own person and performed by him but a perfect righteousnesse inherent in Christ and performed for him What righteousnesse of Christ is it whereby a sinner is justified Not the essentiall righteousnesse of his divine nature but First the absolute integrity of our humane nature which in him our head was without guile Heb. 7. 6. Secondly the perfect obedience which in that humane nature of ours he performed unto the whole law of God both by doing whatsoever was required of us Mat. 3. 15. and by suffering whatsoever was deserved by our sins 1 Pet. 2. 24. for he was made sin and a curse for us that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him What is the forme or being cause of our justification and that which makes this righteousnesse so really ours that it doth justifie us The gracious imputation of God the Father accounting his Sons righteousnesse unto the sinner and by that accounting making it his to all effects as if he himselfe had performed it But how can Christs righteousnesse be accompted ours is it not as absurd to say that we are justified by Christs righteousnesse as that a man should be wise with the wisdom of another or live and be in health by the life and health of another No doubtlesse because this righteousnesse is in Christ not as in a person severed from us but as in the head of the Church the second Adam from whom therefore it is communicated unto all who being united as members unto him doe lay claim thereunto and apply it unto themselves Rom. 5. 19. Rom. 10. 4. For if the sin of Adam were of force to condemn us all because we were in his loynes he being the head of our common nature why then should it seem strange that the righteousnesse of our Saviour Christ both God and man should be availeable to justifie those that are interessed in him especially considering that we have a more strict conjunction in the Spirit with him then ever we had in nature with Adam And though it be not fit to measure heavenly things by the yard of reason yet it is not unreasonable that a man owing a thousand pound and not being able to pay it his creditor may be satisfied by one of his friends If Christ have paid our debt how are we then freely justified by grace It is of grace that Christ is given unto us and also that his righteousnesse apprehended by faith is accounted ours It is true that the justification of a sinner considering the case as it is between the Father and Christ no man dare call it free no the price of our Redemption was the deepest purchase that the world ever heard of but what ever it cost Christ it cost us nothing and so to us it is freely of grace from Christ yea and to us it is freely grace from God the Father too not because he acquits us without a full satisfaction to his Justice or accepts that for perfect righteousnesse which is not perfect righteousnes but because he receives full satisfaction from the hands of a surety and that surety being his own Son when as he might have challenged the uttermost farthing at our hands which were the principals and then there had been no possibility for us to have been delivered What gather you from this doctrine of Justification by Christs righteousnesse 1. To condemn the proud opinion of Papists who seek Justification by their owne workes and righteousnesse inherent in themselves whereas though being accepted we must in thankfulnesse doe all we can for God yet when all is done we must acknowledge our selves unprofitable servants the onely matter of our joy and triumph both in life and death must be the imputation of Christs righteousnes not our persons nor the best actions of the holiest men dare appeare in Gods presence but in his name and merit who consecrates all the Lords Jesus 2. We may here take notice that there is no comfort to a Christian soule like that which floweth from this Well of salvation this sweet doctrine of Justification 1. Here we have assurance of the sufficiencie of our Redemption that soule must be throughly acquited that is stated in such a righteousnesse that debt must be fully discharged that hath such a price laid down for it our sinnes though never so great cannot weigh down his righteousnesse and merit Rom. 8. 33. and God having accepted his Sons righteousnes for us will not hold us any longer trespassers but he disables his own Justice from making any further demand 2. Hence there is nothing comes upon the Saints from Gods revenging Justice but all our corrections are medicinall from Gods Fatherly love to purge out that sin out of our nature which he hath already pardoned to our persons 3. Lastly this doctrine may be great comfort to weak Christians in the midst of their troublesome imperfections and sense of their weak measures of Sanctification To consider that the righteousnesse that is inherent in themselves is not the matter of their Justification or that which must appear before Gods presence to be pleaded the righteousnesse of Christ is compleat and perfect that is our main joy and crown of rejoycing to be found in Christ not having our own righteousnesse but that which is in him and made ours by Gods gracious account But how is this great benefit of Justification applyed unto us and apprehended by us This is done on our part by faith alone and that not considered as a vertue inherent in us working by love but only as an instrument or hand of the soule stretched forth to lay hold on the Lord our righteousnesse Rom. 5. 1. 10 10. Jer. 23. 6. So that faith justifieth onely Relatively in respect of the object which it fasteneth on to wit the righteousnesse of Christ by which
That the breaches of all the Commandements concurred in Adam and Eves sinne 134 The effects of the fall 136 Sin guiltinesse punishment Of our first Parents nakednesse 137 Of their hiding themselves Of sinne Why all Adams posterity are partakers of his sinne and misery 142 What sinne is 143 Imputed sinne 144 Inherent sinne Originall sinne The propagation of originall sinne 145 The minde corrupted The corruption of the memory The corruption of the will 147 The corruption of affections The corruption of the conscience Of the corruption of the body Actuall sinne Of the sin against the Holy Ghost 151 The divers differences of actuall sinne 152 Guilt of sinne 153 Punishment of sinne Of Gods covenants of man 157 Of the covenant of grace 158 The differences between the covenant of works and the covenant of grace 159 Wherein they agree Of Jesus the Mediator of this covenant 160 The foundation of it Of the person of Christ. Of the natures of Christ Divine Humane Of the divine nature of Christ Why it was necessary that Christ should be God 161 Of the humane nature of Christ. 162 Why it was necessary that Christ should be man 164 Of the union of the two natures of Christ. 165 Of Christs Office Mediatorship 166 That here is but one Mediator Of his names Iesus Christ. 167 Of Christs Priest-hood 168 The Popish Priest-hood overthrowne 169 Of Christs satisfaction 170 Of Christs sufferings 171 Of Christs sufferings in his soule 172 Of Christs sufferings in his body Uses of Christs passion 174 Of Christs buriall His descending into hell Christs righteousnesse in fulfilling the Law Christs originall righteousnesse 175 Christs actuall holinesse Of the intercession of Christ. 176 Of the Propheticall office of Christ. 177 Of the Kingly office of Christ. 179 Of Christs humiliation 183 Of Christs exaltation Of the Resurrection of Christ. Of Christs ascension 184 Of the third degree of Christs exaltation his sitting at the right hand of God 185 The state of the godly in Christ. 186 Of the Church of Christ. 187 The Catholick Church The property and office of the head of the Church The Church triumphant 188 Of the Church militant Prerogatives of the members of the Catholike Church 190 What Sanctification is What Redemption is Of our union and communion with Christ. 192 Communion of Saints The benefit of our Communion with Christ. 193 Justification Glorification Of Justification What Justification is Vses arising from the Doctrine of Justification 195. Of Faith 196 The various acception of Faith The divers kindes of Faith 197 Historicall faith Temporary faith Miraculous faith Justifying faith The Popish implicite faith 198 That the whole soule is the seat of faith What reconciliation is 200 What adoption is 201 The benefits of adoption Sanctification 202 The differences between justification and sanctification The differences between the Law and the Gospell 203 The Morall Law the rule of sanctification Ceremoniall Law 204 Judiciall Law The Morall Law The end and use of the Law 205 1. Knowledge of the Law required Rules to be observed for the Interpretation of the Law 1. Rule the Law is spirituall 2. Rule the Law is perfect 206 3. Rule in every commandement there is a Metaphor or Synecdoche 1. Branch of the third rule 2. Branch 3. Branch Why the Commandements are propounded in the second person 207 Good company required Why the Commandements are propounded negatively 208 The division of the Decalogue The summe of the 1. table The summe of the 2. table 209 The division of the 1. table 211 The Preface of the Commandements 212 How the reason of the 1. Commandement belongeth to us 213 The fift Commandement The scope and meaning of this Commandement 214 What is forbidden and required in this first Commandement The severall branches of the first Commandement What it is to have a God 125 Of the knowledge of God Opposites to the knowledge of God Ignorance of God Affiance in God 216 Patience Hope Love of God Thankfulnesse 217 Feare of God Reverence 218 Humility Pride Sorrow Joy Vnity in Religion 219 What it is to have other Gods Sinfull confidence 220 Inordinate love Sinfull feare Sinfull joy and sorrow The third branch of this Commandement True Religion How we must come to the true Religion Helpes inabling us to obey this Commandement 221 Meanes of the knowledge of God Hindrances Meanes of ignorance here forbidden What is enjoyned in the three following Commandements The second Commandement 222 The scope and meaning of the second Commandement What is here forbidden What is meant by making of Images The speciall branches of the second Commandement 223 Of Prayer 224 Of Fasts Of Vowes 225 The manner of Gods worship Of Preparation Of the disposition in the action What is required after the action 226 Ecclesiasticall Ceremonies Of bodily gestures Of the abuse of Gods Ordinances Defects respecting the inward Worship 227 Defects in outward Worship 228 Helps in performing Gods pure worship The second maine branch of the second Commandement 229 What is forbidden concerning Images 230 That it is unlawfull to make the Image of God 231 That it is unlawfull to make the Image of Christ. What is meant by worshipping Images 232 Of countenancing Idolatrie 233 Reasons to back this Commandement taken from Gods Titles Jealous God Reasons drawne from the works of God 234 The first reason The second reason 235 The third Commandement 236 The summe of the third Commandement What is meant by the Name of God What is meant by the word In vaine 237 What is forbidden in the third Commandement What is required in the third Commandement The particular duties required in the third Commandement The duties repugnant 238 The right use of Oathes What persons may lawfully take an Oath 239 The speciall abuses of an oath How Gods Name is taken in vaine in regard of his properties How in respect of his Works 240 How in respect of his Word Of the helpes and hindrances 241 The reason annexed to the third Commandement The fourth Commandement The meaning of the fourth Commandement 242 What need there is of one day in seven to serve God That the Sabbath day is not ceremoniall Of the change of the seventh day to the first and the reason thereof 243 The time of the Sabbath and when it beginneth 244 What is meant by the word Remember 245 Of the preparation of the Sabbath The parts of the fourth Commandement 246 What workes ought to be declined What rest required in the fourth Commandement 247 The speciall breaches opposite to an holy rest To whom this Commandement is chiefly directed 289 The second part of this Commandement which is the sanctifying of the rest The exercises and duties required on the Sabbath Prayer with the Congregation 250 Hearing the Word Receiving the Sacraments Private duties of the Sabbath Of the evening preparation 251 The first duties of the morning Of the publick duties of the Sabbath 252 What is to bee done after the publick Ministery Sins to be
King 4. 33. Mat. 10. 29 30. The uses Of the Omnipotency or almighty power of God Gods absolute power Gods actuall power Gods power Infinite The uses Of Gods will Whether God doth will evil 1 Cor. 10. 31. The holinesse of Gods will Esa. 6. 3. Psal. 145. 17. Of gods goodnesse 1 Tim. 2. 2. The uses of Gods goodnesse The graciousnesse of God Of the love of God Uses of Gods love Of the mercy of God The uses of Gods Mercy Of the Justice of God The uses of Gods Justice Of the Trinity What a person in the Trinity is Vide Melanchthon loc com Of the Father the first Person of the Trinity Of the other Persons of the Trinity in generall Of the second Person in the Trinity Of the third Person in the Trinity Prov. 8. 3. How to know that we have the Spirit How to keep the Spirit Things common to the three persons In what they all agree 1. Coc-essentiall 2. Co-equall 3. Co-eternall Things proper to each of the Persons Of the Kingdome of God The parts of Gods Kingdome Of Gods Decree Of Predestination Parts of Predestination Election Reprobation Election Reprobation Execution of Gods decree Creation Providence Creation in generall Uses of the Creation The creation of the particular creatures The Heavens Of the earth Of the invisible creatures The third heaven and Angels Of Angels Of the creation of visible things Of the Chaos or rude masse Of the parts of the rude masse Of the frame of the world Of the Elements The foure Elements Of the mixt or compounded bodies The severall works of the six dayes The first day Heaven and earth and the light The second day The Firmament The third day Grasse corne trees Of the water and earth The fourth day The creation of the lights The fift day Of the creation of fishes and birds The sixt day Of the creation of man and woman Of the parts of man and first of the body Of the soul of Man The immortality of the soul. Of the seat of the soul. What is the Image of God in Man Of Gods Providence Definition of Gods Providence The uses of the doctrine of Gods Providence Of Gods special providence over Angels Good Angels Of the evill Angels Uses of the doctrine concerning evill Angels Of Gods particular providence over man Of Gods providence towards mankind Of the Covenant between God and man 1. Covenant of works The state of man in the time of his Innocency Of man in the state of corruption and of his fall That the breach of all the Commandements concurred in Adams and Eves sin The effects of the fall Sin guiltinesse punishment Of our first parents nakednesse Of their hiding themselves Hab. 3. 2. Of sin Why all Adams posterity are partakers of his sin and misery What sin is Imputed sin Inherent sin Originall sin a Gal. 3. 22. Rom. 8. 3. b Phil. 3. 9. Tit. 3. 5. The propagation of originall sin The mind corrupted The corruption of the memory The corruption of the will The corruption of the affections The corruption of the conscience Of the corruption of the body Actuall sin Of the sin against the holy Ghost Of the divers differences of actuall sins Guilt of sin Punishment of sin Of Gods Covenants with man Of the Covenant of grace The differences between the Covenant of works and and the Covenant of grace Wherein they agree Of Jesus the Mediatour of this Covenant The foundation of it Of the person of Christ. The natures of Christ. Divine Humane Of the divine nature of Christ. Why it was requisite that Christ should be God Of the humane nature of Christ. Why it was requisire that Christ should be Man Of the union of the two natures of Christ. Of Christs office of Mediatorship That there is but one Mediatour Of his names Jesus Christ. Mar. 9. 23. Luke 4. 18. Joh. 3. 34. Of Christs Priesthood The Popish Priesthood overthrown 1 Sam. 2. 25. Of Christs Satisfaction Of Christs sufferings Esa. 53. 10. Christs sufferings in his soul. Christs sufferings in his body Uses of Christs Passion Christs buriall His descending into hell Christs righteousnesse in fulfilling the Law Christs originall righteousnesse Christs actuall holinesse Of the intercession of Christ. Of the Propheticall office of Christ. Of the Kingly office of Christ. Act. 2. 9. Mat. 25. 24. 31. 33 34. Of Christs Humiliation Of Christs Exaltation Of the Resurrection of Christ. Phil. 3. 10. Of Christs Ascension Heb. 10. 20. Of the third degree of Christs Exaltation His sitting at the right hand of God The state of the godly in Christ. Mat. 13. 15. Acts 14. 16. 17. 30. Of the Church of Christ. Eph. 1. 1. 5. 23. Col. 1. 21. 27. Catholick Church Gal. 4. 26. 1 Pet. 1. 13. 14 15 16 17. Lev. 20. 7. The property and office of the head of the Church The triumphant Church The Church militant Prerogatives of the members of the Catholick Church VVhat Sanctification is VVhat Redemption is Of our Vnion and Communion with Christ. Communion of Saints Rom. 12. 13. 1 Ioh. 1. 17. Eph. 4. 3. The benefit of our Communion with Christ. Justification Glorification Of Justification and first what Justificaon is Vses arising from the doctrine of Justification Of Faith The various acceptions of Faith The divers kinds of Faith Historicall Faith Temporary Faith Miraculous Faith Justifying Faith The Popish implicite faith confuted That the whole soule is the seat of Faith What Reconciliation is What Adoption is The benefits of Adoption Sanctification The differences between Justification and Sanctification Eph. 1. 19. 2. 1. 2 Cor. 3. 18. 2 Pet. 3. 18. Phil. 3. 16. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Job 22. 22. Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 4. 20 21. The differences between the Law and the Gospel * John 5. 23. 14. 1. Mat. 19. 23. The Morall law the rule of Sanctificatiō * Deut. 10. 4. Ceremoniall Law Judiciall Law The Morall Law The end and use of the Law 1. Knowledge of the Law required Rules to be observed for the interpretation of the Law 1. Rule The Law is spirituall 2. Rule That the Law is perfect 3. Rule In every Commandement there is a Metaphor or Synecdoche 1. Branch of the third Rule 2. Branch 3. Branch Why the Commandements are propounded in the second person Good company required Why the Commandements are propounded negatively The division of the Decalogue The sum of the first Table The summe of the second Table The division of the first Table The Preface of the Commandements How the reason of the first Commandement belongs to us The first Commandement The scope and meaning of this Commandement What is forbidden and required in this first Commandement The severall branches of the first Commandement What it is to have a God Of the knowledge of God Opposites to the knowledge of God Ignorance of God Affiance in God Patience Hope Love of God Thankfulnesse Feare of God Reverence Humility Pride Sorrow Ioy. Vnity in Religion What it is
places in heaven and in earth and the sea and hell all at one time neither can he be contained in any compasse of place as is a man or Angel or any other creature but he is in all places and filleth all places at once and is beyond all compasse of place that we can imagine 1 King 8. 27. Ps. 139. 7. 145. 3. Job 9. 7. Esa. 66. 1. 40. 12. Jer. 23. 24. Is God every where bodily No for he hath no body Is God every where in speculation only No for he worketh in every thing which he beholdeth How then is he every where He is every where essentially for his essence is not contained in any place because he is incomprehensible Doth he not remove himselfe from place to place He filleth heaven and earth and all places therefore he can neither depart from any place nor be absent from any place Is he not half in one half of the world half in the other half of the world No but as the whole soul is in the whole body and every part thereof so God is whole and wholly in every part of the world Obj 1. If God be every where essentially then he is in the most filthiest sink and puddle It is no abasing of the glory of his Majesty to say that he is there no more then it is to the Sun whose beams and light are there or to a Physitian to be amongst those that are sick All the creatures of God in themselves are exceeding good and when he is in the most filthiest sink in the world he is not in a more filthy then our selves whether we be sick or sound They are his workmanship and it is no abasement of the workmaster to be amongst his works Obj. 2. If God be every where why is it said he dwelleth in the heavens Psal. 2. 4. Because his glory and Majesty which is every where alike shineth most perspicuously and visibly in heaven Obj. 3. It is said Numb 14. 42. he is not amongst the wicked He is not amongst them with his grace and favour to protect and defend them but otherwise by his power and providence he is amongst them to bridle their raging affections to plague their furious obstinacie and dispose of their desperate attempts to his own glory and good of his people Obj. 4. If God be every where at the same instant of time how is he said to be sometimes near sometimes farther off Esa. 56. 6. God is said to be near unto us when by his word or any other means he offereth us grace and favour by them and when he heareth and granteth our prayers as Moses saith Deut. 4. 7. What nation is there so great who have God so nigh unto them as the Lord God is in all things that we call upon him for Obj. 5. If God be in hell then all goodnesse is there for he is all goodnesse and so consequently there is no want of joy in the damned The damned in hell feel no part of his goodnesse that is of his mercy and loving favour but of his power and justice So that God is in hell by his power and in his wrath To what purpose and use serveth this doctrine of the immensity or infinite greatnesse of God The consideration thereof should put us in mind that nothing which is vile and base should be offered unto God in the worship of him Secondly it serveth to drive all grosse and idolatrous conceits of God out of our minds and to detect and bewray the impiety and blasphemy of those persons who either by making of pictures as they thought of God or by maintaining of them being made or by suffering them to stand still without defacing especially if it be known have thereby denied God to be incomprehensible For those pictures and resemblances of God which ignorant men have forged in their own brain doe tell us and say that God may be comprehended and contained within a place yea in a small place or in any place as a man or other creature which is most high blasphemy against the Majesty of Almighty God What is his eternity It is an essentiall property of God whereby his essence is exempted from all measure of time and therefore is the first and the last without either beginning or end of dayes 1 Tim. 1. 17. Esa. 41. 4. 44. 6. Psal. 90. 2. Rev. 1. 8. 11. In what respect is God called eternall in the Scriptures That he hath been from all eternity without beginning is now and shall be for all eternity without end That all times are present with him continually and so nothing former nor latter nothing past nor to come That he is the Author of everlastingnesse unto others because he hath promised to give his children of his eternall goodnesse and to have a continuall care of them through all eternity and will have a Kingdome in Angels and men whereof shall be no end Is it necessary that we should know this Yea that we may here stay our selves with the certain hope of eternall life grounded upon his eternity How may that hope be grounded upon his eternity Very well for God being eternall he can for ever preserve us and seeing he hath promised he will for ever preserve us Ps. 48. 14. 103. 17. Hereby likewise are we strengthned not only in the immortality of our soule but also in the immortality of our bodies after the resurrection considering that by his everlastingnesse he giveth continuall beeing to such of his creatures as he is pleased to give a perpetuall continuance unto Why else is God said to be eternall That so he might be discerned from all other things created for nothing is like unto God as the Scriptures testifie Esa. 40. 18. Psalm 113. 45. How is God said to be alone everlasting seeing Angels and soules of men shall be also everlasting In regard of the time to come they are everlasting but not in regard of the time past for though they shall continue alwayes yet they had their beginning which cannot be said of God who therefore is called Alpha and Omega Rev. 1. 8. Their continuance is such as it is not absolute and by it selfe but proceeding from the power of God who is able if so he pleased to give unto them an end as well as a beginning in which respect God is said onely to have immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. Is it necessary we hold God to be eternall that so he may be discerned from all things created Yea we hold it in that respect for two causes First because certain hereticks have thought either all the creatures or some of the creatures at least to be derived from the very nature and essence of God by propagation as children from their mothers womb Secondly that all idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded out of our minds What is the life of God It is an essentiall property of God whereby the divine nature
beleefe is a most certain knowledge grounded upon the report of another Whether doth this kind of knowing things agree with the nature of God or no No for God knoweth all things in himselfe and of himselfe but not by the report of another What say you to skill and learning that is both a certain and evident knowledge of things doth not that agree with the nature of God Such knowledge doth not agree with his nature Why so Because it cometh by knowledge that went before and it is gotten by reasoning and debating of things by defining and dividing and by searching out the causes of things but in God is neither before nor after first nor last and God hath no knowledge after such a sort Again our knowledge which way soever it be considered whether it be a habit in us or an action in us is imperfect for we know not all things and those things which we doe know we know not all at once but one thing after another and yet still but in part Declare then in a word how God doth know all things God doth most perfectly know and understand all things at one instant without any conceipt of mind altering this way or that way All our knowledge is a thing distinguished from our mind and understanding is it so in God No for the knowledge or wisdom of God is a most simple and perfect essence yea it is his very essence and substance and God is all knowledge all wisdom and all understanding infinitely more then all men and Angels can conceive Doth God know and understand every thing particularly Yea he knoweth the natures and properties of every particular thing How prove you that By the Scripture and by reason for the Scripture saith that God saw every thing that he made that it was good this is not spoken generally of all but especially of every one creature Again reason makes it manifest by three examples in the Scriptures Gen. 1. First Adam gave to every living thing a proper name Gen. 2. 20. according to its proper nature whereby it appeareth that Adam had a distinct and particular knowledge of every thing how much more then had God this especiall knowledge of every particular thing who gave to Adam whatsoever wisdom and knowledge he had Secondly Solomons wisdom and knowledge was so great that he was able to dispute and did thereby dispute of the nature of all trees plants fishes fowl worms beasts and all naturall things as one that was most skilfull in them how much more then doth God know all things and their natures particularly who gave such wisdom to Solomon Thirdly our Saviour Christ saith of the Father that all our haires be numbred by him and that a Sparrow falleth not to the ground without the will of our heavenly Father if not without his will then not without his knowledge Whether doth God know all the motions of our wills and our thoughts Yea God doth certainly know the motions of the will and the thoughts of the heart in all men and the issue of them all which is manifest by these places of Scripture following Gen. 6. 5. Psa. 94. 11. Pro. 21. 1. Jer. 17. 9 10. Hereof it is that we cite him to be the witnesse of our hearts when we swear by him Whether hath God the knowledge of all evils or no God knoweth all evils and sins which lie lurking in all mens hearts and this is manifest by these places of Scripture following Gen. 6. 5. Psal. 69. 6. Job 11. 11. Psal. 90. 8 9. What if he did not know all these evils It is impossible but he must know them for two causes First if he did not his knowledge would be imperfect Secondly if he did not know them he could not be a just Judge neither could he reward every one according to his works and thoughts which to affirm were ungodly and blasphemous Obj. That which is nothing cannot be known but sinne and evill is nothing for it is nothing else but a taking away or failing of good and it is a meer corruption and therefore sin and evill cannot be known of God We know vvhat is evill and vve know evill things and vve doe discern them from good things but we know evill onely by his contrary that is good as vve know nothing by something darknesse by light death by life sicknesse by health vice by vertue thus by the knowledge of good evill is known unto us and therefore seeing as God vvho is the chiefe good he doth by himself know all good things he must of necessity also know and understand all the evill that is in all good things Whether may God know those things which are not God knoweth the things vvhich are not and he doth also truly know the things which shall never come to passe What reason can you yeeld for this The reason is because he knoweth all things by his essence therefore he knoweth all things which are subject to his divine essence and power and therefore also are possible but shall never come to passe But doth he know them eternally or in time He knoweth them all eternally that is for ever and ever he knew doth know them as the Scripture doth testifie Eph. 1. 4. 2 Tim. 2. 19. Can you make this manifest by any earthly comparison Yea a builder by vertue of his art doth conceive in his mind the form of a house which house he will never build how much more can God doe the same for God can make more worlds and he knoweth that he can and yet he doth it not Again although there were never an Eagle in the City yet we can conceive in our minds what an Eagle is much more doth God know all things vvhich are not in act and vvhich never shall be Obj. This is something which you say but your last similitude of the Eagle doth not hold for therefore we keep the knowledge of an Eagle in our minds though all be gone because the similitude of the Eagle which was sometimes in the City doth stil remain in our minds and understandings But what similitude can there be in the mind of God of those things which are not which never were and which never shall be Yes the very essence and similitude of God is a similitude of all those things that may be if he will which he must needs know for he doth most perfectly know himself And thus if we consider his power or almighty essence all things should be done which he can doe and doth know Then whether is his knowledge power the cause of all things which are which have been and which shall be The onely fore-knowledge of God alone which the Grecians call Theoreticascientia that is a knowledge beholding all things is not the cause of things but his fore-knowledge with his will which the Grecians call Practicascientia that is a working knowledge that is the cause of things Whether may the knowledge or
his nature is not cruell savage nor bloody towards us but most mild pleasant sweet and such as may allure all men to trust in him to love him to call upon him and to worship him Psalm 16. 11. 34. 9. Is nothing good but God Nothing of it selfe and perfectly Matth. 19. 17. howbeit by him and from him doe come good things Gen. 1. ult which have not their goodnesse of themselves for whatsoever goodnesse is in the creatures it is of God the Creatour and they are so farre forth good as they are made good by God and are made partakers of his goodnesse 1 Cor. 4. 7. James 1. 17. Again that goodnesse which is in the things created whether it be naturall or supernaturall is imperfect and finite but the goodnesse of God is most perfect and infinite and therefore onely God is truly good and goodnesse it selfe yea he is Summum bonum that chief good of all to be desired Is the goodnesse of God extended unto all creatures Yea it is so and as this is known by dayly experience so it is witnessed by the Scriptures following Psal. 119. 64. 145. 15. Mat. 5. 45. Hath God shewed his goodnesse to all alike No for the things created are of two sorts either invisible or visible invisible as Angels unto whom the Lord hath given more excellent gifts then to the other And was his goodnesse parted equally among them No for some he suffered to fall into sin for which they were thrust down from heaven to hell 2 Pet. 2. 4. others he hath preserved by his grace that they should not fall away from him Is his goodnesse alike to his visible creatures No for of them some are endued with reason as mankind some are void of reason and therefore is man called a Lord over the rest of the creatures Is the goodnesse of God alike to reasonable creatures No for of them God in his mercy hath chosen some to eternall life whom he hath purposed to call effectually in his time that they may be justified and glorified by Christ others he hath in his justice left to their sins without any effectuall calling to perish for ever What testimony of Scripture have you that Gods goodnesse is farre greater to the Elect then to the Reprobate It appeareth by the words of our Saviour Christ Mat. 13. 11. and of the Prophet Asaph Ps. 73. 1. yet God is good that is singularly good to Israel even to the pure in heart but God makes his Elect onely to be pure in heart Psal. 51. 10. Doth the goodnesse of God towards all men turn to the good of all men No for in the Reprobate Gods goodnesse is turned into evill and serveth to their destruction 2 Cor. 2. 15. and that is through their own fault for they doe contemne and altogether abuse the goodnesse of God and for all his goodnesse bestowed upon them continually they never trust him nor trust in him Rom. 2. 4. Psal. 106. 13. How may we use the goodness of God to our good and to our salvation If we have the goodnesse of God in a true and worthy estimation if we use it with feare and reverence and thereby learn to repent us of our sins and to repose all our trust and confidence in the Lord for his goodnesse then shall all things yea even our sinnes work for our good Rom. 8. 28. What use must we make of Gods goodnesse It teacheth us that we have and doe serve a true God for he is no true God that is not so good as our God is We learn hereby that by this goodnesse of his he useth all things well If our God be so good we should be ashamed to offend him as it is intolerable to hurt an infant that is innocent and harmlesse so it is most intolerable to requite the Lords goodnesse with evill If God be so good and goodnesse it selfe we must trust him and trust in him for we will repose trust in good men and shall we not much more in our good God It teacheth us never to lay the fault upon God for any thing nor to complain of Gods dealing for he is alwayes perfectly good and all that he doth is perfectly good whatsoever men judge of it Seeing God is good to us we ought to be good one towards another To what end is it that the goodnesse of God is not to all alike 1 Tim. 2. 9. It serveth to the adoring and beautifying of Gods Church 1 Tim. 2. 9. It serveth to the maintenance of mutuall love and society amongst men for if the goodnesse of God were to all alike then one could not help another and to this end serves the variety of gifts 1 Cor. 12. 20. Eph. 4. 7. 12. It maketh to the greater manifesting of the glory of the goodnesse of God for if all had alike we would contemn this goodnesse thinking that he were bound to be good to us of necessity From the consideration of Gods speciall goodnesse towards us his Elect by Christ to salvation we must arise to the study of good works whereby Gods goodnesse may be glorified Tit. 2. 3 4 5 6 7 8. What be the severall branches of the goodnesse of God His graciousnesse his love and his mercy Tit. 3. 3 4 5. What is the graciousnesse of God It is an essentiall property whereby he is of himselfe most gracious and amiable and freely declareth his favour unto his creatures above their desert Psal. 145. 8. 15 16. Rom. 11. 6. Tit. 2. 11. Is he only gracious Only in and of himselfe for that whatsoever is gracious and amiable it is from him What learn you from this That we ought to love and reverence God above all for seeing gracious and amiable men doe winne love and reverence from others in whose eyes they appear gracious and amiable who is able more to winne this at our hands then God who is the fountain of all graciousnesse and amiablenesse For the better understanding of this attribute shew how this word Grace is used in the Scripture It is used in three severall significations sometimes it is put for comelinesse stature meeknesse or mildnesse Luk. 2. 25. sometime for free favour whereby one embraceth another pardoning former injuries and receiving the partie offending into favour again Gen. 6. 8. Thirdly it is taken for all kind of gifts and graces which of his free favour are bestowed whether temporall or eternall Acts 2. 23. Eph. 4. 7. Whether is there grace in God according to the first signification of grace or no Yea for God is of his own nature most gracious and grace it selfe which grace was in Christ Jesus from his infancie as he was man and did every day more and more increase Luke 2. 52. Psal. 45. 9. And amongst all things that were created there was nothing indued with such grace as was the humane nature of Christ and that was by the fulnesse of the Godhead which dwelt bodily in him Coloss. 2.
hell for those that should trouble themselves with such vain and idle questions August lib. 1. Confess Chap. 12. What is that he hath revealed unto us concerning that he did before the beginning of the world Besides the inward works of the three Persons of the blessed Trinity whereof we have spoken and the mutuall delights which they took one in another and glory which they gave one to another this externall act of his is revealed unto us in the Scriptures that he hath in himselfe decreed all things together with all the circumstances of all things which have or shall be done from the beginning of the world unto the end thereof What then be the parts of Gods Kingdome The decree determining all things from all eternity and the execution thereof fulfilling the same in time for as from eternity he decreed so in time and everlastingly he accomplisheth all things unto the full execution of that his decree 1 Cor. 2. 16 Eph. 1. 11. Acts 4. 28. Psal. 99. 4. 135 6. So that the first is an eternall the second a temporall work of God What is the decree It is that Act whereby God from all eternity according to his free will did by his unchangeable counsell and purpose fore-appoint and certainly determine of all things together with their causes their effects their circumstances and manner of being to the manifestation of his own glory Psal. 99. 4. Mat. 10. 29. Rom. 9. 20 21. 11. 36. Prov. 16. 4. Eph. 1. 4. 11. Acts 2. 23. Jer. 1. 5. 15. What gather you of this that Gods decree is defined by his most perfects w●ll First that the things which he decreeth are most perfectly good Secondly that we must not subject his decree to our shallow and base capacity or measure it by our reason considering that the will of God from whence the decree cometh is unsearchable What be the parts or kinds of Gods decree That which God hath decreed concerning all his creatures generally for the declaration of his power wisdome and goodnesse in their creation and preservation and that which he hath decreed specially touching the good or evill of the chief or reasonable creatures Angels and Men to declare the glory of his grace and justice What note you in the former That God according to his good pleasure hath most certainly decreed every both thing and action whether past present or to come and not onely the things and actions themselves but also all their circumstances of place and time meanes manner and end so that they shall not come to passe in any other place or time then he hath ordained and then and there they shall come to passe necessarily Psalm 99. 4. Acts 27. 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27. 31 32 33 34. Doth this necessity take away freedome of will in election or the nature and property of second causes No but onely brings them into a certain order that is directeth them to the determined end whereupon the effects and events of things are contingent or necessary as the nature of the second cause is so Christ according to his Fathers Decree dyed necessarily Acts 17. 3. but yet willingly and if we respect the temperature of Christs body he might have prolonged his life and therefore in this respect may be said to have died contingently What consider you in the especiall decree which concerneth the good or evill of the principall creatures The fore-appointment of their everlasting estate and of the means tending thereunto the former whereof is called Predestination What is Predestination It is the speciall decree of God whereby he hath from evelasting freely and for his own glory fore-ordained all reasonable creatures to a certain and everlasting estate of glory in heaven or shame in hell What creatures come within this decree Both Angels 1 Tim. 5. 21. Matth. 25. 41. and Men 1 Thess. 5. 9. Rom. 9. 13. 22 23. 1 Pet. 2. 8. Eph. 1. 5. John 17. 12. 22. Exodus 33. 14. What is the cause of this decree Only the meer will and free pleasure of God to dispose of his own work as he will Rom. 9. 21. Jer. 5. 14. 18. 22. Esay 64. 8. What manner of decree is this It is a deep and unsearchable an eternall and immutable decree Rom. 11. 32. Eph. 1. 4. Is this decree certain and unchangeable Yea it must needs be so because it is grounded on the eternall and unchangeable will of God and therefore there is a certain number of the elect and reprobate known only to God which cannot possibly be encreased or diminished John 13. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 19. How then doth Moses wish himselfe to be blotted out of the book of life Exod. 32. 32. He speaketh conditionally if it were possible to declare his love to Gods glory and his people as Paul did Rom. 9. 3. But if Gods decree cannot be altered then we may be secure and not care how we live No more then we may neglect and forsake our meat and drink because the tearm of our life is fore-appointed the end and the means are joyned together of God and cannot be separated by any man What are the parts of Predestination Election and Reprobation 1 Thess. 5. 9. Rom. 9. 13. 22 23. VVhat is Election It is the everlasting predestination or fore-appointing of certain Angels and Men unto everlasting life and blessednesse for the praise of his glorious grace and goodnesse 1 Tim. 5. 21. Joh. 15. 16. Rom. 9. 22 23. Eph. 1. 4 5 6. 9. Is there no cause reason or inducement of election in the elected themselves None at all it is wholly of free-grace without respect of any goodnesse that God fore-saw in us 2 Tim. 1. 9. Rom. 9. 16. Phil. 2. 13. Eph. 1. 9. for otherwise man should have whereof he might glory in and of himself as having discerned himself from others and God should not be the cause of all good nor should his counsell be incomprehensible Is not Christ the cause of our Election No not of Gods decreeing of it for that he did of his own free-will but of the execution of it that is our salvation is for and through Christ. What tokens have we of our Election A true faith and a godly life What use are we to make of our Election First it is our great comfort that our salvation standeth by Gods eternall decree that cannot be changed and not in our selves that daily might lose it Secondly it sheweth Gods infinite mercy that before we were or had done good or evill he elected us rather then others as good as wee Thirdly it should make us love God all our life to our uttermost for his love to us Fourthly it is a help against al temptations of Satan or our doubting nature and also against all afflictions and contempt of the world Rom. 8. 38 39. Fiftly it serveth to humble us that we had nothing of our selves for our salvation but it freely came from God
2. yet that word mentioned in the 1. Gen. where it is written that the Lord said Let there be light c. was Gods command which then had beginning whereas the Son was from all eternity To what end were all things created For Gods glory Prov. 16. 4. How doth the glory of God appear in them First his eternall power and Godhead is seen in raising all things out of nothing by his word alone Esay 40. 12. Rom. 1. 20. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Secondly his infinite wisdome is made known by them Psal. 104. 24. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Thirdly his goodnesse unto all his creatures is hereby manifested which is very excellently set out by the Prophet in the 104. Psalm Fourthly his infinite authority doth appear by them What uses then are we to make of the Creation First we are thereby taught to discern the true God from all Heathen and Idoll gods in the world Esay 45. 6 7. Jer. 10. 11 12. for nothing in heaven and earth can give a beeing to a creature but God Secondly we are to weigh them and learn their properties Eccles. 7. 25. Thirdly we should learn to give God glory for them Rev. 4. 11. Psal. 92. 5. where it is made one end of the Sabbath Ps. 104. throughout Fourthly we are to gather comfort to our selves from hence That resting upon this faithfull Creator our hope needs not fail us so long as either heaven or earth have any help for us 1 Pet. 4. 19. Esa. 37. 16 17. What doth the Scriptures teach us concerning the goodnesse of the creatures That God made all them in such excellency of perfection for their beeing working order and use that himself did fully approve of them and so establish them Gen. 1. 31. which established order is that which is called Nature In how many things doth the goodnesse of the creatures consist In three First in perfection of their nature Secondly in their properties and qualities whereby they are able to doe those things for which they were created Thirdly in their uses unto man How manifold is that good which men receive by them Threefold First profitable good Secondly pleasant good Thirdly honest and Christian good How were all things made good when we see there be divers kinds of Serpents and noysome and hurtfull beasts That they are hurtfull it commeth not by the nature of their creation in regard whereof they at the first should only have served for the good of man What doe you note in the time of their Creation The beginning and the continuance thereof Might not the world have been before all time even from eternity No for absolute eternity belongeth only to God neither could any thing that is subject to time be after an infinite succession of other things What say you then to Aristotle accounted of so many the Prince of Philosophers who laboureth to prove that the world is eternall Wherein he laboureth to finde out a point of wisdome which he had learned of none other that was before him he therein bewrayeth his greatest folly for his chiefest reason being grounded upon the eternity of the first mover is of no force to prove his most absurd position seeing God as he is Almighty and always able to doe what he will so is he most free and not bound to doe all that he can but what when and how it pleaseth him But seeing Aristotle was enforced by reason to acknowledge God to be the first mover even against his will for it seemed that he endevoured as much as he could to quench the light of divine knowledge shining in his face or obstinately to close his eyes against the same and yet not onely spoiled God of the glory of his Creation but also assigneth him to no higher office then is the moving of the sphears whereunto he bindeth him more like to a servant then a Lord the Judgement of God uttered by S. Paul Rom. 1. 21. is most notoriously shewed upon him in that he knowing God did not glorifie him nor give him thanks but became vain in his disputations and his foolish heart was darkned while he professed wisdome he was made a fool approving Idolatry and that wickednesse which the Apostle there sheweth to be a just punishment of Idolatry and nature it self abhorreth Arist. Polit. lib. 7. cap. 6. lib. 2. cap. 8. How long is it since God did create the world Four thousand years before the birth of our Saviour Christ and so about 5614 years before this time Why is the order of the years of the world so carefully set down in the Scripture To convince all Heathen that either thought that the world was without beginning or that it began Millions of years before it did To give light to all sacred Histories of the Bible To shew the time of the fulfilling of the Prophecies which God foretold But why was not the world made sooner Saving the hidden wisdome and free pleasure of the Maker therein appeareth the free power of God to make or not to make and his absolute sufficiency within himself as having no need of any externall beeing only creating that he might communicate manifest his goodnes How long was God creating the world Six days and six nights Why was he creating so long seeing he could have perfected all the creatures at once and in a moment First to shew the variety distinction and excellency of his severall creatures Secondly to teach us the better to understand their workmanship even as a man which will teach a child in the frame of a letter will first teach him one line of the letter and not the whole letter together Thirdly to admonish us that we are bound to bestow more time in discerning and knowing them then we doe Fourthly that we might also by his example finish our work in six days Fiftly that we might observe that many of the creatures were made before those which are ordinarily their causes and thereby learn that the Lord is not bound to any creature or to any means thus the sunne was not created before the fourth day and yet dayes which now are caused by the rising of the sunne were before that so trees and plants were created the third day but the Sun Moon and Stars by which they are now nourished and made to grow were not created till after the third day Hitherto of the creation in generall what are the particular creatures The world and all things therein Acts 17. 24. or the heavens and the earth and all the host of them Gen. 2. 1. How many heavens are mentioned in the Scriptures Three the first is the ayre wherein we breathe the birds doe fly and the snow rain frost haile and thunder are begotten Matth. 6. 26. Gen. 7. 11. The second is the sky wherein the Sun the Moon and the Starres are placed Gen. 1. 14 15. Deut. 17. 3. The third wherein the Angles and the soules of the Saints from
let that he would not have done if with his will how can his justice be defended if they were not some good things for which hee doth willingly permit it For if a Captain should willingly suffer his souldiers to be murthered when he might hinder the slaughter of them although he put no hand to the murther he is not therefore excusable and free from the blood of his souldiers What else can be alledged against the permission that is separated from the government of the providence For that by this means God should bee spoyled of the greatest part of the government of the world seeing the greatest part and most of the world are wicked all whose actions are as they themselves are wicked Is there yet any other matter against this distinction If in that God doth permit sin he should have no hand in guiding and governing it then he should have no hand in guiding and governing of good things for as it is said that he permitteth sin so it is also said that he permitteth the good Heb. 6. 3. What use is to be made of the doctrine of Gods Providence First as in the Creation so in the continuation preservation and government of all things the power wisdome and goodnesse of the only true God is set forth and therefore in all things is he to be glorified Rom. 11. 36. yea even in the sins of men for the good things he draweth forth from their evill Secondly the consideration of this that nothing can come to passe without the Providence of God should move us to fear God and make us afraid to commit any sin far otherwise then the wicked who upon that that it is taught that all things come to passe by the Providence of God according to that he hath decreed Eccl. 3. 11. 14. would conclude that then a man may give himself liberty to doe any thing considering that it must needs be executed that God hath decreed Thirdly we must banish all slavish fear out of our hearts knowing that nothing can come to passe without the Providence of God Fourthly this should breed thankfulnesse to God in prosperity and in all things that come unto us according to our desire whatsoever blessing we receive we must acknowledge it to come from God and give him the praise and glory Rom. 11. 36. not sacrifice to our own nets Hab. 1. 16. or stay our minds in the instruments thereof without looking upto him by whose speciall providence and government we obtain our desires Fiftly this should cause humility under the hand of God when things come otherwise then we desired Sixthly in adversity we should patiently suffer whatsoever affliction the Lord layeth upon us for this consideration hath wrought patience in Gods servants It is the Lord let him doe whatsoever pleaseth him 1 Sam. 3. 18. Seventhly we must mark and observe the providence of God in former times that thereby vve may gather arguments of his goodnesse unto us in the time to come Having thus spoken generally of the Providence of God we are now to descend unto the speciall consideration of that which doth concern the principall creatures upon whom God hath declared the glory of his mercy and justice and first to begin with Angels Shew how they are upheld in their beeing They are all sustained by the power of God so that they shall never die or return to nothing Luk. 20. 36. How doth God dispose of them First concerning their everlasting condition they had a law given them in their Creation which the elect observe and are established in their perfection but the reprobates sinning against it have lost their first estate and are reserved unto further Judgement for all being by God created good at the first Gen. 1. 31. some continued in humility and obedience according to that dignity in which they were created others continued not in the truth Joh. 8. 44. and so kept not their beeing or excellency in which they were created of God by whom nothing could be made but good but trangressed and fell from it by their sin and wickednesse becomming Devils Jude ver 6. Secondly for their employment God useth them all both good and evill Angels as his servants and ministers for the accomplishment of his will and work Job 1. 6. How are the good Angels called in the Scripture 1. Elohim or gods for their excellency and power Psal. 8. 5. compared with Heb. 2. 7. Psal. 97. 7. with Heb. 1. 6. 2. Sons of God Job 1. 6. 3. Angels of Light 2 Cor. 11. 14. 4. Elect Angels 1 Tim. 5. 21. 5. Heavenly Souldiers Luk. 2. 13. 6. Men of God for their Office 7. Principalities and Powers and Dominions 8. Seraphims and a flame of fire for their swift zeal to doe Gods will 9. Cherubims from the form of young men wherin they appeared Have they any proper names Some for our capacity have names given unto them as Gabriel c. How many are there of them They be innumerable Mat. 22. 30. Heb. 12. 22. Dan. 7. 10. Psal. 61. 15. 17. Are there divers degrees of Angels Yes for some are Principalities and Powers and Dominions and Thrones Col. 1. 16. which sheweth not so much a difference in nature as in diverse employment in office But what those degrees are it is not observed out of Scripture and therefore to us is unknown With what properties are these Angels specially endued They are endued with wisdome holinesse willingnesse to put in execution the will of God power swiftnesse industry glory c. far above any man What measure of knowledge have they Very great in comparison of man both by Creation and otherwise How many sorts be there of their knowledge Three first naturall which God endued them with at ther Creation far above any man as their nature is more heavenly Secondly experimental which they doe mark and observe farre more carefully then man in Gods government of the world and out of all creatures Eph. 3. 10. Luk. 15. 10. Thirdly Divine of which God informeth them according to the severall matters that he sendeth them about and hereby they know things to come as Dan. 9. the Angel telleth before to Daniel the time of Christs death and Matth. 1. God telleth the Angel Josephs thoughts Doe not Angels of themselvess know the thoughts of men No for that is Gods property only 1 Kings 8. 39. 2 Chro. 6. 30. But in some messages as that in the first of Matthew God is pleased to manifest it unto them Have they not knowledge then of all things done here upon earth No for all things are only known to God alone Heb. 4. 13. yet they know the matters of those men and places where God appointeth them a message as Cornelius his alms Acts 10. 4. and the uncomlinesse of women in the Congregation where they are 1 Cor. 11. 10. Can the good Angels fall at any time No God hath confirmed them in their well beeing that they might never
after a man hath been enlightned with it and felt a taste thereof manifested in outward action by some blasphemous oppugning the truth of set hatred because it is the truth What are you to consider in this sin The nature thereof and the deadlinesse of the same What note you in the nature The reason why it is so called and the quality thereof Why is it called the sin against the holy Ghost Not because it is committed against the third Person only for it is committed against all three but because it is committed against the light of knowledge with which the holy Ghost hath enlightned the heart of him that committed it and that of set malice for every one that sinneth against his knowledge may be said to sin against the holy Ghost as Ananias and Sapphira were said to doe Act. 5. 3. But that is not this great sin of malice resisting the truth because it is the truth but of infirmity What qualities and properties hath this great sin First it must be in him that hath known the truth and after falleth away Heb. 6. 5. therefore Infidels and Heathens doe not sin this sinne neither any that are ignorant though maliciously they blaspheme the truth Secondly it must be done of set malice because it is the truth as the Pharises did Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore Peter that cursed himself and denyed that he knew Christ to save his life did not sinne this sin nor Paul that did persecute him doing it of ignorance Thirdly it must be against God himself directly his Son Christ Jesus Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore it is not any particular breach of the second Table nor a slip against any speciall sin of the first Can these qualities at any time befall the elect or children of God No and therefore they that feel in themselves the testimony of their election need not fear their falling into this sin nor despair VVhat is the deadlinesse of this sin above other sins First God hath pronounced it shall never be pardoned not because God is not able to pardon it but because he hath said he will not forgive it Secondly this sin is commanded not to be prayed for when persons are known to be guilty of it 1 Joh. 5. 16. whereas we are bound to pray for all other persons Thirdly this is the ordinary and first sin of the Devill and therefore is he never received into mercy no more then those that are guilty of it Thus much of the sinne against the holy Ghost Shew now the differences of actuall sins in regard of the degrees attained Some are only sins but others are wickednesses and some beastlinesses or devilishnesses for though originall sin be equall in all Adams children yet actuall sins be not equall but one much greater then another Are not sins well divided into Veniall and Mortall None are Veniall of their own nature but only to the faithful they are so made by the mercy of God in Christ. Doe all naturall men alike commit all these kinds of sin No for though all are alike disposed unto all manner of evill Rom. 7. 14. having in their corrupt nature the seeds of every sin yet doth God for the good of humane society restrain many from notorious crimes by fear of shame and punishment desire of honour and reward c. Rom. 13. 3 4 5. How doth God employ men in this state of sin First he guideth them partly by the light of nature Rom. 2. 14 15. Joh. 1. 9. and partly by common graces of the Spirit Esa. 44. 28. unto many actions profitable for humane society and for the outward service of God Secondly he over-ruleth their evill and sinful actions so that thereby they bring to passe nothing but what his hand and counsell had before determined for his own glory Act. 3. 16. 4. 27 28. What are the things that generally follow sin They are two Guilt and punishment both which doe most duly wait upon sin to enter with it and cannot by any force or cunning of man or Angel be holden from entring upon the person that sin hath already entred upon both likewise doe increase as the sinne increaseth What is the guilt of sin It is the merit and desert of sin which is as it were an obligation to the punishment and wrath of God whereby we become subject to Gods debt or danger that is to condemnation Rom. 2. 15. 3. 9. 10. 19. For every man by reason of his sin is continually subject to the curse of God Gal. 3. 10. and is in as great danger of everlasting damnation as the Traitour apprehended is in danger of hanging drawing and quartering Is there any evill in the guilt before the punishment be executed Very much for it worketh unquietnesse in the mind as when a man is bound in an obligation upon a great forfeiture that very obligation it self disquieteth him especially if he be not able to pay it as we are not And yet more because where other debts have a day set for payment we know not whether the Lord will demand by punishment his debt this day before to morrow What learn you from this That sith men doe shun by all means to be in other mens debt or danger as also the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 13. 8. Owe nothing to any man and Solomon also counselleth in the matter of suretiship Prov. 6. 1 2 3 4 5. we should more warily take heed that we plunge not ourselves over head and ears in the Lords debt for if it be a terrible thing to be bound to any man in stature Staple or Merchant or recognizance much more to God who will be paid to the uttermost farthing How else may the hurt and evill of the guilt of sinne be set forth unto us It is compared to a stroake that lighteth upon the heart and soul of a man where the wound is more dangerous then when it is in the body Gen. 44. 16. 1 Sam. 24. 4 5 6. and so it is also a sting or a bite worse then of a viper as that which bringeth death Have you yet wherewith to set forth the evill of the guilt It seemeth when the Lord said to Cain if he sin against his brother his sin lyeth at the door Gen. 4. 7. that he compareth the guilt to a dog that is always snarling and barking against us which is confirmed by the Apostle who attributeth a mouth to his desert of sin to accuse us Rom. 2. 15. What is the effect of this guilt of Conscience It causeth a man to flie when none pursueth and to be afraid of the fall of a leaf Prov. 28. 1. Levit. 26. 36. VVhen a man doth not know whether he doth sin or no how can he be smitten or bitten or barked at or flie for feare therefore against all this evill ignorance seemeth to be a safe remedy No verily for whether we know it or no his guilt remaineth as
naturall Son of God How is he said to be conceived by the Holy Ghost Because the holy Ghost by his incomprehensible power wrought his conception supernaturally which Fathers doe naturally in the begetting of their children not that any of the substance of the Holy Ghost which is indivisible came to his generation in the womb of the Virgin Why is he called the Word John 1. 1. As for other reasons declared in the doctrine of the Trinity so also because he is he whom the Father promised to Adam Abraham and all the holy Patriarchs to make his promises of salvation sure unto them as a man that hath ones word thinketh himself sure of the matter that is promised Why is the Word said to have been in the beginning Joh. 1. 1. Not because he began then to be but that then he was and therefore is from all eternity What gather you of this that he is the Wisdome of God That our Saviour is from everlasting as wel as his Father for it were an horrible thing to think that there were a time when God wanted Wisdome Why is he called the Character or Image of his Father Because God by him hath made himselfe manifest to the world in the Creation and especially in the Redemption of it What learn you from hence That whosoever seeketh to come to the knowledge of God must come to it by Christ. How is the Godhead of Christ proved Not onely by abundant testimonies of Scripture Esa. 7. 14. 9. 6. 25. 9. John 1. 1. 20. 28. Rom. 9. 5. 1 Joh. 5. 20. But also by his miracles especially in the raising of himselfe from death Rom. 1. 4. together with the continuance and conquest of the Gospell Acts 5. 39. and that not by carnall power or policie but onely by the power of his Spirit Zach. 4. 6. and patient suffering of his Saints Rev. 12. 11. Why was it requisite that our Saviour should be God Because first none can satisfie for sin nor be a Saviour of soules but God alone Psal. 49. 7. 1. Thess. 1. 10. For no creature though never so good is worthy to redeem another mans sin which deserveth everlasting punishment Secondly the satisfaction for our sins must be infinitely meritorious otherwise it cannot satisfie the infinite wrath of God that was offended therefore that the work of our Redemption might be such it was necessary our Saviour should be God to the end his obedience and sufferings might bee of an infinite price and worth Acts 20. 28. Heb. 9. 14. Thirdly No finite creature was able to abide and overcome the infinite wrath of God and the sufferings due unto us for our sins Therefore must our Saviour be God that he might abide the burthen of Gods wrath in his flesh sustaining and upholding the man-hood by his divine power and so might get again and restore to us the righteousnesse and life which we have lost Fourthly our Saviour must vanquish all the enemies of our salvation and overcome Satan Hell Death and Damnation which no creature could ever doe Rom. 1. 4. Heb. 2. 14. Fifthly he must also give efficacie to his satisfaction raising us up from the death of sin and putting us in possession of eternall life Sixthly he must give us his Spirit and by it seale these graces to our soules and renew our corrupt nature which only God can doe What comfort have we then by this that Christ is God Hereby we are sure that he is able to save by reconciling us to the Father And what by this that he is the Sonne That uniting us unto himselfe he may make us children unto his heavenly Father Heb. 2. 10. Being God before all worlds how became he man He took to himselfe a true body and a reasonable soule being conceived in time by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin MARY Heb. 1. 6. Joh. 1. 14. Matth. 1. 18. 20. Luk. 1. 31 32. 2. 7. and so became very man like unto us in all things even in our infirmities sin onely excepted Heb. 5. 7. In which respect he hath the name of the Sonne of man given unto him Matth. 26. 24. because he was of the nature of man according to the flesh and the Sonne of David Mat. 9. 27. because he sprang of the linage and stock of David How doth it appeare that he was true man Besides manifold predictions and cleare testimonies of Scripture Gen. 3. 15. Heb. 2. 17. 1 Tim. 2. 5 c. it is abundantly proved by plentifull experiments especially by his partaking of humane infirmities his Conception Birth Life and Death 1 Pet. 3. 18. Joh. 4. 6 7. Luk. 1. 31. 2. 7. Heb. 2. 9. 14 15. How by his Conception Because according to the flesh he was made of a woman and formed of her onely substance she continuing still a pure Virgin by the power of the most High Rom. 1. 3. Gal. 4. 4. Luk. 1. 34 35. Why is he said to be born Mat. 2. 1. To assure us of his true humanity even by his infancie and infirmitie Luk. 2. 7. Why was he born of a Virgin Luk. 1. 27. That he might be holy and without sin the naturall course of originall corruption being prevented because he came not by naturall propagation What learn you from hence That God is faithful as well as merciful ever making good his word by his work in due season Luk. 1. 20. 45. Act. 3. 18. 24. Why is there mention of the Virgin by her name Mary Luc. 1. 27. For more certainty of his birth and linage Mat. 1. 16. Heb. 7. 14. 2 Tim. 2. 8. as also to acquaint us with his great humility in so great poverty Luk. 2. 24. compared with Lev. 12. 8. What gather you from hence The marvellous grace of Christ who being rich for our sakes became poor that we through his poverty might be made rich 2 Cor. 8. 9. Did he not passe through the Virgin Mary as some say like as saffron passeth through a bag and water through a Pipe or Conduit God forbid he was made of the seed of David and was a plant of the root of Jesse for he took humane nature of the Virgin and so the Word was made flesh If he was only made flesh it would seem that the Godhead served instead of a soul unto him Flesh is here taken according to the use of Scripture for the whole man both body and soul otherwise our Saviour should not have been a perfect man and our souls must have perished everlastingly except his soul had satisfied for them Was not the Godhead turned into flesh seeing it is said he was made flesh In no wise no more then he was turned into sin or into a curse because it is said He was made sin and made a curse for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 3. 13. If the Godhead be not changed into the Manhood is it not at least mingled with it Nothing lesse for then he should be
jurisdiction and authority Mat. 20. 19. Joh. 18. 31 32. as likewise to teach us that he appeared willingly and of his own accord before a mortall Judge of whom he was pronounced innocent and yet by the same he was condemned What comfort have you hereof That my Saviour thus suffering not any whit for his own sins but wholly for mine and for other mens sins before an earthly Judge I shall be discharged before the heavenly Judgement seat What did he chiefly suffer under Pontius Pilate He was apprehended accused arraigned mocked scourged condemned and crucified Mat. 26. 27. and 28. chapters What learn you here That he that knew no sin was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 24. Did Christ suffer these things willingly as he suffered them innocently Yes he laid down his life meekly as the sheep doth his fleece before the shearer being obedient even unto the death Luc. 23. 41. 1 Pet. 2. 22. Esa. 53. 7. Phil. 2. 8. Heb. 5. 8. Vnto what death was he so obedient Even unto the most reproachfull painfull and dreadfull death the death of the Crosse Mat. 27. 30. 38. Phil. 2. 8. Why was Christ put unto this death of the Crosse Because it was not a common death but such a death as was accursed both of God and man that so he being made a curse for us he might redeem us from a curse due unto us Deut. 21. 23. Gal. 3. 13. What comfort have you by this I am comforted in this because I am delivered from the curse which I have deserved by the breach of the law and shall obtain the blessing due unto him for keeping of the same Why was it requisite that our Saviours soul should be separated from his body Because we were all dead that so he might be the death of death for us 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. Heb. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. for by sin death came into the world and therefore the Justice of God could not have been satisfied for our sins unlesse death had been joyned with his sufferings How could the death and sufferings of Christ which were but for a short time be a full satisfaction for us which have deserved eternall death Although they were not everlasting yet in regard of the worthinesse of the person who suffered them they were equivalent to everlasting torments forasmuch as not a bare man nor an Angel did suffer them but the eternall Son of God though not in his Godhead but in our nature which he assumed his person Majesty Deity Goodnesse Justice Righteousnesse being every way infinite and eternall made that which he suffered of no lesse force and value then eternall torments upon others yea even upon all the world besides For even as the death of a Prince being but a man and a sinfull man is of more reckoning then the death of an Army of other men because he is the Prince much more shall the death and sufferings of the Son of God the Prince of all Princes not finite but every way infinite and without sin much more I say shall that be of more reckoning with his Father then the sufferings of all the world and the time of his sufferings of more value for the worthinesse of his person then if all the men in the world had suffered for ever and ever What use are we to make of Christs death and passion 1. The consideration hereof may bring us to a sound perswasion and feeling of our sins because they have deserved so grievous a punishment as either the death of the Son of God or hell fire 2. Hereby we reap unspeakable comfort forasmuch as by his stripes we are healed by his bloud washed by his sacrifice God is satisfied and by his death we are saved and redeemed 1 Pet. 2. 24. Rev. 1. 5. Heb. 10. 10. 12. Rom. 5. 8 9 10. 3. We learn from hence to die to our sins and to live henceforth unto him that hath dyed for us Rom. 6. 2. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 15. What befell our Saviour after his soule was separated from his body He was buried Act. 13. 29 30. and went to Hades or as we commonly speak descended into hell Act. 2. 31. Why was it needfull that Christ should be buried 1. To assure us more fully that he was truly dead Mat. 27. 59 60. 94 65 66. Act. 2. 29. 2. That even in the grave the very fortresse of death he might loose the sorrows and bands of death Act. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 55. What is meant by his descending into Hell Not that he went to the place of the damned but that he went absolutely unto the estate of the dead Rom. 10. 7. Eph. 4. 9. What doe you call the estate of the dead That departing this life he went in his soul into heaven Luc. 23. 43. and was in his body under the very power and dominion of death for a season Acts 2. 24. Heb. 2. 14. Rom. 6. 9. What comfort have you by Christs death buriall and lying under the power of death 1. I am comforted because my sinnes are fully discharged in his death and so buried that they shall never come into remembrance 2. My comfort is the more because by the vertue of his death and buriall sin shall be killed in me and buried so that henceforth it shall have no power to reign over me 3. I need not to fear death seeing that sin which is the sting of death is taken away by the death of Christ and that now death is made unto me an entrance into his life Hitherto of his sufferings what is the other part of his satisfaction His perfect righteousnesse whereby he did that which we were not able to doe and absolutely fulfilled the whole law of God for us Ps. 40. 7 8. Rom. 3. 19. 5. 19. Why was it necessary that Christ should as well fulfill the Law as suffer for us Because as by his sufferings he took away our unrighteousnesse and freed us from the punishment due to us for our sins so by performing for us absolute obedience to the whole law of God he hath merited our righteousnesse making us just and holy in the sight of God and purchased eternall happinesse for us in the life to come 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 4. 4 5. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 8. 3 4. For as we are made unrighteous by Adams sinne so are we made fully and wholly righteous being justified by a man that is God How manifold is the righteousnesse of our Saviour Two-fold Originall Actuall VVhat is his originall righteousnesse The perfect integrity and purenesse of his humane nature which in himselfe was without all guile and the least staine of corruption Heb. 7. 26. Being very man how could he be without sin The course of naturall corruption was prevented because he was not begotten after the ordinary course by man but was conceived in the
last judgement in the world to come Why is Christ Jesus also called our Lord Because he is the Lord of glory and life that hath bought us 1 Cor. 1. 2. our head that must govern us and our Soveraigne that subdues all our enemies unto us Act 3. 15. 1 Cor. 2. 8. 1 Pet. 1 19. Eph. 1. 22. Joshua 5. 14 15. Dan. 12. 1. Heb. 1. 10. 14 15. How hath he bought us Not with gold or silver but with his precious blood he hath purchased us to be a peculiar people to himself 1 Pet. 1. 18. What comfort have you by this Seeing he hath paid such a price for us he will not suffer us to perish What learn you from hence that Christ is our head to govern us To obey his Commandements and bear his rebukes and chastisements Luk. 6. 46. John 14. 15. Col. 3. 23 24. In what place of Scripture is the doctrine of Christs Kingdome specially laid down In Esa. 9. vers 6 7. For unto us a child is born and unto us a son is given and the government is upon his shoulder and he shall call his name Wonderfull Counsellour The mighty God The everlasting Father The Prince of Peace The increase of his government and peace shall have none end and he shall sit upon the throne of David and upon his Kingdome to order it and to establish it with Judgement and with Justice from henceforth even for ever the zeale of the Lord of hosts will perform this Psal. 110. 1 2. c. What are we here taught concerning Christs Kingdome The benefit that we receive by it and the cause of it How is the former set forth By declaration First of his person that he is a child born namely God made man whereof hath been spoken Secondly of his properties with the effects of the same How are his properties here expressed They are first generally set forth by comparison of the unlikelihood of his Kingdome with the Regiments of worldly Potentates VVhat difference or inequality is there That whereas other Kings execute matters by their Lievtenants and Deputies armed with their authority In our Saviours Kingdome although there be used instruments yet do they accomplish his will and purpose not only by his authority but also by his strength and vertue VVhat further doctrine doe you note hence That the man of sin or Pope of Rome is not the ministeriall head of the Church which is Christs Kingdom sith he is himselfe present yea and that most notably by his Spirit and more to the advantage of his Church then when he was bodily present Ioh. 16. 7. How are his properties set forth more particularly First that he should be called Wonderfull not that it should be his proper name which was only Jesus But that he should be as renownedly known to be Wonderfull as men are known by their names How is he Wonderfull Partly in his person as is before said and partly in his works namely First in the creation of the world Secondly in the preservation and especially in the redemption of it VVhat is the next that followeth It is shewed more particularly wherein he is Wonderfull and first that he is Wonderfull in counsell and The Counsellour VVhat is here to be observed First in the government of a Kingdom counsell and wisdom are the chief as that which is preferred to strength Esa. 9. 15. 2 Sam. 20. 16. Eccl. 7. 19. 9. 16. Prov. 21. 22. 24. 5. and therefore that we may assure our selves that in the Kingdom of Christ all things are done wisely nothing rashly in which respect he is said to have a long stoal and a white head Rev. 1. 13 14. Secondly a great comfort for the children of God that our Saviour Christ is our Counsellour who giveth all sound advice Thirdly that when we are in any perplexity and know not which way to turn yet we may come to our Saviour Christ who is given unto us for a Counsellour By what means may we come to him for advice By our humble supplications and prayers to him How may we receive advice from him By the doctrine of God drawn out of his holy word which is therefore termed the man of our counsell Psal. 119. 24. VVhat is the next property That he is wonderfull in might and the strong God having all sound strength VVhat have we here to learn 1. That as he is wise and doth all things pertaining to the good of his Church so he is of power to execute all that he adviseth wisely 2. That as there is in us no advice of our selves so there is in us no sound strength to keep us from any evill but that as he giveth good advice to his so doth he with his own power perform and effect it Phil. 2 13. And therefore although we be as the vine of all other trees the weakest or as the sheep of all other beasts the simplest yet we have for our vine a gardner and for our shepherd Christ Jesus the mighty strong God 3. That we should take heed how we depart from his obedience for he will do what he listeth for if to obey be a good means to help us into the favour of our earthly Princes it will much more help us in the favour of the King of Kings VVhat other properties follow Two other which are as it were the branches and effects of the former 1. That he is the Father of eternities 2. The Prince of Peace Sith he is called the Father of eternities is there not a confusion of persons In no wise for it is a borrowed speech signifying that he is the authour of eternity VVhat doe you here gather That where other Kingdomes alter his is everlasting Dan. 2. 44. What doctrine is thereof to be gathered First that the Kingdom of our Saviour Christ being perpetuall he dasheth crushes in peeces al other mighty Monarchies Regiments that shall rise up against him and therfore that his Church subjects generally and every particular member need not to feare any power whatsoever Secondly that whatsoever we have by nature or industry is momentany like unto the grasse that fadeth away and whatsoever durable thing we have we have it from Christ. What is the second property arising out of the former That he is the Prince of peace that is the procurer cause and ground of peace that causeth his subjects to continue in peace and quietnesse Of what nature is this peace It is spirituall Rom. 5. 1. Eph. 2. 14 15 16 17 1. When we have peace with God 2. When we have peace in our Consciences 3. When there is peace between men and men which ariseth out of both the former Where should this peace be established Upon the throne of David that is in the Church of God What is the cause of all this The love and zeal of God breaking thorough all lets either inward from our selves and our own sins or outward from the enmity of the Devill and
the world Esa. 9. 7. What fruit receive we by the Kingly office of our Saviour Christ By it all the treasures brought in by his Priestly and Propheticall office are dealt to us continually For from it all the means of applying and making effectuall unto us Christ and all his benefits doe come yea without it all the actions of his other offices are to us void fruitlesse and of none effect What comfort have we by this Hereby we are assured that by his Kingly power we shall finally overcome the flesh the world the devill death and hell To whom will this blessed King communicate the means of salvation He offereth them to many and they are sufficient to save all mankind but all shall not be saved thereby because by faith they will not receive them Matth. 20. 16. Joh. 1. 11. 1 Joh. 2. 2. Are not the Faithfull in some sort also made partakers of this honor of his Kingdome Yes verily For they are made Kings to rule and subdue their stirring and rebellious affections and to tread Satan under their feet Rom. 6. 12. 16. 20. Rev. 1. 6. 5. 10. You have spoken of the two natures and three offices of our Saviour Shew now in what state did Christ God and man perform this three-fold office In a two-fold estate 1. Of abasement and humiliation Phi. 2. 7 8. 2. Of advancement and exaltation Ph. 2. 9. Col. 2. 15. Eph. 1. 20 21. In the former he abased himself by his sufferings for sin whereof we have heard largely in the declaration of his Priesthood In the latter he obtained a most glorious victory and triumphed over sin thereby fulfilling his Priesthood and making way to his Kingdome What was his estate of Humiliation It was the base condition of a servant whereto he humbled himself from his Conception to his Crosse and so untill the time of his resurrection Phil. 2. 7 8. Wherein did this base estate of the Son of God consist In his Conception Gestation and Birth and in his Life diversly as in his Poverty Hunger Thirst Wearinesse and other Humiliations even unto death of which heretofore hath been spoken What learn you from this that Christ first suffered many things before he could enter into his Glory Luk. 24. 26. 46. That the way to reign with Christ is first to suffer with him and such as bear the Crosse constantly shall wear the Crown eternally Rom. 8. 17 18. 2 Tim. 2. 12. 4. 8. James 1. 12. What is his estate of Exaltation His glorious condition Phil. 2. 9. Heb. 2. 9. beginning at the instant of his Resurrection Acts 2. 24 31 36. and comprehending his Ascension Eph. 4. 8. Acts 2. 34. Heb. 9. 24 25. Sitting at the right hand of God his Father Psal. 110. 1 2 5 6. Mark 16. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 22. and the second comming in glory to judge the world Mat. 25. 31. What is the first degree of this estate His glorious Resurrection for after he had in his manhood suffered for us he did in the third day rise again by his own power from the dead Eph. 1. 19. Luc. 24. 7. 1 Cor. 15. 4. What it needfull that Christ being dead should rise again Yes it was for his own glory and our good Acts 2. 24. 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. How for his glory That being formerly abased as a servant and crucified as a sinner he might thus be declared to be the Son of God and exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour Phil. 2. 7. Luc. 23. 33. Esay 53. 12. Rom. 1. 4. Act. 5. 30 31. How for our good That having paid the price of our redemption by his death we might have good assurance of our full Justification by his life 1 Pet. 1. 19. Acts 20. 28. Rom. 4. 23. 1 Cor. 15. 17. What speciall comfort ariseth from this that the Lord of life is risen from death 1. It assureth me that his righteousnesse shall be imputed unto me for my perfect Justification that he that had the power of death is destroyed Heb. 2. 14. his works dissolved 1 Joh. 3. 8. and that all our misery is swallowed up in Christs victory 1 Cor. 15. 54. 2. It comforteth me because it doth from day to day raise me up to righteousnesse and newnesse of life in this present world 3. It ministreth unto me a comfortable hope that I shall rise again in the last day from bodily death What fruits then are we to shew from the vertue of his resurrection We are to stand up from the dead to awake to righteousnesse to live unto God and dying in him or for him to look for life again from him Eph. 5. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 34. Rom. 6. 4. 11. Phil. 3. 20. 1 Thes. 4. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 22. Col. 3. 4. Why is Christ said to raise himself To let us know that as he had power to lay down his life so he had also to take it up again Joh. 10. 18. What gather you hence That being Lord both of quick and dead he can and will both quicken our souls here to the life of grace and raise our bodies hereafter to the life of glory Rom. 14. 9. John 5. 21. Phil. 3. 21. Why did he rise the third day Because the bands of death could no longer hold him this being the time that he had appointed and the day that best served for his glorious resurrection Act. 2. 24. Mat. 20. 17. 12. 40. Why did he not rise before the third day Lest rising so presently upon his death his enemies might take occasion of cavill that he was not dead Mat. 27. 63 64. 28. 13 14. And why would he not put it off untill the fourth day Lest the faith of his Disciples should have been weakned and their hearts too much cast down and discouraged Mat. 28. 1. Luc. 24. 21. What gather you hence That as the Lord setteth down the tearm of our durance so doth he chuse the fittest time of our deliverance Rev. 2. 10. Mat. 12. 40. Dan. 11. 35. Hosea 6. 2. What is the second degree of his Exaltation His Ascension Mark 16. 19. Ephes. 4. 8 9. For we beleeve that Christ in his humane nature the Apostles looking on ascended into heaven What assurance have you of Christs Ascension The evidence of the Word the testimony of heavenly Angels and holy men Luc. 24. 51. Acts 1. 9. Wherefore did Christ ascend into heaven Because he had finished his Fathers work on earth Joh. 17. 3 4 5. and that being exalted in our nature he might consecrate a way prepare a place Joh. 14. 2 3. and appear in the presence of God to make intercession for us Heb. 4. 29. 9. 24. VVhat benefits did he bestow upon his Church at his Ascension He triumphed over his enemies gave gifts to his friends and taking with him a pledge of our flesh he sent and left with us the earnest of his Spirit Eph. 4. 8. Heb. 10. 12. 20. 2
who is not onely the Lord our Maker Psal. 100. 3. but also our God and Saviour 1 Tim. 4. 10. Psal. 36. 6. Whence is the latter From the Covenant of grace whereby he is our God and Saviour of them that believe 1 Tim. 4. 10. assuring them of all gracious deliverances by vertue of his Covenant from all evills and enemies both bodily and especially spirituall a proofe whereof is laid downe in that famous deliverance of the people of Israel out of the slavery of Egypt which was so exceeding great that by reason thereof they were said to be in an Iron Furnace Deut. 4. 20. How can this belong to us which are no Israelites Though we be not Israel in name or according to the flesh yet wee are the true Israel of God according to the spirit and promise Why doth the Lord make choyse of that benefit which seemeth nothing at all to belong unto us rather then of any other wherein we communicate with them 1. Because it is the manner of God to allure the Israelites to whom the Law was given at first as children with temporall benefits having respect to their infirmity and child-hood whereas wee are blessed of God with greater knowledge and therefore in respect of them are as it were at mans estate Deut. 28. 13. 2. Because it was fittest to expresse the spirituall deliverance from Satan by Christ which was thereby figured and represented and so it belongeth no lesse if not more to us than to them 3. Because we being freed from the slavery of our bloody enemies whereunto we were so neere more than once and unto whom we justly have deserved to have beene enthralled and it being the common case of all Gods Children to bee in continuall danger of the like and to feele the like goodnesse of God towards them we may also make use of this Title and esteeme it a great Bond also of us unto God 4. Because it was the latest benefit the sweetnesse whereof was yet as it were in their mouth and herein the Lord had respect unto our corrupt nature who are ready to forget old benefits how great soever What is there is this reason to set forth the true God whom we worship and to distinguish him from all Idolls whatsoever 1. The name Jehovah which betokeneth that hee onely is of himselfe and all other things have their being of him whereby wee are taught that there is but one true God whose being there is no creature able to conceive and that hee giveth being to all other things both by creating them at first and by preserving and directing of them continually 2. The name Elohim or God which in the Hebrew is of the plurall number to signifie the Trinity of the Persons in the Vnity of the God-head 3. That he is both Omnipotent and is able to do all things and also willing to imploy his power to the preservation of his people proved from an argument of the effects in the deliverance of the Israelites out of Egypt So much of the Preface What are the words of the first Commandement Thou shalt haue no other Gods before Me. Or Thou shalt not haue any strange God before My Face Exo. 20. 3. What is the scope and meaning of this Commandement 1. That this Jehovah one in substance and three in persons the Creator and Governour of all things and the Redeemer of his people is to be entertained for the onely true God in all the powers of our soule Matth. 22. 33. 2. That the inward and spiritual worship of the heart Prov. 23. 26. wherein God especially delighteth Deut. 5. 29. and which is the ground of the outward Prov. 4. 23. Matth. 12. 35. is to be given to him and to none other and that sincerely without hypocrisie as in his sight who searcheth and knoweth the heart Jer. 17. 10. For this word Before me or Before my face noteth that inward entertainment worship wherof God alone doth take notice and thereby God sheweth that he condemneth as well the corrupt thoughts of mans heart concerning his Majesty as the wicked practice of the body for our Thoughts are before his face What is forbidden in this Commandement Originall corruption so farre forth as it is the fountaine of impiety against God Rom. 8. 7. with all the streames thereof What is required in this Commandement That we set up imbrace and sanctifie the Lord God in our hearts Isa. 8. 13. yeilding to him in Christ that inward and spirituall worship which is due unto his Majesty Wherein doth this consist 1. In knowing of God in himselfe in his properties and in his workes for it should be the joy of every Christian soule to know the true God and whom he hath sent Christ Iesus Io. 17. 3. 2. In cleaving unto him Deut. 11. 22. Josh. 23. 8. Acts 11. 23. How is that to be done 1. We must be perswaded of Gods love to us and so rest upon him for all we want being assured that he both can and will abundantly provide for us here and for ever 2. We are to love him so heartily as to be loath to offend him and delight to please him in all things So much of the Commandement in generall What are we to consider of it in particular First the severall branches of it Secondly the helpes and hinderances of the obedience thereof What be the severall branches of this Precept There is here commanded 1. The having of a God and herein Religion 2. The having of one onely God and no more and herein unity 3. The having of the true God and none other for our God and herein truth To what end doth God command us to have a God seeing wee cannot chuse but have him for our God whether we will or not Because albeit all men of necessity must have a God above them yet many either know him not or care not for him and so make him no God as much as in them lyeth What is it then to have a God To know and worship such an infinite Nature as hath his being in himselfe and giveth being to all other things wholly to depend upon him and to yield absolute obedience to his will What is it to have no God In heart to deny either God himselfe or any of his properties or so to live as if there were no God at all What things are to be considered in this first branch of this Commandement Such as doe concerne the faculties of the soule and the severall powers of the inward man namely the Vnderstanding Memory Will Affections and Conscience What is the Vnderstanding charged with in being commanded to have a God 1. To know God as hee hath revealed himselfe in his Word and in his Works 1 Chron. 28. 9. John 17. 3. 2. To acknowledge him to be such an one as we know him to be 3. To have faith both in believing the things that are written of him and
onely to the faithfull for the strengthening of their faith in the eternall Covenant and the bringing them more effectually to the practice of Gods Commandements Exod. 12. 16. Luke 1. 59. 3. 3. 16. 1 Cor. 11. 23. Mat. 26. 26. Rom. 4. 19. 6. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 21. Why call you it Action Because it is not a bare signe alone but a worke 1 Cor. 11. 24 25. Why call you it an action of the whole Church Because it is a publick action and appertaineth to the whole Church and therefore ought to be done in the presence of the Congregation by the example of John Matth. 3. 11 12. and commanded of Paul 1 Cor. 11. 18 20 22. it being a greater indignity for the Sacraments to be administered privately then for the civill judgement which is open and publike That we say nothing of the sacrifices under the Law which were not so excellent as these and yet it was not lawful to offer them in private which reproveth the disorder of the Papists who turne the Communion into a private Masse and minister the Lords Supper to one alone without the presence of the Congregation But may not the Sacraments be so administered upon necessity as namely to a sick man ready to depart out of this life There is no such necessity for a man believing wanting that opportunity of comming to the Lords Supper wanteth not the effect thereof seeing the Lord promised by Ezekiel that hee would be a Tabernacle to his people being banished from it Ezek. 37. 27. And therefore the want of the Sacraments doth not hurt when with conveniency a man cannot enjoy them but the contempt or neglect of them when they may conveniently be come unto What the● is the fittest time and place for the administration of the Sacraments The fittest time is the Lords or some other day of publike meeting The most convenient place is the Church and usuall place of the assembly of the Congregation Did not Abraham minister the Sacrament of Circumcision in his private house His house was at that time the Church of God and therefore not private and so in the time of persecution the godly did oft-times meet in Barnes and such obscure places which were indeed publick because when the Church of God were there the house or place availed nothing to make it publick or private even as wheresoever the Prince is there is the Court also said to be though it were in a poore Cottage What difference is there between a Sacrament and a Sacrifice In a Sacrifice there is an offering made to God in a Sacrament there is an offer made by God to us In the Sacrifices Christ was signified as given for us in the Sacraments as given to us the Sacrifices onely signes the Sacraments seales also Who is the Author of a Sacrament God alone because he onely can bestow those graces which are sealed in a Sacrament How doth God ordaine a Sacrament By his Word How many parts of Gods Word are there whereby he doth institute and and ordaine a Sacrament Two First a Commandement to doe it Secondly a promise of a blessing upon the right using of it Was not the Rain-bow a Sacrament being a signe ordained by God No for though it were a signe yet it was no signe of salvation by Christ. What is the matter and substance of every Sacrament One and the same Iesus Christ although diversly communicated in divers Sacraments and in some more forcible then in others because of some elements communicating with or taking hold of or reaching to more of our senses What things then are required in a Sacrament Three First the outward signes and Sacramentall actions concerning the same Secondly the inward thing signified thereby viz. Christ Iesus with his saving graces and spirituall actions concerning the same Thirdly a similitude betwixt them both As in Baptisme for example that as water doth wash the body so doth the bloud of Christ wash away the spots of the soule What signes are used in Sacraments Some onely representing as water bread and wine some applying as washing eating drinking and such like What are the things signified First Christ Iesus and his merrits and secondly the applying of the same unto us in particular Wherein doth the signes of the things signified differ 1. In Nature 2. In the manner of receiving 3. In the parties which doe receive them 4. In the necessity of the receiving of them Wherein doe they agree In this that the signe doth so fitly represent the things signified thereby that the minde of a Christian is drawne by the signe to consider of the things signified What is then the Sacramentall union betwixt the signes and the things signified Such as betwixt a sealed will and the things conveighed in the same From whence it is that the names effects and properties of the one are given to the other What is the cause that moved the Lord to grace the outward signes in the Sacraments with the names of the things signified The outward elements have the names of the spirituall things they set forth 1. Because of their fit proportion and agreement in regard of the resemblance and similitude of the elements and the things signified in which respect they are called signes 2. To shew the inseparable conjunction of the things signified with the signe in the worthy receiver in which regard they are called Seales as in the person of Christ his two natures are so inseparably united that often times the properties and effects of the one are attributed to the other What is the ground of this Sacramentall union In generall the institution of Christ whereby fit things are appointed so to be used with a promise annexed In speciall the applying of that word unto certain speciall signes with prayer in particular and unto me the ground is my reverent and worthy receiving What is the use of Sacraments God hath ordained them to the end that by comparing and conferring the outward things with the inward they might help 1. Our understanding in which regard they are as it were images and glasses Gal. 3. 1. 2. Our remembrance in which respect they are Monuments Luk. 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 24. 3. And especially the perswasion of our hearts by reason whereof they are seals and pledges Rom. 4. 11. for they are appointed by God to strengthen us in the promises of salvation which God hath not onely made to us in word but also confirmed the same by writ and lest that we should any wayes doubt as naturally we are inclined he hath set to his seales according to the manner of men that nothing might be lacking which should increase our strength What Doctrine is here to be gathered 1. What root of blindnesse of forgetfulnesse and especially hardnesse of heart to beleeve is in us that the Word and Oath of God is not sufficient to pluckup but that we must have such aides 2. The mercy of God that applieth himself
their labours 2 Thes. 1. 9. and a Crowne after their Combate 2 Tim. 4. 8. and after their long pilgrimage an everlasting habitation 2 Cor. 5. 1 Be patient saith the Apole and settle your hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth neere 2 Pet. 2. 9. when they that have sowne in teares shall reap in joy James 5. 7. Heb. 10. 36. Thirdly from this Doctrine excellent arguments may be drawne to presse Christians to a holy life 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then all these things must be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse And verse 14. Wherefore seeing yee look for such things give diligence that you may be found of him in peace We should alwayes live in expectation of the Lord Iesus in the Clouds with oyle in our Lamps prepared for his comming Blessed is that servant whom his Master when he commeth shall finde so doing he shall say unto him Well done good and faithfull servant enter into thy Masters joy FINIS The Table ALL men desire eternall life and happinesse 3 Religion the meanes to obtaine it No salvation but by true Religion The divers kindes of false Religion What Christian Religion is Of Catechising 4 What Catechising is Where to be used and by whom The necessity of it True happinesse consisteth in God How we come to enjoy God Meanes to know God By His divine works His holy word 5 Of the divine workes of God The uses of knowing God by his works Of Gods holy Word the Scriptures 6 How the Scriptures were delivered By Revelations By Oracles By visions 7 What the Scripture is That the Scriptures are the Word of God 8 Reasons to prove God to be the Author of the holy Scriptures 1. Efficient instrumentall 2. The simplicitie and sincerity of the Writers 3. The quality and condition of the pen-men of the holy Scriptures 9 4. The holy matters of holy Scriptures 5. The doctrine of Scriptures are above humane capacity 6. The concord of the severall Writers one with another 7. The Prophesies fulfilled in their due times 8. The Majesty and authority of the Scriptures 10 9. The motives used in them to perswade not reason but commands 10. The end and scope of the Scripture which is Gods glory 11. Their admirable power 12. Their antiquity 13. The hatred of the devill and wicked men against them 14. The preservation of the Scriptures 15. The power to humble a man and raise him up againe 16. The consonant testimony of all men at all times 11 17. The knowne miracles done by the Writers 18. The testimony of the Spirit in the hearts of men What are the books of holy Scripture 12 In what language the old Testament were first written with vowels and pricks That the Scriptures of the old Testament were first written without pricks or vowels 13 The Book of Moses The Booke of the Prophets The Historicall Books The Doctrinall Books The Poeticall books The Prosaicall books 14 The Apocryphall Bookes The erroors of the Apocryphall books 15 Of the books of the New Testament 16 The properties of the holy scriptures 17 1. Holy 2. Highest in authority 18 3. Sufficient in themselves That the Scriptures are a perfect Rule for doctrine life and salvation Objections against the sufficiency of the holy Scriptures answered 20 Of the perspicuity of the holy Scripture 21 The Papists objections against the perspicuity of the Scriptures answered 22 Why God hath left some places of Scripture obscure 23 Of the translations of holy Scriptures An objection grounded on various readings answered 24 Why the Scriptures must be expounded by the Scriptures The use of the holy Scriptures 25 Who must read the Scriptures That all must read the Scriptures proved The Papists objections against reading the Scriptures answered 26 That there is a God 27 Of the nature of God 29 Of Gods essence 30 The Name of God Of the Properties or Attributes of God 32 A description of God God is a spirit 33 The perfection of God The felicity of God Of the simplenesse or singlenesse of God 35 Gods infinitenesse 36 Gods immensity or greatnesse 37 Gods eternity 38 The life of God 39 Of the knowledge or wisedome of God Fore-knowledge or counsell of God The counsell of God Gods absolute wisdome and knowledge The uses 45 Of the omnipotence or almighty power of God Of Gods absolute power 47 Of Gods actuall power Gods power infinite The uses 50 Of Gods will Whether God doth will evill 56 The holinesse of Gods will 61 Of Gods goodnesse The use of Gods goodnesse 62 The graciousnesse of God 63 Of the love of God 64 Uses of Gods love 67 Of the mercy of God The uses of Gods mercy Of the justice of God 70 The uses of Gods justice 72 That there is but one God 73 Of the unity of the God-head Of the Trinity 75 What a Person in the Trinity is 78 Of the Father the first person of the Trinity 79 Of the other persons of the Trinity in generall Of the second person in the Trinity 80 Of the third person in the Trinity 83 How to know that wee have the Spirit 86 Things commune to the three persons 87 In what they all agree 1. Coessentiall 2. Coequall 3. Coeternall Things proper to each of the persons Of the kingdome of God 88 The parts of Gods Kingdome Of Gods decree Of Predestination 91 Parts of Predestination Election Reprobation Election Of Reprobation Execution of Gods decree 93 Creation Providence Creation in generall Vses of the creation Creation of the particular creatures The Heavens The earth Of the invisible Creatures the third Heaven and Angels Of Angels Of the creation of visible things 98 Of the Chaos or rude masse Of the parts of the rude Masse Heaven Earth Of the frame of the world Of the Elements The foure Elements Of the mixt or compound bodies The severall works of the six days 100 The 1. day heaven earth and the light The 2. day the firmament The third day grasse corne trees Of the water and earth The 4. day of the Creation of lights 101 The 5. day of the creation of fishes birds The 6. day of the creation of man and woman 102 Of the parts of man and 1. Of his body 2. Of the soule of man 103 Of the immortality of the soule Of the seat of the soule What is the Image of God in man 104 Of the womans creation 106 The end of the creation Of Gods providence 107 Definition of Gods providence 108 The uses of the Doctrine of Gods providence 115 Of Gods speciall providence over Angels Good Angels 116 Of the Evill Angels 120 Vses of the Doctrine concerning evill Angells 122 Of Gods particular providence over man Of Gods providence towards mankind 123 Of the Covenant between God and man First Covenant of works 124 The state of man in the time of his innocency 126 Of man in the state of corruption and of his fall 127
read definition p. 232. l. 31 read you shall no more call for me in Baal p. 245. l. 13. for private good read private prayer p. 254. l. 2 for preferring read preserving p. 255. l. 15. for revile read reveale p. 262. l. 21. for towards them read before them p. 272. l. 37. for owne read very p. 277. l. 43. for commended read commanded p. 289 l. 3. for goe read and therefore p. 293. l. 10. for retained read received l. 11. for retaine read receive p. 301. l. 5. read the publike are either p. 314. l. 32. for thirst read Christ. p. 323. l. 11. leave out other p. 364. l. 36. for proposeth read purposeth p. 374. l. 13. for hands read hearts p. 405. l. 34. for of read and. p. 417. l. 41. read now in the time p. 420. l. 10. read But where God denieth p. 421. l. 17. leave out but. p. 423. l. 36. for which we have alone read which we have not p. 427. l. 47. for groaning read growing p. 435. l. 45. for examination read Excommunication IMMANUEL OR THE MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION OF THE SON OF GOD UNFOLDED By JAMES VSHER Archbishop of Armagh JOHN 1. 14. THE WORD WAS MADE FLESH LONDON Printed by M. F. for RICH. ROYSTON and are to bee sold at his shop at the sign of the Angel in Ivy-Lane MDCXLV THE MYSTERY OF THE Incarnation of the SON OF GOD. THE holy Prophet in the Book of the Proverbs poseth all such as have not learned wisdome nor known the knowledge of the holy with this Question Who hath ascended up into heaven or descended who hath gathered the wind in his fists who hath bound the waters in a garment who hath established all the ends of the earth What is his name and what is his SONS name if thou canst tell To help us herein the SON Himself did tell us when hee was here upon earth that None hath ascended up to heaven but hee that descended from heaven even the Son of man which is in heaven And that wee might not bee ignorant of his name the Prophet Isaiah did long before foretell that Vnto us a Childe is born and unto us a Son is given whose name shall bee called Wonderfull Counseller The Mighty God The Everlasting Father The Prince of Peace Where if it bee demanded how these things can stand together that the Son of man speaking upon earth should yet at the same instant bee in heaven that the Father of Eternity should bee born in time and that the Mighty God should become a Childe which is the weakest state of Man himself wee must call to minde that the first letter of this great Name is WONDERFULL When hee appeared of old to Manoah his name was Wonderfull and hee did wonderously Judg. 13. 18 19. But that and all the wonders that ever were must give place to the great mystery of his Incarnation and in respect thereof cease to bee wonderfull for of this work that may bee verifyed which is spoken of those wonderfull judgements that God brought upon Aegypt when hee would shew his power and have his name declared throughout all the earth Before them were no such neither after them shall bee the like Neither the creation of all things out of nothing which was the beginning of the works of God those six working dayes putting as it were an end to that long Sabbath that never had beginning wherein the Father Son and holy Ghost did infinitely glorifie themselves and rejoyce in the fruition one of another without communicating the notice thereof unto any creature nor the Resurrection from the dead and the restauration of all things the last works that shall goe before that everlasting Sabbath which shall have a beginning but never shall have end neither that first I say nor these last though most admirable peeces of work may bee compared with this wherein the Lord was pleased to shew the highest pitch if any thing may bee said to bee highest in that which is infinite and exempt from all measure and dimensions of his Wisdome Goodnesse Power and Glory The Heathen Chaldeans to a question propounded by the King of Babel make answer that it was a rare thing which hee required and that none other could shew it except the Gods whose dwelling is not with flesh But the rarity of this lyeth in the contrary to that which they imagined to bee so plain that hee who is over all God blessed for ever should take our flesh and dwell or pitch his tabernacle with us That as the glory of God filled the Tabernacle which was a figure of the humane nature of our Lord with such a kinde of fulnesse that Moses himself was not able to approach unto it therein comming short as in all things of the Lord of the house and filled the Temple of Solomon a type likewise of the body of our Prince of Peace in such sort that the Priests could not enter therein so in him all the fulnesse of the Godhead should dwell bodily And therefore if of that Temple built with hands Solomon could say with admiration But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth Behold heaven and the heaven of heavens can not contain thee how much lesse this house which I have built of the true Temple that is not of this building wee may with greater wonderment say with the Apostle Without controversie great is the mystery of Religion God was manifested in the flesh Yea was made of a Woman and born of a Virgin a thing so wonderfull that it was given for a signe unto unbeleevers seven hundred and forty yeers before it was accomplished even a signe of Gods own choosing among all the wonders in the depth or in the heighth above Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a signe Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and shall call his name Immanuel Esa. 7. 14. A notable wonder indeed and great beyond all comparison That the Son of God should bee made of a Woman even made of that Woman which vvas made of by himself That her womb then and the heavens now should contain him vvhom the Heaven of Heavens can not contain That hee who had both Father and Mother whose pedegree is upon record even up unto Adam who in the fulnesse of time vvas brought forth in Bethlehem and when hee had finished his course was cut off out of the land of the living at Jerusalem should yet notwithstanding bee in truth that which his shadow Melchisedec was onely in the conceite of the men of his time without Father without Mother without pedegree having neither beginning of dayes nor end of life That his Father should bee greater then hee and yet hee his Fathers equall That hee is before Abraham was and yet Abrahams birth preceded his wel-nigh the space of two thousand
discharge in the least measure His surety therefore being to satisfie in his stead none will bee found fit to undertake such a payment but he who is both God and Man Man it is fit he should bee because Man was the party that by the articles of the first Covenant was tyed to this obedience and it was requisite that as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man likewise many should be made righteous Again if our Mediatour were onely God he could have performed no obedience the Godhead being free from all manner of subjection and if he were a bare man although he had been as perfect as Adam in his integrity or the Angels themselves yet being left unto himselfe amidst all the temptations of Satan and this wicked world he should be subject to fall as they were or if he should hold out as the elect Angels did that must have been ascribed to the grace and favour of an other whereas the giving of strict satisfaction to Gods justice was the thing required in this behalf But now being God as well as Man he by his own eternall Spirit preserved himself without spot presenting a far more satisfactory obedience unto God then could have possibly been performed by Adam in his integrity For beside the infinite difference that was betwixt both their Persons which maketh the actions of the one beyond all comparison to exceed the worth and value of the other we know that Adam was not able to make himselfe holy but what holinesse he had he received from him who created him according to his owne image so that whatsoever obedience Adam had performed God should have eaten but of the fruit of the vineyard which himselfe had planted and of his own would all that have been which could be given unto him But Christ did himself sanctifie that humane nature which he assumed according to his own saying Joh. 17. 19. For their sakes I sanctifie my self and so out of his own peculiar store did he bring forth those precious treasures of holy obedience which for the satisfaction of our debt he was pleased to tender unto his Father Againe if Adam had done all things which were commanded him hee must for all that have said I am an unprofitable servant I have done that which was my duty to doe whereas in the voluntary obedience which Christ subjected himself unto the case stood far otherwise True it is that if we respect him in his humane nature his Father is greater then he and he is his Fathers servant yet in that he said and most truly said that God was his Father the Jews did rightly infer from thence that he thereby made himself equall with God and the Lord of Hosts himselfe hath proclaimed him to bee the man that is his fellow Being such a man therefore and so highly born by the priviledge of his birth-right hee might have claimed an exemption from the ordinary service whereunto all other men are tyed and by being the Kings Son have freed himself from the payment of that tribute which was to be exacted at the hands of Strangers When the Father brought this his first-begotten into the world he said Let all the Angels of God worship him and at the very instant wherein the Son advanced our nature into the highest pitch of dignitie by admitting it into the unity of his sacred Person that nature so assumed was worthy to be crowned with all glory and honour and he in that nature might then have set himself down at the right hand of the throne of God tyed to no other subjection then now he is or hereafter shall be when after the end of this world he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God the Father For then also in regard of his assumed nature he shall be subject unto him that put all other things under him Thus the Son of God if he had minded onely his own things might at the very first have attained unto the joy that was set before him but looking on the things of others he chose rather to come by a tedious way and wearisome journey unto it not challenging the priviledge of a Son but taking upon him the form of a mean servant Whereupon in the dayes of his flesh hee did not serve as an honourable Commander in the Lords host but as an ordinary soldier he made himself of no reputation for the time as it were emptying himself of his high state and dignity hee humbled himself and became obedient untill his death being content all his life long to be made under the Law yea so farre that as he was sent in the likenesse of sinfull flesh so he disdained not to subject himself unto that Law which properly did concern sinfull flesh And therefore howsoever Circumcision was by right appliable onely unto such as were dead in their sins and the uncircumcision of their flesh yet he in whom there was no body of the sins of the flesh to be put off submitted himself notwithstanding thereunto not onely to testifie his communion with the Fathers of the old Testament but also by this means to tender unto his Father a bond signed with his own bloud whereby he made himself in our behalf a debtor unto the whole Law For I testifie saith the Apostle to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law In like manner Baptisme appertained properly unto such as were defiled and had need to have their sins washed away and therefore when all the land of Judea and they of Jerusalem went out unto John they were all baptized of him in the river Jordan confessing their sinnes Among the rest came our Saviour also but the Baptist considering that he had need to be baptized by Christ and Christ no need at all to be baptized by him refused to give way unto that action as altogether unbefitting the state of that immaculate Lambe of God who was to take away the sinne of the World Yet did our Mediatour submit himself to that ordinance of God also not onely to testifie his communion with the Christians of the new Testaments but especially which is the reason yeelded by himselfe because it became him thus to fulfill all righteousnesse And so having fulfilled all righteousnesse whereunto the meanest man was tyed in the days of his pilgrimage which was more then he needed to have undergone if he had respected only himself the works which he performed were truly workes of supererogation which might be put upon the account of them whose debt hee undertook to discharge and being performed by the Person of the Son of God must in that respect not onely be equivalent but infinitely over-value the obedience of Adam and all his posterity although they had remained in their integrity and continued untill this houre instantly serving God day
concerning that everlasting righteousnesse which was to bee brought in by him upon this very ground Because I goe to my Father and ye see mee no more For if he had broken prison and made an escape the payment of the debt which as our surety he took upon himself being not yet satisfied he should have been seen here again Heaven would not have held him more then Paradise did Adam after hee had fallen into Gods debt and danger But our Saviour raising himselfe from the dead presenting himself in Heaven before him unto whom the debt was owing and maintaining his standing there hath hereby given good proof that he is now a free man and hath fully discharged that debt of ours for vvhich he stood committed And this is the evidence we have to shew of that righteousnesse whereby we stand justified in Gods sight according to that of the Apostle Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us Now although an ordinary man may easily part with his life yet doth it not lie in his power to resume it again at his own will and pleasure But he that must doe the turn for us must be able to say as our JESUS did I lay down my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again and in another place Destroy this Temple and in three days I will raise it up saith he unto the Jews speaking of the Temple of his body An humane nature then he must have had which might be subject to dissolution but being once dissolved hee could not by his own strength which was the thing here necessarily required raise it up again unlesse he had declared himselfe to be the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead The Manhood could suffer but not overcome the sharpnesse of death the Godhead could suffer nothing but overcome any thing He therefore that was both to suffer and to overcome death for us must be partaker of both natures that being put to death in the flesh he might be able also to quicken himself by his own Spirit And now are wee come to that part of Christs mediation which concerneth the conveyance of the redemption of this purchased possession unto the sons of men A dear purchase indeed which was to be redeemed with no lesse price then the bloud of the Son of God but what should the purchase of a stranger have been to us or what should we have been the better for all this if we could not derive our descent from the purchaser or raise some good title whereby we might estate our selves in his purchase Now this was the manner in former time in Israel concerning redemptions that unto him who was the next of kinne belonged the right of being Goël or the Redeemer And Job had before that left this glorious profession of his faith unto the perpetuall memory of all posterity I know that my Goël or Redeemer liveth and at the last shall arise upon the dust or stand upon the earth And after this my skin is spent yet in my flesh shall I see God Whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another for me Whereby we may easily understand that his and our Redeemer was to be the invisible God and yet in his assumed flesh made visible even to the bodily eyes of those whom he redeemed For if he had not thus assumed our flesh how should we have been of his bloud or claimed any kindred to him and unlesse the Godhead had by a personall union been unseparably conjoyned unto that flesh how could he therein have been accounted our next of kinne For the better clearing of which last reason we may call to minde that sentence of the Apostle The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from heaven Where notwithstanding there were many millions of men in the world betwixt these two yet we see our Redeemer reckoned the second man and why but because these two were the only men who could be accounted the prime fountains from whence all the rest of mankind did derive their existence and beeing For as all men in the world by mean descents doe draw their first originall from the first man so in respect of a more immediate influence of efficiency and operation doe they owe their beeing unto the second man as he is the Lord from heaven This is Gods own language unto Jeremy Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee and this is Davids acknowledgement for his part Thy hands have made me and fashioned me thou hast covered me in my mother womb thou art he that took me out of my mothers bowels and Jobs for his also Thy hands have made mee and fashioned mee together round about thou hast clothed me with skin and flesh and hast fenced me with bones and sinews and the Apostles for us all In him we live and move and have our beeing who inferreth also thereupon both that we are the off-spring or generation of God and that he is not far from every one of us This being to be admitted for a most certain truth notwithstanding the opposition of all gain-sayers that God doth more immediately concurre to the generation and all other motions of the creature then any naturall agent doth or can doe And therefore if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousnesse shall reigne in life by one Jesus Christ. Considering that this second man is not onely as universall a principle of all our beeings as was that first and so may sustain the common person of us all as well as he but is a farre more immediate agent in the production thereof not as the first so many generations removed from us but more neere unto us then our very next progenitours and in that regard justly to be accounted our next of kinne even before them also Yet is not this sufficient neither but there is an other kind of generation required for which we must be beholding unto the second man the Lord from heaven before we can have interest in this purchased Redemption For as the guilt of the first mans transgression is derived unto us by the meanes of carnall generation so must the benefit of the second mans obedience be conveyed unto us by spirituall regeneration And this must be laid down as a most undoubted verity that except a man be born again hee cannot see the kingdome of God and that every such must be born not
the glory of Christ. We read in the holy story that God took of the spirit which was upon Moses and gave it unto the seventy Elders that they might bear the burden of the people with him and that hee might not bear it as before hee had done himself alone It may bee his burden being thus lightned the abilities that were left him for government were not altogether so great as the necessity of his former imployment required them to have been and in that regard vvhat vvas given to his assistants might perhaps bee said to bee taken from him But wee are sure the case was otherwise in him of whom now wee speak unto whom God did not thus give the Spirit by measure And therefore although so many millions of beleevers doe continually receive this supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ yet neither is that fountain any way exhausted nor the plenitude of that well-spring of grace any whit impaired or diminished it being Gods pleasure That in him should all fulnesse dwell and that of his fulnesse all wee should receive grace for grace That as in the naturall generation there is such a correspondence in all parts betwixt the begetter and the Infant begotten that there is no member to bee seen in the Father but there is the like answerably to bee found in the Childe although in a farre lesse proportion so it falleth out in this spirituall that for every grace which in a most eminent manner is found in Christ a like grace will appeare in Gods Childe although in a far inferiour degree similitudes and likenesses being defined by the Logicians to bee comparisons made in quality and not in quantity Wee are yet further to take it into our consideration that by thus enlivening and fashioning us according to his own image Christs purpose was not to raise a seed unto himself dispersedly and distractedly but to gather together in one the Children of God that were scattered abroad yea and to bring all unto one head by himselfe both them which are in Heaven and them which are on the Earth That as in the Tabernacle the vail divided between the Holy place and the most Holy but the curtaines which covered them both were so coupled together with the taches that it might still bee one Tabernacle so the Church Militant and Triumphant typified thereby though distant as farre the one from the other as Heaven is from Earth yet is made but one Tabernacle in Jesus Christ In whom all the building fifty framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord and in whom all of us are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit The bond of this mysticall union betwixt Christ and us as elsewhere hath more fully been declared is on his part that quickning Spirit which being in him as the Head is from thence diffused to the spirituall animation of all his Members and on our part Faith which is the prime act of life wrought in those who are capable of understanding by that same Spirit Both whereof must bee acknowledged to bee of so high a nature that none could possibly by such ligatures knit up so admirable a body but hee that was God Almighty And therefore although wee did suppose such a man might bee found who should perform the Law for us suffer the death that was due to our offence and overcome it yea and whose obedience and sufferings should be of such value that it were sufficient for the redemption of the whole world yet could it not be efficient to make us live by faith unlesse that Man had been able to send Gods Spirit to apply the same unto us Which as no bare Man or any other Creature whasoever can doe so for Faith wee are taught by S. Paul that it is the operation of God and a work of his power even of that same power wherewith Christ himself was raised from the dead Which is the ground of that prayer of his that the eyes of our understanding being enlightned wee might know what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power to us-ward who beleeve according to the working of his mighty power which hee wrought in Christ when hee raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places far above all Principality and Power and Might and every Name that is named not onely in this World but also in that to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to bee head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulnesse of him that filleth all in all Yet was it fit also that this Head should bee of the same nature with the Body which is knit unto it and therefore that hee should so bee God as that hee might partake of our Flesh likewise For wee are members of his body saith the same Apostle of his flesh and of his bones And except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man saith our Saviour himself and drink his blood yee have no life in you Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in mee and I in him Declaring thereby first that by this mysticall and supernaturall union wee are as truely conjoyned with him as the meate and drink wee take is with us when by the ordinary work of Nature it is converted into our own substance Secondly that this conjunction is immediately made with his humane nature Thirdly that the Lamb slaine that is Christ crucified hath by that death of his made his flesh broken and his blood powred out for us upon the Crosse to bee fit food for the spirituall nourishment of our soules and the very well-spring from whence by the power of his Godhead all life and grace is derived unto us Upon this ground it is that the Apostle telleth us that wee have boldnesse to enter into the Holyest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which hee hath consecrated for us through the vaile that is to say his flesh That as in the Tabernacle there was no passing from the Holy to the most Holy place but by the vaile so now there is no passage to bee looked for from the Church Militant to the Church Triumphant but by the flesh of him who hath said of himself I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth unto the Father but by mee Jacob in his dream beheld a ladder set upon the Earth the top whereof reached to Heaven and the Angels of God ascending and descending on it the Lord himself standing above it Of which vision none can give a better interpretation then hee who was prefigured therein gave unto Nathaniel Hereafter you shall see Heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Whence wee may well collect that the onely meanes whereby God standing
every thought to the obedience of Christ. Where as wee must needs acknowledge that it is God which worketh in us both to will and to doe and that it is hee which sanctifyeth us wholly so are wee taught likewise to beleeve that both hee who sanctifyeth and they who are sanctifyed are all of one namely of one and the self-same nature that the sanctifyer might not bee ashamed to call those who are sanctifyed by him his brethren that as their nature was corrupted and their blood tainted in the first Adam so it might bee restored again in the second Adam and that as from the one a corrupt so from the other a pure and undefiled nature might bee transmitted unto the heires of salvation The same God that giveth grace is hee also that giveth glory yet so that the streams of both of them must run to us through the golden pipe of our Saviours humanity For since by man came death it was fit that by man also should come the resurrection of the dead Even by that man who hath said Who so eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him up at the last day Who then shall come to bee glorifyed in his Saints and to bee made marvellous in all them that beleeve and shall change this base body of ours that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body according to the working whereby hee is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe Unto him therefore that hath thus loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him bee glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen PHILIP 3. 8. I COUNT ALL THINGS BUT LOSSE FOR THE EXCELLENCY OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST JESUS MY LORD FINIS 1 Pet. 1. 19. 21. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 1. 17. Psalm 147. 5. Exod. 34. 6 7. 1 Joh. 5. 7. 1 Chron. 29. 11 12. Psal. 145. 10 11 12. Act. 17. 24. Gen. 1. 26 27. Psal. 103. 19. 66. 7. Jude ver 6. Rev. 12. 7. Gal. 3. 10. Gen. 2. 17. Eccl. 7. 31. Rom. 5. 12. 14. Gal. 3. 10. Deut. 28. 45. Mat. 1. 21 22 23. Gal. 4. 4 5. Phil. 2. 7 8 9. Heb. 5. 4 5. Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 10. 12. Luk. 4. 18 19. Isay 9. 6 7. Heb. 3. 1. 2 Tim. 1. 9. Heb. 12. 23. Cant. 2. 16. Joh. 17. 21 22 23 24. Rom. 3. 24 25 26. and 4. 6 7. Rom. 8. 15 16 17. 23 24 25. Eph. 1. 4. Col. 3. 9 10. 12. 14. Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. Exod. 20. 2 3. Exod. 20. 5 6. Exod. 20. 7. Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. Exod. 20. 12. Exod. 20. 13. Exod. 20. 14. Exod. 20. 15. Exod. 20. 16. Exod. 20. Acts 26. 20. 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. Jer. 31. 18 19. Eph. 6. 10 11 12. 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Gal. 6. 14. Rom. 8. 35 36 37. Gal. 5. 14. Col. 3. 5 6. Lev. 1. 74 75. Tit. 2. 11 12 13 14. Matth. 6. 6 7. Matth. 6. 9 10. Ver. 11. 12 13. Matth. 6. 13. Matth. 5. 16 17 18. Eph. 4. 28 29. Heb. 13. 16. Rom. 10. 14 15. Eph. 4. 11 12 13. Rom. 4. 11. Matth. 18. 15 16 17. Heb. 9. 1. 9 10. 1 Cor. 10. 1 2 3 4. Joh. 1. 17. Heb. 12. 27 28. Matth. 28. 19. 1 Pet. 3. 21. 1 Cor. 11. 23 24. 1 Tim. 4. 12 13. 2 Thes. 2. 3 4. Heb. 9. 27. 1 Thes. 4. 15 16 17. 1 Cor. 15. 51 52. Matth. 25. 34 35. All men desire eternall happinesse Religion the means to obtain happinesse No salvation but by the true Religion Diverse kindes of false Religion What Christian Religion is Of Catechising what it is Where to bee used and by whom The necessity of it a Eccles. 1. 2. True happines consisteth in God How we come to injoy God b Job 22. 21. c Joh. 17. 3. Gal. 4. 9. d Eccle. 12. 13. e 2 Cor. 5. 9. f 1 Sam. 2. 30. Means to know God By his Divine Works and holy Word Job 22. 20. Joh. 6. 68. Of the Divine Works of God Plato Galen Homer Virgil. Ovid. The uses of knowing God by his Works Of Gods holy Word the Scriptures How the Scriptures were delivered Revelations Oracles Visions What Scripture is That the Scriptures are the Word of God Reasons to prove God to be the Author of the holy Scriptures 1 Efficient Instrumentall 2 The simplicity and sincerity of the writers 3 The quality and condition of the Penmen of holy Scriptures 4 The heavenly matter of holy Scripture 5 The Doctrine of the Scriptures above humane capacity 6 The concord of the several writers one with another 7 The prophesies fulfilled in their due time 8 The Majesty and authority of the Scriptures 9 The motives used in them to perswade not reason but commands 10 The end and scope of the Scriptures which is Gods glory 11 Their admirable power 12 Their antiquity 13 The hatred of the Devill and wicked men against them 14 The preservation of the Scriptures 15 Their power to humble a man and raise him up again 1 Cor. 14. 25. 16 The consenant testimony of all men at all times 17 The known miracles done by the Writers of the Scriptures 18 The testimony of the Spirit in the hearts of men That the authority of the Scriptures doth not depend on the Church What are the books of holy Scriptures In what language the Old Testament was writen That the Scriptures of the Old Testament were first writen with vowels and pricks The books of Moses The books of the Prophets The Historicall books The Doctrinal books The Poeticall books The Prosaicall books The Apocryphall books The errors of the Apocryphal Books Of the books of the New Testament The properties of the holy Scriptures As 1 holy 2 Highest in authority 3. Sufficient in themselves That the Scriptures are a perfect rule for doctrine life and Salvation Objections against the sufficiency of the holy Scriptures answered Tim. Qu. An. Of the perspicuity of the holy Scriptures The Papists objections against the perspicuity of the Scriptures answered Ans. Why God hat● left some places of Scripture obscure Of the Translation of holy Scriptures An objection grounded on various readings answered Why the Scriptures must be expounded by the Scriptures The use of holy Scriptures Who must read the Scriptures That all must read the Scriptures proved The Papists objections against reading the Scriptures answered That there is a God Of the Nature of God Of Gods Essence The name of God Of the Properties or Attributes of God A description of God God a Spirit The perfection of God The felicity of God Of the simplenesse or singlenesse in God Gods infinitenesse Gods immensity or greatnesse Gods eternity The life of God Of the knowledge and wisdom of God Fore-knowledge and Counsell of God The Counsell of God Gods absolute wisdome and knowledge 1