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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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pondered Isa. 28. 17. Gal. 6. 16. 3. Because they only are commended for a holy and righteous life who have framed it according to the Word Luc. 1. 6. and all others secluded Isa. 8. 19 20. Mat. 22. 29. 4. Because nothing can be counted holy and righteous which God doth not so accompt and that in his Word so as he only is righteous and maketh this or that to be holy and righteous So his Word only sheweth us what that is which he so accompteth and therefore it is called his holy Word holy Scriptures righteous Laws c. Deut. 4. 8. VVhat mean you here by the holy Word of God Both the Law and the Gospel the Old Testament the New How is the Gospel a rule of obedience being the rule of faith As the Law requireth obedience Jam. 12. 1. so the Gospel directeth the faithful how to perform it 1 Tim. 1. 9 10 11. only with difference 1. Of the manner the Law propounding God to be worshipped of us in himself as our Creator the Gospel in Christ as our Saviour 2. Of the end The Law requiring all duties as for the procurement of our own salvation The Gospel in way of thankfulnesse for salvation in Christ already bestowed 1 Thess. 5. 18. 3. Of the effect the Law like Pharaoh that required brick but allowed no straw demanding obedience but vouchsafing no assistance supposing man as in the state of Creation The Gospel both offering and conferring to the regenerate that which it requireth Rom. 10. 5 6. 8. for it both requireth and confirmeth faith unto the Elect and that not only as a hand to lay hold on Christ but also as a chief vertue working by love in all parts of obedience without which even the Gospel is a Law that is a killing letter 2 Cor. 3. 6. to the unregenerate and with which the Law becommeth as it were Gospel to the regenerate even a law of liberty Jam. 1. 25. 2. 12. For as the Law saveth us not without the Gospel so the Gospel saveth us not without the Law Doth not the Gospel add other Precepts or Counsels to those of the Law Not any other in substance of action but only reneweth and enforceth those of the Law 1 Joh. 2. 7 8. and specifieth some duties as of faith in the Messias of the Sacraments c. which have their generall ground from the Law As for those that are propounded in form of counsell and doe concern things indifferent they are not therefore arbitrary courses Rev. 3. 18. of higher perfection much lesse meritorious of greater glory but as they are applyed with due circumstances necessary precepts referred to some or other Commandement of the Law the neglecting whereof excludeth from the kingdome of God VVhat is that law which with the direction of the Gospel is the rule of Sanctification The Morall law or law of nature engraven by God himself first in the heart of man in his Creation after in Tables of stone in the days of Moses and so published and committed to the Church for all ages as the royall Law for obedience to God our King Jam. 2. 8. Why did God write that law in Tables of stone Partly to signifie the perpetuall use and continuance of them to the end of the world Partly to shew the stony hardnesse of our hearts in which this law was to be written and to declare how hard it is to bring us to obedience of them VVhy did none but God write this Law in Tables of stone Because none but God can write his Law in our hearts How was this Law delivered To shew the gloriousnesse of it God delivered it in fire for the Mountain burned the Trumpet sounded the people fled and Moses himself trembled What did this signifie to them and teach us 1. That without Christ the Law is but death 2. That we should be very careful to perform obedience to the same Did God give no other law but the Morall law onely Yes he added the Ceremoniall and Judiciall laws as speciall explications and applications of the law Morall unto that present Church and people the Israelites What was the Ceremoniall law That law which did set down orders for direction in rites of outward worship shadowing the grace of the Gospel Heb. 10. 1 c. Are we bound to keep and observe those laws No for the substance being now exhibited those shadows are utterly abolished by the death of Christ and therefore the use of them now would be a kind of denyall of his death What call you the Judiciall law That wherein God appointed a form of Politique and Civill government of the Common-wealth of the Jews which therefore is ceased with the dissolution of that State for which it was ordained saving only in the common equity Is this law utterly revoked and abolished by Christ No for he came not to overturn any good government of the Common-wealth much lesse that which was appointed by God himself May not Christian Magistrates then swerve any thing from those laws of government which were set down by Moses In some circumstances they may but in the generall equity and substance they may not What Judiciall laws are immutably to be observed now of Christian Magistrates Those which have reasons annexed unto thē specially those wherin God hath appointed death for the punishment of hainous offences VVhat is the Morall law That which commandeth the perfection of godlinesse righteousnesse and directeth us in our duties to God and man Deut. 5. 32. 12. 32. Are we not delivered from this law by the means of Christ From the burthen of the law exacting in our own persons perfect obedience from the curse of that law due unto disobedience we are delivered by Christ Gal. 3. 10 11 12 13. But from the Commandment as a rule of life we are not freed Jam. 2. 8. but contrariwise are inclined disposed by his free Spirit to the willing obedience therof Ps. 51. 12. 119. 32. 45. 1 Joh. 5. 3. To what end serveth the Law First it is a Glasse to discover our filthinesse and to shew us our sinnes and the punishment thereof that thereby we may be driven unto Christ to be purged by him Gal. 3. 24. Rom. 3. 20. 27. For it layeth open all the parts of our misery both sinfulnesse accursednesse and impotency or unablenesse to relieve our selves so whipping us and chasing us to Christ that in him we may finde deliverance Secondly when we are come to Christ and feele our selves saved by him it is a guide to direct us in the way we have to walke in all our life after Matth. 5. 17. Luke 1. 6. Deut. 6. 6. For after the Law hath brought us to Christ the feeling of the love of God within us maketh us to strive towards the obedience of it and then it is a rule to direct us how to behave our selves in
A BODY OF DIVINITIE OR THE SVMME AND SVBSTANCE 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 VVhereunto is adjoyned a Tract intituled IMMANVEL OR THE MYSTERY OF THE Incarnation of the SON OF GOD Heretofore writen and published by the same Author JOHN 17. 3. This is life eternall that they might know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent LONDON Printed by M. F. for THO DOVVNES and GEO BADGER and are to be sold in S. Dunstans Church-yard in Fleetstreet MDCXLV To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader I doe here present and commend unto thee a booke of great worth and singular use which was written and finished about twenty years since the Author whereof is well knowne to bee so universally eminent in all Learning and of that deepe knowledge and judgement in sacred Divinity that he transcendeth all elogies and praises which I can give him I commend it unto the Christian Reader under a two-fold notion the first respecteth the subject matter of this whole Work which is of greatest excellency ad being The summe and substance of Christian Religion upon which as a most sure foundation we build our faith ground all our hopes and from which we reap and retain all our joy and comfort in the assurance of our salvation which as at all times it is most profitable to be read studied and known so now if ever most necessary in these our days wherein men never more neglected these fundamentall principles as being but common and ordinary truths and spend their whole time study and discourse about Discipline Ceremonies and circumstantiall points and herein also not contenting themselves with those common rules and that clear light which shineth in the Word they are onely led by their own phantasies daily creating unto themselves diversity of new opinions and so falling into sects and schismes they break the bond of love and fall off from the communion of Saints as though it were no Article of their Creed and being in love with their own new Tenets as being the conception and birth of their own brains they contend for them more then for any fundamentall truths and not onely so but also hate maligne and most bitterly and uncharitably censure all those that differ from them in their opinions though never so conscientious and religious as though they professed not the same faith yea served not the same God nor beleeved in the same Christ but remain still Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and in comparison of themselves no better then Papists or at the best but carnall Gospellers The second notion under which I commend it respecteth the Work it self or the manner of the Authors handling it which is done so soundly and solidly so judiciously and exactly so methodically and orderly and with that familiar plainnesse perspicuity and clearnesse that it giveth place to no other in this kind either ancient or modern either in our own or any other Language which ever yet came to my view in which regard I may say of it as it is said of the vertuous woman Many have done excellently but this our Author exceedeth them all I will adde no more in the deserved praises of this Worke but leave it Christian Reader to thy self to peruse and judge of it commending thee to the Word of Gods grace and the good guidance of his holy Spirit who is able to build thee up in fruitfull knowledge to lead thee into all truth to direct and support thee in the wayes of godliness and to give thee an everlasting inheritance amongst the blessed Thine in the Lord Jesus Christ JOHN DOWNAME The Connexion of these Points together and Dependence of them one upon another IN Christian Religion wee are to consider the Ground thereof contained in the Scripture Parts which treat of Gods Nature in his Essence considered absolutely in it selfe where the doctrine of divine Attributes which respect either His perfection in his Simplenesse whereby he is exempted from Composition and division Infinitenesse wherby he is exempted from all measure of Time by his eternity Place by his immensity Life whence he is called The living God Considered in his All-sufficiency Al-seeing wisdom Foreknowledge Counsell Almighty power Holy will wherein is seen his Goodnesse and therein his love unto his creatures mercy or grace shewed them in their misery Iustice in his word called his Truth deeds disposing of all things rightly rendring to the creatures according to their works Persons subsisting in one and the same undivided Essence Kingdome in his Eternall decree which men must not curiously prie into but content themselves with what is made manifest Execution thereof in the workes of Creation of things Invisible The highest Heavens Angels Visible Unreasonable Reasonable man consisting of Body Soule Providence Common unto all creatures Proper respecting the everlasting condition of principall Creatures Angels Good Bad. Men who are ordered in This life by the tenor of a two-fold Covenant Nature or Workes where we are to consider the Conditions and Events Shame Primary the fall of our first parents Secondary the corruption of Nature originall Actions actual of omission commission Death comprehending all the curses of the Law whereunto the nature of man standeth subject Grace wherein we are to consider the state of Christ the Mediator in his Person and there in his Natures and their Union where of his Conception Nativity Distinction Two fold state of Humiliation Exaltation Office with his Calling thereunto Execution thereof concerning God the party offended wherein his priestly office is exercised the parts whereof are Satisfaction giving contentment to Gods Iustice by his Obedience to the Law Suffering for our sinne Intercession soliciting Gods mercy for those he hath redeemed Man the party offending to whom he communicates the grace by him purchased by his Propheticall office Kingly office The rest of mankind who are called by participation of his grace where we are to consider 1. The company thus called out of the world The Catholike Church of Christ where such as obey this calling in Outward profession alone hold onely externall communion with it Inward affection also internall with the Head Christ Iesus there being a Mutuall donation whereby the Father gives Christ to them them to Christ. Mysticall union whereby they are knit together by Gods quickning Spirit The rest of mankind whence ariseth the Communion of Saints 2. Grace whereunto they are called Reconciliation Iustification where of Iustifying Faith Adoption and therein of Hope Sanctification and therein of Love here consider the Rule of Holines the morall law contained in the ten Commandements wherein are to be considered Generall rules to be observed in the exposition of them Distinction of them into two tables containing the duties we owe unto God namely Having the
true God and entertaining him in all the powers of the soule Com. 1. Honoring him with that worship which is to be given from men to him Every day as occasion requireth either in Solemne worship prescribed in the 2. Com. Glorifying his name in the common course of our life in the 3. Com. One day certain in the week prescribed in the 4. Com. Man respecting Such acts as are joyned with advised consent in duties which we owe unto Speciall persons in regard of some particular relation which we beare unto them prescribed in the 5. Com. All men in generall for the preservation of their Safety in the 6. Com. Chastity in the 7. Com. Goods in the 8. Com. Good name in the 9. Com. The first thoughts and motions of evill towards our neighbour that doe arise from the corruption of our nature in the 10. Com. Exercise thereof Repentance Fruits thereof in Resistance of sinne by Christian warfare where of the spirituall Armour Conflict with the World Flesh Devill in prosperity adversity here of bearing the crosse Abounding in good workes especially towards God in Praier the rule whereof is contained in the Lords Prayer wherein are to be considered the 1 Preamble 2 Petitions 3 concerning Gods glory 3 touching our necessities 3 The Conclusion and there of thanksgiving Fasting Our brethrens Edification in respect of their soules Almsgiving for the good of their bodies 3 Meanes whereby they are called The outward ministery of the Gospell wherein consider 1 Minister 2 Parts of the ministery Word Seales annexed thereunto viz. Sacraments for confirming the promises to the obedient which are either of Initiation or Admission into the Church Continuall nourishment Censures for ratifying of threatnings towards the disobedient in Word by admonition Deed by Suspension Excommunication 3 The kinds thereof namely the Old ministery before Christ called The old Testament where of the 1 Word of the Gospell more sparingly and darkly delivered 2 Types and Ceremonies 3 Sacraments Initiation Circumcision Nourishment Paschall Lambe New from the comming of Christ unto the end of the world called The new Testament wherein is to be considered the cleernes and efficacy of the Word Sacraments Initiation Baptisme Nourishment The Lords Supper 4 Divers states of the Church The world to come by the sentence of a twofold Iudgement Particular upon every soule as soon as it departs from the body Generall upon all men at once both in soule and body therein is to be considered 1 Iudge Christ comming with the glory of his Father 2 Parties to be judged Quick of whom there shall be a change Dead of whom there shall be a resurrection 3 Sentence and execution thereof where of the The torments of the Damned The joyes of the Blessed THE HEADS OF THE BODY OF DIVINITY DIVIDED INTO Two and fifty Heads 1. OF Christian Religion and the grounds thereof Gods Word contained in the Scriptures 2. Of God and his Attributes Perfection Wisdome and Omnipotency 3. Of Gods Goodnesse and Justice and the Persons of the Trinity 4. Of Gods Kingdome and the Creation of all things 5. Of the Creation of man in particular and the Image of God according to which he was made 6. Of Gods Providence and continuall government of his creatures 7. Of the good Angels that stood and the evill Angels that forsooke their first integrity 8. Of the Law of nature or the Covenant of works made with man at his Creation and the event thereof in the fall of our first Parents 9. Of Originall and Actuall sinne whereunto all mankind by the fall is become subject 10. Of Gods curse and all the penalties due unto sinne whereunto man is become subject as long as he continueth in his naturall estate 11. Of the Covenant of Grace and the Mediator thereof Jesus Christ our Lord his two distinct natures in one Person together with his Conception and Nativity 12. Of the state of Humiliation and Exaltation of our Saviour his office of Mediation and calling thereunto 13. Of his Priestly office and the two parts thereof Satisfaction and Intercession 14. Of his Propheticall and Kingly office 15. Of the calling of men to partake of the grace of Christ both outward and inward and of the Catholick Church thus called out of the world with the members and properties thereof 16. Of the mutuall donation whereby the Father giveth Christ to us and us unto Christ and the mysteriall union whereby we are knit together by the band of Gods quickning spirit with the Communion of Saints arising from thence whereby God for his Sons sake is pleased of enemies to make us friends 17. Of Justification and therein of justifying faith and forgivenesse of sinnes 18. Of Adoption whereby in Christ we are not only advanced into the state of friends but also of sons and heires and therein of the spirit of Adoption and Hope 19. Of Sanctification whereby the power of sin is mortified in us and the image of God renued and therein of love 20. Of the direction given unto us for our sanctification contained in the Ten Commandements with the rules of expounding the same and of distinction of the Tables thereof 21. The first Commandement of the choice of the true God and the entertaining him in all our thoughts 22. The second Commandement of the solemn worship that is to be performed unto God and therein of Images and Ceremonies 23. The third of the glorifying of God aright in the actions of our common life and therein of swearing and blaspheming 24. The fourth of the certain time set apart for Gods service and therein of the Sabbath and Lords day 25. The fift of the duties we owe one unto another in regard of our particular relation unto such as are our Superiours Inferiours and equals 26. The sixt of the preservation of the safety of mens persons and therein of peace and meeknesse 27. The seventh of the preservation of chastity and therein of temperance and mariage 28. The eight of the preservation of our own and our neighbours goods and therein of the maintaining of justice in our dealing one with another 29 The ninth of the preservation of our own and our neighbours good name and the maintaining of truth in our testimony and truth 30 The tenth of contentednesse the first motions of concupiscence which doe any way crosse that love we owe to our neighbour whereto for conclusion may be added the use of the Law 31 Of Repentance 32 Of the spirituall warfare and Christian armour 33 Of resistance of the temptations of the Devill 34 Of resisting the temptations of the world both in prosperity and adversity and here of patient bearing of the Crosse. 35. Of resisting the temptations of the flesh 36. Of new obedience and good works and necessity thereof 37. Of Prayer in generall and
and whereas a man willeth a member of his body to be cut off we may rather call it a permission then a willing and yet a vvilling permission You have shewed how many ways sin is to be considered how many things are to be considered in every sin and how we are said to will a thing Now let me hear what you say to the matter in question that is whether God doth will sin or no Before I answer directly to your question I think it is not amisse to shew what every one must carefully take heed of in answering to this question for in answering there is danger Let me hear what dangers must be avoided in answering There are two and every one must avoid them and sail between them as between two dangerous rocks The first is this we must take heed lest we make God the author of sin by affirming that he willeth sin as the Libertines do as Adam did Gen. 3. 12. for that were the next vvay not only to put off our sins from our selves and lay them upon God but also to cast off all conscience of sin and all fear of God then the which nothing can be more blasphemous against God and pernicious to our selves What is the second thing to be avoided The other is this we must take heed that we affirm not any evill to be in the world which God knoweth not of or whether God vvill or no for that vvere to deny Gods omnipotency and al-knowledge These are two dangerous rocks and heresies indeed but now I expect a direct answer to the question That cannot be at once but by going from point to point according to our former distinction of sin and vvilling Very well then declare first of all what things God doth properly will which of themselves are to be willed God doth first and chiefly vvill himself that is his own glory and Majesty as the end for vvhich all things are and this he is said to vvill properly that is he loveth it advanceth it and delighteth in it and to this purpose serve all those Scriptures vvhich command us to sanctifie his name and to adore his glory as in Esa. 48. 11. Pro. 16. 4. Rom. 11. 36. Besides himselfe he doth properly vvill all other things vvhich he made and vvhich he doth himself insomuch as he doth approve them and love them as appeareth by these places following God saw all that he made and it was good and therefore gave a Commandement that one should preserve another by multiplying and encreasing Again it is said whatsoever the Lord will that he doth therefore whatsoever he doth that he wils and although he hateth evill yet he doth properly will and love that good which commeth of evill that is his own glory and the salvation of his people Whether doth God will punishments or no Yea his will is the first and efficient cause of all punishment which is proved by this reason and argument every good thing is of God every punishment being a work of justice is a good thing therefore every punishment is of God and he doth will it What say you to the words in Ezekiel 18. 23. 32. I will not the death of a sinner That place is to be understood onely of the elect for properly indeed God doth not will their death and therefore to keep them from death meaning eternall death he giveth them repentance Whether doth God will sin as it is a punishment of sin that went before Yes he doth and it usuall with God to punish one sin with another as for example the hardning of Pharaohs heart was a sin in Pharaoh and God brought it upon him not as a sin but as a punishment of his former sins You say that in every sin is an action or deed which is either inward or outward whether doth God will that or no So far forth as it is an action only God doth will it but not the corruption deformity of the action for in him we live move and have our beeing Acts 17. 28. But whether doth God will sin properly as it is a transgression of the law and a corruption in the action or no No he doth not neither can be for it is against his nature and to this effect serve these places of Scripture following Psal. 5. 5. Heb. 1. 15. 1 Joh. 1. 4. and reason doth confirm it many vvayes for looke vvhat God doth vvill properly he loveth and alloweth it but God hateth and damneth sin as the Scriptures vvitnesse and therefore he doth not vvill it properly Zach. 8. 17. Again he hath sent his Son to take away the sins of the vvorld and to destroy the vvorks of the Devill therefore he doth not vvill them Lastly if God should properly vvill sin then he must be the author of sin but he is not the author of sin for the Scriptures doe never attribute sin unto God but unto the devil unto men Ro. 9. 14. 1 Ioh. 2. 16. But although God doth not properly will sin yet he doth willingly permit sin doth he not Yes but for the better understanding how God doth permit sin vve must consider hovv many vvays or in hovv many senses one is said to permit a thing and that is three vvays To permit is sometime of two good things to grant that vvhich is lesse good although it vvere against our vvill as for example a man vvould bring up his son in learning rather then in vvarfare or in any other occupation but because his son hath more mind to an occupation then to learning and doth crave of his father to go to some occupation or to be a Soldier rather then a Doctor his father doth grant him his desire but he had rather have him to be a Scholar And this is a kind of permission and suffering but this permission ought rather to be called a will indeed for that which is lesse good yet because it is good he doth will it and approve it and it is a true object of his will and it may be called a permission in respect of that will which had rather have had the greater good And is thus God said to permit sin in this sense No by no means for sin as it is sin hath no shew of good in it which may be compared with a greater good Which is your second way of permitting Sometimes to permit is to grant one evill to goe unpunished that many more grievous evils thereby may be prevented as many times Princes Magistrates are wont to doe and so some do think that God hath granted some sin to be done without danger or threatning of punishment lest more and more hainous mischiefs should ensue And are not you of that mind No God forbid I should for the Apostles rule is both generall and true we must not doe evill that good may come thereof lest we be damned justly therefore no man may by the law of God admit any sin to avoid another
respect of this naturall gift of righteousnesse we say that in the beginning Adam was made just because he was created just and in his whole nature was righteous and good but this righteousnesse was derived from God Whom doe you call just by grace All the elect which are redeemed by the death of Christ and that in two respects First because the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed unto them so by grace and favour in Christ their head they are just before God Secondly because of grace and favour they are regenerated by the holy Ghost by the vertue of whose inherent righteousnesse and holinesse they are made holy and just and whatsoever they doe by it is accepted for just for Christs sake Whom doe you call just and righteous by yeelding perfect and willing obedience to God and his law No man in this world after the fall of Adam Christ only excepted ever was or can be just after that manner What say you of Christ how was he just Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is most perfectly just and righteous every manner of way First as he is God he is in his own essence of himself and by himself most just even as the Father is eternall righteousnesse it self Secondly as he was Man he was just by nature because he was conceived without sinne and so was borne just and righteous Thirdly by vertue of his union with his divine nature which is eternall righteousnesse it self he is most just Fourthly by receiving the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure he is most just Psal. 45. 7. Fiftly he did most perfectly obey the law of God and kept it most absolutely therefore that way also he is most just and righteous What conclude you upon all this That forasmuch as God onely is in his own essence and nature by himself and of himself eternall justice and righteousnesse therefore this attribute of justice or righteousnesse doth most properly agree to God In how many things is God just In three things First in his Will Secondly in his Word Thirdly in his Works What mean you when you say that God is just in his Will That whatsoever he willeth is just his will as hath been declared being the rule of justice What mean you when you say that God is just in his Word That whatsoever he speaketh is just What are the parts of Gods Word Four First the History which is all true Secondly the Precepts and the Laws which are perfect Thirdly Promises and Threatnings which are accomplished Fourthly Hymnes and Songs which are pure and holy and undefiled In what respect is God just in his Word First he speaketh as he thinketh Secondly he doth both as he speaketh and thinketh Thirdly there is no part of his Word contrary to another Fourthly he loveth those that speak the truth and hateth those that are liers What are the Works of God 1. His eternall decree whereby he hath most justly decreed all things and the circumstances of all things from all eternity 2. The just execution thereof in time What justice doth God shew herein Both his disposing and his rewarding justice What is Gods disposing justice That by which he as a most free Lord ordereth all things in his actions rightly Psal. 145. 17. In what actions doth that appear First he hath most justly and perfectly created all things of nothing Secondly he hath most wisely justly and righteously disposed all things being created What is Gods rewarding justice That whereby he rendreth to his creatures according to their works Wherein doth that appear First he doth behold and approve and reward all good in whomsoever Secondly he doth behold detest and punish all evill in whomsoever to which justice both his anger and his hatred are to be referred What must we understand by anger in God Not any passion perturbation or trouble of the mind as it is in us but this word Anger when it is attributed to God in the Scriptures signifieth three things First a most certain and just decree in God to punish and avenge such injuries as are offered to himself and to his Church and so it is understood Joh. 3. 36. Rom. 1. 18. Secondly the threatning these punishments and revenges as in Psal. 6. 1. Hos. 11. 9. Jonah 2. 9. Thirdly the punishments themselves which God doth execute upon ungodly men and these are the effects of his anger or of his decree to punish them so it is taken in Rom. 2. 5. Mat. 3. 7. Eph. 5. 6. What use may we make of this Attribute First it teacheth us that anger of it self is not simply evill but then it is good when it is such as the Scripture attributeth to God and commendeth to men when it saith Be angry and sin not Eph. 4. 26. Secondly Gods anger seemeth to raise us up from security Thirdly we must not be slothfull when we see the signs of Gods wrath comming but use ordinary means to prevent it What is that hatred that is attributed to God Not any passion or grief of the mind as it is in us but in the Scriptures these three things are signified thereby First his deniall of good will and mercy to eternall salvation as Rom. 9. 13. I have hated Esau that is rejected him and have not vouchsafed him that favour and grace which I have shewed upon Jacob and we also are said to hate those things which we neglect and upon which we will bestow no benefit nor credit but doe put them behind other things and therefore it is said If any man come unto me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children c. he cannot be my Disciple that is he that doth not put all these things behind me and neglect them for me so that the love which he beareth to them must seem to be hatred in comparison of the love which he must bear to me and in this sense it is properly attributed to God Secondly the decree of Gods just will to punish sin and the just punishment it selfe which he hath decreed as in Psal. 5. 6. Job 30. 21. Thou turnest thy selfe meerly against me and art an enemy unto me with the strength of thine hand that is thou dost so sore chasten me as if thou didst hate me and in this sense also it is properly attributed to God for it is a part of his Justice to take punishment of sinners Thirdly Gods displeasure for those things which we hate doe displease us and in this sense it is also properly attributed to God for it is the part of a most just Judge to disallow and detest evill as well as to allow and like that which is good By what reason may this be confirmed It is the property of him that loveth to hate and detest that which is contrary to himselfe and that which he loveth For love cannot be without his contrary of hatred and as therefore the love of good things doth properly agree to God so doth also the
not those spirituall creatures sinning against him neither will he spare us rebelling against his Majesty 2 Pet. 2. 4. Thirdly to feare to offend God that hath such messengers to send at his command Fourthly to learn to arm our selves with the shield of faith and fear of God since we have such great enemies to fight against Eph. 6. 11. 1 Pet. 5. 9. Fifthly to be comforted that though the Devill be powerfull and most malicious against us yet Christ hath broken his head Gen. 3. 15. and at last will tread Satan under our feet Rom. 16. ●0 Thus much of the providence that concerneth Angels Shew now how God doth deale with man As with that creature in whom above all other he intendeth to set forth the glory of his Wisdome Power Justice and Mercy Prov. 8. 31. Psal. 8. 3. c. 1 Cor. 9. 9 10. and therefore the Scriptures doe most plentifully declare the dealing of God with man both in the time of this world and for ever hereafter How is man upheld in his being Two wayes First as all other bodily creatures partly by maintenance of every mans life here on earth for the time alotted by God himselfe Acts 17. 28. Ps. 36. 6. 1 Tim. 4. 10. Partly by propagation of kind unto the end of the world through the blessing of procreation Gen. 1. 28. Eccl. 1. 4. Secondly as Angels after a sort God so providing that though the body of man returneth to the earth from whence it was taken yet the soule perisheth not but returneth to God that gave it Eccl. 12. 7. yea that the same body also and every part thereof is preserved in the grave and shall be joyned intire to the soule at the last day so to continue for ever Job 19. 26 27. How manifold is the state wherein man is to be considered Threefold first the state of innocencie commonly had and lost of all mankind both elect and reprobate without difference Eccl. 7. Secondly the state of corruption and miserie seising on all men naturally but abiding without recoverie only in the Reprobate Rom. 3. 23. Thirdly the state of Redemption proper to the elect 1 Pet. 2. 9. Psal. 130. 8. All which doe make way unto that finall and everlasting estate of honour or dishonour fore-appointed unto all men beginning at the end of this life perfected at the day of judgement and continuing for ever in the world to come And thus touching this part of Gods providence the Scriptures doe teach us both the benefits of God bestowed upon man before his fall and likewise his justice and mercy towards him after his fall his justice upon the Reprobate who are left without hope of restitution and reserved together with the Devills unto everlasting punishment Matth. 25. 41. Rev. 20. 10. 15. His mercy upon the elect who notwithstanding their fall are restored again by grace Gen. 3. 15. Is it not likely that all the visible world together with man is fallen without hope of restitution by mercy Yes for it standeth well with the justice of God that seeing the visible world was made for the use of man Gen. 2. 9. that with the fall of man it should be punished Gen. 3. 17 18. and with his raising up be restored Rom. 8. 20 21 22. What is that speciall order of government which God useth towards mankind in this world and in the world to come In this world he ordereth them according to the tenor of a two-fold Covenant in the world to come according to the sentence of a two-fold judgement What understand you by a Covenant An agreement which it pleaseth Almighty God to enter into with man concerning his everlasting condition What be the parts of this agreement Two the one is the Covenant that God maketh with us the other is the Covenant that we make with God the summ of the former is that he will be our God of the latter that we will be his people Jer. 31. 33. What gather you from the former The sir-name of God as it is in divers places of Scripture and namely Exod. 3. 15. where it is said The Lord God of your Fathers the God of Abraham the God of Isaac the God of Jacob hath sent me unto you this is my name for ever and this is my memoriall unto all generations from whence we may observe the singular glory and priviledge of Gods people in that God is content to take his sir-name of them Heb. 11. 16. Why is this sir-name added For that it is a fearfull thing to think of the proper name of God alone unlesse this be added to it whereby he declareth his love and kindnesse to us What gather you from the latter That man standeth bound by these Covenants of agreement to perform that duty which God requireth at his hands How many such Covenants be there Two First the Law and Covenant of works Secondly the free promise or Covenant of grace which from the comming of Christ is called the Gospell Rom. 10. 5 6. Gal. 3. 11 12. Which of them was first The Law for it was given to Adam in his integrity when the promise of grace was hidden in God How so since it is said that the Law was first given to Moses That is to be understood of the written Law as it was written by Moses and ingraven in tables of stone by the finger of God otherwise the same was imprinted in the beginning in the hearts of our first parents and therefore it is called the Law of nature Rom. 2. 14. How was this Law given unto Adam in the beginning It was chiefly written in his heart at his creation and partly also uttered in his eare in Paradise for unto him was given a will both to good and also to evill and also to be inclined thereto with ability to perform it There was something likevvise outwardly revealed as his duty to God in the sanctification of the Sabbath to his neighbour in the institution of marriage and to himselfe in his dayly working about the garden How doth it appeare that the substance of the Morall Law was written in the hearts of Adam and Eve First by the effect of it in them both who immediately after their fall were forced by the onely guilt of conscience not yet otherwise charged to hide themselves from Gods presence Gen. 3. 8. Secondly by the remainders thereof in all mankind who even without the Law are by light of nature a Law unto themselves Gen. 4. 6. Rom. 2. 14 15. How hath the Morall Law been delivered since the fall The summe thereof was comprised in ten words Exod. 34. 28. Deut. 4. 13. commonly called the Decalogue or ten Commandements solemnly published and engraved in tables of stone by God himself Deut. 10. 4. Afterwards the same was more fully delivered in the books of holy Scripture and so committed to the Church for all ages as the Royall Law for direction of obedience to God our King Jam.
2. 8. and for the discovery of sin and punishment due thereto Deut. 27. 26. Rom. 1. 31. 3. 20. What then doth the Law now require of us All such duties as were required of Adam in his innocency Levit. 18. 5. and all such as are required since by reason of his fall Deut. 27. 26. binding us to eternall death for our least defect therein Declare now out of that which hath been said what the Covenant of works is It is a conditionall Covenant between God and man whereby on the one side God commandeth the perfection of godlinesse and righteousnesse and promiseth that he will be our God if we keep all his Commandements and on the other side man bindeth himselfe to perform intire and perfect obedience to Gods Law by that strength wherewith God hath endued him by the nature of his first creation What was done in this Covenant on Gods part There was his Law backed with promises and threatnings and unto them were added outward seales What was the summe of this Law Doe this and thou shalt live if thou dost it not thou shalt dye the death What is meant by Doe this Keep all my Commandements in thought word and deed What is meant by life promised to those that should keep all the Commandements The reward of blessednesse and everlasting life Levit. 18. 5. Luke 10. 28. What is meant by death threatned to those that should transgresse In this world the curse of God and death with manifold miseries both of body and soule and where this curse is not taken away everlasting death both of body and soule in the world to come Deut. 27. 26. 29. 19. 20. 32. 22. Levit. 26. Deut. 28. What were the outward seales added hereunto The two trees planted by God for that purpose in the midst of the garden Gen. 2. 9. 3. 3. that Adam before and in the sight of them might resort to some speciall places to serve God in and might by the sight of them be put in mind of those things whereof they were signs and seales What did the tree of life serve for It sealed up happinesse life and glory unto man upon condition of obedience that by tasting thereof which no doubt according to the manner of Sacramentall signes was a tree of marvellous comfort and restoring he might be assured he should live in Paradise for ever if he stood obedient to Gods Commandements Gen. 2. 9. Prov. 3. 18. Revel 2. 7. Was this tree able to give everlasting life to man or otherwise why did God after the fall shut man from it It was no more able to give everlasting life then the bodily eating of any other Sacrament but Adam having by sin lost that which was signified hereby God would have him debarred from the use of the Sacrament What did the tree of the knowledge of good and evill serve for Both for triall of obedience and also for a warning of their mutability and of what would follow upon sin so sealing death and damnation in case of disobedience not as though the tree was able to give any knowledge but that by tasting of it contrary to Gods command they should have experimentall knowledge of evill in themselves which before they had of good only and by wofull experience should learn what difference there was between knowing and serving God in their integrity and being ignorant of him by their sin Gen. 2. 17. What was done in this Covenant on mans part Man did promise by that power which he had received to keep the whole law binding himself over to punishment in case he did not obey In what state is man to be considered under this Covenant In a twofold estate 1. Of Innocency 2. Of Corruption and misery What things are you to note in the innocent estate of man First the place where he was seated Secondly the happy and glorious estate he there enjoyed both in soul and body Where did God place man when he created him In a most glorious pleasant and comfortable Garden which is called Paradise or the Garden of Eden for pleasantnesse Gen. 2. 8. What doth the Scripture teach concerning it The place where it was and the commodities thereof Where and in what part of the world was it In Asia neer the meeting of Euphrates and Tygris those two famous Rivers What commodities had it All the principall creatures of God did adorn it and therefore it is said to be more extraordinarily then the rest of the world planted by God There are set down also the precious stones thereof under the Sardonyx pure metals under the gold precious woods under the Bdelium and so all other living things and growing creatures that it might be as it were a shop furnished for man to see in and learn by it Gods Wisdome Power and Majesty Doth this place now continue The place remaineth but the beauty and commodities be partly by the Floud partly by mans sin for which the whole earth is cursed almost abolished though as may be observed out of good Authors it is a very fruitfull place still What happinesse did man enjoy thus placed in Paradise It was partly inward partly outward Wherein did the inward appear First in his wonderfull knowledge whereby he made use of all the creatures of God as the greatest Philosopher that ever was Secondly in that holy and heavenly image of God of which Adam had the use and comfort before his fall it shining in him without tainture or blemish and he thereby being without all sin or punishment of sin Thirdly in the full fruition and assurance of the favourable and blissefull presence of his Creator Matth. 5. 8. Psal. 17. 15. and his heavenly company and conference with God without all fear as a subject with his Prince Gen. 3. 8. Fourthly in his joyfull serving God together with absolute contentment in himself Gen. 2. 25. Wherein did the outward appear First in having so comely perfect and glorious a body in which there was no infirmity pain nor shame though naked Gen. 2. 25. Secondly in his dominion over all the creatures that submitted themselves and did service unto him to whom also as their Lord he gave their originall names Gen. 2. 19 20. Thirdly in the comfortable state and sense not of Paradise alone but of all the world round about him having neither storm winter nor extremity in any creature What employment had man in this estate A twofold employment the first outward to till and dresse the Garden Gen. 2. 15. the other spirituall to worship and serve God his Creator and to procure his own everlasting blessednesse whereto he was fitted with freedome of will and ability for perfect obedience unto God according to the tenor of the Covenant of works What use are we to make of the knowledge of mans happinesse before his fall First to admire and praise the great goodnesse and favour of God in so dealing with man a clod of the earth Secondly
onely be directed by Gods holy word How is the Memory corrupted First with dulnesse and forgetfulnesse of all good things that we should remember notwithstanding we have learned them often Secondly with readines to remember that we should not and to retain errors and vanities as tales and playes much more then godly matters What use make you hereof As first to bewaile the defects of our understanding so to lament our forgetfulnesse of good things Secondly to distrust the faithfulnesse or strength of our memories in hearing and learning good things and to use all good helps we can as often repeating them writing and meditating on them Thirdly not to clogge our memories with vanities for which we should rather desire the art of forgetfulnesse How is the Will corrupted First with a disablenesse and impotency to will any thing that is good in it selfe Rom. 5. 6. Phil. 2. 13. Secondly with slavery to sin and Satan the will being so enthralled Rom. 6. 20. 7. 23. and hardened Eph. 4. 18. that it onely desireth and lusteth after that which is evill Gen. 6. 5. Job 15. 16. Thirdly with rebellion against God and any thing that is good Rom. 8. 7. What use are we to make hereof First that we have no free will left in us since Adams fall for heavenly matters Secondly that for the conversion either of our selves or any other we must not look for it from man but pray to God to convert man who worketh in us both the will and the deed Phil. 2. 13. Heb. 2. 5. as the Prophet saith Convert thou me and I shall be converted Lam. 5. 21. How are the affections corrupted The affections of the heart which are many as love and hatred joy and sorrow hope and feare anger desire c. are subject to corruption and disturbance Gal. 5. 24. James 4. 15. Job 15. 16. First by being set upon unmeet objects in affecting and being inclined to the things they should not be and not to those they should thus we hate good and love evill 1 Kings 22. 8. And in a word our affections naturally are moved and stirred to that which is evill to embrace it and are never stirred up to that which is good unlesse it be to eschew it Secondly by disorder and excesse even when we doe affect naturally good things as for our own injuries we are more angry then for Gods dishonour when we are merrie we are too merrie when sad too sad c. What use make you of the disorder of the affections First to keep our selves from all occasions to incense them to sinne whereunto they are as prone as the tinder to the fire Secondly to labour to mortifie them in our selves that we may be in regard thereof pure Nazarites before God Gal. 5. 24. Col. 3. 5. How is the conscience corrupted It is distempered and defiled Tit. 1. 15. both in giving direction in things to be done and in giving judgment upon things done How in the former It sometime giveth not direction at all and thereupon maketh a man to sin in doing of an action otherwise good and lawfull Rom. 14. 23. sometime it giveth direction but a wrong one and so becometh a blind guide forbidding to doe a thing which God alloweth and commanding to doe things which God hateth 1 Cor. 8. 7. Col. 2. 21. John 16. 2. How in the latter When it either giveth no Judgement at all being left without feeling or when it hath an evill feeling and sense How is it left without feeling When it is so senselesse and benummed with sin that it never checketh a man for any sin Eph. 4. 18 19. called a cauterized conscience 1 Tim. 4. 2. which reseth from the custome of sinning Heb. 3. 13. How doth it faile when it hath a feeling but a naughty one Sometimes in excusing sometimes in accusing How in excusing First when it excuseth for things sinfull making them no sinnes or small sins and so feeding the mind with vain comforts Mark 10. 20. Gen. 3. 10. 12. Secondly when as it excuseth us for having a good intent without any warrant of Gods word 1 Chron. 13. 9. How in accusing First when for want of time direction and lightening it condemneth for doing good as a Papist for going to Sermons condemning where it should excuse and so filling the mind with false feares Secondly when accusing for sin it doth it excessively turmoyling a man with inward accusations and terrors Esa. 57. 20. and drawing him to despair by such excessive terror as may be seen in Cain and Judas What use are we to make of this confusion of the conscience First seeing it doth thus abuse us we are never to make it a warrant of our actions unlesse it be directed by Gods word Secondly we are to feare the terror of the great Judge of heaven and earth when we are so often and so grievously terrified with our little Judge that is in our soul. What corruption hath the body received by originall sinne It is become a ready instrument to serve the sinfull soule having both a pronenesse to any sin the soul affecteth and likewise an eagernes to commit it and continue in it Rom. 6. 12. 19. whereby it is come to passe that the bodily senses and members are 1. As Porters to let in sin Job 31. 1. Psal. 119. 37. Matth. 5. 29 30. 2. The instruments and tooles of the mind for the execution of sinne Rom. 3. 13 14 15 6. 13. VVhat use are we to make of this doctrine of originall sinne First the due knowledge thereof serveth to humble the pride of man remembring that he is conceived in so sinfull a sort that howsoever the branches of his actions may seem green yet is he rotten at the root Secondly it should move him with all speed to seek for regeneraon by Christ seeing he hath so corrupt a generation by Adam VVhat is actuall sinne It is a violation of Gods Commandements done by us after the manner of Adams transgression Rom. 5. 14. to wit a particular breach of Gods Law in the course of our life which proceedeth as an evill fruit from our naturall corruption and leaveth a stain in the soule behind it Jer. 13. 23. which polluteth the sinner and disposeth him to further evill How is such sin committed Either inwardly or outwardly How inwardly First by evill thoughts in the mind which come either by a mans own conceiving Gen. 6. 5. Matth. 15. 19. or by the suggestion of the Devill John 13. 2. Acts 5. 3. 1 Chron. 21. 1. Secondly by evill motions and lusts stirring in the heart against the righteousnesse of the Law which condemneth the very first motions of evill that arise from our corrupt nature How outwardly By evill words and deeds Esa. 3. 8. which arise from the corrupt thoughts and motions of the heart when any occasion is given Matth. 15. 19. So that the imagination of mans heart the words of
2 Cor. 4. 4. Heb. 2. 14. Luke 11. 21 22. How may a man know whether Satan be his God or no He may know it by this if he give obedience to him in his heart and expresse it in his conversation And how shall a man perceive this obedience If he take delight in the evill motions that Satan puts into his heart and doth fulfill the lusts of the Devil Joh. 8. 44. 1 Joh. 3. 8. What is that slavery whereby a man is in bondage to the flesh A necessity of sinning but without constraint untill he be born again by the grace of God Mat. 12. 33 34 35. If we sin necessarily and cannot but sin then it seemeth we are not to be blamed Yes the necessity of sin doth not exempt us from sin but only constraint What punishments are inflicted upon sinfull man after this life A twofold death Which is the first death Bodily death in the severall kindes namely the separation of the soul from the body Gen. 3. 19. Eccl. 12. 7. Rom. 5. 12. Wherein consisteth the second death 1. In an everlasting separation of the whole man from the favourable presence and comfortable fellowship of Gods most glorious Majesty in whose countenance is fulnesse of joy 2. Perpetuall imprisonment in the company of the Devill and Reprobates damned in hell 3. The most heavy wrath of God and unspeakable torments to be endured in hell fire world without end 2 Thess. 1. 9. How doth this death seize upon man 1. After this life is ended the soule of the wicked immediately is sent unto hell there to be tormented unto the day of Judgement Luk. 16. 22 23. 2. At the day of Judgement the body being joyned to the soule againe both shall be tormented in hell everlastingly Matth. 10. 28. so much also the more as they have had more freedome from pain of body and anguish of soule and losse of outward things in this life Is the punishment of all sins alike No for as the guilt increaseth so doth the punishment and as the smallest sin cannot escape Gods hand so as we heap sins he will heap his judgements John 19. 11. Mat. 11. 20 21 22 23 24. But God is mercifull He is indeed full of mercy but he is also full of righteousnesse which must fully be discharged or else we cannot be partakers of his mercy Cannot we by our own power make satisfaction for our sins and deliver our selves from the wrath of God We cannot by any meanes but rather from day to day increase our debt for we are all by nature the sons of wrath and not able so much as to think a good thought therefore unable to appease the infinite wrath of God conceived against our sins Could any other creature in heaven or earth which is onely a creature perform this for us No none at all for first God will not punish that in another creature which is due to be paid by man Secondly none that is onely a creature can abide the wrath of God against sinne and deliver others from the same Thirdly none can be our Saviour but God Could man by his own wisdome devise any thing whereby he might be saved No for the wisdom of man can devise nothing but that which may make a further separation betwixt God and him VVhat then shall become of man-kind is there no hope of salvation shall all perish then surely is a man of all creatures most miserable when a dog or a toad die all their misery is ended but when a man dieth there is the beginning of his woe It were so indeed if there were no meanes of deliverance but God in his infinite wisdome and mercy hath found out that which the wisdome of man could not and provided a Saviour for mankind How then is man delivered from this sinfull miserable estate Sinne is repressed and misery asswaged by many meanes naturall and civill but they are not removed nor man restored but onely by a new Covenant the old being not now able to give life unto any by reason of the infirmity of our flesh VVhy is the former Covenant of works called the old Because we not onely cannot doe it but through the perversenesse of our nature and not by the fault of the Law it maketh our old man of sin elder and we more hasting to destruction How are they convinced that seek righteousnesse by this Covenant Because thereby they make God unjust and that he should thus give the Kingdome of heaven to wicked men as to those that cannot fulfill the Law Seeing the nature of a Covenant is to reconcile and joyne those together that are at variance as we see in the example of Abraham and Abimelech Laban and Jacob why is this called a Covenant that can make no reconciliation betwixt God and us Although it be not able to reconcile us yet doth it make way for reconciliation by another Covenant neither is it meet strictly to bind Gods Covenant with men to the same Lawes that the Covenants of one man with another are bound unto For amongst men the weaker seeketh reconciliation at the hand of the mightier Luk. 14. 31 32. But God neither able to be hurt or benefitted by us seeketh unto us for peace 2 Cor. 5. 20. VVhether of these two Covenants must be first in use The Law to shew us first our duty what we should doe Secondly our sin and the punishment due thereunto How is that other Covenant called whereby we are reconciled unto God and recovered out of the state of sin and death The new Covenant so called because by it we are renued the Covenant of grace of promise of life and salvation the new Testament the Gospell c. Ier. 31. 31 32. Rom. 3. 23 24. What is the Covenant of grace Gods second contract with man-kind after the fall for restoring of him into his favour and to the estate of happinesse by the meanes of a Mediatour Gal. 3. 21 22. and it containeth the free promises of God made unto us in Jesus Christ without any respect of our deservings VVho made this Covenant God alone for properly man hath no more power to make a spirituall Covenant in his naturall estate then before his creation he had to promise obedience How are they convinced by the giving of this second Covenant which seek righteousnesse in the Law or old Covenant Because thereby they make God unwise that would enter into a new and second Covenant if the former had been sufficient Heb. 8. 7. When was this Covenant of Grace first plighted between God and man Immediately after his fall in Paradise in that promise given concerning the womans seed Gen. 3. 15. God in unspeakeable mercy propounding the remedy before he pronounced sentence of Judgment Was it once only published It was sundry wayes declared in all ages partly by ordinary means and partly by Prophets extraordinarily sent and directed by God What is the foundation of this Covenant The meer
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
of the feare of God and contempt of his Majesty What sin is joyned with the want of the feare of God Carnall security whereby a man doth flatter himselfe in his owne estate be it never so bad What vertues arise from the feare of God Reverence and Humility What is the former The Reverence of the Majesty of God in regard whereof we should carry such an holy shamefastnesse in all our actions that no unseemely behaviour proceed from us that may any wayes be offensive unto him Heb. 12. 28. Of which if Men be so carefull in the presence of Princes who are but mortall Men how much more carefull ought wee to bee thereof in the presence of the Almighty and most glorious God How was this prefigured in the Ceremoniall Law That when Men would ease themselves according to the course of nature they should goe without the Hoast and carry a paddle with them to cover their filth because saith the Lord I am in the midest of you whereby the filthinesse and impurity of the minde was forbidden more then of the body and the equity hereof reacheth also unto us Deut. 23. 12 13 14. What is contrary to this Reverence of the Majesty of God Irreverence and Prophanenesse of Men to God-ward What is Humility That vertue whereby we account our selves vile and unworthy of the least of Gods mercies and casting our selves downe before his Majesty doe acknowledge our owne emptinesse of good and insufficiency in our selves for so all our behaviour should be seasoned with humility What sinnes are repugnant to this vertue 1 Counterfeit humility when a man would seeme more lowly then he is 2. Pride vaine glory and presumption whereby we boast and glory of our selves and our owne strength and goodnesse Who are to be accounted proud 1 They that would bee thought to have those good things in them which they want 2 They that having a little goodnes in them would have it seem greater then it is 3 They that having any goodnsse in them doe thinke that it commeth from themselves 4. They that thinke they can merit from GOD and deserve his favour VVhat is the godly sorrow which is required in this Commandement Spirituall griefe and indignation against our owne and others transgressions and also lamenting for the calamities of Gods people private and publique the want of both which is here condemned VVhat spirituall joy is there here injoyned Ioying in God rejoycing in all our afflictions with consideration of the joy prepared for us before the beginning of the world Luke 1. 47. Rom. 5. 3. James 1. 2. the defect of which spirituall joy is here condemned So much of the Affections what is required of us in respect of our Conscience That we live in all good conscience before God Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 8. What sins are here condemned 1. Hardnesse of heart and benummednesse of conscience 2. Hellish terros and accusations proceeding from doing things either without or against the rule of the Word So much of the first branch of this Commandement what is required in the second branch thereof Vnity in Religion because we are commanded to have but one God and no more What things are required of us that we may come to this unity Foure principally 1. An upright and single heart ready to embrace the true Religion and no other 2. Constancy and continuance in the truth 3. A godly courage to stand to the truth and withstand the enemy 4. An holy zeale of the glory of God What contrary vices are forbidden 1. Indifferency in Religion when a man is as ready to embrace one Religion as another 2. Inconstancy and wavering in Religion 3. Obstinate and wilfull continuance in any Religion without any good ground 4. Rash and blinde zeale when a man without knowledge or judgment will earnestly maintaine either falshood or truth by wicked meanes To what end doth God will us to have no other God but himselfe seeing no man can have any other God though he never so much desire it Because howsoever there be but one God yet many doe devise unto themselves divers things which they place in Gods stead and to which they give that honour which is proper to God 1 Cor. 8. 4 5. 10. 20. What sin then doth God condemne by forbidding us to have many gods All inward idolatry whereby men set up an Idoll in their heart in stead of God Ezek. 14. 3. ascribing thereunto that which is proper to him and giving it any part of spirituall adoration Shew how this is done in the Understanding When men doe thinke that other things have that which is proper unto God as Papists when they beleeve That the Sacrament is their maker That the Saints know their hearts That the Pope can forgive sins which none can doe but God How doth the Memory faile herein In remembering of evill things especially of those which most corrupt us and chiefly then when we should be most free from the thoughts of them What is the fault of the Will Readinesse unto and wilfulnesse in evill especially the worst Shew the like in the Affections first in sinfull confidence There is here condemned trust in the Creatures more then in God and all fleshly confidence in our selves or in our friends honour credit wit learning wisdome wealth c. thinking our selves the better or more safe simply for them Prov. 18. 11. Psa. 62. 10. Jer. 17. 5. 2 Chron. 16. 12. whence ariseth pride Acts 12. 23. and security VVhat is our duty concerning these things 1. To esteem of them only as good means given us of God whereby to glorifie him the better 2. To trust in God lesse when we have them then when we want them Job 13. 15. VVhat is further here condemned 1. To ascribe the glory of any good thing either to our selves or any other then the Lord. 2. To seeke for help of the Devill by Witches or Wise men VVherein standeth inordinate love In loving of evill or in loving of our selves or any other thing more then God of whose favour we ought more to esteem then of all the world besides Here therfore is condemned all carnall love of our selves our friends our pleasure profit credit or any worldly thing else for whose sake we leave those duties undone which God requireth of us 2 Tim. 3. 4. 1 John 2. 15. 1 Sam. 2. 29. whereas the true love of God will move us with Moses and Paul to wish our selves accursed rather then that the glory of God should any thing at all be stained by us Exod. 32. 32. Rom. 9. 3. VVhat feare is here condemned All carnall feares and especially the fearing of any thing more then God Isa. 7. 2. 8. 12 13. 51. 12 13. Mat. 10. 28. How may a man know that he is more afraid of God then of any other thing If he be more afraid to displease God then any other and this feare of
speakings Prov. 12. 18. yet men in authority may use such tearmes as the sinne of those with whom they deale doth deserve What use are you to make of all this That according to the counsell of Saint Paul we see that no corrupt communication proceed out of our mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace unto the hearers Ephes. 4. 29. that our speech be alwayes gracious seasoned with salt that we may know how we ought to answer every man Col. 4. 6. For as flesh in Summer if it be not poudred with salt will smell so will it be with them that have not their hearts seasoned with the word of truth And thence for want of care proceed angry wrathfull and loathsome speeches against our brother which are in the Scripture compared to Iuniper coales which burne most fiercely Psal. 120. 4. or to the pricking of a sword or a razor which cutteth most sharply Prov. 12. 18. Psal. 52. 2. Whereupon the tongue is by Saint James said to be an unruly evill set on fire of Hell Jam. 3. 6 8. We ought therefore to governe our tongues by the Word of God and take heed of vile speeches So much of our Gestures and our Words what is required in our deeds 1. That we doe good to our Neighbours so far as our power and calling will suffer 2. That we visit and comfort him in sicknesse and affliction Mat. 25. 36. Jam. 1. 27. 3. That we give meat drinke and cloth to the poore and needy 4. That we give reliefe to the distressed and succour to the oppressed Iob 29. 15 c. 5. That we foresee and prevent mischiefs before they come 6. That we rescue our Neighbour from danger and defend him with our hands if we can if we may What be the contrary sins forbidden 1. Oppression and cruelty in withdrawing the meanes of life Iam. 5. 4. as by usury and by letting out of land so that men cannot live by it c. 2. Not looking unto the sicke and those that be in distresse 3. Neglect of Hospitality especially to the poore which by the Commandement of God must be provided for 4. Not preventing mischiefe and turning away all stroaks from our Neighbours so much as in us lieth 5. Extremity and Cruelty in punishing where the correction is excessive Deut. 25. 3. 2 Cor. 11. 29. or is not inflicted in love of Iustice Deut. 16. 19 20. 6. All angry and despitefull striking how little soever it be 7. Fighting smiting wounding or maiming of the body of our brother or neighbour Iam. 4. 1. Lev. 24. 19 20. 8. The indangering or taking away of his life How is this done Either directly or indirectly How indirectly 1. When one defendeth himselfe with injury or purpose of revenge or to hurt his adversary and not onely to save himselfe Rom. 12. 21. Exod. 22. 2 3. 2. When women with childe either by mis-diet or streine by reaching violent exercise riding by Coach or otherwise and much more by dancing either hurt the fruit of their wombe or altogether miscarry 3. When children begotten in Fornication or Adultery are committed to them to keep which have no care of them 4. When those to whom it appertaineth doe not punish the breach of this Commandement Num. 35 31 32. Prov. 17. 15. 5. Keeping of harmfull beasts Exod. 21. 29. 6. All dangerous pastimes 7. When things are so made that men may take harme by them or such care is not had of them that ought to be as when the high-wayes and bridges are not mended or when staires are so made that they are like to hurt either children servants or others when Wells and Ditches or any such like dangerous places are not covered or fenced Exodus 21. 33. whereunto belongeth that the Lord commanded the Israelites to have Battlements upon their houses Deut. 22. 8. How directly When a man without a Calling doth actually take away the life of his brother Gen. 9. 6. otherwise then in case of publick Iustice Iohn 7. 19. just warre Deut 20. 12 13. or necessary defence Exod. 22. 2. How many sorts of this direct killing are there Three First Chance-medly Secondly Man-slaughter Thirdly Wilfull murther What is that which we call Chance-medley When it is simply against our will and we thinke nothing of it as he which felleth a tree and his Axe head falleth and hurteth and killeth a man Deut 19 4 5 which is the least sinne of the three and by mans Law deserveth not death and therefore by the Law of Moses in this case the benefit of Sanctuary was granted Exod. 21. 13. But how appeareth it to be a sinne at all 1. Because by the Law of Moses the party that committeth this ●act was to lose his liberty untill the death of the high Priest to signifie that he could not bee freed from the guilt thereof but by the death of Iesus Christ the great high Priest 2. Because it is a fruit of the sin of our first Parents who if they had stood in that integrity wherein God created them such an act as this should never have happened 3. Because there is some impudency in him that doth it and want of consideration What should this teach us To take heed of all occasions that may make us guilty of this sin What doe you account Man-slaughter When one killeth another in his owne defence whereunto also may be added If one should kill a man at unawares in hurling stones to no use Or if a drunkard in reeling should fell another whereof he should dye for this is different from that which commeth by chance-medley when a man is imployed in a good and lawfull worke What thinke you of killing one another and challenges to the field It deserveth death by the law of God and man What is wilfull Murther When a man advisedly wittingly and maliciously doth slay or poyson his Neighbour which is a sin of a high nature and at no hand by the Magistrate to be pardoned because thereby the Land is defiled Gen. 9. 5 6. Hos. 4. 2 3. Numb 35. 31 33 34. Deut. 21. 2 7 8 9. What reasons are there to set out the detestation of this sin 1. If a man deface the Image of a Prince he is severely punished how much more if he deface the Image of God Gen. 9. 6. 2. By the law of Moses if a beast an unreasonable creature had killed a man it should be slaine and the flesh of it though otherwise cleane was not to be eaten Exod. 21. 28. 3. By the same law if this sin goe unpunished God will require it at the place where it was committed and at the Magistrates hands Numb 35. 33. Hitherto of the duties of this Commandement belonging to the person of our Neighbour while he is alive What are they after his death They either concerne himselfe or those that pertaine to him What are the duties
means 1 Tim. 6. 9. 3. Too much haste in gathering riches joyned with impatience of any delay Prov. 28. 20. 22. 20. 21. 4. An unsatiable appetite which can never bee satisfied but when they have too much they still desire more and have never enough Eccles. 4. 8. like the Horse-leech Prov. 30. 15. the Dropsie and Hell it selfe Prov. 27. 20. 5. Miser-like tenacity whereby they refuse to communicate their goods either for the use of others or themselves 6. Cruelty Prov. 1. 18 19. exercised both in their unmercifulnesse and oppression of the poore VVhat doe you think of this vice That it is a most hainous sinne for it is Idolatry and the root of all evill Col. 3. 5. 1 Tim. 6. 10. A pernicious Thorne that stifleth all grace and choaketh the seed of the Word Mat. 13. 22. and pierceth men through with many sorrowes 1 Tim. 6. 10. and drowneth them in destruction and perdition verse 9. What is Ambition An immoderate love and desire of honours which is a vice compounded of Covetousnesse and Pride in which concurre all those vices in Covetousnesse before spoken of as an immoderate love of honours a resolution to aspire unto honours either by lawfull or unlawfull meanes too much haste in aspiring unto honours not waiting upon God for preferment in the use of lawfull meanes unsatiablenes in aspiring higher and higher and enlarging of the ambitious mans desire like unto hell Hab. 2. 5. Vnto which may be added Arrogancy whereby hee coveteth to be preferred before all others and Envy whereby he disdaineth that any should he preferred before him What is the fourth and last vice here forbidden Immoderate and carking care in the pursuing of these earthly things riches and honours and contrariwise moderate appetite and desires of having and moderate care of procuring them is approved and required that we may not be burthensome but rather helpfull unto others 2 Cor. 12. 13. Eph. 4. 28. What are the extreames opposed to the former vertue They are two the first is carelesnesse and neglect of our goods and state For as he is commended who gathereth in seasonable times so he is condemned who neglecteth those opportunities Prov. 10. 5. 6. 6. and is censured by the Apostle to be worse then an Infidell 1 Tim. 5. 8. What is the other extreame Anxious and solicitous care which distracteth the minde that it cannot be wholly intent to Gods service And this doth partly arise from Covetousnesse and partly from diffidence in Gods Promises and Providence What are the reasons that may disswade from this vice They are chiefely two First because it is Impious Secondly because it is Foolish Why is it impious Because it chargeth God either with ignorance that he knoweth not our wants contrary to that Matth. 6. 32. or of carelesnesse that hee neglecteth us or of impotency that he is notable to supply our wants whereas he is omniscient and knoweth our necessities omnipotent and able to relieve us Eph. 3. 20. and our most gracious Father and therefore willing and ready to helpe us in time of need Secondly because it divideth the heart between God and Mammon and we cannot at once serve these Masters Matth. 6. 24. 1 John 2. 15. Iames 4. 4. Thirdly because it is heathenish Mat. 6. 32. Why is it foolish Because it is both superfluous and vaine superfluous because God hath undertaken to provide for us and therefore in the use of lawfull meanes wee must cast all our care upon him 1 Peter 3. 7. Psalme 55. 22. How is it vaine Because it is Gods blessing onely that maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. Deut. 8. 18. and by our owne care wee can no more adde to that stint of state which he hath allotted unto us then we can thereby adde one Cubit to our stature Matth. 6. 27. You have spoken generally of the internall duties what duties are externally and more specially required They respect either the just acquisition and getting of our goods or the just retention and possessing of them unto which is opposed the unjust getting and keeping of them which are here forbidden under the name of Theft What is required to just getting That we get them by just and lawfull meanes For riches are Thorns which are not to be hastily catched but to be handled warily and with much caution that they doe not pierce the soule and wound the conscience What may move us hereunto First by considering that a little justly gotten is better then abundance gotten unjustly Prov. 16. 8. Psal. 37. 16. Secondly that what is justly gotten is the gift of God and a pledge of his love but that which is gotten unjustly is given in his wrath and is a snare of the devil to our destruction Thirdly that as goods justly gotten are Gods gifts which he blesseth unto us Prov. 10. 22. so that which is ill gotten is lyable to his curse Prov. 13. 11. Hab. 2. 9. Jer. 27. 11. How many wayes are goods lawfully gotten Two wayes First without Contract Secondly by Contract Out of Contract either such as are gotten by our selves or received from others How gotten by our selves Either ordinarily or extraordinarily Ordinary getting is by the sweat of our browes in our lawfull Callings So that here two things are required First a lawfull Calling and secondly that we labour in it Eph. 4. 28. What is a lawfull Calling It is the setting apart of singular men unto some lawfull labour and imployment according to the variety of their gifts and inclinations whether they be publick or private What is in the second place required of every man That they diligently labour in their lawfull calling 1 Thes. 3. 10. and that variously according to every mans condition and the variety of their severall callings For if Adam was not to be idle in the state of Innocency Gen. 2. 15. much lesse we after the fall Gen 3. 19. What doe you call extraordinary getting That which is acquired by the law of nature or the law of Nations as that which is gotten by the law of Armes or that which is casually found being lost of another unto which men have right when as by diligent enquiry the owner cannot be knowne How are goods justly gotten as they are retained from others When as by a civill right we retaine them from others who are the true and lawfull owners and that either by free gift or by succession and inheritance whether it be given unto us by the Testators will or by Law and right doe fall unto us What are the vices opposite to the former vertues All means and kinds of unjust getting opposite to just acquisition whether ordinary or extraordinary VVhat is opposite to ordinary just getting Inordinate walking 2 Thes. 3. 6. 7. 11. which is opposed either to a lawfull calling or to labour required in it What is opposed to a lawfull Calling Either no Calling at all or such a Calling as is
It is also called habituall concupiscence which is nothing else but an evill inclination and pronenesse to the transgression of Gods Law which by corrupt Nature is bred with us How is it called in the Scriptures The old man Ephes. 4. 22 Coloss. 3. 9. Sin inhabiting and dwelling in us the Law of sin the Law of the members warring against the Law of the mind the flesh the encompassing sin c. Rom. 7. 23. Gal. 5. 17 24. Heb. 12. 1. Is this to be reputed sinne Yes and a great sin as may appeare by these reasons First because it defileth and corrupteth the whole man soule and body with all their faculties powers and parts as the minde will memory heart affections appetite with all the members of the body which it maketh to be the instruments of evill Secondly it polluteth all our words and works and maketh them all repugnant to the Law of God Thirdly it is the root and fountaine of all our actuall sins from which they grow and spring Fourthly because it continually warreth against the spirit and choaketh and quencheth the good motions of it Gal. 5. 17. 1 Pet. 2. 11. Fifthly because it maketh a man the slave of sinne and Satan Rom. 7. 14 23. Sixthly because it joyneth with the Devill and the World and betrayeth us to their tentations Eph. 2. 2 3. Seventhly because it is an uncurable evill seeing it so hangeth upon us that we cannot shake it off Heb. 12. 2. Eighthly because it is but the more irritated by the Law of God which should suppresse it Rom. 7. 8. Lastly because it maketh us children of wrath and liable to everlasting condemnation although dying in childhood we should never commit any actuall transgression For death and damnation raigned even over them which had not sinned after the similitude of Adam that is by actuall transgression Rom. 5. 14. But doth this Commandement extend to the prohibition of Originall sin in the whole body and all the parts of it No for it forbiddeth sins committed against our Neighbours only like all other Commandements of the second Table as appeareth by the words themselves and the Apostles epitomizing of this whole Table in those words Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Rom. 13. 9. And therefore all originall injustice wicked inclinations thoughts and affections are here only forbidden as they respect our neighbours and are opposite to charity but as they respect God and are repugnant to the love of him they are forbidden in the first Table What are actuall Concupiscences They are evill motions which are repugnant to charity What are the kinds of them They are either such as are vaine and unprofitable or such as are hurtfull and pernicious How are they unprofitable So farre forth as they fasten mens minds to earthly things and thereby withdraw them from heavenly In what respects are they hurtfull First because they are instruments of sin as they are fit objects to every sin in its kinde For if any objects are offered to the minde or senses which self-love causeth them to thinke to be profitable pleasant and desireable concupiscence presently apprehendeth and catcheth at them to satisfie worldly lusts Secondly They choake the seed of the Word in the hearts of carnall men Mar. 4. 19. Thirdly They make men insatiable knowing no end or measure in pursuing worldly things Fourthly They cast men headlong in whom they raigne into sin Eph. 2. 3. and give them up to vile lusts and a reprobate mind Rom. 1. 24. Psal. 81. 12. Fifthly They fight against the soule and if they overcome bring it to destruction 1 Pet. 2. 11. How many wayes are these motions evill Two wayes either in respect of the phantasie and cogitations of the minde or in respect of the affections and imaginations of the heart When are the thoughts evill Then and so far forth as they sollicite and encline us unto evill Why doe men thinke that thoughts are free and not to be charged upon men or called to account Foolish men thinke and say so but the Scriptures say otherwise and affirme them to be sins Prov. 24. 9. as being repugnant to charity 1 Cor. 13. 5. and therefore forbid them Deut. 15. 9. injoyne us to confesse them and to crave pardon for them Isa. 55. 7. Acts 8. 22. and though we sleight them yet God taketh notice of them Psal. 94. 11. 1 Chron. 28. 9. Ezek. 11. 5. Psal. 139. 2. yea he hateth evill thoughts as abominable Prov. 15. 26. Zach. 8. 17. and severely punisheth them as we see in the example of the old world Gen. 6. 5. and 8. 21. How are these evill thoughts injected Either by Satan or else arise from originall concupiscence and both of them either waking or sleeping How are they injected by Satan Either immediately by himselfe 1 Chron. 21. 1. John 13. 2. Luke 9. 46 47. or mediately by his instruments as of old by the serpent And that he may the more easily insinuate into his minde whom he tempteth he often suborneth those that are nearest and dearest unto us to be his instruments as we see in the example of Jobs wife and Peter Iob 2. 9. Math. 16. 23. But are these tentations to be reputed our sins Not if we repell and extinguish them as fire in water for Christ himselfe was tempted yet without sin Heb. 4. 15. But if we admit them and doe not presently reject them they infect our minds and hearts with their poison and become our sins How else doe evill thoughts arise in us From our naturall corruption and habituall concupiscence Luke 24. 38. Gen. 6. 5. Math. 15. 19. 2 Cor. 3. 5. And these thoughts arise in us either waking or sleeping How are these motions evill in respect of the affections of the heart These though they have not the consent of the will to act them yet are they sinfull in respect of the sins which arise from them of which also they are the first degrees as we see in the first boyling of anger in the heart and of lust and uncleane motions which proceed from the defect of that charity and purity which God requireth in us and afterwards produce the acts of murther and fornication when the will consenteth unto them Mat. 5. 22 28. Are there no degrees of these evill affections and perturbations of the heart Yes for they are to be considered either in their first beginnings as they are the first motions of concupiscence by which the minde is first withdrawne from its rectitude and then the heart suddenly affected Or else when by the pleasure and delight in those first motions they are tickled and inticed to retaine them still that they may enjoy a greater and more full measure of delight What followeth this pleasure thus retained and continued in the mind and heart Consent to the acting of the sin which in Gods sight is all one with the sin it selfe seeing he reputeth the will for the deed
both to God and man Whereof must we give Almes Of that good thing that is wholsome and profitable to the receiver which is justly our owne not another mans unlesse in case of extremity before mentioned for otherwise of goods evill gotten or wrongfully detained not almes but restitution must be made How much must we give Wee must sow liberally that wee may reape also liberally notwithstanding in the quantity and proportion of almes respect must be had 1. To the ability of the giver who is not bound so to give as utterly to impoverish himselfe and to make himself of a giver a receiver saving that in a common and extream necessity of the Church every one must be content to abate out of his revenue that the rest may not perish and some whose hearts God shall move may voluntarily and commendably sell all and put it into the common stocke yea it is unlawfull so to give unto some one good use as to disable our selves for the service of the Common-wealth Church or Saints in generall or for the reliefe of our family or kindred in speciall Secondly to the condition of the receiver that his necessity may be supplyed not as to make him of a receiver a giver for this is to give a patrimony not an almes and belongeth rather to Iustice binding men to provide for those of their owne houshold then to mercy To whom must we give To such as are in want with this difference First in present extremity we must preserve life in whomsoever without enquiring who and what a one the partie be Secondly in cases admitting deliberation we must confine our almes to such as God hath made poore as Orphans Aged Blinde Lame the trembling hand c. wherein such gifts are most commendable as extend unto perpetuity as the erecting or endowing of Churches Schooles of good learning Hospitalls c. But as for such as turne begging into an art or occupation they are by order to bee compelled to worke for their maintenance which is the best and greatest almes What order must we observe in giving We must begin with such as are nearest to us in regard of domesticall civill or Christian neighbour-hood according as the lawes of Nature Nations and religion direct us unlesse other circumstances as the extremity of want or the indignity of the person to bee relieved doe dispence and so proceed to such as are further off according as our ability can extend What are the times and places fittest for those duties For publick almes the fittest time is when we meet together for the solemne worship of God likewise the fittest place where provision is made for publick Collections For private when and wheresoever the necessity of our poore brother offerth it selfe With what affection must we doe Almes-deeds 1. With pity and compassion on our needy brother Psal. 112. 4. 2. With humility and secrecy not seeking praise from men but approving our selves to God Matth. 6. 1 c. 3. With cheerfulnesse Rom. 12. 8. because God loveth a cheerfull giver 4. With simplicity not respecting our selves but the glory of God and the good of our fellow members Rom. 12. 8. 2 Cor. 8. 4 5. How many wayes may almes-deeds be performed Not only by giving but also First by lending to such as are not able to lend to us againe some being no lesse relieved by lending then others by gift provided we take nothing for the loane yea in some cases either remit part of the loane or commit it into the hands of our poore brother without assurance to receive from him the principall againe Secondly by selling when we doe not only bring forth the commodity as of corne c. which others keep in but also in a mercifull commiseration of our poore brother abate something of the extreame price Thirdly by forbearing whatsoever is our right in case of great necessity What fruit may we expect of this duty Not to merit thereby at the hands of God But yet 1. To make God our debtor Prov. 19. 17. according to his gracious promises who also in Christ will acknowledge and requite it at the last day Mat. 10. 42. 25. 35. 2 Tim. 1. 18. 2. To seale the truth of our Religion 1 Sam. 1. 27. 3. To assure us of salvation Heb. 6. 9 10. 1 John 3. 14. 1 Tim. 6. 19. 4. To make amends to man for former covetousnesse and cruelty Dan. 4. 24. Luke 19. 8. 5. To sanctifie our store Luke 11. 41. and bring a blessing on our labours Deut. 15. 10. yea and upon our posterity after us Psal. 112. 2. 37. 16. 2 Tim. 1. 16. We have spoken at large of the participation of the grace of Christ and the benefits of the Gospell Now we are come unto the meanes whereby God doth effect these things Shew therefore how and in what manner God doth offer and communicate the Covenant of Grace unto mankinde By vocation or calling Rom. 8. 30. Heb. 3. 1. when God by the meanes of his Word and Spirit acquainting men with his gracious purpose of salvation by Christ inviteth them to come unto him Hos. 2. 14. and revealing unto them his Covenant of grace Mat. 11. 27. 16. 17. Iohn 14. 21. Psalme 25. 14. bringeth them out of darknesse to light Acts 26. 18. Is this Calling of one sort only No there is an externall gathering common to all together with some light of the Spirit and certaine fruits of the same attained unto by some that are not heires of the promise for many are called with this outward and ineffectuall calling who are not chosen Isa. 48. 12. Mat. 22. 14. And there is an internall and effectuall calling peculiar to those few that are elect whereby unfaigned faith and true repentance is wrought in the heart of Gods chosen and God become in Christ their Father doth not only outwardly by his Word invite but inwardly also and powerfully by his Spirit allure and win their hearts to cleave to him inseparably unto salvation Gen. 9. 27. Psal. 25. 14. 60. 6. 5. 4. Ioel. 2. 32. Acts 2. 39. How doe both these kinds of Callings differ Howsoever we are to judge charitably of all outwardly called 1 Cor. 1. 2. because who among them is also inwardly called is only knowne to God 2 Tim. 2. 19. yet doth this outward calling differ from the inward 1. In that it is wrought only by outward meanes and common illumination Heb. 4. 2. without the spirit of regeneration Jude vers 19. or any portion of saving faith Luke 8. 13. 2. In that they are admitted only to an outward and temporary league of formall profession Acts 8. 13. Rom. 9 4 5. not to that intire fellowship with Christ required unto salvation 1 Iohn 2. 19. 1 Cor. 1. 8 9. What are the
heaven yet he is not by and by to be admitted to all priviledges of the Church but to be suspended for a time till the fruits of repentance may better appear for if some in the law for a certain pollution in a lawfull duty of burying the dead were suspended from the Passeover Numb 9. 6. much more in the Gospell for such obstinacy How many sorts of suspensions then are there Two one going before excommunication and the other following the same towards them that are penitent both which were shadowed in the Leviticall law in the case of Leprosie For first in the 13. of Levit. we finde that upon suspition of Leprosie a man was shut up for a time not only from the worship of God but also from all society of men and how much more may it be lawfull under the Gospell to execute the censure of suspension af●er two admonitions upon a known offence when it is set down in the 14 of Levit. That a man cleansed from his leprosie was brought home unto the campe and placed in his tent where he stayed for certaine dayes it being not lawfull for him to come into the Tabernacle So much of the medicinall censures what is the last censure of fearfull revenge The curse unto death called by S. Paul Anathama Marenatha 1 Cor. 16. 22. that is accursed untill the Lord come or everlastingly which is thought to have been executed upon Hymeneus and Alexander by Paul 1 Tim. 1. 20. and afterwards upon Iulian by the Church then Against whom is this censure to proceed This everlasting curse which is the most fearfull thunderclap of Gods judgement is to be pronounced only against such as are desperately wicked that have nothing profited by the former censures and shewe th●ir incorrigiblenesse by their obstinate and malitious resisting all means gratiously used to reclaime them giving tokens even of that unpardonable sinne against the Holy Ghost Which fearfull sinne by how much the more difficult it is to be discerned and knowne by so much the more care is this heavie doome to be used by the Church Yet doubtlesse God doth sometimes give cleare tokens thereof in bl●sphemous Apostates such as Iulian and others who malitiously oppose deride and persecute that truth of God which they have been enlightned in And where God doth set such marks upon them the Chu●ch of God may pronounce them to be such and carry it selfe towards them accordingly What are the outward enemies that oppose against the Church of Christ Some doe under the shew of friendship and some with profession of enmity Who are the open enemies Heathens Iewes Turks and all that make profession of prophanenesse by sitting down in the seat of scorners What enemies are they that make shew of friendship Such are al those that bearing the name of Christians do obstinately deny the faith whereby we are joyned unto Christ which are called Hereticks or that break the bond of charity whereby we are tyed in communion one to another which are tearmed Schismaticks or else adde tyranny to schisme and heresie as that great Antichrist head of the generall apostasie which the Scriptures forewarned by name Where are we forewarned of the Apostasie Where the Apostle foretelleth that there shall be a generall apostacy or falling away from the truth of the Gospell before the latter day Is it meant that the whole Church shall fall away from Christ No it were impossible that a perfect head should be without a body Why is it then called generall Because the Gospell having been universally preached throughout the world from it both whole Nations did fall and the most part also even of those Nations that kept the profession of it howbeit still there remained a Church though there were no setled estate thereof Is it likely the Lord would barre so many Nations that lived under Antichrist and that so long from the means of salvation Why not and that most justly for if the whole world of the Gentiles were rejected when the Church was onely in Iury for some 1500 years and seeing of the Iewes ten Tribes were rejected and the remainder but a few were of the Church with great reason might the Lord reject those Nations and people for so many ages seeing they rejected Gods grace in falling away from the Gospell which the Lord most graciously revealed unto them rather then to their Fathers before them Is this apostasie necessarily laid upon the See of Rome Yes verily as by the description may evidently appear What are the parts of this Apostasie The head and the body for as Christ is the head of the Church which is his body so Antichrist is the head of the Romish Church which is his body Who is that Antichrist He is one who under the colour of being for Christ and under title of his Vicegerent exalteth himselfe above and against Christ opposing himselfe against all his offices and ordinances both in Church and Common-wealth bearing authority in the Church of God ruling over that City with seven Hils which did bear rule over Nations and put our Lord to death a Man of sinne a Harlot a Mother of spirituall fornications to the Kings and people of the Nations a childe of perdition a destroyer establishing himselfe by lying miracles and false wonders all which marks together do agree with none but the Pope of Rome How doth the Apostle 2 Thess. 2. 3. describe this Antichristian head unto us First he describeth what he is towards others and then what he is in himselfe What is he towards others That is declared by two speciall titles the Man of sinne and Sonne of perdition declaring hereby not so much his own sinne and perdition which is exceeding great as of those that receive his marke whom he causeth to sinne and consequently to fall into perdition as Ieroboam who is often branded with the mark of causing Israel to sin and he is so much more detestable then he by how much both his idolatry is more and hath drawn more Kingdomes after him then Ieroboam did Tribes In what respect is he called the man of sin In that he causeth man to sinne and this the Pope doth in a high degree justifying sinne not by oversight but by Lawes advisedly made not onely commanding some sinnes which we are by our corrupt nature prone unto as spirituall fornication but also to the great profanation of the holy name and profession of Christ permitting and teaching for lawfull such as even our corrupt nature not wholly subverted through erronious custome of sin abhorreth as incestuous marriages and breaking of faith and league equivocating and the like which profane men by the very light of nature doe detest In what sense is he called the child of perdition Not as the unthrift mentioned in the Gospel neither as Judas who is passively called the Son of perdition but actively as it is other where expounded where he is called the destroyer Rev.
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
instant pronounceth and the conscience apprehendeth the sentence of blessing or cursing Heb. 9. 27. 2. The soule of every man accordingly is by the power of God and the ministery of Angels immediately conveyed into that state of happinesse or misery wherein it shall remaine till the resurrection and from thenceforth both body and soule for ever Luke 16. 22 23 26. Eccl. 11. 3. What gather you of this That the doctrine of Purgatory and Prayer for the dead is vaine seeing it appeareth by the Word of God that the souls of those that die in Gods favour are presently received into joy Isay 57. 2. Ioh. 5. 24. Luke 23. 43. Apoc. 14. 13. 1 Thess. 4. 16. and the souls of those that dye in their sinnes cast into endlesse torments no means being left after death to procure remission of sinnes Isay 22. 14. Iohn 8. 24. Rom 6. 10. What is the generall and finall judgement The great day of assize for the whole world wherein all mens lives that ever have been are or shall be being duly examined every one shall receive according to his works In which judgement we are to consider 1. The preparation to it 2. The acting of it 3. The execution of the sentence Wherein doth the preparation to the last judgement consist In five things 1. In the foretokening of the time thereof which though it be so sealed up in the treasury of Gods counsell that neither men nor Angels nor yet our Saviour himself as man in the dayes of his flesh had expresse notice thereof that from the uncertainty and suddennesse of it we might be taught to be alwayes in readinesse for it yet it hath pleased God to acquaint us with some signes whereby we may discern Christs approaching as men in the Spring time may discerne Summer approaching by the shooting forth of the Figtree What are the signes foretokening the last judgement They are certaine notable changes in the world and Church some further off some nearer unto the comming of Christ as 1. The publishing and receiving the Gospel throughout the world 2. The Apostasie of most part of professors not loving the truth 3. The revealing of Antichrist that Man of sinne and Childe of perdition who under the title of Christs Vicegerent opposeth himselfe to Christ in all his offices and ordinances both in Church and Common-wealth 4. Common corruptions in manners joyned with security as in the dayes of Noah and Lot 5. Warres and troubles in the world and Church 6. False Christs attended with false Prophets and armed with false miracles 7. The calling of the Iewes unto the faith of the Gospell 8. And lastly signes in Heaven Earth and all the Elements As the darkning of the Sunne and Moone c. Yea firing of the whole frame of Heaven and Earth with the signe of the Sonne of man whereby his comming shall then be clearly apprehended by all men What is the second thing in the preparation The comming of Iesus Christ the Iudge of the world who in his humane visible body but yet with unspeakable glory shall suddenly break forth like Lightning through the Heavens riding on the clouds environed with a flame of fire attended with all the host of the elect Angels and especially with the voice and shout of an Archangel and the Trumpet of God and so shall sit downe in the royall throne of judgement What is the third thing The summoning and presenting of all both dead and living men together with Devils before the glorious throne of Christ the judge How shall all men both dead and living be summoned By the voice of Christ appeared by the ministery of Angels and namely by the shout and Trumpet of the Archangel whereto the Lord joyning his divine power as unto the word preached for the work of the first resurrection shall in a moment both raise the dead with their own bodies and every part thereof though never so dispersed and change the living so that it shall be with them as if they had been a long time dead and were now raised to life againe Shall there be no difference betweene the resurrection of the elect and reprobate Yes for howsoever they shall both rise by the same mighty voice and power of Christ in the same bodies wherein they lived upon earth and those so altered in quality as then they shall be able to abide for ever in that estate whereunto they shall be judged yet 1. The elect shall be raised as members of the body of Christ by vertue derived from his resurrection the reprobate as Malefastors shall be brought forth of the prison of the grave by vertue of the judiciary power of Christ and of the curse of the law 2. The elect shall come forth to everlasting life which is called the resurrection of life the reprobate to shame and perpetuall contempt called the resurrection of condemnation 3. The bodies of the elect shall be spirituall that is glorious powerfull nimble impatible but the bodies of the reprobate shall be full of uncomelinesse and horror agreeable to the guiltinesse and terror of their consciences and liable to extreame torment How shall all men be presented before the throne of Christ The elect being gathered by the Angels shall with great joy be caught up into the aire to meet the Lord Luke 21. 28. 1 Thess. 4. 17. The reprobate together with the Devill and his Angels shall with extreame horrour and confusion be drawne into his presence Rev. 6. 15. What is the fourth thing The separation of the Elect from the Reprobate For Christ the great Shepheard shall then place the Elect as his Sheep that have heard his voice and followed him on his right hand and the Reprobates with the Devils as straying Goats on the left hand Matth. 25. 33. What is the fift and last thing The opening of the book of record by which the dead shall be judged Rev. 20. 12. viz. 1. The severall books of mens consciences which then by the glorious illumination of Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse shining in his full strength shall be so enlightned that men shall perfectly remember what ever good or evill they did in the time of their life the secrets of all hearts being then revealed 2. The book of life that is the eternall decree of God to save his Elect by Christ which decree shall then at length be made known to all Thus farre of the preparation to judgement what are we to consider in the second place The act of judgment wherein the Elect shal first be acquitted that they may after as assistants joyne with Christ in the judgement of the reprobate men and Angels How shall the act of judgement be performed 1. By examination 2. By pronouncing sentence The examination shall be according to the Law of God which hath been revealed unto men whether it be the Law of
nature onely which is the remainder of the morall Law written in the hearts of our first parents and conveyed by the power of God unto all men to leave them without excuse or that written Word of God vouchsafed unto the Church in the Scriptures first of the old and after also of the new Testament as the rule of faith and life 2. By the evidence of every mans conscience bringing all his works whether good or evill to light bearing witnesse with him or against him together with the testimony of such who either by doctrine company or example have approved or condemned him Shall there be no difference in the examination of the Elect and the Reprobate Yes for 1. The Elect shall not have their sinnes for which Christ satisfied but onely their good works remembred 2. Being in Christ they and their works shall not undergoe the strict triall of the Law simply in it self but as the obedience thereof doth prove them to be true partakers of the grace of the Gospel Shall there be any such reasoning at the last judgement as seemeth Matth. 7. 25 No but the consciences of men being then enlightned by Christ shall cleare all those doubts and reject those objections and excuses which they seem now to apprehend How shall the sentence be pronounced By the Iudge himselfe our Lord Iesus Christ who according to the evidence and verdict of conscience touching workes shall adjudge the Elect unto the blessing of the kingdome of God his Father and the Reprobates with the Devill and his Angels unto the curse of everlasting fire Shall men then bee judged to salvation or damnation for their workes sake 1. The wicked shall be condemned for the merit of their workes because being perfectly evill they deserve the wages of damnation 2. The godly shall be pronounced just because their workes though imperfect doe prove their faith whereby they lay hold on Christ and his meritorious righteousnesse to be a true faith as working by love in all parts of obedience Hitherto of the act of judgement What are we to consider in the third and last place The execution of this judgement Christ by his almighty power and ministery of his Angels casting the Devils and the reprobate men into hell and bringing Gods Elect into the possession of his glorious kingdome wherein the Reprobates shall first be dispatched that the righteous may rejoice to see the vengeance and as it were wash their feet in the bloud of the wicked What shall be the estate of the Reprobates in hell They shall remaine for ever in unspeakable torment of body and anguish of minde being cast out from the favourable presence of God and glorious fellowship of Christ and his Saints whose happinesse they shall see and envie into that horrible Dungeon figured in Scripture by utter darknesse blacknesse of darknesse weeping and gnashing of teeth the Worme that never dieth the fire that never goeth out c. What shall be the estate of the Elect in heaven They shall bee unspeakeably and everlastingly blessed and glorious in body and soule being freed from all imperfections and infirmities yea from such Graces as imply imperfection as Faith Hope Repentance c. endued with perfect Wisdome and Holinesse possessed with all the pleasures that are at the right hand of God seated as Princes in Thrones of Majesty crowned with Crownes of Glory possessing the new Heaven and Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousnesse beholding and being filled with the fruition of the glorious presence of God and of the Lambe Iesus Christ in the company of innumerable Angels and holy Saints as the Scripture phrases are What shall follow this Christ shall deliver up that dispensatory Kingdome which hee received for the subduing of his enemies and accomplishing the salvation of his Church unto God the Father and God shall be all in all for all eternity Amen What use may we make of this Doctrine concerning this generall end and finall judgement First it serveth to confute not onely heathen Philosophers who as in other things so in this concerning the worlds continuance became vaine in their imaginations and their foolish heart was full of darknesse Rom. 1. being destitute of the Word of God to guide them but also to confute many prophane Atheists in the Church of God who doe not believe in their hearts those Articles of the Resurrection and of the generall judgement it is much indeed that there should bee Atheists in the Church of God and none in hell that any should deny or doubt of that which the devills feare and tremble at But sure the Apostle Peters prophesie is fulfilled 2 Pet. 3. 3. there shall come in the last dayes scoffers walking after their owne lusts and saying Where is the promise of his comming for since the fathers dyed all things continue alike from the beginning of the creation and as they would perswade themselves so they shall for ever And answerable their lives are to such conceits Eccl. 11. 9. But if neither the light of reason it being impossible that the truth and goodnesse and justice of God should take effect if there were not after this life a doom and recompence 2 Thes. 1. 6. Nor secondly the light of Conscience which doubtlesse with Felix Acts 24. 25. makes them tremble in the midst of their obstinate gain-saying Nor thirdly the light of Scripture can convince and perswade men of this truth then we must leave them to be confuted and taught by woefull experience even by the feeling of those flames which they will not beleeve to bee any other then fancies and by seeing the Lord Iesus come in the Clouds when all nations shall weep before him and these Atheists especially lament their obstinate infidelity with ever dropping teares and ever enduring misery And this Doctrine may be terrour to all gracelesse and wicked livers to consider that the wrath of God shall be revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of men 2 Thes. 1. 6. when all the sweetnesse of their sinfull pleasures shal be turned into gall and bitternesse for ever Wis. 5. 6 7 8. How may the consideration of this Doctrine touching the end of the world and the day of Judgement be usefull to the godly First it should teach us not to seek for happinesse in this world or se our affections on things below for this world passeth away and the things thereof Secondly here is a fountaine of Christian comfort and a ground of Christian patience in all troubles that there shall be an end and a Saints hope shall not be cut off If in this life onely we had hope we were of all men most miserable 1 Cor. 15. 19. But here is the comfort and patience of the Saints they wait for another world and they know it is a just thing with God to give them rest after