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A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

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pronouncing against vs the iudgement and condemnation f Rom. 3. 9. due vnto sin to driue vs to seeke Righteousnesse and thereby Saluation in another that is to say in Christ For Christ is the end of the Law for Righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 10. 4. So g Gal. 3. 22 23 24. The Law shutteth all men vnder sinne not that they should perish but that the promise by Faith in Iesus Christ might be giuen to those that beleeue And thus are wee led by the hand to the second part of this most holy Doctrine the Doctrine concerning Christ and the ioyfull and glad tydings of Saluation in and through him In speaking of Christ we are to handle both his Person Immanuel God with vs is in one person and his Office And first his Person In regard wherof the Scripture giueth him the Name of h Esay 7. 14. Mat. 1. 23. Immanuel God with vs or God-man The true Iehouah Coessentiall and Consubstantiall with the Father and the holy Spirit true man of our very nature and substance Wherefore in his Person are to be considered First The two distinct natures Secondly The vnion of them into one Christ The two distinct natures the Sonne of God Samosetanus held that Christ was not before hee tooke flesh Patropassians held that the Father tooke flesh and suffered are his Deitie and Humanitie his God-head or Diuine Nature being not the Person of the Father who was not incarnate nor of the Holy Ghost but of the Sonne as it is confessed by all as many as admit the distinction of persons and euident by the Scripture Gal. 4. 4. When the fulnesse of time came God sent downe his Sonne made of a woman c. Iohn 3. 16. God so loued the World that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne c. This is also the confession of PETER Mat. 16. 16. Thou art the Sonne of the Liuing God and infinite other places Whatsoeuer therefore is disputed before concerning the God-head of the Sonne and his eternall Deitie falleth into this Man Christ Iesus And this nature doth of it selfe make a person supporting and holding vp the Manhood that wholy is subsisteth in the person of the God-head Wherefore that which is said Iohn 1. 14. The Word became flesh is expounded Heb. 2. 16. to be by taking it to his God-head therein to haue the being and subsistence and of the same to be supported and holden vp for euer The other nature is his Humanitie and very man Marcian and Valentinus taught that Christ tooke his bodie from Heauen and passed thorow the Virgin as water thorow a Pipe or that he tooke it out of the Ayre and so denyed the truth of his humane nature in that hee was perfect man of the very flesh of Marie So we reade Rom. 1. 3 Made of the Seed of DAVID according to the flesh that is his humane nature and Heb. 2. 16. He tooke not to his Godhead the nature of Angels but the Seed of ABRAHAM Againe Galat. 4. 4. he is said to be made of a woman the Preposition of noting her very substance and flesh And this is it that was prophecied long before that i Gen. 3. 15. the seed of the woman should tread downe the head of the Serpent And that k Psal 132. 11. Acts 2. 30. of the fruit of DAVIDS Loynes God would rayse vp Christ as touching the flesh Wherefore to make this more manifest he is called Shilo that is the After-birth of IVDA Gen. 49. 10. and is said to haue opened the Virgins wombe Luke 2. 23. Hee was therefore made of the Seed of Dauid and was a Plant of the Roote of Iesse a perfect man consisting as all other men doe of a bodie and soule indued with the faculties of vnderstanding and will That hee had a bodie it is plaine Heb. 10. 5. A bodie thou hast fitted for mee That it was a true bodie flesh and bones appeareth Luke 24. 39 euen after his Resurrection See mine hands and my feete for it is I my selfe handle mee and see for a Spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye behold me to haue Of his soule l Mat. 26. 38. the Holy Ghost saith His Apollinaris thought that Christ tooke a bodie onely and not a soule but that his God-head stood in stead of a soule soule was heauie vnto death And hee himselfe Father m Luke 22. 46. into thy hands I commit my spirit And when he had said so he dyed Now this could not possibly fall into the God-head which is not subiect to any passion was not nor could not be seuered from the bodie seeing it is euery-where Therefore it must needs be meant of that part of mans nature which properly wee terme the soule According whereunto he attributeth Monothelites which hold there was but one will in Christ vnto himselfe a will and that distinct from the will of his Father Not n Mat. 26. 39. as I will but as thou wilt So he is said to haue an Vnderstanding Luke 2. 47. They maruailed at his answeres and at his vnderstanding And in both these parts was he subiect to o Heb. 4. 15. 2. 14. all humane frailties and imperfections without sinne In his bodie to p Mat. 4. 2. hunger q Mar. 4. 38. sleepe r Iohn 4. 6. wearinesse Å¿ Marke 3. 9. wringing t Iohn 20. 25. 19. 37 38. piercing wounding and death it selfe u Luke 2. 52. growing in height and stature as other mens bodies grow finite and circumscribed Vbiquists that would haue his bodie to be euery-where Papists that would haue it to be in many places at once in place that when hee was in one hee was not in another but x Iohn 20. 19. remooued from place to place being y Mark 16. 19. Acts 1. 9. Luke 21. 27. taken vp and corporally ascending into Heauen from z Mat. 25. 31. Acts 1. 11. whence hee shall corporally come downe againe In his minde he was subiect to ignorance of some things but not sinfull ignorance for he grew a Luke 2. 52. and increased by degrees in Wisdome b Heb. 5. 8. He learned obedience by the things hee suffered yea of some things hee had no knowledge at all as it may be probably gathered out of Mar. 11. he had not c Mar. 11. 13. of the Fig Tree whether it had any fruit or no d Mar. 13. 32. of the day houre of Iudgement in his soule hee was subiect to all kinde of naturall passions e Iohn 11. 4 35 not sinfull loue f Heb. 5 7. feare g Mar 3. 5. griefe anger h Mat. 9. 36. 14 14. pittie i Iohn 11. 15. ioy k Mar. 10. 14. indignation l Iohn 11. 33. trouble of heart m Mat. 8. 10. Mar. 6. 6. wondering n Iohn 11. 27. perplexitie
o Mat. 26. 37. heauinesse p Mar. 14. ●3 amazement The difference of Christs Hebion Cerinthus and others said he was conceiued by ordinarie procreation of man and woman as other men are humane nature from all other mens standeth in this that hee was not conceiued according to the ordinary procreation of man and woman but of a Virgin and therefore by the immediate power of the Holy Ghost not begetting him of his owne substance as fathers doe their children but by his Almightie Power framing and fashioning the same after a wonderfull manner miraculously and without mans helpe in the wombe of Marie That she was a Virgin the Storie is plaine q Mat. 1. 23. Mat. 1. according as it was r Esay 7. 14. long before prophecied Behold that Virgin shall conceiue and beare a Sonne The ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word in both the Tongues signifieth one hidden vnknowne vnto a man And fondly doe the Iewish Rabbins pretend the place t Pro. 30. 19. Prou. 30. to delude the truth of this Interpretation which indeed doth confirme and giue strength vnto it for when Salomon saith The way of a man in a u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Maide Is it not plaine that hee speaketh by an Ironie meaning a Strumpet of that brazen fore-head and so impudent as notwithstanding her filthinesse will needs goe for as good a Mayde as the best Therefore he addeth in the next Verse Shee eateth and then wipeth her mouth saying I haue done none iniquitie yea this seemeth though more obscurely to haue beene pointed at in that promise The seed of the woman shall tread downe the head of the Serpent for in saying the seed of the woman and not of the man who in the ordinarie course of generation hath the first and chiefest place what can else bee meant but a wonderfull and strange conception of a woman without the helpe of man And of this interpretation Esay may bee the Authour who doth not say simply A Virgin shall conceiue but that Virgin that is to say that Virgin so famously and so long before spoken of to Gods people of whom as touching the flesh Christ should come which no other Scripture but this doth warrant Last of all the efficient and worker of this so wonderfull by the Holy Ghost a conception is expressed Mat. 1. 20. That which is conceiued in her is of the Holy Ghost And l●st you should take of here for the materiall cause which is repugnant to the Diuine Nature of the Spirit of God and ouerthroweth the true humane Nature of our Sauiour Christ the Angell Luke 1. 35. declareth the whole order and manner of this conception The Holy Ghost shall come vpon thee and the power of the most High shall ouer-shaddow thee Next is the vnion of Who is also these two Natures Nestorius deuided the Person and made two persons one God the other man Eutyches confounded the two natures and made them but one attributing to the Man-hood all the properties of the God-head as to be vncreated omnipotent euerywhere c. and to the God-head to be subiect to suffer and whatsoeuer else belongeth to the humane Nature Both which in the first moment of his Conception inseparably knit together and still remaining in substance propertie and action distinct one from other and each keeping his seuerall and proper qualities make one Person Iesus Christ as the soule and bodie personally conioyned make one man A Mysterie of all Mysteries that a man should make one Person with GOD whom the glorious and blessed Angels are not able to behold and yet cleerly and manifestly taught in the Scriptures x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2. 16. For he tooke not to an Angellike nature but hee tooke to the Seed of ABRAHAM This taking to which must needs bee meant vnto his God-head doth it not most manifestly shew a distinction of the Natures not a drowning or swallowing vp of either against Eutyches and againe a personall vnion of them in an vnspeakeable sort against Nestorius The place to the y Col. 2. 9. Coloss 2. 9. as it spake before for the God-head of Christ So it speaketh for the vnitie of his natures For in him that is in Christ whom he opposeth to those traditions of men dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God-head bodily When he saith In him dwelleth the God-head hee distinguisheth two Natures one the God-head dwelling the other the man in whom it dwelleth By which phrase of dwelling also he noteth not an abode for a time but a perpetuall habitation for which cause he vseth the present time And adding bodily hee signifieth that the same is not by communication of his power and vertue in which sence God is said to dwell in all his Saints nor in a Sacramentall manner as God is said to dwell in his Temple but by a substantiall and personall vnion of both Natures making one Christ Therefore Paul vnto the Romanes speaking of both apart his Manhood first and then his God-head afterwards knitteth them in one IESVS CHRIST z Rom. 13. 4. concerning his Sonne made of the Seed of DAVID according to the flesh mightily declared to bee the Sonne of God as touching the Spirit of Sanctification by rising from the dead euen IESVS CHRIST our LORD Againe a Rom. 9. 5. that CHRIST as touching the flesh came from the Father being also ouer all God to be blessed for euer And 1. Peter 3. 18. CHRIST was put to death as touching the flesh and quickened touching the Spirit To conclude this was plainly fore-told by the Prophet Esay 7. 14. that hee should be EMANVEL that is God with vs. Wherefore that of Iohn 1. 14. The Word became flesh and whatsoeuer other speeches like to that may not be vnderstood of a confusion but of an vnion of the natures and as the natures themselues are not mingled no more are their properties it being impossible that the properties of one nature should agree vnto the other for as the God-head cannot die no more can the Man-hood be infinite omnipotent euery-where c. By reason of the vnion of these natures into one person these two things follow First Beside that touching the Deitie he is the Sonne of God by nature In which respect hee is indeed most properly called the Sonne the b Heb. 7. 3. Apostle witnessing that He was without Father according to his Man-hood and without Mother according to his God-head hee is also in his humanitie the Sonne of God by this personall vnion Luke 1. 35. That holy One that is borne of thee shall be called The Sonne of God And yet for all that there is but one onely Sonne of God not two though the same by reason of this personall Vnion bee in two respects the Sonne Secondly Hereof it is that hee is to bee adored of all his Creatures euen the holy Angels Heb. 1. Let all the Angels of God
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The other is that of Tremellius and Iunius which is also the receiued interpretation I haue gotten a man from Iehouah by an Ellipsis of the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Gen. 14. 4. and Deut 34. 1. But neyther doe these places nor I thinke any other that you can bring warrant such an Ellipsis And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Verbe here vsed hath alwaies going with it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and no Ellipsis of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at any time As for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it selfe neuer signifieth from It is commonly the note of an Accusatiue case 〈◊〉 ●ny times of an Ablatiue and signifieth with Ioyned with a neuer ●ll it may stand for a Nominatiue as 1. Sam. 17. 34. 2. King 6. 5. So if it be ioyned with a Passiue as L●u●t 13. 49 But none of these can agree here and in any other sense I doe not find that it is euer taken EVE conceiued and bare KAIN and said I possesse the man IEHOVAH that is GOD by opening my wombe and making mee the Mother of a goodly Childe hath put me in possession as if now I had and held him in mine armes of that blessed Seed which in the fulnesse of time he will send into the World who being the LORD from Heauen shall tread downe the head of the Serpent Prophetically spoken like to that of IACOB Gen. 48. 22 I giue thee one portion aboue thy Brethren which I tooke out of the hand of the Amorite with my Sword and with my Bow It was not taken till foure or fiue Generations after but by faith hee did apprehend it as certaine as if it were then wonne and tooke vpon him to dispose thereof as of his owne Wherefore Kain had that name not for his owne sake nor was hee the purchase or possession the woman fixed her eyes vpon Shee lifted them vp higher and by so sweet a Babe such as the World had neuer seene before shee held her faith confirmed in the expectation of the Messiah God and Man who many yeeres after was to come out of the loynes of one of Eues Daughters In effect shee calleth him The man IEHOVAH in the same sense that God the Father Zach. 13. 7. calleth him the man my fellow Here therefore is a cleere testimonie of the Deitie of Christ which I would not willingly lose the hold off being not onely so plaine and pregnant and such a noble euidence of Eues faith but withall an Antiquity of such price the first thing recorded after man was throwne out of Paradise Which addeth I know not how a great waight maiestie to this most sweet and gracious speech And that Christ is euery-where called Iehouah may appeare both by the Old Testament it selfe and especially if it be conferred with the New For proofe whereof I lay before this ground as most certayne and infallible that wheresoeuer the true God Iehouah is said to haue appeared in the likenesse of an Angell or man this was the person not of the Father nor of the Holy Spirit but of the Sonne who appeared to the Fathers as a man to note out the great Mystery of his Incarnation and is called an Angell not by nature but by office as in i Malach. 3. 1. MALACHY The Angell of the Couenant and him whom k Zachar. 3 2. Zachary calleth The Angell of IEHOVAH IVDE l Iude verse 9. cermeth Michael the Arch-angell which is Christ our Sauiour This foundation laide which cannot faile I come to those places where the Name of Iehouah is giuen to him And first to those where this Angell appeared as a man Gen. 18. Three men being indeed Angels appeared vnto Abraham of which three one was Iehouah for so the very beginning of the Chapter hath it Further IEHOVAH appeared vnto him in the plaine of Mamre for when he lift vp his eyes behold three men stood before him and afterwards m Gen. 18. ver 13 15 17 20. Iehouah one of them had communication with him and his wife Againe of these three men two n Gen. 19. 1. went towards Sodome who are called Angels But Iehouah still remayned with Abraham till hee had left communing with him The very o Gen. 19. 24. next Chapter it is said IEHOVAH powred downe vpon Sodome and Gomorrah fire and brimstone out of Heauen from IEHOVAH that is Christ from his Father Gen. 32. 24 When Iacob was left alone beyond the Riuer after he had sent away his Companie a man wrestled with him till the morning whom IACOB calleth The mighty God naming the place where this was done Peniel that is The place where hee saw the face of the mighty God whereby appeareth manifestly that it was Iehouah which in the Prophet p H●sh 12. 5. H●sea is yet more euident where Iehouah saith that at Bethel God found him that is met Iacob and appeared vnto him and there saith that IEHOVAH he spoke with vs. Ioshua 6. IOSHVA being at Ierico a man stood before him with a Sword drawne in his hand Ioshua demanding who hee was hee said Hee was the Prince of the Host of IEHOVAH whereupon Ioshua fell downe vpon his face and worshipped him Then hee bade Ioshua plucke off his shooes from his feet for the place where hee stood was holy And afterwards Iehouah said to IOSHVA Lo I giue Ierico into thy hands c. Here the Epithere Of the Prince of the Host of IEHOVAH the adiuncts of worship belonging to GOD onely which the Angels doe renounce and of plucking off the shoo because the place is holy a peculiar marke of the Maiesty of God and lastly the effects of giuing Ierico into his hands prooue this man to bee Iesus Christ the true Iehouah and God alone Hee q Iudges 6. 21. which appeared vnto Gedeon with a walking staffe in his hand and is called The Angell of IEHOVAH is also named Iehouah and confirmeth Gedeon that by the power which hee had giuen vnto him sending him and promising his presence with him he should saue Israel out of the hands of the Midianites whereby hee doth manifestly declare himselfe to be the Lord of glory The Angell r Iudges 13. 8 10 22 23. of God which appeared to Manoah and his Wife by them both expresly called a man when he had declared himselfe wonderfull by his miraculous ascending in the flame of the fire that was vpon the Altar MANOAH said vnto his Wife wee shall certainly dye for wee haue seene God But his Wife said vnto him If IEHOVAH had pleased to kill vs hee would not haue receiued at our hand a burnt Offering nor gift nor haue shewed vnto vs all these things c. Here Manoah calleth him God and his Wife Iehouah so that this also must needes be the eternall Sonne of God the Angell of the Couenant Genesis 31.
worshipped But this honour Christ also hath For both Stephen giueth it vnto him when he saith Lord y Acts 7. 59. Iesus receiue my spirit And it is the Epithete of all the Church that they z Acts 9. 14. 1. Cor. 1 2. call vpon the Name of Christ IOHN likewise in the a Reuel 21. 22. Reuelation maketh the Lord God Almighty and the Lambe alike the Temple of that holy City the heauenly Ierusalem meaning that hee is equally to bee worshipped and with the same honour Faith doth onely rest vpon God but wee are commanded to beleeue in Christ Yea b Iohn 16. 1. beleeue in God beleeue also in me Further it is the pleasure c Ier. 9. 24. of GOD that whosoeuer glorieth should glory onely in this That he knoweth him to be IEHOVAH But Paul doubteth not to professe that he d Gal. 6. 14. gloried onely in the Crosse of Christ and neyther preached nor chose to know any other thing saue e 1. Cor. ●2 onely him alone Christ f Iohn 17. 3. also himselfe coupleth these two together This is euerlasting life to know thee the onely true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ But what stay I hereupon when testimonies are so cleere vpon the marke and notes when the things themselues are so euident and expresse his God-head being euerywhere to bee found in most plaine and manifest termes Which that it may the better appeare I will sort all the testimonies of this kind into three Orders or Rankes The first is of such as attribute the spirit vnto him Not as the spirit or soule of a man but so as it appeareth plainly by the Epithetes adioyned to be the Diuine Spirit or GOD himselfe 1. Cor. 15. 45. The first man ADAM was made a liuing Soule the latter ADAM a quickering Spirit As bee noteth out in Adam the whole man by the more excellent part the Soule so doth he in Christ the whole Person by that most excellent Nature of the God head bodily dwelling in him calling him another Adam for that as Adam imparted fleshly life vnto all that come from him so doth Christ the Spirituall Life to all that are his And that this may bee the better conceiued to be meant of his Eternall Deity in the seuen and fortieth Verse hee doth more cleerely frame the comparison The first man out of the earth earthly the second man the Lord himselfe from Heauen Therefore is his Spirit or Diuine nature sometime called The g Heb. 9. 14. euerlasting Spirit a thing proper to the God-head sometime The h Rom. 1. 4. Spirit of Sanctification whereby hee sanctifieth all Gods Elect and sanctified his humane Nature otherwise infirme and weake and not able to rayse vp it selfe As in i Iohn 6. 63. Iohn he saith It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing And k 1. Pet. 3. 18. Peter that he was put to death as touching the flesh but quickened as touching the Spirit Finally the Apostle l 2. Cor. 13. 4. Paul expounding as it were this place For though saith he he were crucified of infirmity yet he liueth by the power of God In the name of infirmity or weaknesse manifestly alluding to the Hebrew En●ch which signifieth a fraile or weake and mortall man and in the name Power vnto El the mighty God of the second sort are those where he is said to haue the m Col 29. For in him dwelleth all the fulnes of the God-head bodily that is personally and substantially fulnesse of the God-head in him to bee n Phil. 2. 6 7. Who being in the forme of God emptied himself taking the forme of a Seruant becomming in the likenesse of men and in habit found a very man Where the forme of a Seruant noting a verie seruant and abiect person indeed sheweth that to bee in the forme of God signifieth as much as to be really and essentially God himselfe in the forme of God to be o Iohn 8. 15. For this cause the Iewes sought to kill him because hee called God his owne Father making himselfe equall with God Phil. 2. 6. He thought it no robbery to be equall with God equall with God And to conclude to bee p Dan. 10. 13 21. Michael of equall Power with the Almighty God And this to be an honour belonging vnto Christ alone and not to any created Angell the Apostle Iude q Iude verse 9. teacheth expresly when he so termeth Iehouah himselfe that in Zachary stroue with Satan about the Body of Moses or the truth and perfection of the Law of Moses namely the whole Doctrine of the Gospell Remission of sinnes Imputation of Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption as in that Chapter the Angell reasoneth of them all But most manifestly this appeareth Reuelat. 12. 7. where MICHAEL and his Angels fought with the Dragon and his angels Against the Dragon that is the Deuill head of the malignant Church opposing Michael that is Christ Head of Saints and Angels and therefore calling them his Angels which agreeth to God alone Finally the holy Ghost so expoundeth it Verse 10. Now is the Saluation and Might and Kingdome of our God and the Power of his Christ In the third and last ranke come those that call him expresly r Iohn 1. 1. The Word was God 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World Luke 1. 16. 17. Many shall he that is Iohn Baptist turne vnto the Lord their God and himselfe shall goe before him in the spirit and power of Elias Where before him being referred to Christ as it must sheweth him to bee the true and vndoubted Lord God And hither tendeth the confession of Thomas sirnamed Didymus my Lord my God Iohn 20. 28. Of this sort also is that 2. Peter 1. 1. Through the righteousnesse of our God and Sauiour Iesus Christ The coupling and context of the sentence without any Article before Sauiour which otherwise by the vse of that tongue ought to haue beene shewing plainly that the word God can haue no reference but to Christ our Sauiour M 〈…〉 plaine is that Co● ● 2 Vnto the knowledge of God both the Father and Christ Where God as a common antecedent is attributed to them both God The ſ 1. Iohn 5. 20. We are 〈…〉 true one in his Sonne Iesus Christ Th●● is that true God and life euerlasting true God The t Titus ● 13. Wayting for the blessed hope and glorious bright appearance of the great God and Sauiour of vs Iesus Christ Where not onely the knitting of the sentence as in the place of Peter before but the phrase of bright appearance neuer spoken but of the Sonne enforceth that whole sentence to be meant of him great God The mighty u Esay 9. 6. To vs a Child is borne wh●le name is called Wonderfull The might● God Most strong c. God The onely x Iude
worship him Phil. 2. 9. Therefore God did also exceedingly exalt him and gaue vnto him a name aboue all names that al the Name of IESVS euery knes should bow of things in Heauen and vpon the Earth and vnder the ground Thirdly Hence groweth a borrowed manner of speech which the Learned in other Professions call Synedoche Diuines for the most part The c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 communication of properties whereby sometimes that is attributed to whole Christ which agreeth to him but in respect of one of his natures As when wee say d 1. Cor. 15. Christ suffered was crucified dead and buried wee meane it of his Man-hood onely not of the Godhead which could not suffer when he saith of himselfe e Iohn 8. 58. Before ABRAHAM was Iam this is to bee vnderstood of his God-head onely not of his Man-hood which came of the Seed of Abraham Sometimes it is spoken of some one nature which agreeth to his whole person as that of the Apostle There f 1. Tim. 2. 5. is one Mediator betweene God and men the Man CHRIST IESVS meaning he which is so God as hee is also Man Sometimes of one nature which fitteth not that but the other As when the Apostle saith g 1. Tim. 3. 16. God was taken vp in Glorie h 1. Cor. 2. 8. If they had knowne him they would not haue crucified the Lord of Glorie i Acts 20. 28. God hath purchased his Church by his bloud And when our Sauiour saith k Mar. 13. 23. The Son himselfe knoweth not of that Day of Iudgement who seeth not that it is spoken of Christ by the Name of God which belongeth but to his Man-hood Againe in saying l Iohn 3. 13. The Sonne of man which is in Heauen hee giueth to himselfe as Man that which appertayneth to the God-head But note this phrase of speech or communication of properties hath place in the Name of m The Learned say in concreto not in abstracto God and Man not of the God-head and Man-hood Therefore as it is most certaine against Nestorius deuiding the person that the Man Christ was God and therefore eternall not in his Man-hood but in his God-head that Christ God was also Man and therefore crucified taken vp into Heauen c. not in his God-head but in his Man-hood So it is most wicked and blasphemous to say that the Man-hood of Christ is his God-head vncreated omnipotent euery-where c. or that his God-head is his Man-hood subiect to suffer c. as Eutyches did confounding the natures Thus farre of the person of Christ who it was necessarie should indeed be man First That God might be pacified in that nature that had offended Secondly that hee might vndergoe the punishment due to sinne which the God-head free from all suffering could not And therefore also it was necessarie hee should haue a soule and not his God-head stand in stead of a soule for our soules must haue perished euerlastingly except his soule had suffered for them Thirdly That he might be a fit Intercessor for vs hauing tasted of our miseries All this the Apostle teacheth Heb. 2. from the tenth Verse to the end of the Chapter setting forth most notably the rich and plentifull comfort that we reape from hence by many goodly Arguments And Heb. 4. 15. hee saith Wee haue not an High Priest that cannot suffer together with vs in our infirmities but one that was tempted in all things like vnto vs. Againe it was necessarie he should be God First Because none but God could reueale vnto vs the will and pleasure of God For none hath ascended into Heauen but the Sonne of man that descended from Heauen and is in Heauen Iohn 3. 13. that is to say No man euer did nor by nature can attayne to the true knowledge of heauenly things but hee that is also God to wit the Sonne the eternall Wisdome of the Father as Iohn also saith No n Iohn 1. 18 man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten Sonne of God which is in the bosome of the Father that is of one nature and essence with him hee hath reuealed him Neither had hee beene able to sustayne the infinite wrath of God due to our sinnes much lesse to ouercome it if himselfe had beene but a finite nature Yea meete it was hee should be the Sonne of GOD for being so by nature hee is able to bestow this priuiledge on those that beleeue to bee the sonnes of GOD by adoption Iohn 1. 12. The Vnion of both natures into one person was also necessarie First That in him God and Man wee might see and behold the Father for seeing God in his owne essence and nature is inuisible and no conceit can possibly bee framed of him the Apostle sheweth that for the staying of our faith and that our minde and vnderstanding might haue somewhat to rest vpon we haue Christ o Col. 1. 15. the Image of the inuisible God the p Heb. 13. brightnesse or resplendence of his Glorie and the ingrauen forme of his Person whom whosoeuer seeth seeth the Father also as he himselfe speaketh Iohn 1. 2. For the Sonne being q 1. Tim. 3. 16. God himselfe the second Person in Trinitie manifested in the flesh is as a Glasse in whose substantiall and visible Glorie as hee was made Man the Father giueth vs to see and almost to grope and feele his owne infinite Maiestie and Loue that cannot be comprehended without whom if we looke vpon God wee see indeed some small sparkes of Glorie to terrifie and amaze vs but in Christ God and Man we behold the liuely and expresse face of God not any more as a fearefull and terrible Iudge to affright vs but as a most gracious and louing Father to comfort and refresh vs. Secondly That thereby the obedience of Christ performed in the Man-hood might be of infinite merit as being the obedience of God himselfe 2. Cor. 5. 12. Him that knew not sinne he made to be sinne for vs that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him After the person of Christ followeth his Office of Christ or Anoynted Mediation to set vs at one with God whereof the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 2. 5. There is one Mediator betweene God and men the Man Christ Iesus In this Office of Mediation three things may bee considered First The persons both of the Mediatour and of those for whom Mediation is made Secondly The point and propertie of the office of Mediation Thirdly The meanes to effect it The Mediator is Christ the Sonne of God whom his Father in his infinite Wisdome Goodnesse and Mercie prouiding a meanes when there was no other meanes left in Heauen or vpon the Earth to saue vs sent downe his owne Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh to saue all Beleeuers whereupon it is not onely said that Christ died but that he was r Rom.
thing from this at the Margent follow that which is by it selfe at the beginning Difference in substance there is not any but the Copie for that at the Margent was not altogether so perfect THE FIRST BOOKE OF DIVINITIE OF GOD THE CREATOR CHAPTER I. Of GOD the FATHER the SONNE and the HOLY GHOST DIuinitie is a Doctrine of glorifying God whereof there bee two parts One that concerneth God The other concerning Emanuel God with vs. God is Iehouah three Persons Iehouah which is Being or Perfection it selfe signifieth a Nature that hath all good and perfect things in a most perfect and incommunicable manner The perfect things in God beside Life Vnderstanding and Will without which no perfection can bee are Holinesse and Blessednes Holinesse is the puritie of his Nature from whence commeth a Righteousnesse in all his Wayes specially seene to vs in foure chiefe and principall Vertues which in the Scripture you shall find for the most part to goe by couples or payres The first couple are Kindnesse and Truth Kindnesse in being ready to bestow all good things Truth faithfully to performe whatsoeuer he speaketh The other couple are Iustice and Mercy flowing from the former Iustice to render to euery one his due Mercy in being ready to helpe in time of need This is the Holinesse of GOD and his Righteousnesse comming from it Blessednes is his All-sufficiency of things that make one happy and standeth in Kingdome and Power or Glorie Kingdome is his Soueraigntie of commanding whatsoeuer he will Power his ablenesse to doe whatsoeuer hee commandeth Glorie comprehendeth all the excellencies of his Nature as Wisedome and other Graces of the minde Strength Comelinesse and Beautie Graciousnesse or an amiable and louely Nature a complete furniture of Riches Honour and of all kind of Pleasures and Delights These are the Perfect themselues His perfect and incommunicable manner of hauing of them is Infinitenesse and Eternitie Infinitenesse whereby he is without circumscription and therefore of a most single Nature that whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe and therefore also inuisible and incomprehensible Eternitie whereby Hee is without beginning or ending and therefore of himselfe and vnchangeable This is it we meane by IEHOVAH who vpon all that hath beene said is nor can be but One. The three Persons are each of them that one Iehouah diuersly subsisting and are the Father and the Sonne or the Holy Ghost The Father is a Person who from all eternitie hath begotten the Sonne The Sonne is a Person from all eternitie begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost is a Person eternally proceeding from the Father and the Sonne CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God GOD being thus in his Nature and Person most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glorie by two notes of excellencie which he taketh to him Kingdome and Honour Kingdome is that whereby hee doth exercise an absolute Soueraigntie toward others The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the Persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them The Kingdome of God hath two parts Purpose and Works Purpose is his Decree before all times of euerything CHAP. III. Of Creation THe Works of God are the execution of his Purpose and are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things of nothing finished in sixe dayes and was of euery Creature in excellencie of perfection Of the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men it was after his owne Image and Likenesse in Holinesse and Happinesse Holinesse in a mind inlightned with the knowledge of the whole Will of God and all the strengths of Nature conformed thereunto Happinesse in the fruition of Gods loue and from thence comming a Coniunction and Communion with him Coniunction is an inioying of his Personall presence Communion is a participation in some sort of his Blessednes both Kingdome Power and Glorie CHAP. IIII. Of Prouidence PRouidence is his gouerning of the things created CHAP. V. Of the Morall Law SO much of the Kingdome of God the honour due vnto him is That the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men doe his Will with that whole strength of their naturall integritie Euery thing with so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excell the doing whereof is termed Righteousnesse CHAP. VI. The first Table and the first Commandement RIghteousnesse hath two parts Pietie and Iustice Pietie is of the immediate duties to God whereof this is the whole that wee haue God to be our God The parts are two One to cleaue vnto him Louing Reuerencing Feating Beleeuing Trusting and Hoping in him from whence arise Patience and Humilitie The other to worship him which worship comprehendeth all kind of Seruice publike and priuate One principall part whereof is Prayer both petition for the obtayning of good things or turning away of euill and thanksgiuing for all wee doe inioy A piece also of this Seruice when iust cause requireth is swearing and cursing by his Name making our Vowes vnto him and by lotterie to commit into his hands the successe of our doubtfull affaires CHAP. VII Of the second Commandement TO the worship of God two things doe belong a holy manner of worshipping God and a holy rest The manner standeth in Obedience and Reuerence Obedience is the worshipping of him according to his Commandement CHAP. VIII Of the third Commandement REuerence is a religious affection in the seruice of God whereunto are requisite Preparation and Humiliation and when need is both Fasting to quicken vs to petition in the acknowledgement of our vnworthinesse and wants and Feasting to expresse our thankefulnesse for his benefits CHAP. IX Of the fourth Commandement THis is the manner of Gods worship A holy rest is a sanctifying of a time vnto his seruice which beside other times as occasion shall be offered in a Family or for ones selfe apart ought ordinarily to bee in the Morning and Euening of euery day for Church-meetings on such Dayes and Times of the day as may stand with the conuenience of that Church But of necessitie one whole day in seuen is thus to be kept holy both with publike and priuate exercises In which number the duties of brotherly loue as distributing to the Poore according to Gods blessing vpon vs visiting the Sicke helping our Neighbour or any thing that is his in their distresse come also to bee reckoned when they are done as works of Mercy This Day in the first institution was the seuenth Day from the Creation and called the Sabbath Day beginning on the euening of the day before when the Creation of the World was finished CHAP. X. Of the second Table of the Law and of the fift Commandement IVstice followeth which is of the duties among our selues and is honour or the generall duties of Loue. Honour is a performance of duties in respect of a degree First among vnequals from Inferiours to their Superiours and contrariwise As To all Superiours in
Will Holinesse 1. Petition Kindnesse Truth Iustice Mercie Blessednesse Kingdome Power Glory Wisedome Infinitenesse singlenesse of Nature Eternitie Vnchangeablenesse 7. That there is but one God 26 Of the Persons in God 27 The distinction of Persons 31 The three Persons and one God 31 The incommunicable Properties whereby they are distinguished 34 The God-head of the Sonne 35 The God-head of the holy Ghost 53 CHAP. II. Of the Kingdome of God and the order of administration thereof 60 2. Petition Of the Decrees of God the eternitie cause generalitie of the same 61 CHAP. III. Of the Creation of all Things 64 The Matter and Manner 72 73 Sixe Dayes Worke. 74 The perfection of the Creature 75 The holinesse happinesse of the principall Creatures Angels Men. 75 Of the Law of Nature 77 CHAP. IIII. Of Gods Prouidence extending to all Persons and Actions 82 His free and absolute Dispensation 94 The ineuitable necessitie of the execution of his Counsels 101 The end both of Creation and Prouidence 109 CHAP. V. Of the Honour due to God That his Will be done 112 3. Petition Of the Morall Law that teacheth the Will of God or the Duties we owe vnto him 114 Fiue things which the Law of God generally requireth or which are to concurre in euery Dutie 1. To doe all that is commanded 114 2. To doe whatsoeuer we doe as vnto God 114 3. That there bean Integritie or right frame and disposition of all the powers of Nature both of the Soule and Body 115 4. To doe it with the whole strength of those Powers Sinceritie Zeale Watchfulnesse Diligence and Perseuerance 128 5. To doe euery thing with so much the greater strength as the Dutie doth more excell 139 The properties of the Morall Law 143 Rules for the vnderstanding of the Ten Commandements 145 The first Commandement Of Loue Reuerence Feare Beleefe Trust and Hope in God Of Patience and Humilitie Of Prayer and other Seruices 148 CHAP. VI. The second Commandement To worship God as he hath appointed Of Will-worship Idolatrie Superstition c. 159 CHAP. VII The third Commandement Of Reuerence in Gods Worship Preparation Attention Meditation Of Fasting and of a holy Feast 162 CHAP. VIII The fourth Commandement Of set times in Gods Seruice 168 Of the Sabbath day The Duties it requireth the day for it in the first Institution the Moralitie 169 CHAP. IX The fift Commandement Of Duties to Magistrates Ministers Parents Masters Husbands and from them againe 175 Of Duties to Equals 186 The due respect we are to haue to our selues 187 CHAP. X. The sixt Commandement Of the Duties of Mercie 188 Of Meekenes Gentlenes a peaceable disposition putting vp of Wrongs 191 Of Kindnesse Pittying and helping our Neighbor in Distresse forgiuing Offences ouercomming Euill with Good 194 CHAP. XI The seuenth Commandement Of Chastitie of holy Marriage Incest and Polygamie Of Contracts of Matrimonie of Vncleannesse Buggerie Adulterie Fo●nication Rapt Of Modestie and Temperance 198 CHAP. XII The eight Commandement Of Iust dealing and the contrary Theft Oppression Extortion Vsurie c. 207 Of Frugalitie Liberalitie Hospitalitie 210 CHAP. XIII The ninth Commandement Of Prudence a righteous Sentence Slandering Hearing of Iales Flattering and Dissembling 212 Of Deceit in Bargayning Buying and Selling remouing Bounds fraudulent with-holding of Goods Gaming and other vnlawfull Trades 214 Of taking Things in the best part and the contraries euill Suspitions and sinister Censures 218 CHAP. XIIII The tenth Commandement Of Couetousnesse Selfe-loue Enuie c. CHAP. XV. Of the Couenant of Workes Of Life and Death 222 The Couenant of Workes seruing in this our corrupt estate not to iustifie but to leade vs vnto Christ CHAP. XVI Of the Fall of Angels and Men. The reason of their Fall The time when they fell 227 Speciall to the Fall of Angels Their Sinne what it was The number that fell Their Captaine and Ring-leader 228 Of the Deut●s damnation in Hell The Release which God doth sometimes giue them and why 230 Of their full damnation in the latter Day 232 Of the elect Angels that did not fall 232 CHAP. XVII Speciall to the Fall of Man Their Sinne what it was The Actors that had a hand in it 233 In Adam and Eue all Mankind did fall 236 Of the totall Corruption of Mans Nature 237 Of the Curses of this Life 243 Of the Remn●nts of Gods Image 249 Of the impayre of the Creature 252 Of Mans Damnation 252 Of the Abolition of the Creatures 255 THE CONTENTS OF THE Second Booke CHAP. I. OF Christ the end of the Law His Godhead Humane Nature Christ the end of the Law whom the 3. last Petitions doe respect the Vnion of them into one Person And why all this was necessarie Fol. 267 Of Christs Office of Mediation Of his Appointment and Calling thereunto when it began That it belongeth to whole Christ and is appropriate vnto him for whom he maketh Mediation and wherein his Mediation lyeth 278 Of Gods Couenant the End and Fruit The Substance or Foundation The Meanes or Condition The extent of the Couenant 283 The excellencie of the Couenant of Grace aboue the Couenant of Works Of the Old and the New Testament 307 Of Predestination both Election and Reprobation 283 Of the words Purpose Predestination Prescience or Fore-knowledge Of the number of Gods Elect the Cause the subordinate Meanes the Eternitie and Immutabilitie the end of Gods predestinate Decrees CHAP. II. Of the Priesthood of Christ His Calling thereunto The eternitie of it He our onely Priest 311 Of the sanctification of Christs humane Nature 312 Of Christs Righteousnesse or Obedience 314 Of his Suffrings In what nature and what things he suffred 315 Of Satisfaction How it was and when The fruit of it 322 Of Christs Resurrection Ascension Glorification 326 Of his Intercession 330 CHAP. III. Of the Kingdome of Christ His Calling and inuesting into it the fruit of it 332 Of his Gouernment of the World in generall The largenesse of his Power the qualitie of Administration the fruit of it 334 CHAP. IIII. Of Christs Propheticall Office 343 Of his Word The Author the Matter the Ministeriall Instruments the perfection of his Doctrine 345 Of the Promise and the Gospel 347 Of the outward Church The Condition of it to be subiect to error to be mingled of good and bad The priuiledge of the outward Church and of euery Member thereof 348 Of the Sacraments 360 Of Ministeries Preaching of the Word Publike Prayer Administration of the Sacraments 366 Of the Ministerie of Men inspired of a liuely Voice of the Scriptures the truth holinesse authoritie perfection of the same and of Miracles 368 Of Graces for the discharge of publike Functions 377 Of Knowledge 378 Of a Taste of the sweetnesse of Christ and of sinne against the Holy-Ghost 379 CHAP. V. Of the Church vnder the Law 387 Of the Church in the time of the Gospel of the Sacraments of the New Testament Baptisme and the
first of the Nature Persons and properties of the Godhead then of his soueraigntie and command together with the duty of Allegiance which wee owe vnto him which if men were able to performe as the Law of their Creation not enioyneth onely but inabled them vnto and as the Angels doe in Heauen they neede goe no farther but should be blessed in the doing of it But because that is a path which no foot of man can tread he propoundeth in the other three to miserable man fallen now away the blessed Sonne of God that peerelesse Pearle and inestimable Treasure of the World Iesus Christ the righteous who hath gone the tracke for vs and regeneration righteousnesse and sanctification through him more briefly Iohn 17. 3. hee noteth the perfect distribution of Diuinity To know thee the only true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ These two parts lacking apt names to expresse them you may perhaps till we light vpon some better not altogether vnfitly call Theologie and Christianitie for so Theologie doth in his proper and naturall signification sound a Speech of or concerning God The name of Christianity taking it for the Doctrine of Christianitie as is vsuall in words of art may aptly bee deduced from diuers t Act. 13. 26. and 26. 18. 1. Pet. 4. 16. places of holy Writ and is the same in sense which the u Col. 3. 16. Apostle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of Christ. But till these termes by custome and vse bee worne and made familiar and our eares better acquainted with them I thinke it not amisse to forbeare the names let the thing be vnderstood To define God perfectly as that great and Christian God is Iehouah three persons Iehouah which is Being or perfection it self x Ramus in his Theology Logician said wee had neede of Gods owne Logicke whose nature knowne onely to himselfe infinitely exceedeth all thought and apprehension that can possibly bee in any creature wherefore to keepe vs within the limits of sobriety not taking vpon vs to define that wee know not which were folly and madnesse much lesse attempting it in the God-head which were extreme vngodlinesse we must remember the answere that God made vnto Moses desiring to see the Maiestie of his presence that he should see his hinder y Exod. 33. 23. parts but his face could not be seene There is then in God a forepart and a face there is a hinder part and backe By his face that is his very Maiestie and Essence no man or Angell is able to define GOD but by those steps and markes of his glory whereby he hath manifested himselfe in his Word and Works as it were by his hinder and backe parts we may in some sort describe him which what they are appeare in the next Chapter when passing by Moses whom he set in the hollow of a Rocke and couered with his hand till he were gone by he cryed z Exod. 34. 6. IEHOVAH IEHOVAH the mighty God mercifull and gracious long suffering and full of kindnesse and truth preseruing kindnesse for thousands forgiuing iniquity and rebellion and sinne by no meanes freeing the guiltie visiting the iniquity of fathers vpon children and vpon childrens children to the third and fourth Generation All which and whatsoeuer notes of his glory else scattered here and there in the whole Volume of the Scriptures or shining euery-where in the large Volume of the Heauens are many times comprehended in one onely word as Iah Iehouah or Ehieh that is to say I am as if you would say Being or perfection it selfe For these three comming from the same a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 root and being in effect but one are that essentiall and proper name of God whereby he calleth himselfe when he would paint out men the excellency of his Nature and distinguish it from all other things that are in Heauen or vpon the earth or vnder the earth So Exod. 3. 13 14 15. vnto Moses asking him When I shall say vnto them The God of your fathers hath sent me vnto you and they say to me What is his name what shall I say to them IEHOVAH answered MOSES EHIEH or I am for I am And he said Thus shalt thou say to the Children of Israel EHIEH that is I am hath sent me vnto you Againe God said to MOSES Thus shalt thou say vnto the Children of Israel IEHOVAH the God of your fathers the God of ABRAHAM the God of ISACK and the God of IACOB hath sent me vnto you This is my Name for euer and this is my Memoriall vnto all Ages Of the other we reade Psal 68. 5. Exalt him for his Name IAH It is most certaine that b Plato in his Dialogue entituled Cratylus the name of a thing if it be rightly giuen serueth to set out the true nature property of the thing wherein consisted a great part of that wisedome which was in Adam who c Gen. 2. 19. gaue apt and fit names to all the Beasts of the Field and to all the Fowles of the Ayre according to their quality and condition much more is the same to be thought of this Name which the most wise God taketh to him and is neuer giuen to any Creature Man nor Angell to Temple Sanctuary nor any holy place else not so much as in a Sacramentall signification if the places seeming to serue for that purpose be rightly skanned These words therefore doe truly and perfectly comprehend that backe part of his or d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1. 19. whatsoeeuer may be knowne of God so farre as our slender capacity is able to reach For first hereby appeareth that all that is is in him subsistence life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse and whatsoeuer else all proper to him all his and commeth from him all essentiall vnto him and of his nature all infinite eternall and vnchangeable Or to speake more plaine in that he is Being first he must needs haue in himselfe the very life soule and perfection of all things that be subsistence life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse and whatsoeuer else Secondly all this hee hath infinitely for what can bee imagined where Being should be excluded Thirdly nothing is in him but essentiall and of his nature for all is his Being Fourthly how can being it selfe otherwise be then of and from it selfe Fiftly Being can neuer leaue to bee nor haue beginning of his Being and therefore is eternall Lastly it is not possible that any thing should bee whom Being doth not make to bee In briefe God is being life vnderstanding will holinesse happinesse essentially infinitely eternally causally to himselfe and others And so doth the Apostle at once expound all those names when hee saith e Rom. 11. 36. For of him and by him and to him are all things But this needeth some larger explication Therefore it shall not bee amisse more particularly to deduce these things and
and part in another and therefore they are many men But God because he is a most single and perfect and infinite essence to whomsoeuer hee communicateth his nature as hee hath before all times to his Sonne and holy Spirit must needes communicate the same wholly and perfectly and infinitely So as there can be but one God for if there be many one must differ from another in hauing that the other hath not so can they not be perfect much lesse can they be perfection it selfe perfection being that which both is perfect of it selfe and giueth perfection to all other things But being many gods if one should giue perfection to the other that other were not God For hee had not his God-head of himselfe if all had of themselues none should giue to other so none of them were God And infinite how can that be which is distributed among many for where there be many all must be circumscribed because where one is there cannot bee the other But our God is such a one as filleth Heauen and Earth and cannot be circumscribed therefore in trauelling with a multitude of gods they bring forth no God at all But because in so high and deepe a point of Christian Religion we are not to rest vpon naturall reasons leauing them I come vnto the vndoubted Oracles of holy Scripture whereby it is most cleerely and euidently confirmed Deut. 6. 4. Harken Israel IEHOVAH thy Gods meaning the persons in the God-head are one Iehouah or one diuine Essence Deut. 32. 39. See now that I am he and there is no God with mee For who k Psal 18. 32. saith the Psalmist is God beside IEHOVAH Esay 44. 6. Thus saith IEHOVAH I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Againe l Esay 45. 5. I am IEHOVAH and there is none but I beside me there is no God And the m 1. Cor. 8. 4. Apostle to the Corinths We know there is no other God but one for albeit there be that are called gods both in Heauen and vpon Earth as there be in the vaine conceits of men many gods and many lords yet to vs there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and one Iesus Christ c. The same hee inforceth in the n Ephes 4. 5. Epistle to the Ephesians There is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all c. which also is a notable reason For if there were many gods there must also be many faiths one beleeuing in this god another in that god And here the sleights of Satan haue from time to time beene wonderfull who not able to wring out of mens minds the opinion of a God so strongly settled in them hath cunningly abused the World by bringing in an imaginary multitude of gods bewitching them to worship partly fained powers partly bare creatures neglecting the Creatour blessed for euer Amen By how much The three persons are each of them that one Iehouah diuersly subsisting and are the Father and the Sonne and the Holy Ghost the more wee are to striue for the holding fast of this Truth as the Piller of Faith and ground of all Pietie howsoeuer it bee a truth of all other most true and certayne that there is nor can be but one onely God for the causes before alleaged ye the Scripture telleth vs that in this most simple and single essence there bee three subsistences or persons truely subsisting whereof euery one is distinct from other and each hath the whole God-head in him The Father which eternally begat the Sonne The The Father is a Person which from all eternitie hath begotten the Sonne Sonne eternally begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost eternally proceeding both from the Father and the Sonne And these three Persons are all one God or one Diuine Nature The Scripture is wont to expresse them vnder the name The Sonne is a Person from all eternitie begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost is a Person eternally proceeding from the Father and the Sonne of Elohim gods not as if there were more gods then one but to note the diuers subsistences in the God-head as you may see Deut. 6. 4. Esay 54. 5. and in a number of other places and therefore vseth for the most part to couple it with a Verbe singular Wee call them Persons because they are liuing and vnderstanding natures subsisting by themselues which are the things that make a Person For first brute creatures are no persons because hauing life yet they want vnderstanding Secondly euery person must subsist that is bee some one particular thing as Iohn Peter c. For the whole nature of man wee doe not call a person but a thing common to many persons Thirdly this subsistence must be by it selfe neyther the part of another thing nor sustayned of another thing as the Soule of a man whilest it is coupled with the Body subsisting all that while not alone but together with the Body is not called a person And so wee rightly say that the humanity of Christ consisting of a reasonable Soule and Body as all other men doe yet in him maketh not a person as it doth in Iohn and Peter because it subsisteth not alone but in the Deitie which supporteth it To prooue the Sonne and Holy Ghost Samosetan ' Seruetus c make the Sonne and eternall Word of God a bare Idea and imaginary thing The Holy Ghost nothing else but an operation or moouing whereby God worketh in his Children And so rob the Church of the true God blessed for euer Amen to bee persons truly subsisting indued with Iudgement will vnderstanding and a liuing nature not bare qualities or actions the place of Genesis o Gen ● 26 is most cleere and subiect to no cauill Let vs make man according to our Image God the Father consulteth not there with his Angels for the glory of Creation he reserueth to himselfe alone neyther was man made to the Image of Angels but of God he speaketh not of himselfe in the plurall number for honour sake for that kind of speech you shall not finde so ancient nor knowne to the former Ages but he speaketh and consulteth after his manner which is Diuine and Spirituall with his Sonne Holy Spirit which how could it be if they were not vnderstanding substances So in the diuision of Tongues he taketh counsell Come p Gen. 11. 7. let vs goe downe and confound their speech This was not with the Angels but with the Sonne and Holy Ghost For straightway Moses addeth So IEHOVAH scattered them Touching the Sonne In the beginning was the Word Iohn 1. 2. was that is truely subsisted for so is the nature of that word How could hee bee the q Iohn 1. 18. onely begotten Sonne of God r Col●s 1. 15. borne before any thing was created if hee were not a liuing person He that ſ Dan. 9. 13.
Testament In the New as all other Mysteries of God so this especially is more cleerely reuealed by that great Prophet which was to come into the World the High Priest and Apostle of our Profession y Mat. 3. 16 17 and 2. Pet. 1 17. Christ Iesus vpon whom in his first imitation to the worke of our Redemption being himselfe the Sonne one of these three Persons the other two shewed themselues from Heauen The Holy Ghost in his Gifts and Graces represented by the visible shape of a Doue the Father by his voyce from the Seate of Glory This is my Beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased In his last farewell to his Disciples being to leaue the World and to goe vnto the Father hee left this Doctrine as a perpetuall Monument religiously to bee obserued of the Church to the end of the World willing to baptize all Nations z Mat. 28. 19. In the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost That as in other respects so in this it is most worthily said a Iohn 1. 18. No man hath seene God at any time The onely begotten Sonne who is in the bosome of the Father hee hath reuealed him With these two Testimonies I willingly content my selfe as most pregnant of all the rest And therefore I passe ouer diuers other that might bee alleaged to this purpose because these twaine may stand in stead of many Onely I will adde that golden testimony of his beloued Disciple b 1. Iohn 5. 7. There bee three that beare record in Heauen the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost It is cleere that to the earthly witnesse or testimony of men in the things which we feele and haue experience of within our selues Regeneration Righteousnesse Sanctification hee opposeth the heauenly Witnesse or Testimony of these persons greater in regard of the excellence of the witnesses but equall in the number whereby appeareth the cleere euidence of this place The third point is that these persons Tritheites who though they acknowledge the three Persons to bee euery one God indeede yet teach that they are not onely distinct but seuered and deuided haue euery one the whole God-head and Diuine nature and are all three that one onely true and euer-liuing God For both the Apostle c 1. Iohn 5. 7 9. there calleth them so expresly and the testimony of all three hee knitteth vp in one when he saith If wee receiue the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater Euen as Moses d Deut. 6. 4. also doth when from the multitude of the Persons hee calleth them to the vnity of the substance Therefore the Apostle Paul e Col. 2. 9. saith In him Christ the Sonne of GOD manifested in the flesh dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily that is personally which is to bee extended to all the other Persons For to whomsoeuer God communicates his nature he must needes communicate it wholly as hath beene said And this mystery how in that most simple and single essence of God there bee certaine substances or persons truly subsisting three in one and one in three differing but not deuided seuerall but not sundred many and yet the same all one for their nature all distinct for three persons is a secret of all secrets passing all reach and vnderstanding of man rather reuerently to be adored then too curiously to be searched into The fourth last point is the incommunicable properties whereby these persons are distinguished in thēselues To the Sonne is proper to be begotten to the Holy Ghost to proceede the Father is of himselfe neyther begotten nor proceeding but which from all Eternity hath begotten his Sonne and hee and the Sonne together send forth the holy Spirit Of the Father wee shall not neede to speake But that the Sonnes proper subsistence is to be begotten as the name of Sonne importeth giuen vnto him of God Marke 3. 17. This is my well beloued Sonne and so called before hee tooke flesh Psal 2. 13. Kisse the Sonne lest hee be wroth But most cleerely in the f Pro. 30. 4. Prouerbs What is his Name or his Sonnes Name So the Scripture in many places sheweth Iohn 1. 18. The onely begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father And a g Iohn 2. 14. little before Wee beheld his glory as the glory of the onely begotten of his Father The like wee say of the Holy Ghost who is sometimes called the Spirit of God sometimes the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 9 10. 11. But you are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be the Spirit of God dwell in you but if one haue not the Spirit of Christ this man is not his But if the Spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raysed Christ from the dead will also quicken you by his Spirit dwelling in you Sometimes hee is said to bee sent from the Father or to proceed from the Father which is all one sometime to be sent from the Sonne Iohn 1. 5. 26 The error of the Greeke Churches who deny the Holy Ghosts proceeding from the Sonne But when the Comforter shall come whom I will send vnto you from the Father the Spirit of Truth which proceedeth from the Father As touching the God-head of Arius denyed Christ to be of the same nature with his Father but as it were a secondary god acknowledging hee was an excellent Creature created before the World by whom God created the World and saued Mankind and therefore as a God in office to bee adored not in essence The like of the Holy Ghost But since it is plaine that God made all things in six daies both the Sonne and the Spirit if they were creatures must haue beene comprehenced in that worke these three Persons Of the Father no man euer doubted But the God-head of the Sonne and Holy Ghost some Heretikes haue called in question wherefore to confirme our faith herein let vs take Arguments for them both For the God-head of the Sonne we haue these He is IAH IEHOVAH EHIEH that is to say being or perfection it selfe Psal 68. 19. Ascending on high thou leddest captiuity captiue and gauest gifts vnto men euen the Rebels thou dwelling there that is to say in Heauen leddest captiue O IAH God meaning Christ To whose Ascension the Apostle doth apply it Ephes 4. 8. EHIEH hee calleth himselfe manifestly Iohn 8. 58. Before ABRAHAM was made I am Not made but of my selfe and from my selfe without beginning for that i● the force of am elegantly opposed vnto made The name Iehouah is giuen him Genes 4. 1. h This interpretation floweth naturally from the Hebrew Text. Beside it there be two other which of all the rest seeme most probable One is Ieromes With or by ●ehouah that is by his goodnesse and blessing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But in that sence it should haue beene 〈◊〉
proofe of the God-head of the Spirit This is the summe of our most precious Faith concerning the God-head of the Sonne and Holy Ghost against Arrius Seruetus and all that hellish crue which either bring in a multiplicitie of gods and so in truth make no God at all or imagine a secondary kind of God-ship making them inferior to the Father or of the like but not of the selfe-some essence against whatsoeuer Heresies else that Hell hath forged and Satan set abroch to the dishonour of these three Persons the one onely true and euer-liuing GOD Coequall Coeternall and Consubstantiall whom we onely honour and serue CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God THE glory of God which from all Eternitie God being thus in his nature and Persons most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glory by two notes of excellency which he taketh to him Kingdom and Hanour Kingdome is that whereby he doth excite an absolute soueraigntie toward other The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them did shine in and to himselfe it hath further pleased him both to manifest in the exercising of a Kingdome and to inlarge by taking honour vnto him Therefore our Sauiour in the Lords Prayer after the Name of God comprehending his nature and persons which hitherto haue beene handled addeth these other two Thy Kingdome come thy will bee done c. By the one he ruleth by the other his rule is obeyed This to speake properly is not any other Kingdome then that which he had before but the actuall exercise and putting into practice of that Kingdome or Soueraigntie which is of his very nature as our Sauiour doth distinguish them Matth. 6. when saying Thy Kingdome come c. he addeth by and by For thine is the Kingdome c. The order or the administration of it is in this manner The Father is first in Order not in Power nor in Time is the supreme working cause who doth whatsoeuer hee doth in the Sonne and they both by the holy Spirit To whom is attributed the immediate doing of them nor as if eyther the Sonne or Spirit were instruments to worke by but both of them be principall efficient causes and they all that one and the same God that worketh all in all The place for this diuersitie of working is manifest ●n the Epistle to the Romanes a Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raysed Christ from the dead will quicken also your mortall bodies by his Spirit dwelling in you Here as you see all is comprehended The Father quickening in Christ by his Spirit that dwelleth in vs for to this end hee maketh mention of Christs raysing from the dead More cleere betweene the Father and the Sonne is that to the b 1. Cor. 8. 6. Corinthians But vnto vs there is one God The Father from whom are all things and one Lord Iesus Christ through whom are all things From he giueth to the Father as the Fountaine of the Action Through to the Sonne in regard of the personall Distinction So in the Epistle to the c Heb. 1. 2. Hebrewes Through his Sonne hee made the World Of the Holy Ghost also it is said By his d Iob 26. 13. ●pirit he beautified the Heauens And our Sauiour Iohn 16. 14. He shall glorifie me for he shall receiue of mine and shew it vnto you whose proper kind of working as the next and immediate cause of all things is most liuely set forth e 1. Cor. 12. 4 5 ● 7 ● 10 11. 1. Cor. 12. Now there are differences of gifts but the same spirits there are differēces of Ministeries but the same Lord. And there are differences of working but there is the same God who worketh all in all But to euery one is giuen the manifestation of the Spirit to profit for vnto one by the Spirit is giuen the Word of Wisedome and to another the Word of Knowledge by the same Spirit and to another Faith by the same Spirit and to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit and to another the working of Powers and to another Prophecie and to another discerning of Spirits and to another kinds of Tongues and to another interpretation of Tongues But all these things worketh one and the same Spirit distributing them seuerally to euery one as he pleaseth This Kingdome standeth in three things whereof the first are his Purposes or Decrees Then his Creation and The Kingdom of God hath two parts purpose workes Purpose is his Decree before all times of euery thing thirdly the Gouernment of the World the Apostle reduceth them vnto two purpose and workes Ephes 1. 21. Who worketh all things after the counsell of his will In the Counsels and Workes of God putting them both together fiue things may be noted one proper to the purpose of God the other in common appertayning both to his Workes and Purpose The first is as touching the Eternitie of this Decree that it is before all times that is to say from euerlasting The second is the generalitie of his Dispensation that it stretcheth it selfe to all things to wit to all kinds and each particular of euery kind Thirdly the relation betweene his Purpose and Workes that he effecteth nothing which before he hath not decreed decreeth nothing which in time hee doth not effect whereupon followeth the ineuitable necessitie of the execution of his counsels The fourth is touching the Lords most free and absolute stroke in this whole dispensation Lastly That all this is proper vnto God within the compasse of one of which will fall whatsoeuer wee are to speake concerning the Gouernment and Kingdome of God The Apostle in that one sentence elegantly comprehendeth all for in saying Him that worketh c. meaning God he sheweth the supreme cause before assigned and maketh it proper to God by calling him as it were by that name and saying all things hee leaueth nothing free Now where he addeth recording to the purpose after the counsell he giueth to vnderstand that nothing is wrought but that which is decreed nothing decreed but in time it is effected In which words of purpose counsell the Eternity of this Decree is also included as fore-running all his Works yea the first worke of Creation it selfe Lastly the free-will of God is expressed in adding after the counsell of his will But for a better view to be taken of them all let vs handle these three apart Therefore to begin with his Purposes or Decrees obserue in them three things First The Eternitie of those Decrees for as God himselfe is eternall so are his deep and vnsearchable counsels all of them written and decreed or euer the World was And as f Psal 93. ● He is from euerlasting so is
which he requireth of vs Know ſ Psal 110. 3. that IEHOVAH he is God Thou t 1. Chron. 28. 9 SALOMON my sonne know the God of thy fathers and serue him Behold u Ro. 2. 17 18. thou art named a Iew and restest in the Law and boastest of God and knowest his will Be x Ephes 5. 17. not foolish but vnderstand what is the will of the Lord. The contrary whereof is ignorance of God and of his reuealed will whither referre all Errors and Heresies concerning either God his Persons and Properties or any other point of Christian Doctrine But then y Gal. 4. 18. verily not knowing God ye serued those that by nature are no gods z Ephes 4. 18. which are strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Fashion a 1. Pet. 1. 14. not your selues to the former lusts which you had in your ignorance Next is iudgement or wisdome which is as it were the life of our knowledge and added by the Apostle as one degree higher Thou b Rom. 2. 18. knowest his will and tryest the things that differ So he prayeth for the Philippians that they may discerne c Phil. 1. 10. things that differ And to the Hebrewes d Heb. ● 14. he saith Strong meate belongeth to them which are of age who through long custome haue their wits exercised to discerne both good and euill A principall branch of this is the trying of Spirits Dearely e 1. Iohn 4 1. beloued beleeue not euery spirit but try the Spirits whether they be of God Try f 1 Thess 5. 21. all things and keepe that which is good Hereby g Act. 17. 11. are those noble men of Berea commended that they searched the Scriptures whether the things that Paul said were so or no. The contrarie whereof is that which the Apostle h Rom. 1. 28. calleth a minde void of iudgement and the i Ephes 4. 17. vanitie of mindes wherein we all naturally doe walke esteeming Truth Falshood and Falshood Truth whence it commeth that we k Ephes 4. 19. are carryed away with euery winde and puffe of Doctrine With knowledge and iudgement a good conscience must be ioyned whose propertie it is iustly and rightly to beare witnesse of our Actions in l Rom. 2. 15. Their Consciences accusing or excusing accusing or excusing them as it ought The contrary whereof is an euill conscience either benummed or through hypocrisie seared as it were with a hot Iron that both it accuseth not where it should and excuseth where it ought not To the m Tit. 1. 15. vnfaithfull there is nothng pure but both their minde and conscience is polluted For remembrance of holy things a Commandement is giuen Numb 15. 39. that the children of Israel should weare frindges vpon the edge of their garments that seeing the same they might remember all the Commandements of IEHOVAH and doe them Ps 119. 11. DAVID professeth of himselfe I hid thy Word in my heart that I might not sinne against thee And Mary hath her worthy prayse Luke 2. 51. for that shee retayned all the things there spoken of in her heart The contrary whereof is forgetfulnesse My n Prou. 3. 1. sonne forget not my Law but let thy heart keepe my Commandements I forget o Psal 119. 16. not thy Word In the soule first is the desire comprehending all inward thoughts and motions that but once rise vp within vs and come not so farre as to haue consent vnto them And this desire is by nature a holy thing The p Gal. 5. 17. spirit desireth or lusteth against the flesh Hereof principally the Lawes of God are q Rom. 7. 24. called spirituall because they bind not onely all the Creature his intents and purposes but his whole force and power and all the thoughts and inclinations of his heart The contrary is concupiscence or lust The Papist which teach that the first motions are no sin Put off r Ephes 4. 22. saith the Apostle the old man which is corrupted through deceiueable lusts which he there opposeth to renewing in the spirit of our minde Walke ſ Gal. 5. 16. 17 in the Spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit Let t Rom. 6. 12. not sinne raigne in your mortall bodie to obey it through the lusts thereof that is of the body flying u 1. Pet. 1 4 the corruption which is in the World through concupiscence Euery x Iam. 1. 14. man is tempted of his owne lust Sinne y Rom. 7. 8. taking occasion by the commandement wrought in me all lust Of concupiscence or lust the Apostle Iames z Iam. 1. 1 4 noteth two degrees First The a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moouing of the powers of nature out of their right and proper place by raysing vp wandring and wicked thoughts which yet we neuer like of Secondly The nibbling b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were with some delight at this bayte laid before vs though presently we repell it of which nature are vaine sudden wishes and euill dreames though it bee of things which a man misliketh when he is awake And that all concupiscence is vnlawfull euen that whereunto no consent of the will doth come may appeare by these reasons following First Because the Root from whence the least thought doth spring is naught our owne inborne corruption else it could neuer enter into vs farther then by Satans offering it to the sences and outward obiects as it was to our Sauiour Christ and to our first parents in their innocencie The sinne whereof appeareth in this that wee thinke not vpon it with a detestation at the first but when it hath once passed our thoughts then we beginne to detest it which in the vncorrupt estate of man should haue beene quite contrary Secondly Iames doth tell vs that lust conceiuing bringeth forth sinne Can lust conceiue and bee with childe of sinne and be any other thing then sinne Are fishes bred of Serpents or is it possible that the fruit and the Tree should bee not of one nature Euen so concupiscence which is the spawne of sinne the bed and bosome wherein it is conceiued and hatched must needes it selfe bee sinne euen after Baptisme after wee bee regenerate and after that the guilt and the sting thereof is pulled out by Christ Thirdly Philosophers and other heathen men that neuer heard of the Law of God haue condemned settled purposes to doe euill Therefore this must needs bee more close and secret which Paul himselfe so great a Doctor of the Law brought vp at the feet of Gamaliel was altogether ignorant of till he was taught a better Lesson in the Schoole of Christ I c Rom. 7. 7. knew not sinne but by the Law for I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust
vertue of all goodnesse The Apostle noteth this also common to all good duties And c 2. Thess 3. 13 ye brethren be not wearie of well-doing Doing d Gal. 6. 9. well let vs not bee wearie for in the proper time we shall reape if we faint not Which is a notable reason taken from the end and reward due vnto it And the rather to perswade vs to this vertue the Apostle to the e Heb. 12. 2 3. Hebrewes biddeth vs to looke to the Captaine and perfiter of our faith IESVS who for the ioy set before him indured the Crosse despising shame and sitteth at the right hand of the Throne of God Consider therefore saith the Apostle him that indured such gaine-saying of sinfull men against him that you bee not wearie and faint in your soules The contrarie therefore is First To faint giue ouer and to be wearie of well-doing Cursed f Gal. 3. 10. is euerie one that continueth not in the things that are written in the Law to doe them Secondly To slide backe and fall away from which the Apostle doth carefully dehort vs Take g Heb. 3. 12. heed brethren lest there be at any time in any of you a wicked heart of vnbeliefe to depart away from the liuing God for as our Sauiour threateneth Hee h Luke 9. 62. which setteth his hand vnto the Plough and looketh backe is vnfit for the Kingdome of God Now wee must not thinke that this perfection here spoken of is required of all alike for euen among men it is iust i Luke 12. 48. to whom more is committed of him to require more The holinesse and perfection of the Angels farre exceeded the holinesse and perfection of Adam according as their nature was more excellent and perfect Adam k 1. Tim. 3. 6. also excelled Eue who as the weaker Vessell euen then when shee stood in her integritie was first assailed by the cunning and slight of Satan and both Adam and Eue if they had still continued in the state of Innocencie by time and experience of Gods goodnesse should haue beene better confirmed and growne more and more in heauenly Graces as our l Luke 2. 52. Sauiour did so in men growne and publike persons more is required then in children or priuate men The last thing is that as our minde soule and bodie Euery thing with so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excell and all the strength of them must bee carryed both in nature and action to the performance of all good duties so it must bee to euery one in his degree and place For a difference of duties must of necessitie bee holden the Commandements are some greater then other and in euery Commandement some duties to bee preferred before the rest For example the duties of the first Table are greater then the duties of the second which besides the expresse words of our Sauiour Christ calling it the m Mat. 22. 37. first the great Cōmandement may be shewed out of the Prophet first and then out of the Apostle who both make the breach of the first Table to bee the cause that men runne head-long into all offences against the second Vpon n Hosh 4. 12. the tops of the Mountaines they sacrifice and vpon the hils they offer burnt offerings vnder the Oke and Poplar and Oliue because the shaddow therof is good Therefore doe your daughters commit fornication and your daughters in Law goe a whoring And therefore o Rom. 1. 25 26 28 29. God gaue them vp to their owne hearts lust vnto vncleannesse to defile their owne bodies betweene themselues which turned the Truth of God into a Lye and worshipped the Creatures forsaking the Creator who is blessed for euer For this cause God gaue them vp to vile affections vnrighteousnesse fornication c. The duties of the first Table are greater then the second as they are in order before them And this is absolutely true comparing like degrees as morall duties of the one with morall duties of the other not ceremoniall of the first Table with the Morall of the second for in that case it is true which the p Hosh 6. 6. Prophet speaketh I am delighted with Mercie and not with Sacrifice So the chiefe middle and least duties of the first Table are to be compared with the like of the latter deedes with deedes words with words thoughts with thoughts not otherwise for if you cōpare Murder with the least abuse of the Name of God or Adulterie with the least breach of the Sabbath these are the greater sinnes For the measure and proportion to bee obserued in this difference First in the seruice of God our nature ought to bee more prone and apt vnto it our knowledge greater our iudgement riper our conscience tenderer our memorie fresher our desires and will earnester all things to bee done with a greater Affection Loue Approbation Cheerefulnesse Feare to offend Sinceritie Zeale Watchfulnesse and continuance both in Profession and Action In which regard to shew how all our Thoughts Desires and Affections should thus bee taken vp when we come to deale with God it is said Thou q Mat. 22. shalt loue the Lord with all thine heart and with all thy soule and with all thy strength As if this were proper to the Duties of the first Table which indeed doth but principally belong to them and is by proportion to bee carryed to the rest Therefore the glorie of God ought to be dearer vnto vs then the sauing of our owne soules As the examples of Moses and Paul doe teach vs r Exod. 32. 32. one desiring to be blotted out of the Booke of Life rather then that Gods great Name should be blasphemed amōg the Gentiles The ſ Rom. 9. 3. other for the glorifying of God in the sauing of his Brethren the Nation of the Iewes wishing to be anathema accursed from Christ But especially Christ himselfe as a most absolute and perfect example of all righteousnesse doth herein goe before vs when the houre being come wherein hee was for our sakes to drinke vp the full cup of the fierce wrath of his Father and his soule perplexed that he knew not which way to turne him yet hee more regardeth the glorifying of God then the sauing of himselfe from that houre Now t Ioh. 12. 27 28 is my soule troubled And What shall I say Father saue me from this houre but for that cause am I come vnto this houre Father glorifie thy Name And hereupon it is that in all our Prayers we are to set that in the first place as our Sauiour by the verie order of his heauenly Prayer teacheth so as if it could be imagined that wee had no need to aske for our selues which wee alwayes haue yet the onely zeale of his glorie ought continually to stirre vs vp vnto this dutie and that much more forcibly then all our owne necessities The
12 2. 3. recorded to haue taken a pound of oyntment of spikenard very costly and to haue anoynted Iesus feete that all the house was filled with the sauour of the oyntment Temperance in marriage-matters is when we vse it soberly and with seemelinesse rather to suppresse then to satisfie the flesh which is one part of the z 1. Thes 4. 4. possessing of our vessell in holines and honor For this cause it is that the Apostle a 1. Tim. 434. teacheth vs our marriages and the liberty that God hath giuen vs therein are to be sanctified by prayer and thankesgiuing The contrary whereof among other is that forbidden in the Law Leuit. 18. 19. and reckoned vp as one of those sinnes that bring Gods heauie wrath Ezech. 18. 16. CHAP. XII Of the eighth Commandement THE three Commaundements following Those that respect the good things belonging to the person are vprightnes and contentednes Vprightnes is to hold a lawfull course in dealing about them and slandeth in right and truth concerne one common subiect or matter which they all bend vnto that is to say the outward good things of this present life of what nature soeuer the same be Lands Possessions Goods Good name Credit or the like wherein because the greatest part of our life is spent in tumbling and tossing about them it hath pleased the wisdome of God to allot vnto them three Commandements as men for the most part three manner of wayes offend in them comprehended by Iohn the Baptist in one Verse Luke 3. 14. in his answere to the Souldiers Shake no man in his estate by pilling polling rapine or other violence nor circumuent by guile and be content with your wages The two former which are the neerer in affinitie Dauid hath twice in b Psal 111. 7 8. one Psalme in two seuerall Phrases applyed vnto God First in the Phrase of c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth or Faithfulnesse and Iudgement then by d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth or Faithfulnesse and Rightnesse The first of those three wayes wherein men so offend Right which is in dealing iustly is by meere wrong forbidden in the eighth Commandement whether the same haue force and violence ioyned with it in which case the difference betweene this and the Commandement following is easie to be discerned or though it be without force and violence yet by meere wrong and iniurie without colourable shewes and shifts or other disguisings to hide it by whereby it is also distinguished from the ninth Commandement though the difference in this point lyeth not so plaine In the eighth therefore we are The Anabaptistical communitie of goods commanded First To deale vprightly and iustly in all things concerning goods both for the meanes of comming by them and in the vsing of them Wherefore our Sauiour Mat. 23. 22. noteth out this Commandement by the name of iudgement or right in doing that which is iust and equall betweene man and man as the word d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iudgement in the Hebrew Phrase doth signifie And Dauid doth so interpret it Psal 111. where that which in the seuenth Verse hee calleth Iudgement in the next Verse he calleth Rightnesse or Equitie as wee commonly translate it The contrarie whereof is meere wrong in such sort as before was opened The lawfull meanes of comming by goods is double First Lawfull purchase as e Ge. 23. 14 15 Both for the meanes of comming by them That it bee by lawfull purchase Abraham purchased of Ephron the Field and caue of Macpela for the full value that it was worth which Ephron himselfe had set And Dauid f 1. Chron. 21. 22 23 24 25. or Descent bought of ORNAN the threshing floore to build an Altar to IEHOVAH for sufficient money Secondly Descent when by course of Inheritance it is cast vpon vs whereof we haue a Law g Le. 25. 45 46 Of the children of the strangers that are soiourners among you of them shall you buy and of their Families that are with you whichthey beget in your Land These shall be your possession So ye shall take them as inheritance for your children after you to possesse them by inheritance ye shall vse their labours for euer When h Num. 27 8 9 10 11. a man dyeth and hath no sonne ye shall transferre his inheritance to his Daughter and if hee haue no Daughter ye shall giue his possession to his brethren and if he haue no brethren ye shall giue his possessions to his fathers brethren and if his father haue no brethren then shall you giue hi● possession to his Kinsman the next vnto him of his Family and he shall inherit it The contrarie to these two are First Theft He i Ephes 4. 28. that stealeth let him steale no more but rather let him labour c. The speciall kinds of these are Sacriledge when it is of things consecrated to God in which sort k Iosh 7. 7. c. Achan offended And of this the Wiseman l Pro. 20. 25. speaketh It is a snare for a man to deuoure that which is sanctified and after vowes to inquire Robberie by the high-way The companie m Hosh 6. 8 9. of Priests is like vnto Troopes that waite for one by the high-way side Piracie vpon the Sea Burglarie in the night breaking of houses c. If n Exod. 22. 1. a Thiefe bee found breaking vp and bee smitten that he dye no bloud shall be shed for him Stealing mens seruants or children which sinne the Apostle o 1. Tim. 1. 10. wrappeth vp in the number of those things that are contrarie to wholesome Doctrine filching or pilfering the least Pinne or Point Secondly Oppression But p Esay 3. 14 15 yee haue eaten vp the Vineyard the spoyle of the poore is in your houses What ayle ye that ye beat my people to pieces and grinde the faces of the poore Thirdly Extortion as q Luke 3. 14. Souldiers not content with their wages Counsellors with their Fees c. This was the sinne of Elies sonnes of whom it is said r 1. Sam. 2. 12 13 14 15 16 17 Now the sonnes of ELI were wicked men and knew not IEHOVAH For the Priests custome towards the people was this when any man offered Sacrifice the Priests Boy came while the flesh was a seething and a flesh-hooke with three teeth in his hand and thrust it into the Kettle or into the Caldron or into the Pan or into the Pot all that the flesh-hooke brought vp the Priest tooke vp for himselfe Thus they did vnto all the Israelites that came thither to Shiloh yea before they burnt the fat the Priests Boy came and said to the man that offered Giue me flesh to roste for the Priest for he will not haue sodden flesh of thee but raw And if any man said vnto him Let them burne the fat according to the custome then take as
power and comfort of his Spirit whereby he doth communicate himselfe and all he hath vnto vs not in any corporall or bodily presence The time that hee thus ascended both in Soule and the fortieth day after his Resurrection Bodie was fortie d Acts 1. 3. dayes after his Resurrection during all which time hee was conuersant with his Disciples teaching and instructing them aswell in all points of Christian doctrine as in those that belong to the Policie and Gouernment of his Church whereupon the e Heb. 3. 2 3 4 5 6. Apostle saith He was faithfull in all the House of God after a more excellent sort then Moses was The fruit of Christs Ascension into Heauen is our comming thither as shall appeare more at large hereafter And this entrie into Heauen to purchase full Redemption for vs belonged to his Priestly Function wherof the High Priests entring into the Holy of holies once a yeere was a type or figure Heb. 8. 7 12. The fourth and last step is his f Iohn 7. 39. Acts 3. 13. Glorification or the and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say enioyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glorie inriching of him after hee was ascended with an vnspeakeable and incomprehensible though not an infinite measure of all Happinesse Ioy Wisdome Knowledge Excellencie more then all men and Angels haue whereof the g Psal 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. Psalmist speaketh God euen thy God hath anoynted thee with the Oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes Therefore this is called also his h Acts 2. 33. Exaltation or i Phil. 2. 9. Superexaltation hauing in stead of shame and contempt which for our sakes hee did willingly vndergoe becomming subiect vnto death the most ignominious death of the Crosse all and all manner of excellencie both Kingdome Power and Glorie bestowed vpon him and this is that which figuratiuely is meant by his sitting or standing at the right hand of God his Father Heb. 1. 3. Hauing by himselfe purged our sinnes hee sitteth at the right hand of Maiestie in the highest places Marke 16. 19. The Lord after he had spoken these things was taken vp into Heauen and sitteth at the right hand of God Acts 7. 55. He being full of the Holy Ghost looked stedfastly vp to Heauen and saw the Glorie of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God A phrase or forme of speech taken from earthly Princes who are said to set them at their right hand whom they are pleased to k Mat. 20. aduance into the principall place of Honour and Administration of their Kingdome First touching his Gouernment and Dominion both the Apostles so expound this Phrase when that which l Psal 110. 1. Dauid saith IEHOVAH said vnto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole The one m 1. Cor. 15. 25 rendreth thus He shall raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet The n Acts 2. 36. other inferreth vpon it Let all the house of Israel therefore know for a certaine that Him God hath made both Lord and Christ For power and dominion both that serueth Ephes 1. 10 20 21. According to his mightie power which hee wrought in Christ when he raysed him from the dead and set him at his right hand in the heauenly Places far aboue all Principalitie and Power and Might and Dominion and euery name that is named not in this World onely but also in that that is to come and hath made all things subiect vnder his feet Of his Glorie the same is manifest in that this verie setting at the right hand of God is o Acts 3. 13. called his Glorification and the p Acts 7. 55. Storie of Stephen coupleth them together He saw the Glory of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God The fruit of his setting at the right hand of God is very great and in a manner all in all both for his Intercession and Kingdome as we shall haue occasion to note hereafter All that hitherto hath beene said concerneth our Sauiours Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is offering of himselfe we come now to the other part of his Priesthood standing in his Intercession A thing most necessarie to be added to the rest for in vaine were all his Offerings and Oblation if by his Prayers and Supplications to his Father and the continuall presenting of his Merits hee did not purchase Grace that the same should bee made effectuall for vs. Wherefore this as one step higher is added to the former Rom. 8. 34 Who shall condemne It is Christ that dyed nay rather which is risen who also is at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for vs. In his Intercession I obserue First that it is the proper Office and Honor of Christ by whom onely we come vnto God Heb. 7. 25. Secondly That it is the requesting and intreatie of the continuall presenting of his Merits to God his Father the continuall presenting of himselfe and the Merits of his Death and Passion whereupon hee is called our q 1. Iohn 2. 1. Aduocate or Spokesman and is said to r Heb. 9. 24. appeare on our behalfe before the face of God and to make If any man sin we haue an Aduocate with the Father euen Iesus Christ that righteous one Å¿ Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. his Father Intercession for vs. The word appearing being a word taken from the Courts and Seats of Iustice as we vse to say when the Plaintife or Defendant is called Who is heere to appeare for him Christ therefore is as it were our Attournie to appeare for vs before his Father I make mention of the Father onely because the Father is the first of the three Persons in order who being appeased the Sonne and Holy Ghost are also pleased they all being one as in essence and nature so in will and agreement Thirdly When and how he performed this Intercession namely whilest hee was vpon Earth in so many so sweet so heauenly and so feruent Prayers as he powred forth from time to time for the Saluation of his Elect especially that most solemne and sacred one aboue the rest Iohn 17. wherein being anon to be offered hee did consecrate both himselfe the onely and eternall Sacrifice and vs in and through him vnto his Father by the power and force of which his Prayer the Church of God hath euer stood and shall stand vnto the end And what he did then vpon the Earth the same he doth though not in the same manner now in Heauen not with knees bowed and hands stretched out but yet in such sort as is fit for him to giue and fit for his Father to receiue Fourthly That hee maketh Intercession for all the Elect on the behalfe of those Elect. and for them alone not for the Reprobate and Worldlings Iohn 17. 9. I pray not
so Esay 45. 24 you shall find this very word to that purpose in the u Matth. 22. 11 plurall And Iohn here placeth wholly in the robe that the Saints put on the x 2. Cor. 5. 21. marriage garment Christ Iesus not in themselues but the y Rom. 1. 17. 3. 21. 22. brightnes wherof is not meant of shining before men but in the eyes of God wherefore in many and elsewhere places it is called The Righteousnes of God as that which may boldly offer it selfe in Gods sight and abide the strict examination of his Iustice being the Righteousnesse of him that is God himselfe But what vse will you say is there of the imputation of righteousnesse if our sinnes that seuer vs from God be forgiuen and taken from vs Yes vndoubtedly verie great and singular as may appeare by those parts of happinesse whereunto otherwise then by this we are able to lay no claime And therefore the Apostle Rom. 5. handleth professedly this Doctrine of imputation of Righteousnesse as without which the other of forgiuenesse of sinnes had not beene perfect And where in z Rom. 4. 6 7. another place he defineth Happinesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are pardoned it is no full and exact definition numbring all the parts but by a Synechdoche naming one best fitting his present purpose hee giueth to vnderstand the rest as in diuers other places Blessednesse is diuersly defined by those things which yet in truth are but branches of the true and perfect Blessednesse Blessed a Psal 1. 1. is the man that hath not walked in the way of sinners Blessed b Luke 11. 2● are they that heare the Word of God and keepe the same The reason whereof is because all the parts of happinesse are so linked and ioyned together that he which hath one must needs haue all The parts if I may so call them of this righteousnesse the holinesse of his nature imputed to vs are first the perfect Sanctification of Christs humane nature whereby our originall and naturall corruption not imputed to vs our nature it selfe is accounted holy in the sight of God whereof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 2 3. The Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death for which was impossible to the Law for that it was weake by reason of our flesh God sending his own Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne hath condemned sinne in the flesh that that which the Law requireth might bee fulfilled in vs where the Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus he calleth that perfect and all-sufficient Sanctification of our nature in him whereby he comming in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne that is to abolish sinne it selfe in our nature taken vpon him condemned or which is all one abolished sinne in the flesh meaning in his own person through whose perfect Sanctification of nature made ours the reliques of sinne that our corrupt nature is tainted with are not imputed to vs and therefore wee bee free from death and condemnation being wholly restored euen in our nature to a greater integritie then we lost in Adam All which the Apostle sheweth was in respect of the weaknesse of the Law being of no strength by reason of the flesh or part vnregenerate which hindreth the worke of the Law otherwise most perfect and is opposite thereto that it neither can or will be subiect to it So as to the end we might fulfill that which the Law requireth which is to be righteous not in our Actions onely but in our verie nature it was necessarie so to haue it sanctified in the person of Christ not supplying that which ours wanteth but wholly and altogether sanctifying vs in himselfe And by this meanes it commeth to passe that wee are after the most precise and exact rule of the Law righteous before God hauing the perfect integritie of our nature absolutely in Christ for which purpose hee saith not might be fulfilled of vs but in vs speaking of Christs owne Sanctitie imputed to vs. Secondly The thorow and perfect obedience which and Righteousnesse to be ours he performed in the whole course of his life both in the duties to God his Father and in respect of men with whom he was conuersant here on Earth whereby all our vile and filthy actions not comming into account our whole life is reckoned most absolutely good and holy not onely void of sinne but full of perfect Righteousnesse as the same Apostle teacheth b Rom. 5. 12. to the end of the Chapter Rom. 5. setting it forth by an excellent comparison of our Sauiour Christ with Adam both in the things wherein they agree in this point and in those wherein they differ They agree in this that each conueyeth his owne to those that are his whom the Apostle therefore calleth many opposing them to that one whom hee considereth as their Head Adam hee conuayeth both guilt and sinne vnto condemnation Christ Righteousnesse and Obedience vnto Iustification they differ in this First Adam deriueth it downe by nature vpon all his posteritie Christ bestoweth it by grace and fauour and free imputation Secondly Adams one sinne condemed all CHRIST iustifieth from many sinnes not that one onely but all other Thirdly Christs Righteousnesse is more auaileable and of greater power to saue then Adams sinne was to condemne for that indeed threw vs downe from the state of Innocencie but Christ hath raysed vs to a more excellent state vnto the heauenly glorie And hereof commeth our Iustification properly so called that is to say Gods censure and Iudgement of vs approouing vs for holy and righteous before him as hauing that Righteousnesse that is able to abide his presence So as euen by the sentence of God himselfe and in his most exact Iustice we are freed and absolued and declared righteous and worthie of euerlasting life which is that the Scripture opposeth to the sentence of condemnation Rom. 8. 33 34. Who shall lay accusation to the Elect of God It is God that iustifieth who can condemne Thus the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. 18. As by one offence guilt came vpon all men vnto condemnation so by one c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the matter of our Iustification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iustification it selfe fulfilling of Righteousnesse that is by Christs perfect fulfilling of the Law the benefit came vpon all vnto Iustification of life or to the declaring and approouing of vs iust before God whereby wee obtayne euerlasting life This so noble a benefit commeth to bee wrought by the Resurrection of Christ as the Remission of our sinnes came by his death and sufferings So writeth the d Rom. 4. 25. Apostle to the Romanes He dyed for our sinnes and rose for our Iustification Not that his death had no hand in
and all thus rise againe is the common Certaine men vpon our Sauiour Christs Resurrection rose againe and are already with him in Heauen condition of all Mankind some few excepted and those of three sorts for First Some there were who being dead vpon our Sauiour Christs Resurrection rose againe and are alreadie with him in glorie Of whom you may reade Mat. 27. 52 53. that the graues did open themselues and many bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the Graues after his Resurrection and went into the holy Citie and appeared vnto many Which word appearing sheweth that they did not rise to conuerse among men or to dye againe as Lazarus and some other did but in their owne persons to attend vpon him in his Ascension vnto Heauen and by their Resurrection to seale vp the truth of his and of ours in and through him that so not onely in Christ our Head but in our Brethren and fellow-members full assurance might bee made vnto vs of this sweete and comfortable Doctrine Secondly Other there were that neuer dyed but So are Enoch and Elias both aliue assumed thither onely changed their miserable condition into Glorie Immortalitie and so were taken vp aliue into Heauen And this was the peculiar priuiledge of Enoch and Elias One before the Law another vnder the Law both in most corrupt and depraued times wherein the sincere worship of God was no where to bee found the hope of eternall Life and of the Resurrection to come vtterly lost and gone God therefore to leaue a plentifull testimonie of a blessed Resurrection till the cleerer manifestation of it by the rising of his Sonne and both to giue testimonie of the Faith and Pietie of such men and to conuince the wicked World of Infidelitie suffered not those two to goe the way of all flesh but by a speciall fauour did assume them bodie and soule vnto himselfe thereby also to make them types and figures of the Resurrection of his Sonne by whose power they thus escaped death Of Enoch first it is recorded Gen. 5. 24. That he walking with God three thousand yeers in which time as u Iude ver 24. Iude the Apostle witnesseth hee diligently executed the part of a faithfull Teacher in Gods Church reproouing the corrupt World of sin denouncing Gods seuere Iudgements against them euen to the extreme curse of Anathema Maranatha in the end hee was no more seene for God tooke him that is as the x Heb. 11. 5. Apostle to the Hebrewes doth expound it did translate him that hee should not see death And of Elias the Storie is set forth at large in the first and second Booke of Kings How after long conflicts with Achab the King of Israel and Iesabel his wife and with foure hundred and fiftie prophets the priests of Baal at once being tossed as wee say from Post to Pillar and driuen to flye for his life hauing restored the true Worship of God and reedified his Altars that before were throwne downe destroyed being now as hee thought left alone and wearie of his life God in the end after his many labours y 2. Kings 2. 23 tooke him vp in a whirlewinde into Heauen Thereby conuincing the Idolatry of that Age. And when in the Towne of Bethel where the Calues were erected and Idolatrie and Superstition raged they made a Scoffe of this Ascension and taught their children so to doe saying to Elisha in scoffing sort Ascend Bald-pate ascend Bald-pate that is Goe vp to Heauen as Elias did as if they should haue said A proper and goodly ascension two Beares comming out of the Forrest tare in pieces two forty children of them And that this was alwayes the iudgement of the Church concerning Elias may appeare Luke 9. 8. where in the diuersitie of opinions held of our Sauiour Christ some said that IOHN was raysed from the dead some that ELIAS had appeared other that one of the old Prophets was risen againe To all the rest attributing Resurrection as of bodies dead onely to ELIAS Apparition in the truth of his humane nature as of one that neuer dyed Two things there bee that may seeme to crosse this Doctrine One that Christ is called The first fruites of them that sleepe 1. Cor. 15. 20. The other that in the eleuenth to the Heb. 11. 39. the Apostle speaking of the holy men of God before the Comming of Christ And of Enoch among the rest saith of them all that they receiued not the promises But hereunto it may bee answered that the promise which the Apostle meaneth is the manifestation of Christ in the flesh and the more plentifull measure of grace now then was before his Comming which pertayneth nothing to this question As for that 1. Cor. 15. Christ is called The first fruits of them that sleepe because by the power of his Resurrection all shall rise againe and his Resurrection sanctifieth ours as the first fruits did the whole crop not that he of necessitie must be the first that rose no more then hee was the first whose soule did enter Heauen though all both before and since haue entred by his power Although if you should so farre presse this Phrase Christ was indeed the first that rose seeing to speake properly Enoch and Elias neuer dyed and therefore neuer rose And howsoeuer it bee an extraordinarie Example in one or two speciall persons it serueth not to ouerthrow a generall truth But the first I take to be the Apostles meaning Yet haue not these two sorts their full glorie alreadie for howsoeuer their whole nature bee made perfect yet the fulnesse of their perfection is deferred till the latter Day as to the rest of Gods Elect Euen as wee see the whole spirituall nature of the Angels that fell is now fully accursed and yet reserued for a more full damnation The third sort are those men that the Comming of Those that are liuing at the latter Day shall suddenly be changed after the dead are once risen Christ doth finde aliue who shall not dye but shall suddenly bee changed as Enoch and Elias were and so bee taken vp to meete Christ after that the dead in him shall be first risen All of vs saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 15. 51 52. shall not sleepe but all of vs shall be changed in a moment in the twinkling of an eye at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall rise vp without corruption and we shall be changed And againe 1 Thess 4. 15 16 17. This say we to you in the Word of the Lord that we which liue and are remayning in the Comming of the Lord shall not preuent them which sleepe for the Lord himselfe shall come downe from Heauen and the dead in Christ shall arise first afterwards shall we which liue and remayne be caught vp also with them in the Clouds to meete the Lord in the Ayre By the Analogie