Selected quad for the lemma: power_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
power_n body_n natural_a sow_v 2,624 5 11.4108 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 28 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Lazarus was caried by the conduct of Angels into Abrahams bosome so was the rich man thrust downe into hell c luk 16.23 and therefore the soules can not be said to rise againe either from death or sleepe In this respect do wee confesse in the Creede the Resurrection of the flesh onely Yet because the soule returneth to quicken and gouerne the bodie and there is no resurrection without the soule it may be said to rise againe by accident Shall the same bodies in number or shall new bodies rise againe 1. The verie selfe same in number those truly without defect because Psal 34.21 The Lord keepeth all the bones of the Saints there shall not one of them be broken And there shall not a heire of your head perish Luk. 21.18 2. Because euery one shall beare in his bodie that he hath done bee it good or euill 2. Cor. 5.10 3. Because God hath consecrated the bodies of the faithfull to be Temples vnto himselfe d, 1. Cor 3 16.17 6 15 19 4. Because this corruptible bodie saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 15.53 must put on incorruption pointing with the finger a like quantitie and the verie same essence in number saith Tertul For he could not speak more expresly vnlesse hee should apprehend with his hands his owne skinne 5. Because the bodies of the wicked are subiect to the torment of hell e Math. 10 28 6. Because all that are in their graues shall heare the voice of God Ioh. 5.28 Men therefore shall not rise againe out of the fower Elementes as if they were made of a new matter as though the being the same againe could not be in the matter of an humaine bodie but onely in the forme thereof to wit in the soule as some vnconstant spirits would haue it and therefore man may bee said to rise againe the same in number Alber. oratio de Resurr for the form's sake namely the soule for although when a print is made in wax and marred againe the same forme remaineth not and therefore if it be againe made in the same wax it cannot bee called the same print in number yet the verie same wax remaineth so although the substantiall figure of mans bodie be confounded in the graue yet the bodie shal rise again the same in nūber because the selfe same matter with the properties making one and the same Indiuiduum indiuisible bodie shall be restored by the commaundement of God a Ioh. 2.18 7. Because Christ whose members wee are and to whose bodie our bodies shall be conformed receiued againe that bodie which he had caried about with him b Ioh. 2.19 8. Because it were absurd that Paule should be depriued of the reward of the Crowne in his bodie wherein he caried the markes of Christ So that euen as if a garment be ripped into pieces afterward bee againe sowed together it maketh all one garment no other in number or if the small wheele of a firelock bee taken in sunder afterward the ioynts therof also made cleane be ioyned and set together againe it is the same in number So shall the essence be all one of mans bodie which though dissolued shall againe be ioyned together by God and shall rise againe the infirmities and accidents being taken away which may bee wanting without destroying the essence And because God hath all the Elements readie at his beck no difficultie shall hinder him that hee may not command both earth and water ayre fire to restore that which seemeth to be consumed by them VVhat shall bee the forme or manner of the Resurrection When the last day shall appeare Christ on a sodaine and vnawares in the same visible forme wherein he ascended to heauen shall come in the clouds with Angels and thousands of his Saints Iud. 14. with the cheerefull voice of an Archangell and with the trumpet of God when at the voice and so at the sound of the trumpet Mat. 24.31 as in mount Sinai when the Law was promulged c Exod. 19.16 they shal be raised vp shal take againe their owne bodies who sleep in the dust to whom the act of coupling the soule and body togither a new after death or the returning of the soule at the commaundement of God into her owne bodie shall be the forme of Resurrection but they who shall be found liuing and remaining afterward in his comming shall be changed in a moment and in the twinckling of an eye 1. Cor. 15 52. d 1 Thes 4 15 16 this sudden change not of the substāce but of the quality of their bodies shal be vnto them in the steed both of death as also of resurrectiō that it might be true which is written Heb. 9.27 It is appointed vnto men that they shall once die When shall the Resurrection be Christ answereth But of that day and hower knoweth no man no not the Angels of heauen but my father only Mat. 24.16 What shall be the conditions and qualities of the bodies that rise againe Six especially are recited a 1. Cor. 15 32.43.53 1. Immortalitie for of mortall such as they are now they shal be made immortall 2. Incorruption of corruptible they shall become incorruptible it is sowne a bodie subiect to corruption it is raised in vncorruption 3. Spiritualnesse for of liuing creatures that is of such as are quickned with an humane soule and are maintained in this naturall and fraile life with outward succors as meats and other means ordained of God they shall be made b Gen. 1.29.40 1 Tim. 4.3 spirituall not in essence but in condition or qualitie by partaking of the gifts of the spirit 1. Because they shal be altogether ruled by the holy spirit 2. Because they haue wholly giuen themselues to the gouernment of the same spirit 3. Because being vpheld by the power of God they haue no neede of meates or other helps because they shall be endewed with an exquisite fine and sharp intelligence of the senses it is sowne a naturall body it is raised vp a spirituall bodie 4. Strength for of being weake and subiect to sundry calamities sicknesse and sorrowes they shall be made firme strong not subiect to any perturbation and able for it is sowne in weaknes but shall rise in strength and the soule shall so perfectly rule ouer the bodie that heauinesse and weight shall be no hinderance thereto whereby it shall come to passe that we shall be rapt with such a nimble motion of our bodies to meet the lord in the aire 1. Th. 4.17 5. Perfection for of being deformed altogether full of vncleannesse lame and filthy to behold they shall rise very beautifull comely to behold very seemely wanting no limme not young as children nor decrepit with yeares but of a ful age ripe and strong as also the bodies of Infants that die in their mothers wombe shal by that wonderfull worke of God receiue as Austin witnesseth such a body as
himselfe 4. Feare namely of the offending of God 5. Vehement desire namely of approuing himselfe to God 6. Zeale to take heede of offending God 7. Reuenge or punishment of our selues whereof 1. Cor. 11.31 If wee would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged of the Lord. But indeed these are rather effects or adiuncts or signes of repentance then parts Wee say then that the essentiall parts of regeneration or repentance are two mortification of the flesh or of sin or the destruction of the old man or the denying of our selues and Viuification or the renewing of the spirit of righteousnesse or of the new man Which diuision we gather 1. First out of the Prophets as Psalme 34.15 Cease from euill and doe Good And Esai 1.16 Cease to doe euill learne to doe well 2. Out of Rom. 6.4 VVee are buried with Christ by Baptisme into his death that as he was raised from the dead into the glorie of his father So vve also should vvalke in nevvnesse of life And the same Ro. 7.4 a Ephes. 4.22.23.24 Colloss ● 5.8.9.10 Mortification is the destroying of our natural corruption proceeding from the holy Ghost and arising from the participation of Christ himselfe for if we doe truely communicate with Christs death by the power thereof our old man is crucified and the bodie of sinne dieth by little and little Viuification or new birth is that power of the holy Ghost proceeding from the resurrection of Christ which following after the destroying of our naturall corruption by little and little as the day succedeth the remoouing of the darknesse causeth vs the will of God being knowne approued to begin to will to do well for being made partakers of the resurrection of Christ wee are thereby raised vnto newnesse of life which may answere the iustice of God Rom. 6.6 Is it finished in any short space No but it is extended euen to the last instant of our life that the faithfull may exercise themselues therein all their liues and may the better also learne their owne weaknesse For that which is said Ephe. 5.26.27 That God doth purge his Church from all sinne is referred rather to the guilt then to the verie matter of sinne it selfe and sinne in those that are regenerate doth onely cease to raigne but it leaueth not to dwell in them Rom. 7.17 Whereupon also vers 24. Who not hath deliuered mee but shall deliuer mee from this bodie of death for the combat lasteth till it bee ended by death Which is the subiect to whome repentance belongeth or Whose is repentance There is a repentance of the heathen who either for wearisomnesse doe giue ouer their vices or else by the iudgement of reason doe cease to sinne and that either for feare of punishment or for loue of vertue There is also a repentance that an earnest repentance of the wicked but it is but temporarie onely for a time as in Esau a Gen. 27.38 Heb. 12.17 and Achab. b 1. Kings 21 27.29 which is nothing else but a worldly sorrowe which causeth death whom notwithstanding God spareth for a time and doth temporally blesse them that by that clemencie he might prouoke his owne children to sincere repentance There is also a repentance of hypocrites fained and Pharisaicall which consisteth onlie in the outward forme against which Ioell cryeth out Chap. 2. vers 13. and the rest of the Prophets doe the like But sincere repentance is onely belonging to the elect whom God will deliuer from destruction for it dependeth of the spirit of regeneration and is inseparable from faith and the mercie of God as witnesseth the Prophet Esai 59.20 The Redeemer shall come vnto Syon and vnto them that turne from iniquitie in Iacob And Heb. 6.6 the Apostle minding to exclude the Apostates from the hope of saluation bringeth this reason that It is impossible that they vvho vvere once enlightened and haue tasted of the heauenly gifte and haue beene partakers of the Holy Ghost and haue tasted of the good vvord of God and of the powers of the vvorld to come if they fall away should bee renewed againe by repentance because they crucifie againe the sonne of God and make a mocke of him Because indeede God renewing those whom hee will not haue to perish sheweth them a token of his fatherly loue and fauour and on the contrarie hee stricketh the reprobate with hardnesse of heart whose iniquitie is vnpardonable Doth repentance befall God himselfe Not to speake properly 1. Sam. 15.29 For hee is not as a man that hee should repent yet it is attributed to God a Gen. 6.6 Ier. 18.8 but by a Metonimie by reason of the effect for as wrath in GOD signifieth the verie effect of his wrath namely punishment so repentance doth signifie the sodain change of his disposing of matters Whereupon Augustine saith The repentance of God is saide to bee in alteration to looked for of men of thinges vvithin his povver De Ciuit. dei Lib. 17. cap. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the presence of God remaining vnchangeable And the golden rule of Athanasius is to bee obserued Those things are spoken after the manner of men but vnderstoode as they may beseeme God For God submitting himselfe vnto our capacitie doth set forth himselfe vnto vs not as hee is in himselfe but as he is by vs supposed to be What is the subiect of Repentance wherein it is The whole man for hee is wholy renewed in minde in will Ephe. 4.23 VVhat is the obiect vvhereabout repentance is conuersant 1. In respect of the beginning from whence it is or the Terminus a quo sinne is the obiect about the reforming whereof it consulteth for of a good worke there is no repentance such had Ecebolius Iulian and the Apostataes which though it bee called repentance yet it is euill and wicked 2. In respect of the Terminus adquem that thereunto it tendeth vertue is the obiect therof about the practise wherof repentāce studieth or the law is the obiect of repētance properly taken VVhich is the fourth signification of repentance It is improper and is vsed not so much for the inward conuersion vnto God as for the profession thereof which consisteth in the confession of the fault and the desire of pardon for the punishment and guilt thereof Of how many sorts is this repentance Of two sorts Ordinarie or common and to bee vsed euery day and extraordinarie or speciall and commaunded vnto repentant sinners at a certaine season Which is that which is Ordinarie That whereunto all Christians euen the Saints as long as they liue here Tu remisisti iniquitatem cordis mei the hebrewe is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the english The punishment of my nue must endeauour themselues throughout the whole course of their liues by reason of the remainder of their naturall corruption For 1. Iohn 1.8 If wee say that wee haue no sinne vvee deceiue our selues and there is no trueth in
together in act circumscribed and not circumscribed because these things are contradictorie But contrariwise we retort the argument drawne from omnipotencie God is omnipotent therfore he can bring to passe that we being in earth may partake of the true bodie of Christ being in heauen and therfore we do so though we are vpon earth and so need not a corporall Manducation Is it true which our aduersaries take for granted that Christ when he appeared to Paule in his iourney Act. 9.17 and stood by him in the Castle Act. 23.11 was in bodie both in heauen and on earth together No For it was a heauenly vision as it is said Act. 26.19 Which helpeth nothing the presence of the bodie of Christ in earth For Christ is said to haue talked with Paule not placed in earth but from heauen eyther without a corporall voyce the Lord powerfully imprinting into him the conceipt of speech or by a voyce framed from heauen which came to his cares like thunder And Act. 23.11 Noe man but seeth that it was a nocturnall vision which appeared not to his eyes but to his minde eyther in waking or dreaming But yet for some peculiar and extraordinarie apparitions wee must not depart from the vniuersall rule of faith whereby Christ is beleeued to possesse heauen in his bodie and there to remaine vntil the end of the world Yet notwithstanding we must not denie but that Christ in euerie moment is wheresoeuer and howsoeuer it pleaseth him according to his Maiesty not corporally but spiritually Is hee a manifest denier of the power of God which denieth that by his absolute power he doth bring to passe that the bodie continuing in his propertie may be in many places after another and diuers maner Hee is not yea rather because we denie that God can bring it to passe wee openly affirme the omnipotencie of God For seeing God is so ommipotent and effectuall that he is not contrarie to the truth he can in no manner of wise bring to passe that a thing may together be and not be that the same bodie may remaine in his propertie that is to retaine his dimensions and circumscripton and be the same bodie together and at one time present in many places and separated by a long space betweene Rightly therefore Cyrill Wilt thou grant also to another nature not diuine Book de Trin. 5 besides the diuine nature that it can fill all things and passe through all things and follow in all things No verily Is the contradiction taken away in the diuersitie of respects and of these names if it be said that the bodie of Christ in truth and verie deed is in heauen according to the naturall properties of a true bodie circumscriptiuely locally visibly and after a naturall manner and that it is by the power of God also in truth and in verie deed in many places or euerie where or in the supper but sacramentally inuisibly supernaturally illocally after a celestiall and miraculous manner and if it be said that the nature of Christ in the propertie of his nature is circumscribed and visible but in regard of the vnion vncircumscribed and inuisible In no wise because these distinctions or manners cannot bee prooued out of the scriptures Moreouer all such manners doe not alwaies excuse a contradiction as if one say that the bodie of Christ was dead according to the manner of death and at the same time was aliue according to the manner of life Finally contrarie modi or manners which doe destroy one another when they are put in doe not take away but confirme a contradiction But yet such a diuerse respect cannot bee graunted wherein one and the same thing may bee the same and bee not the same in trueth which is the first lie of the aduersaries neither is a manner to be feined which may take away the essence of a thing Wherefore seeing the bodie of Christ assumed is in act organical Physicall tempered together disposed and finite in his parts it cannot bee in act in many places by any meanes not Organicall vndisposed infinite or in manie planes although it bee adorned with vnspeakeable glorie because God is vnchangeably true neither will hee that an affirmation should be a negation against a principle vnmoueable Quodlibet est aut non est that is euery thing is or is not Whether as the eye hath not the force of seeing in it selfe but by reason of the vnion with the soule and receiueth it in the vnion so the flesh of Christ receiueth not those proper things in it selfe but hath them truely and really in that wonderfull vnion No because things vnlike and in kinde diuers are compared together For the eye is so ordained by nature that it is a naturall proper and necessarie instrument whereby the sensitiue life doth exercise and accomplish her facultie of seeing and without which it cannot bring forth this faculty into effect But the flesh of Christ is so ordained by nature that it is a naturall proper and necessarie instrument whereby the diuine nature alone may shewe forth his omni presence and inuisibilitie and so necessarie that without it the diuine nature in the Act it selfe cannot be omnipresent norinuisible Furthermore the flesh of Christ is not considered in it selfe or out of the vnion seeing that that flesh neither is nor hath beene nor euer shall be out of that vnion Moreouer one nature receiueth not any contrarie thing or diuers in it selfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is it selfe but it is a thing diuerse farre vnlike to be circumscribed in a place and to be euery where Otherwise wee should say that the humane nature of Christ hath a beginning in it selfe and hath not a beginning in the vnion that it is created in the proprietie of it owne nature and that it is not created in the vnion That it is lesse then the Angels in it owne nature but in the vnion equall to the father finally that it is dead in it selfe and not deade in the vnion or for the vnion or for the cause and respect of the vnion Must wee altogether abandon mans reason and the principles of Philosophie in those things which are affirmed concerning the body of Christ No so farre forth as mans reason beeing made spirituall after Regeneration beareth true witnesse to the creatures and affirmeth true principles concerning things proper to mans bodie For it is written Be yee not like a horse or like a mule which vnderstand not Psal 32.9 besides God is the author of all trueth in Logick Ethicks and Physicks Moreouer Christ after his resurrection appearing to the Disciples when hee would proue his owne bodie to be substantially present he reasoneth from his adioyned visibilitie and palpability and appealeth to the verie senses of the Disciples a Luk. 24.36 Like as from all the accidents of the bread of the Eucharist it is rightly gathered that it is the substance of bread by experiment of all the
or Bacchanalls without a Sermon or declaring of the Lords death which Paule would haue to be vsed in the Lords supper 23 By hearing or rather by looking vpon the Masse they thinke themselues armed against God and as it were with an Ammulet or preseruatiue against poyson safe from all daunger 24 That the Sacrament is once a yeare to bee deliuered or communicated to the people 25 They teach that auricular confession is necessarie for those that will be communicants 26 They celebrate the Masse in a strange and vnknowne language 27 In the Canon of the Masse besides the offering of their sacrifice they vse inuocation of Saints departed and they mixe withall imaginarie merits 28 They celebrate Masses for the honour of Saints and for the obtayning of their intercession with God whereby the remembrance and intercession of Christ is obscured and ouerthrowen 29 They thinke that the vse of the Supper is of absolute necessitie to those that are readye to depart this life 30 They vse consecrated bread for the quenching of fire and for the calming of tempests 31 They doe superstiously include it in their Armories and Cupbords 32 They burne candles before it 33 VVhen they please euen as in the olde time the Persians did the fire they carrie it about to bee worshipped Thirdly the errors of the consubstantiators who doe not admit the true doctrine of the letter and the spirit but thinke that the sacramentall speeches are to be interpreted literally according to the letter and rationallie as they meane 2 That it is offered bodily or essentially or ioyntly or after an admirable and vnspeakable manner and yet by the hand of the minister 3 They say that the bodie of Christ is cast into the mouthes euen of the wicked 4 They commend the recantation of Berengarius which was set downe to him by Pope Nicholas wherein he professeth that not onely the Sacrament but euen the verie true bodie and bloud of our Lord Iesus Christ is sensually and in truth handled and broken by the hands of the minister and torne in peeces by the teeth of the faithfull 5 They teach the reall omnipresence of the verie bodie of Christ vpon earth in many places nay in euery place 6 They attribute to the flesh of Christ many sortes of beings 7 They holde that there is a communion made by a mutuall reall and actuall conioyning of the substances 8 The doe not acknowledge the spirituall presence onely of the bodie and bloud of Christ 9 They reckon the papisticall eleuation and lifting vp of the hoast among things indifferent 10 They doe wickedly confound the twofold eating namely the one outward of the bread the other inwarde of the bodie of Christ to be but one and the same Fourthly the errour of them who haue taken away the breaking of bread in the supper of the Lord and in stead of bread broken or cut doe distribute vnto euery one that commeth to the Lords table so many in nomber of whole and severall breads or round and thin cakes 2 They haue abolished the deliuerie of the signes into the hands of the receiuers and the taking of them by their hands Fiftly the error of those who doe very seldome make mention of the sacramentall changing of the bread and wine 2 They teach that the onely merit of Christes obedience is to be accounted for the thing signified in the holy Supper of the Lord and thinke that onely the commemoration and remembrance of the death of Christ and of his benefits is taught therein and doe not vrge vs to bee by communion incorporated into Christ Sixtly the errors of them who first denie the presence of Christ in the Supper 2 They hold them to be but common signes which doe not effectually and powerfully moue 3 They account the sacramentall signes but as bare pictures and things to looke vpon whereby they may onely be stirred vp to renue the memory of Christs death 4 They take these holy mysteries but as outward notes or badges whereby they that professe themselues to be Christians may be distinguished from other profane people Seuenthly the error of them who doe vnreuerently vse these holy actions and in no other manner but as common and daily matters 2 They that thinke it is free for them eyther to come to the Lords Supper or to abstaine from it at their pleasure and therefore vse it verie seldome whereas indeed it is no small part of Gods worship and by God commaunded Eightly the error of some who alleadge that the Supper of the Lord succeedeth not the Paschall Lambe but Manna which was not an ordinarie and perpetuall sacrament nor ioyned in time with the Supper neyther had it any signe of the merite of Christ which is the chiefe thing in the Lords Suppe contrarie to the manifest institution of the Lord a Luk. 12.19 Ninthly the error or rather the dreame of a certaine libertine Iodochus Harchius a Montensian Belgan who holdeth that wee doe not eyther corporally or spiritually take and eate the verie bodie of Christ crucified but making a twofold flesh of Christ one naturall and taken of the virgin Marie now glorious in heauen the other spirituall intelligible and made by the diuine power of God of bread and wine to bee tasted and conceiued chiefely in the minde this hee imagineth to goe into the nourishment of the mysticall bodie that is to say of all the faithfull being daily taken with the mouth and by faith or otherwise he dreameth that there is a certaine power proceeding from the flesh of Christ and after a wonderfull and vnspeakeable sort infusing it selfe into the bread doth nourish the flesh of a Christian man which is cōtrarie to the expresse words of our Sauiour Christ which is giuen which is powred out which words doe euidently shew that the true bodie of Christ and the true bloud of Christ are signified and spiritually exhibited vnto the beleeuers The nine and fortieth common place Concerning Magistrates or Politicke gouernment Is the doctrine of policie or ciuill gouernment and Magistracie to be deliuered in the Church IT is Because Commonweales are the Nourceries of the Church and the consciences of both godly Magistrates and faithfull subiects are by this doctrine to bee enformed against such Fanaticall Spirits as oppugne that doctrine Whence is the Commonwealth called Politeia Policie Of the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Citie comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 many But Ciuitas a Citie as it were Coiuitas or Ciuium vnitas the vnitie of Citizens is not onely such buildings as are comprehended in one ditch trench or wall but that multitude of people which doth inhabite those buildings And the regiment and order of that companie or people is called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 policie in Latine Respublica the Common-wealth From whence is deriued politice the Art of policie which teacheth how the Commonwealth must be ordered and preserued as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
bene in some bodie like vnto a little cloud made of the waters which by his circular motion made the day and the night whereupon the Sunne came foorth and was framed with a most perfect light 2. When as he stretched foorth like a curtaine a Ps 104.2.3 that part of the waters wherewith the earth was ouerflowed being rarified and made thinne by which meanes that spreading abroad is called Rachiang which word the Greekes interprete but not so fitly * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Firmament especially to signifie the stabilitie and soliditie of the heauenly Circles not for the hardnesse but onely in respect of the firmenesse thereof For Moses by that word which he vseth meaneth not onely the Firmament and the celestiall Circles but also the region of the fire and of the ayre which were made in the second day b Gen. 1.6.7.8 But where it is said that the firmament or spreading abroad doth separate the waters aboue from them beneath it is to be vnderstood of the ayre which diuided the waters aboue that is the cloudes which are the cause of raines snowes dew haile and such other Meteors from c Psal 104.3 the waters of the riuers and fountaines which are beneath 3 When as the greatest part of the waters wherewith the earth was before ouerflowed and couered as it were with a garment d Psa 124.6.7 was gathered into the channels of the earth whereby the earth appeared aboue the waters and the waters being gathered into one place were called the Sea e Psal 33.7 Ier. 5.22 Job 28.9 10.11 And although there be but one sea which for the swiftnesse of it is called the Ocean which doth continually ebbe and flow and that either naturally from the North where it is deeper by reason of the cold wherby the waters are not so much dried vp but rather increased because much aire is turned into water vnto the South where because of the great heate the waters are diminished or else by some externall cause to wit by the changeable light and effectuall motion of the Moone which by the great prouidence of God doth rule waters and all moist things else by her ascending and descending in the day time doth speedily eb and flow that so the waters in the sea might be kept pure and might not putrifie yet in regard of diuers places whereby it passeth it is called by diuers names and from this there flow other seas along in the midst of the earth which also are called the Mediterranean seas and creekes besides certaine lakes and gulfes are called Seas in the Scriptures a Mat. 4.18 Ioh. 6.1 of which Eccles 1.7 All riuers either mediatly or immediatly flow from the sea and runne againe into the sea namely by certaine secret passages of the earth which also men cal veines whereby it commeth to passe that by dayly addition of so many riuers the seas neuer increase nor passe their bounds And though the waters by reason of the diuers qualities of the veines of the earth thorough which they runne are affected and some are of the nature of brimstone other sweete some salt b Exod. 35.23 some be hote and some colde some wholesome some noisome some coloured some without colour for the great and manifold vse of men yet the waters in the sea are salt and for that cause they are called Mare Mare ab amaritudine the sea because either by creation they be so or by the force of the Sunne alwayes working vpon it the more thinne and sweeter part of them is taken vp out of them but in fountaines and riuers they be sweete because as they passe through the pores of the earth they are purged of the saltnesse neither do they lie open to the continual beames of the Sun Now that part of the earth which is aboue the waters although it be beneath the sea is called drie land because it is dried from the waters wherewith before it was ouerspread and couered to the end that it may be seene planted troden vpon and inhabited for which cause the Greekes call it by a word that signifieth Habitable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Latines by a word which signifieth that it is worne of mens feete and other liuing creatures Terra a terēdo And that is also called Habitable or Continent which containeth the Ilands of the sea which distinction was made the third day d Gen. 1 9 10. Psal 105.7.8.9.10 Into how many parts is the earth deuided Into two for the Ocean sea as it were a most large girdle or band deuideth it from the North to the South into the vpper part in which we liue and the nether part wherein liue the Antipodes or those which go with their feete against ours and which doth answer directly to ours so as when the Sunne sets with vs it riseth with them and so on the contrary For if in our time there be some found who haue trauelled thither then some also might do so before them at other times and to propagate mankind there Yea this must needs be so seeing there are found there so many millions of men although Moses maketh no mention of them What is the vse and what is the nature of the earth It is the common mother of all things a Eccles 40.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gigno and therefore she is called by a name that signifieth to bring forth because she is most fruitfull For she begetteth within as in a wombe mettals stones gummes liuing creatures that liue vnder the earth and winds she bringeth forth all kind of fruites she 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nourisheth and cherisheth al and preserueth all whatsoeuer good thing she hath she imparteth it vnto vs she is content to suffer all wrongs neither doth she cease to do good and to profit all men Whatsoeuer seede is cast into her she doth restore the same faithfully and liberally againe vnto vs to some an hundred fold to some sixtie fold to some thirtie fold b Mat. 17.8 Gen. 26.12 therefore she is well called the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tribute payer Besides she doth entertaine our dead bodies into her bosome that one day she may render them againe aliue and incorruptible yet she doth all this not of her selfe or by her selfe but by the commaundemet of God and by his power Thus much of the distinction What was the adorning of the world It is that whereby the earth is adorned with the bringing forth of herbes and plants the firmament is adorned by the creation of the two greater lights the Sun and the Moone and the fixed stars c Gen. 15.5 as also of fiue wandring starres being made of the matter of their orbes which are as it were goodly shining pearles in their rings the sea with the framing of creatures liuing in the waters the aire with fowles the earth with beasts and men inhabiting of it What are
the plants They are sprouts brought out of the earth being tilled by no man but hauing receiued from God power to grow to the end of the world and without any seede receiued into her neither helped of the Sun nor raine but onely by vertue of the word of God both in the beginning with flowers fruites and seeds as now it comes to passe in time of Autumne which now by vsing the second causes plowing sowing the Sunne Moone raine all which notwithstanding be in the hand of God d Mat. 6.30 1. Cor. 3.7 are brought forth successiuely according to their kind which are and liue onely both for meate as also for medicine and delight and the manifold vse of the liuing creatures e Gen. 1.29 2.9 And three are both herbes and trees created the third day wherein also these waters below which couered the earth were gathered together into one certaine place f Gen. 1.11.12 13. To what end were the Sunne Moone and the Starres in heauen created 1. To this purpose that they might be receptacles and as it were vessels or wagons to carie abroade that light which was created in the first day to put a difference betweene light and darknesse day and night 2. For signes daies times that is that they might signifie vnto vs many things to come raines windes heate cold drought and sundrie seasons g Iob 38.31.32 Amos 5.8 and that they might be significations of the anger or mercie of God h Ios 10.13 2. King 20.11 Luke 21.25 and that by their motion they might both make and distinguish artificiall daies moneths yeares seasons and courses of times as the Spring Sommer Autumne and Winter for the great good of liuing creatures and the seruice of men i Deut. 4 9. Psal 104.20.22.23 Mat. 5.45 3. That by a certaine vertue giuen vnto them of God they might affect the bodies of the elements by making them warme moist drie cold namely by the approching of the Sunne vnto certaine starres by which meanes are caused raine droughts heate cold and humours are increased for the cōferring of life for generation and for the perfecting of all things which pertaine vnto this present life k Job 38.33 Whereupon it is said in Hos 2.21 The heauen shall heare the earth and the earth shall heare the corne And this adorning of the heauen was made the fourth day l Gen. 1.14.15 16.17.18.19 Whether can things to come be foreknowne and foretold by the starres Indeed such things may which come to passe by the motion of the starres by their situation and position by the necessarie course of nature or naturally and ordinarily as the eclipses of the Moone or the Sun faire weather or tempests droughts raine winds snow heate cold and such like And probably those things which for the most part are wont to follow the motion of the starres as kinds of diseases barrennesie of the earth dearth of victuals and such like but onely in generall and not in particular m Mat. 16.2 neither yet as of their owne proper causes but onely as of signes Also physicall passions which follow the diuerse temperatures of the humours of the body because euery one followeth the disposition of his nature But not anie of those things which depend vpon the free will of man nor such as proceed from the meere goodwill and pleasure of God as those which belong either to saluation or damnation as also those things which we vse to place in the number of things contingent as good successe or bad successe which the Lord distributeth as it pleaseth him The reason is because neither are all the stars knowne of vs neither are the influences of those which we know vnderstood of vs neither can we perfectly obserue the moments of times wherein anie man is conceiued or borne and we see that the nature and disposition of twinnes is most contrarie And lastly because God doth moderate the starres and those things which he portendeth by them euen at his owne will and pleasure a Prou. 27.1 and Iames. 4.14 We know not what shall be to morrow But if anie do foretell and it so falleth out it either cometh to passe contingently or else by the reuelation of the diuell Therefore that iudiciall part of Astrologie as they call it or prognosticating which searcheth out what shall befall a man this or that yeare or day what shall come to passe to a man well or ill is vaine and vngodly and by no meanes to be tollerated in the Church of God b Deut. 18.19 Ier. 10.2 Act 1.17 Ioh. 21.22 The first Councell at Toledo Canon 21. If any man thinke we are bound to beleeue his Astrologie or Mathematicks let him be accursed Is it a sound opinion to thinke that the starres haue soules or that they be liuing creatures Yea rather it is impious because it tends to the vpholding of their error which worshipped the starres offered sacrifice vnto them c 2. Kin. 23.5 Ier. 7.17 44 19. and because none of the faculties or operations of the soule as vegetatiue sensitiue intellectiue can agree to a celestiall bodie Why did God place the creation of the starres betweene the creation of plants and beasts To the end he might shew that though ordinarily there doth concurre the Sunne with his motion and light as also other starres to the generation of plants and beasts yet the generation of things doth not simply proceed from the Sunne and the starres but from God sith that euen before the starres were created he commanded all plants with their fruites to be brought out of the earth And before the creation of beasts he would in great wisedome first create the Sunne and the starres which might giue light to the earth because that beasts aboue all things stand in need of light What are liuing Creatures Things created of God which haue their being liue and haue sense or else they be substances indued with an instrumentall bodie which haue besides the soule whereby they liue sense and power to moue themselues from place to place Whence were liuing creatures brought foorth Some out of the waters as fishes which are also called creeping creatures because they haue no feete which also haue no lungs and therefore breath onely by their gils and birds which are feathered winged twofooted although they seeme to be created of the earth d Deut. 2.10 and haue respiration and a voice which were made the fift day e Gen. 1.20.22.23 Some of the earth which liue vpon the earth whereof Moses maketh three kinds of beasts which be helpful vnto man some way as are cattell which liue by grasse not by flesh horses oxen sheepe and which may be tamed liue about the house as Elephants Camels Harts Creeping things which haue no feete or very short ones wherewith they be a little caried aboue the earth And beasts which be wild and liue by flesh as Lions Bears
to effect if God permit them or haue decreed to suggest them to be done of others or as they guesse by signes or rashly suppose but sometimes certainely sometimes probably and for the most part lyingly and doubtfully but howsoeuer alwaies to seduce men and therefore neuer to be listened vnto because though they speake the truth sometimes the Lord permitting them to the end to trie vs whether we feare him Deut. 13.2.3 yet they euer speake it with a purpose to deceive that they might seduce men from God and destroy them c Mark 1.34 Act. 16.18 What are we to thinke of Sybils prophecies and the speciall oracles of Balaam and Caiphas concerning Christ and the mysteries of mans saluation Numb 24.17 and Ioh. 11.54 It is likely that the verses which we haue of Sybillaes Prophecies were written since Christ because they set downe as it were the historie of Christ plainely else we should thinke that God reuealed his Sonnes coming more plainely to a doating woman then euer he did to his seruants the Prophets which is absurd As for Balaam and Caiphas Prophesies that they come frō God were put into their minds either not vnderstanding of them or else intending some other thing a Numb 23.5 24 2. to the end that both the Gentiles and vnbeleeuing Iewes might be conuinced and made inexcusable by the testimonie of those men who were of their owne stampe And therefore ●hat those Oracles are to be regarded because they be agreeable to the Oracles of the Prophets Can the wicked spirits know the thoughts of our hearts Not certainely and of themselues but they can tell many by our speeches and gestures and by externall signes expressed by the inward passion and affection namely hatred anger concupiscence and that onely by coniecture and probabilitie Which things being diligently obserued and knowne they stirre men forward to commit these or these euils Therefore Peter saith well Be ye sober and watch because your aduersarie the diuell goeth about seeking whom he may deuoure 1. Pet. 5.8 But what thinke you of the power of the diuels That it is great for it is compared to the Whale b Psal 27.1 to an armed man c Mat. 12.29 to a roaring Lion d 1. Pet. 5.8 and to him is ascribed power and rule in the ayre e Eph. 6.12 but yet not absolute yea indeed finite and limited with certaine bounds and so they haue a restrained power so as they can do nothing till God permit them and giue them leaue and no further neither then it makes for the good of his and the aduancing of his glorie f Exod. 8.18.19 1. King 22.20.21 Iob. 1.12 2.6 Mat. 8.31 Luk. 8.31 Eph. 2.2 2. Tim. 2.26 Reu. 20.7 Now the power of Satan shewes it selfe so often as the Lord thinkes good both vpon outward things as the bodies vnder the Moone which he can moue trouble and affect diuersly g Job 1.12.19 To this place belongs that Reu. 7.2.3 of the Angels who had power giuen them to hurt the earth the sea and the trees Also vpon the bodies of men whilst that he moues them from place to place as he will for sometimes he lifteth vp the bodies of men from the earth in height into the ayre and casteth them downe againe from on high to the ground as the histories do report of Simon Magus Sometimes he doth transport them from one place to another in a very short time and troubles them at his pleasure Further he can alter them as when he doth affect them with sundrie qualities and makes them sicke bodies of sound as in the historie of Iob 2.7 may be seene on the other side he makes some sound that are sicke for the greater blinding of the wicked and their spirituall destruction Besides these he doth bleare the sight of men that things should seeme to be changed which are not or that spirits should be seene in stead of true liuing creatures as those counterfeit frogges of the Sorcerers of Egypt and such like delusions as that ghost of the diuell which was shewed to Saule in the likenesse of Samuel by helpe of the Witch a 1. Sam. 28.12 And such delusions whereby men are said to be turned into Wolues or other beasts in appearance as they say not in very deed and truth Or else he doth most nimbly place some other bodies in the roome of others of which sort some thinke those frogges of Egypt were for God alone can by himself change bodies if you speake of their substance from one kind into another kind Moreouer he doth pierce and penetrate into the bodies of men either by the vertue of action as he is said to enter into Iudas b Luk. 22.3 or else euen by his substance as in those which were possessed or now in these dayes are possessed of diuels so as he doth inwardly moue their bodies diuersly that they should hurt themselues or others as in those which are possessed and desirous to hurt others may be seene c Mat. 8.16.32 12.28 17.15.18 He hath also power upon the outward senses which he moueth with diuerse obiects either he hurteth the instruments of the senses as namely the eyes and doth ill affect them with internall corrupt humors so as they cannot well see and discerne or else puts some other impediment betweene the eyes or the eares and the obiects As also vpon the minds when he stirreth vp euill thoughts in them by troubling the phantasies in the imagination and stirring of diuerse humors whereby he doth trouble and weaken the powers of the soule and bodie as it befalleth those which are diseased with melancholie or the frenzie or madnesse and then by meanes of the obiects which he sets before the senses he stirreth vp lust as also he is wont to moue the mind of men by troubling them with euill affections as he moued Iudas with the affection of couetousnes to betray Christ and he filled the heart of Ananias to lie against the holy Ghost Act. 5.3 Last of all he can obiect many things vnto the senses of the godly whereby they are prouoked to sundry sins as it fel out with Dauid a 2. Sam. 11.2 Also he can hinder them by outward impediments from the performance of good actions as the Apostle testifieth of himselfe that he was hindered by Satan that he could not come to see the Thessalonians b 1. Thess 2.8 and by setting of feares before their eyes so to shake them that they shall fall from the faith Therefore Christ saith to Peter Behold Satan hath desired you that he might sift you Luk. 22.31 He is able also to annoy their bodies as Paul said that he was buffeted by the messenger of Satan 2. Cor. 12.7 Is the power which wicked Angels haue alike both toward the elect and the reprobate No but God permitteth them to exercise the elect for a time but neuer to ouercome them because
because the heart amongst all the intrailes and members in man is the first that liueth and the last that dieth And euery where in the Scriptures the speciall actions of the soule are ascribed to the heart d Mat. 15.18.19 Rom. 2.15 10.10 1. Pet. 3.4 Is the whole soule in the whole bodie and in euery part of the bodie the whole soule Of this mind is Augustine and some other after him as light is in the aire which is primarily by it selfe in the whole secundarily in the parts And that it is not only the forme act and perfection of the whole body but also of euery particular part And lastly that it hath no bodie and is not circumscribed in any place and is indiuisible But others thinke that like a certaine king she sitteth in some one part of the bodie alone and in one place as it were in her princely pallace doth diffuse her vertue thorough the whole bodie and that it doth exercise diuerse actions in the diuerse parts of the bodie according to the diuerse placing of the instruments in those parts which are necessarie for the doing of such actions So it reasoneth in the head it willeth in the heart it concocteth in the stomacke seeth in the eyes a 1. Cor. 12.17 to which opinion we subscribe touching which notwithstanding modest wits may forbeare till they be confirmed But how many parts or faculties of the soule be there Three essentiall according to Plato the vnderstanding facultie the facultie of anger and of lusting or after Aristotles the facultie of reasoning and discoursing of sense of liuing or nourishing For the same Aristotle saith the soule is that principium to wit inward and formall whereby we first liue haue sense and vnderstand But that distinction better befitteth the doctrine of Christians whereby the soule is distinguished into the vnderstanding which is also called the Mind and the Will or as the Scripture sometimes speaketh the spirit and the soule being taken in a more strict signification b 1. Thes 5.23 Heb. 4.12 What is the vnderstanding It is that facultie whereby we do discerne obiects either to be liked or disliked and the vnderstanding is double 1. Practising whereby we discerne good from euill right from wrong 2. Speculatiue whereby we distinguish truth from falsehood by the notions of goodnesse and truth which God hath put into our minds c Rom. 1.32 2.14 And what is the will A facultie of the soule whereby we either chuse or refuse the obiects so farrefoorth as the vnderstanding iudgeth them to be good or euill Which if it follow the rule of reason it is called election or consultation in a speciall manner but if otherwise it be moued by a false shadow and appearance of good then it is called both a passion and perturbation of the mind or an affection as also concupiscence Were all the soules of men created of God at once as the Angels were Origen and other Fathers haue bene of that mind and that they were as it were laid vp in Gods store-house but the contrarie is proued by the Scriptures For Gen. 2.17 Moses spake but of one soule Againe Dauid sheweth that soules are created successiuely in euery mans bodie Psal 33.15 who frameth their hearts that is their soules one by one and Zach. 12.1 Who frameth the spirit of man in the middest of him Rom. 9.11 the Apostle writeth of Iacob and Esay that before they were borne they had done neither good nor euill If they had done neither good nor euill then it followeth that their soules were not created from the beginning for it is against reason that all this while they should do nothing at all Whether was the soule of Euah made of Adams or not and whether are the soules deriued one of another by propagation or else new ones euermore created of God Some of the Fathers were of opinion that as one candle is lighted by another euen so the whole man is deriued of the whole man the soule of the soule the bodie of the bodie For say they first as one Lion begets another so by the power and efficacie of Gods blessing one man begets another who consists not only of a bodie but of a soule 2. Because we reade not that God created and inspired a new soule 3. Because the soule is the primarie seate of sinne in which Dauid saith his mother conceiued him Psal 51.7 4. Because in the first conception the soule is potentially in the bodie which according to the generatiue power giuen to mans seed is brought into act But the creation of the first soule as a plaine patterne sheweth what is the beginning of all other soules Againe Adam said of Euah Genes 2.23 This is now bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh but he saith not soule of my soule which he should haue said if so be that the soule of Euah had bene taken out of his soule Moreouer the testimonie of Zaccharie 12.1 is cleare who frameth or formeth the spirit of man in the midst of him And Eccles 12.7 The spirit returneth to God that gaue it Peter also commaundeth that we should commend our soules to the faithfull Creatour 1. Pet. 4.19 Besides that opposition doth seeme to require the same Heb. 12 9. where the fathers of our flesh are opposed to the Father of spirits because he doth not vse the helpe of men in creating of liuing creatures to which we must referre that of Esa 57.16 where in expresse words God is said to make soules to wit immediatly and not by propagation of man Yea the very nature of the soule doth testifie the same which is most simple and therefore indiuisible So then seeing to the propagation of it there is required a decision it is apparent that it hath not his beginning by propagation from the soule of the parents Neither indeed can spirituall substances be changed one into another and therefore as one Angell cannot beget another Angell euen so no more can one soule being of the same kind and nature produce another soule Wherefore it remaineth that it is created in the infusion of it and infused in the creating of it as August saith But herupon it will follow that God rested not from all his works Gen. 2.2 I answer out of Augustine that God rested from the workes of some new kind but not from the works of the same kind a Ioh. 5.17 By what meanes then is originall sinne conueyed to the children Neither by meanes of the soule nor by meanes of the bodie but by meanes of propagation from Adam alone For that all mankind is corrupted by Adam doth not so much proceed from generation vnlesse it be in regard of the manner that is so farrefoorth as one sinfull man begets another sinfull man as from the iust iudgement of God who as he had adorned all men in one as the roote and head of all mankind with originall iustice so after that
dayly through Christ c 2. Cor. 3 18. and shall be perfected in the life to come How doth the image of God shine in mans bodie 1. Not in respect simply that it is a bodie and endued with such a forme but so farre foorth as the bodie is ioyned with a reasonable soule carrieth with it some part of the image of God and doth in some sort comprehend it in the whole world whereupon also man is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little world wherin shineth the builder and master workman of the whole world 2. Because the diuers members of the bodie eyes eares mouth tongue hands do represent the spirituall parts of God that is to say his spirituall perfections wisedome power and the rest of Gods attributes no otherwise then Heb. 8.5.9 24. 10.1 the tabernacle and the arke of the couenant the table vessels and sacrifices were representations of heauenly and spirituall things 3. Because the gifts of the mind do make the bodie shine euen as the light of the candle doth make the skinne of the lanthorne to shine and the very righteousnesse and holinesse of the soule did redound to the very bodie and to the members of the bodie and so by that meanes man did exercise by the body that soueraigntie and excellencie vpon all inferiour creatures and caried in his countenance a certaine soueraigne maiestie by meanes whereof the beasts also did acknowledge him for their Lord. Gen. 2.20 Why and to what end did God create man after his owne image 1. That God who is in himselfe and in his owne nature inuisible might make his essence and nature in some sort visible in man as it were in a glasse and so by this meanes might offer himselfe to be knowne of man for the proper end and vse of a picture is that he whose picture it is might thereby be knowne 2. To the end that God being so acknowledged of man he might loue worship and glorifie him for euery like loueth his like 3. That God himselfe might of the other side vnite man vnto himselfe as being like vnto him vnto eternall happinesse 4. To the end that men being made after the same likenesse of God might not onely loue and reuerence God but one another both in this life and that which is to come 5. That the reprobates being made after the image of God might be without all excuse What things are against this doctrine 1. The heresie of the Manichees and of the Anthropomorphites who fained God to haue a bodie who should frame the bodie of Adam after the image and likenesse of his owne bodie 2. The dotage of Osiander who taught that the bodie of man was framed after the shape or idea of that body which Christ should afterwards assume 3. Also of Flaccus Illyricus who affirmed that the image of God that is his holinesse and righteousnesse was of the essence of his soule 4. Of the Schoole-men who affirmed that the image of God was nothing else but a certaine accessorie and outward decencie The tenth common Place of originall Righteousnesse What doctrine hath affinitie with the former touching the image of God THe doctrine of originall righteousnesse or of the first integritie of our nature Was the first man created of God in originall righteousnesse He was which is proued by the doctrine going before For Gen. 1.27 Moses saith He made man after his owne image male and female made he them Now we said that the most speciall part of that image was that pourtraiture of the righteousnesse and holinesse of God which was made in man whereof this was a signe that they walked naked and were not ashamed Gen. 2.24 Moreouer Gen. 2.31 immediatly after the creation of Man Moses addeth presently And they were very good To this purpose maketh that Eph. 4.24 Put ye on the new man which after God is created in true righteousnesse and holinesse Whether if man had stood in that his originall righteousnesse should he haue had neede of Christ the Mediator Not that he might be reconciled to God and be healed of his sinne which he had not yet committed but by whom so long as he would he might be kept in the fauour of God and be preserued from sin for that sentence of Christ is alwaies true without me ye can do nothing Ioh. 15.5 That same originall righteousnesse wherein Adam was created was it a substance or an accident It was not a substance but it was an vprightnesse and integritie in nature and therefore a qualitie which may be present or absent according to the definition of an accident without the destruction of the subiect that is the soule For these differ a nature right and the rightnesse of nature as much as a right line and the rightnesse of the line do differ because the line is the subiect of the rightnesse Therefore the soule of Adam was the subiect of that original righteousnesse and integritie but his soule was not that righteousnesse it selfe Againe it is proper to God to be essentially iust and good because God is very goodnes it self integritie it selfe and iustice it self And therefore if that originall righteousnesse of the first man had bene a substance then man should haue bene called iustice it selfe which without blasphemie to God cannot be spoken Besides the contrary to that originall righteousnesse to wit originall sin is an accident because it entred into the nature of man Now then seeing contraries haue both one genus or generall it followes that original righteousnes was not a substance but an accidēt Lastly seeing the restauration of that image is nothing else but the repairing of new qualities which is wrought by regeneration It followeth that originall righteousnes was also a qualitie wherby the whole man was iust and right yet indeede such a one as might be lost as afterwards was proued by the fall of man What then was that originall righteousnesse 1. The light in the mind of man whereby he knew God and his will 2. The ingrauing of the law of God in his heart wherby he was moued to obey him and the integritie of the whole man whereby the spirit was subiect to and obeyed God the soule was subiect to and obeied the spirit the body was subiect to the soule and obeied it 3. The acceptation of the whole man whereby he was acceptable and well pleasing to God but yet so as man might loose it as the very euent shewed Why is it called originall Because it was natural the first man was created in it vnto it not as a priuate person but as the stocke and roote of all mankind a Gen. 1.17 Ephes 4.24 Now say that Adam had stood in that originall righteousnesse should it haue bene deriued to all his posteritie It should 1. because it was the righteousnes of mans nature and not the righteousnes of a priuate person 2. Because the contrary to it namely original sinne was deriued by Adams meanes to
The other is by words de praesenti for the present as I do betroth thee to be my wife which present and actual promise is called simple absolute consent although the mariage be not yet celebrated Thus she is accounted betrothed named a wife VVho so defileth anothers mans betrothed wife or spouse let him be stoned to death for he hath hūbled his neighbours wife b Deut. 22.23 And Iacob speaking of Rachel who was only betrothed vnto him Giue me my wife c Gen. 29.21 The Angel saith vnto Ioseph Fear not to take Mary thy wife d Mat. 1.20 when she was but betrothed vnto him but she that was betrothed was now by determination accounted a wife vnlesse some thing fell out which might frustrate the contract Is the bond alike in both contracts No for in the contracts de futuro indeed touching the promise and to free the faith plighted they may be admonished but they can not be cōpelled especially if they bring probable reasons why they wil change But the cōtracts de praesenti induce an effectual obligation which ought not to be dissolued by mutuall consēt for it is a truly ratified mariage e Math. 19.6 although not wholy consūmated without adding the duties of mariage Also contracts de futuro if they be confirmed with copulation following ought to be ratified VVhy are contracts instituted and why is there a certaine time obserued betweene it and the celebration of mariage There are diuers causes first that the bridegroome and bride may first consent in minde before they cōioyne in body or as Austine saith lest the husband easily obtaining make light account of that which he longed for being deferred Secōdly that in the mean time the cōtracts may be published in the Church to the end that if any iust cause ly hid for which the mariage begū may not be cōsummated it may be manifested in due time Thirdly naturall honestie that mē might not presently after the contract be caried violently like beasts with the sway of their sensuall desires Which three causes appeare in the contract of Ioseph and Marie a Mat. 1.18 Deut. 21.12 Which is the other degree of mariage The consummation which is done by consecrating or blessing and by celebration of the mariage What is consecration of mariage It is a holy actiō wherein the bride groome bride being brought into the church before the congregation are taught by the minister touching the institutiō ends of mariage there expresly witnes their consēt either by signes if they be dūb or deaf or by words if they can speake For the Canons say that mariage is of no force except consent be declared by words so i● their mariage publikly confirmed and they themselues consecrated vnto God by prayer From whence is this custome taken From the example of God himselfe who as soone as he had giuē Adam a wise blessed them like a Minister in these words Increase and multiplyb Also from a general rule which commandeth That all things be done in the Church decently and in good order c 1. Cor. 14 40. Further it maketh for the dignitie of mariage and freeth the new maried of all ill suspition least they should be thought to liue together like harlots Lastly it cannot but be approued by God who will both be called vpon and is alwayes at hand to them that call vpon his name What is the celebration of mariage All the other whole politicke action by which the couenants of mariage are confirmed and the bride is honestly and modestly brought into the bridegromes house Ought a Christian to obserue this festiuitie and celebration Yea and that according to the custome of the country where he dwelleth and that rule which Paul commandeth Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust holy of good report c. do them d Philip. 4.8.9 Thinke you the mariage feast lawfull Yea it is vsed almost amongst all nations and also confirmed by many examples of Scripture as we reade that Laban made a great feast at the mariage of Iacob and Rachel e Gen. 29.22 and Christ both with his presence and present of 6. galons of excellent good wine confirmed this custom f Ioh. 2.1.2.7.8 But yet in such bankets we must remember that which is recorded concerning Tobias his mariage that they feasted in the feare of the Lord g Tob. 7.17 8.20 As also that at King Ashuerus his great and solemne feast such modestie and honest●e was obserued as that no man was compelled to drink more then himself pleased h Hest 1.8 Wherfore mariages celebrated with riot pride gluttonie drunkennes vnchast playes al kind of wantonnes are solemnized to the diuel and not vnto God these are not the least cause of euils which make mariage troblesome vnpleasant vnto many withall rob many parents of their children What is the forme of mariage A iust coniunction of one man and of one woman into one flesh for they which were two before mariage are after marrying made one flesh that is one man by the coniunction and vnion both of soule and bodie What positions do you gather out of this formall cause of mariage First that the bond of mariage is most straight far exceeding that which is betweene the parents and the children as God saith a man shall leaue his father and his mother and shall cleaue vnto his wife i Gen. 2.24 2. That it is not only most strait but indissoluble because that two are made one flesh therefore Christ saith Whom God hath ioyned together let no man separate a Math. 19.6 Thirdly that it is mutuall and reciprocall in one ouer anothers bodie for the Apostle gathereth hereout in that they are one flesh that neither of both hath power ouer their owne bodie b 1. Corin. 4.7 Fourthly an argument of mutuall loue betweene them The husband must loue his wife as his own flesh and as Christ loueth h●s Church c Ephes 5.28 Fiftly that there ought to be a communion of all things both spirituall and corporall betweene maried couples What and how many are the ends of mariage Three if thou respect the persons themselues first that they mutually helpe one another both in heauenly and humane things This God expressed Let vs make Adam a helper like vnto himselfe d Genes 2.20 that humane societie may be familiar and friendly yet so as that the husband may appeare to be the wiues head e 1. Corin. 11.3 The second is procreation of children which may succeed their parents both in name and goods which end the Lord hath likewise expressed Increase and multiply f Gen. 1.28 Thirdly that it may be a remedie against all wandring lusts as Paul noteth For auoiding fornication let euery one haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband g 1. Cor. 7.2.3 But if you respect either the church or common wealth
will be thy God and of thy seede after thee Gen. 17.7 Is Originall sinne the sinne of another or is it euery mans proper sinne It is another mans sinne because being committed by Adam it is deriued to vs from the same author and yet is not lesse proper to any one of vs then it was to Adam First because Adam sinned not as a priuate man but as head of all mankind 2. Because as mans nature communicated by him becomes euery mans owne nature so also his sin communicated by propagation and death vvhich entred by sin becomes euery mans ovvne sinne 3. Because the opposition betwixt the obedience of Christ the disobedience of Adam requireth it to be so d Rom. 5.18.19 As therefore the obedience of Christ is so communicated to his members that euery faithfull person may call it his owne so the vnrighteousnes of Adam is so made common to all men that euery man is punished for his owne fault May the sinnes of other parents be said to be conueyed into their children as the sinne of Adam is said to be The case differeth because that first sinne was not so much personall and proper to Adam as natural that is common to al mens nature which originally and naturally was in his Loynes therfore truely originall But other sinnes of Adam and of other men were truely personall Of which Ezech. 18.20 The sonne shall not beare the iniquitie of the father but the soule that sinneth shall die Yet it shall be no absurditie if wee say that the sinnes of our next parents and auncestors are communicated to their children by corrupt seed their bodie being first stained with sinne and after the soule being infected by the bodie whence is is said Exod. 20.5 I will visite the iniquitie of the fathers vpon the children But that children are not alwaies borne like to their wicked parents it proceedeth from the speciall grace of God Is Originall sinne a Substance or an Accident It is no substance for then it should be either a soule or a bodie but the bodie and soule in respect of the substance are the good creatures of God which are also as yet created by God wherefore they are not sinne Neither is it a substantiall propertie or any thing substantiall in man but it is an outward and accidentall qualitie which notwithstanding is called natural not that it hath proceeded from nature insomuch as it is created but because it seizeth vpon men and possesseth them as by right of inheritance and cleaueth to the nature of man his strength and naturall faculties and is naturally bred in man Ephes 2.3 By nature wee are the sonnes of wrath Rom 7.17.20.21 The Sinne that dwelleth in me the euil which is present with mee saith the Apostle Is it an accident which may be separated from man Augustines words may serue for answere hereunto Lib. 1. de Concupiscentia c. 25. Originall sin is remitted not so as it is no longer originall sinne but so that now it is not imputed the guilt thereof is past and gone the actuall being of it remaineth therefore also doth death it selfe remaine What is the subiect of Originall sinne The whole man both in bodie and soule from head to foote with all his powers and faculties of bodie and soule as well the higher as lower as vnderstanding will sense Whereupon the Apostle Ephes 4.17.18 affirmeth the minde is addicted to vanitie the thought to blindnesse and the heart to wickednesse Rom. 8.7 The wisdome of the flesh is enmitie against God The same thing is manifest by our renewing which the Apostle attributeth to spirit soule and bodie a Rom. 12.1 Ephes. 4.33 1 Thessa 5.23 How many parts are there of this corruption Two A defect and concupiscence or a peruerse and inordinate inclination to euill The defect is a wanting of Originall righteousnesse as there are in the minde of man blindnesse and ignorance of heauenly things in the will and heart a turning away from God or a depriuation of the loue of God and men b Rom. 3.23 1. Cor. 2.14 The naturall man perceiueth not the things of Gods spirit Concupiscence is not a naturall desire of meat drinke generation and delight in the senses neither motions of the heart such as affections are neither onely a disorder of appetites and desires but it is a readie inclination of all our strength to doe those things which are forbidde● in the lawe of God of which nature is darknesse of our vnderstanding doubting in our mindes of God and of his prouidence in our will and heart contumacie and stubbornnesse against God Because Paule saith Rom. 7.18 I know that in me that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good and vers 23. I see another Lawe in my members resisting the Lawe of my minde doth it therfore follow hence that the highter part of the soule is not the subiect of concupiscence but onely the sensitiue part No for he doth not oppose flesh and members to the minde that is reason such as it is without the light of the holy Ghost but he opposeth the flesh to the spirit that is to spirituall gifts or regeneration in as much as it is begunne in man by the Holie Ghost But are that priuation of Originall righteousnesse and concupiscence sinnes They are 1. Because that priuation is transgression of the law 2. Because it is a sin not to be such a one as God commands thee to be But concupiscence it selfe also is a sinne because Deut. 10.16 we are commanded to circumcise the foreskins of our hearts and in the law it is said Thou shalt not couet Exod. 20.17 3. Because Rom. 7.7 the Apostle teacheth that concupiscence remaineth euen in the regenerate which constantly hee calleth a sinne against which we must without ceasing fight and he plainly affirmeth that it disagreeth with Gods Law I had not knowne saith hee that concupiscence is sinne except the Lawe had said Thou shalt not couet Whosoeuer looketh vpon a woman to lust after her hath already committed adultery with her in his heart Mat. 5.28 And 1. Iohn 2.16 The concupiscence of the flesh is not of the father And the Apostle calleth euen that euil which he willeth not that is to which hee yeeldeth not consent Rom. 7.19 I do not that good I would but that euill which I would not Lib. 3. contra Iul. Therefore Augustine ascribeth three things to concupiscence that it is sinne and the cause of sinne the punishment of sinne What is Originall sinne therefore Anselmus thus describeth Originall sinne It is a wanting of originall righteousnesse which ought to be in man We describe it in this maner It is not onely a priuation of Originall righteousnes but both a deprauing and corruption of mans nature spread vpon al parts of the soule propagated from Adam to his posteritie and it is a guiltinesse wherby euen the newe borne infants are also corrupt by Adams fall and are therefore
guiltie of Gods anger and eternall death vntil pardon be granted and except the benefit of Christ help a Ioh. 1.29 and besides these it comprehendeth those workes which the corruption of our nature bringeth forth in vs which the Scripture calleth The workes of the flesh b Gal. 5.19 By what names is this sinne called in the Scriptures The sinne that dwelleth in a man because it remaineth continually in the flesh vntill death but in them who are not regenerate it raigneth in the regenerate it only dwelleth and not raigneth c Rom. 7.17.20 Malum adiacens The sinne which easilie cleaueth to vs and compasseth vs round about occupying all our strength e Heb 12.1 The sense and vnderstanding of the flesh f Rom. 8.6 Also it is absolutely and simply called Sinne g Rom 7 8. Because it is the source and fountaine of all sinnes The bodie of sinne h Rom. 6.6 because in it are gathered together all sins which breake forth when occasion is giuen The Lawe of the ●●mbers i. because all the members of soule and bodie i Rom. 13.4 that is all the parts powers of man obey it as a Law Flesh k Gen. 6 3. concupiscence c. to which is opposed the Spirit which signifyeth the grace of regeneration l Gal. 16.17 The heart of man m Gen 8 21 Also old Adam n Rom 6 6. How doth Originall sinne differ from actuall sinne As the tree differeth from the fruite or the roote from the branches Originall sinne is like a tree and a roote out of which euill fruites and boughes do spring namely actuall sins not only outward but also inward Out of the heart proceede euill thoughts saith Christ Mat. 15.19 Gal. 5.19 In that place are recited the workes and fruites of the flesh that is of originall sinne Moreouer in actuall sinne the matter of the sinne remaineth not for when a man hath either committed adulterie or spoken blaspheamie those actions straight cease to be when the thing is done notwithstanding the offence to God and the guilt remaine still But in originall sin the matter therof passeth not away for wee finde in experience that the corruption of nature sticketh by vs seeing still we run into sinne and are vntoward to heauenly things both in body and soule What is the end or wage of Originall sin Eternall damnation together with all the mischiefes incident to this life a Gen 2 17 3 19 What is the effect thereof It deceiueth it worketh all concupiscence it killeth b Rom. 5 12 17 What vse is there of this Doctrine concerning Originall sinne A threefold vse 1. That wee may acknowledge our vncleannesse and that laying away all arrogancie wee may betake our selues and flie to Christ our Sauiour 2. That in what manner we vnderstand that the vnrighteousnesse of Adam is imputed to vs in the same maner we may beeleeue that wee by the righteousnesse of Christ are accounted truly and perfectly iust before GOD as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 5.15 3. That because our birth and generation was and is full of vice wee may know we haue neede of a regeneration according to that Ioh. 3.5 Except a man be borne againe he cannot enter into the kingdome of Heauen How is this Doctrine opposed By sundry errors 1. Of the Pelagians who denie that Originall sinne is deriued by propagation to posteritie but say it is conueyed only by imitation and example They also affirme that death is the condition of mans nature although Adam had not fallen Also that Adams sinne hurt no man but himselfe onely Also they say that infants when they are borne doe not bring with them a prauitie of nature resisting the law of God contrarie to Pauls assertion Rom. 5 12. 2. By the Monkes who denie that Originall sinne is a sin worthy of death but either a guiltinesse onely of another mans faults or onely a fewell and matter to feede sinne contrarie to Pauls speach Ephes 2.3 where he saith VVe are the children of wrath Also they determine that it is onely in the bodie in the senses and inferiour faculties but not in the minde and will Also that by Baptisme not only the guilte but the euill and prauitie of concupiscence is taken away that concupiscence is not a sinne but a natuall appetite or desire that it is onely in the sensual appetite giuen vnto man that by striuing with it he may more more be sharpened to follow vertue and may binde God to himselfe by his greater desert Also they say that infants damned for Original sin only haue not poena sensus no punishment of feeling in their bodies but only poena damni or punishment by losse of the sight and enioying of God although it be credible that those are more gently to bee punished in whom originall sinne hath not yet broke forth into workes Also that Marie the mother of our Lord was conceiued borne without originall sin which iudgment also they hold of Iohn Baptist therefore that Christ died not for Marie and Iohn Baptist because he died for originall sinne onely which they wanted yet Mary reioyced in God her Sauiour and Iohn confesseth that he is not worthie to beare the shoes of Christ 3 Of those who say the corruption onely of nature is imputed to vs not the guilt also of Adam and contrarily of those who say the guilt and not the corruption is to be vnderstood by the name of originall sinne 4 Of those Papists who hold that onely actuall sinnes are forbidden by the law and that therefore a man may satisfie the Lawe 5 Of the adherents of Flauius Illiricus who teach that it is not an accident but the verie nature of man and the substance thereof corrupted contrarie to that saying of Paule Rom. 7.21 Sinne is present with me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and contrarie to those testimonies which teach that God is author of mans nature euen since his fall and also against those places whereby wee learne that Christ tooke our humane nature and substance and redeemed man but not sinne 6 Of the Philosophers who call that only sinne which resisteth reason whereas reason it selfe can doe nothing but erre vntill it be enlightened by the light of God 7 Of the Libertines who define and restraine sin to be only that wherein a man thinketh himselfe to sinne 8 The blasphemie of the Manichees who say that sinnes proceed of God ❧ The sixteenth Place of Actuall sinne VVhat is actuall sinne IT is a fruit of Originall sinne when the lawe of God is actually violated to wit euery action affection speech or omission disaagreeing with Gods will whereby a man becomes guiltie anew and is guiltie of Gods anger and eternall death Of which Iames speaketh 1.15 Concupiscence after it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne and sinne finished bringeth forth death whereby Concupiscence he vnderstandeth the roote that is Originall sinne by sinne finished
remembrance Looke vpon his wounds when he hung on the tree his bloud vvhen he died the price vvherevvith he redeemed vs. Hee hath his bodie so placed on the crosse as he bovveth it to kisse thee his armes spread to embrace thee his vvhole bodie giuen vs to redeeme thee Consider hovv great things these are vveigh these things in the ballance of your heart that he may be vvholy fastened in your heart vvho for your sakes vvas vvholy fastened to the crosse Hovv is the passion of Christ applied vnto vs By the word by faith and the Sacraments for by the word he is offered as by the hand of God by faith he is receiued as by the hand of man by the Sacraments he is sealed vp vnto vs. What opinions are against the sacrifice and passion of Christ 1 The blasphemy of the Marcionites and Manichees who affirmed that Christ did not suffer truly but imaginarily and in appearance to men 2 The blasphemy of the Papists whereby they affirme that Christ is still offered daily vnto the father by priestes in the Masse and that really for the quicke and the dead contrarie to that which is said Heh 10.14 vvith one offering hath he consecrated for euer them vvhich are sanctified 3 The righteousnesse which is of works Pardons Inuocations of Saints that forged Purgatorie and whatsoever men deuise thereby to make satisfaction for sinne The foure and twentieth common Place Of the buriall of Christ VVhat is buriall or burying IT is a proceeding of death and so also a confirmation of death for not liuing but dead men vse to be buried The Latine word Sepultura Buriall is deriued a sepeliendo or a sepiendo because the corps is enclosed and fensed with earth stone or some other matter and is laid vp in the graue or tombe But Funerare or Pollincere is to make readie the bodie for buriall by washing anointing and the like complements a Gen. 50.26 Math. 26.20 Mat. 27.60 1 Cor. 15 4 Wherupon Pollinctores were a seuerall sort of men from Libintiarii But what was the buriall of Christ It is a part of Christs abasing whereby after death his bodie being seuered from the soule was laid in a Sepulchre according to the fashion of the Iewes b yet so as this was a preparatiue and enterance to the glorie of his resurrection VVhat is the chiefe cause thereof God who not onely hath engrauen in the minds of men the custome and manner of burying according to that Gen. 3.19 Earth thou art and to dust thou shalt returne as the auncient examples of the Saints who were buried doe testifie c Gen. 23.4 15. 49.29 50 13. 2 King 13 3 Tob. 4 3 and the depriuation of buriall which is reckoned amonst the signes of Gods wrath d Psal 79.3 2 King 6.35 Ierem 14.16 22 19. but did also specially ordaine all things which were done about Christs buriall VVho were the ministers and meanes of this burial Noble and rich men who were of the degree of Senators Ioseph of Arimathea which some thinke to be the same with Ramathaim e 1. Sam. 1.1 and Nicodemus who were the Disciples of the Lord but in srcret through the feare of the Iewes f Ioh 3 2 19 38 and who as gratefull Disciples performed to their well deseruing maister the honour of buriall when as there appeared no danger or but very little whom whilest he liued he durst not confesse For when the open and professed Disciples of Christ were dispersed and hid themselues for feare they then stirred vp confirmed by God tooke the bodie of Iesus being giuen them by Pilate that it should not fall into the hands of the rascall executioners who were wont to cast the bodies of theeues into stinking pits whereby it appeareth how great the power of Christs death was who made these men so coragious as they feared not to attempt an enterprise most base and daungerous namely to take downe from the crosse a man condemned by the authoritie of the whole councill and the President and by this their deed to accuse their iudgement of iniustice and impietie whereby also they incurred extreame danger for his sake and in the extremest ignominy which Christ suffered what time he was hanged betwixt two theeues they professed themselues his Disciples how much more doth it now become vs so to doe when he raigneth in glorie What was the manner of his buriall Ioseph as it is recorded Mat. 27.58 went with a bold courage to aske Pilate the bodie of Iesus of whom he obtained it after he had vnderstood certainly by the centurion that hee was dead Mark 15.44 so God vseth to blesse those who earnestly and vprightly go about his busines which pertainineth to the publike weale and benefit Nicodemus in the meane while prepared a mixture of myrrhe and aloes which things do preserue bodies from putrefaction to the weight of an hundred pounds Ioh. 19.39 And so they both come and openly with their owne handes take the naked bodie of Christ from the Crosse and wrapped it in cleane linnens with those pretious odours after the maner which the Iewes vsed with their Nobles in hope of the resurrection and also hereby to signifie that Christ would rest in a pure minde well seasoned and spiced with sweet smelling vertues Yet it was annointed because they could not do it by reason of the shortnes of time For the Sabath was at hand on which day it was not lawfull to do any worke and the women a Ioh 20.1 Mark 16 when the Sabbath was ended came to the Sepulchre to annoint Iesus but he was now risen againe Yet those spices were which thing belongeth to God types of that quickening odour which ariseth from Christs death And God would by this glorious buriall declare the innocencie of Christ and abolish for the most part the ignominie of the crosse according as Esaias had foretold and his sepulcher shall be glorious cap. 11.10 VVhat are the subiectes and adiuncts of Christes buriall The place the time the shutting vp and keeping of the Sepulchre Where vvas the Lord buried 1 In a garden planted with herbs and trees next vnto the place where he was crucified in which place Ioseph had his Sepulcher that in the verie place of his delights he might be admonished of death by the beholding of the monument 1 Because the first Adam died spiritually in a garden 2 Because as Cyril saith there is prepared for vs a returne into Paradise by the death of Christ 3 To shew the plentiful fruit which should grow to all that beleeue from his death and buriall 4 Because from the crosse there is a passage to Paradise Againe he is buried in a Sepulchre 1. Hevven out of a rocke least the aduersaries should cauill that the Lordes bodie was stolne by his Disciples through some vaults vnder the ground 2 In a new one that we might know how that the condition of death is chaunged
by his merit and because of the mysterie of a nevv breast wherein the Lord reioyceth to dwell 3 He is buried in a Sepulchre wherein no man vvas buried before that his resurrection might not be slaundered as if some other rose againe saith Theophylact that is that they should not deuise this slaunder as to say that some one or more other did rise againe and not Christ himselfe or that he rose againe by the touching or power of another who had beene buried before in the same verie place as wee read of him 2. King 13.21 who being cast into the Sepulcher of Elizeus reuiued when he had touched his bones 4 In an other mans Sepulchre because as Augustine saith he died and was buried for other mens saluation What fell out about the buriall of Christ A great stone was rolled to the doore of the Sepulche first because so was the manner 2 Least the bodie of the Lord should lie open to the abuse of the aduersaries 3 By Gods counsell and prouidence to giue the greater certaintie of his resurrection and to take away all suspicion of deceipt and taking away of his bodie Moreouer they sealed it vp and warded it both these being done not without the singular prouidence of God namely that the most hatefull enemies of Christ by whose seale and custodie the Sepulchre of Chist was garded might against their wils be compelled to acknowledge the resurrection which soone after followed And to this vse also euen at this day remaineth the Sepulchre of Christ vnuiolated For although the Turks do keepe it for gaine sake which they reape in no small measure by them who trauel thither for religion sake yet God would haue it extant that it might be a monument of the historie of Christs death buriall and resurrection How long did he lie in the graue Not so long as Ionas lay in the fishes belly to wit three naturall daies a Ion. 2.2 Math. 12 4● for neyther was it necessarie that the truth should in all things answere the type But we must know that whereas Christ then hasted vnto the victorie as it were the Scripture by a Synecdoche doth giue the appellation of the whole thing to the beginning and end thereof and putteth the space of three daies for the time which raught unto three daies For on that verie day that Christ died which day we call Friday three whole hours after his death his funerall was prepared and his corps committed to buriall this is the first day of Christs buriall 2 The day following he lay in the Sepulchre all the Sabbath according to the manner of the Iewes who reckon a naturall day consisting of foure and twentie houres from euening to euening This is the second day 3 In the beginning of the day following which was the first of the weeke and it is called Sunday before the day grew light he rested twelue houres or thereabout in the Sepulchre and rose againe on the same day wherupon it is called of vs the Lords day Therefore from Christs death to his resurrection passed almost fortie houres And three daies are reckoned because as Augustine saith the first day is taken according to the last part therof the second as it is whole and entire the third in regard of the first part thereof And so there are three daies and euerie one of these daies hath his night But why did the Lord rest the whole Sabbath in his Sepulchre Because as God hauing finished the worke of creation on the sixt day rested the seuenth day Gen. 1.31 and 2.2 So the Sonne of God hauing accomplished the worke of our redemption vpon the crosse on the sixt day of the weeke rested the seuenth day in the Sepulchre that this resting of Christ in the graue may be a document and instruction to the faithfull that they are spiritually to rest from the works of sinne in this life as also a pledge and signe vnto them of their eternall rest from all labour after this life and with all that we must keepe holy the Sabbath day How came it to passe that the bodie of Christ was all that while preserued from corruption Not by vertue of the spices with which he was not embalmed but in that the cause of corruption is from sinne now there was no sinne eyther in the flesh or bones of Christ yea he had no longer no other mens sinne which was imputed vnto him for he had abolished it by his death which was past VVhat are the ends of Christs buriall 1 That it might appeare he was truely dead 2 That he might pursue and ouercome death flying as it were into his lowest denne and so the expiation of our sinnes made by his death might be grounded on a more firme testimonie 3 That he might burie our sinnes together with himselfe in his graue and might for euer hide them from the sight of God 4 That we being made partakers of his buriall might be also our selues buried in sinne 5 That he might sanctifie our burying places and perfume them with the quickening odour of his death and so might take from vs all feare of the graue and confirme vnto vs the hope of our resurrection VVhat be the effects of it 1 That as when Ionas was cast into the Sea hid in the fishes belly the tempest was calmed Iona 11 15 so Christ being cast out from the number of the liuing and hidden in the Sepulchre all the tempests of Gods wrath which were raised against our sinnes are pacified at the appearance of the milde countenance of our God and Sauiour 2 That as he rescued his bodie from the effect of death that is the dissolution of his bodie so by the same power he will bring our bodies to incorruption so that now buriall is like a seed time in which our bodies being laid in the earth when they being dissolued by it shall haue put of their corruption 1 Cor. 13.30 42 43. they shall hereafter in the last day rise againe glorious and excellent 3 The burying of the olde man or of sinne which by little and little dieth in us in which respect Rom. 6.4 we are said to be buried together with him into his death that being dead vnto sinne we may no more liue in it fulfilling the desires thereof but may rest from ill Whereupon Ambrose saith that The buriall of Christ is the rest of a Christian What is the vse of it 1 That for as much as Christ hath hid our sinnes in his graue that we should not seeke to dig them vp and bring them againe to light For this were to violate the Sepulchre of Christ and to commit sacriledge 2 That we should take care for the buriall of the dead that it be honest and inuiolated and that the bodies of the dead be not neglected or vexed against the law of humanitie which when they liued were the instruments and temples of the holy Ghost if they were the bodies of
compassed me and the griefes of the graue caught mee when I found trouble and sorrow 4 According to some mens interpretation it signifieth the generall state and condition of the dead whether the good estate of the aged or the euill of the wicked 5 In others iudgement it signifieth the extreemest degree of humiliation What signifieth the word Descending 1 It properly signifieth a motion from a high place to a lower 2 By a tropicall speech it signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the descending of Christ or the last degree of his humiliation ●s Ephes 4.10 He that descended that is he that made himselfe base and of no reputation and taking vpon himselfe the forme of a seruant subiected himselfe to the miserable condition of this earthly life he is euen the same that ascended aboue all heauens What therfore is the meaning of this article He descended into hell It is diuers accordingly as the simple words are taken in diuers significations What is the first The first interpretation is of them that thinke these words are added for better explanation sake against the heresie of the Valentinians and that no other thing is heereby meant then that Christ was truly dead and laid in his graue as other men who haue beene dead and buried VVhat thinke you of this exposition That it is too sleight and trifling because it is not likely that the buriall of Christ being declared in plaine words should be deliuered in a more obscure forme of speech neither doth such a rep●tition of the same thing befit such a briefe and compendious rehearsall of the chiefe heads of our faith What is the second It is Hieromes and the Papists who thinke that Christs soule being separated from the bodie came to a certaine place which they call Limbus patrum to wit the vpper part or an vpper roome as it were of hell in which there are no punishments but onely a depriuation of a better and more perfect good In which place they say the Spirits of the faithfull fathers did remaine before Christs incarnation from whence afterwards the soule of Christ comming thither in deed did bring them with himselfe into heauen Which thing they go about to confirme out of Mathew 27.52 Many besides of the Saints rose againe either with Christ or after him and 1. Pet. 3.19 By which also he went and preached vnto the spirits which are in prison and 4.6 for vnto this purpose also was the Gospell preached vnto the dead Doe you like this opinion No 1 for such a place cannot be proued by any testimonie of Scripture 2 Because we read that not all the Saints bodies but some only rose againe with Christ to testifie the power of Christs resurrection whereby life is restored to vs. 3 The place 1. Pet. 3.16 Is manifestly to be vnderstood concerning Christs spirit which preached repētance by the mouth of Noah to the disobedient and wicked and the place in the fourth Chapter is to be vnderstood of the Gospell which was preached to them which were dead in former times that is which were indeed aliue when they were preached vnto but were dead at what time this was spoken of them Also because this opinion doth not a little detract from the power of Christs sacrifice the price whereof is infinite and extendeth it selfe vnto all times according to that which was said Apoc. 13.8 The Lambe was slaine from the beginning of the world Therefore Abraham was deliuered from hell by the merit of Christs sacrifice no lesse then Paule or any one of the godly that died after Christ was giuen for our redemption What is the third opinion The third is of them who thinke that Christ did indeed descend into the place of hell But this opinion is diuided three waies For some there are who say that the soule of Christ did go downe thither whilest his bodie lay in the graue that there it might suffer for the soules of men Which opinion is by three reasons confuted 1 Because the bloud of Christ is a most perfect expiation for all the world a Iohn 1.7 2 It is confuted by Christs saying vpon the crosse It is finished Ioh. 19.30 Therefore he had no more to suffer when as death made an end of his torments 3 Because Christ endured horrible torments in his soule whilest it was yet in his bodie as is manifest by that terrible crying My God my God c. Mat. 27.46 which shooke both heauen earth 2 Others say that the soule of Christ descended into hell not that it might suffer any thing there but that as in his bodie he had preached vpon earth the Gospell to them who were liuing so being dead he might in his spirit preach the Gospell to them in hell which opinion commeth neere to the second of those formerly repeated by vs. But to what purpose had this beene seeing after death there is no place left for preaching and repentance Moreouer he commended his spirit into the hands of his father and said vnto the theefe This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise where vndoubtedly there is no hell Luke 23.43.46 3 The fathers for the most part of them do labour to shew that in the very earthquake momët of his resurrectiō Christ did prese●t himself aliue to thē in hell shewed himselfe not so much in wordes as in deede conquerour of death and of the Prince of darknesse and that Sathan had no more power ouer the elect and that hee had a name giuen him aboue all names that at the name of Iesus euerie knee should bow both of things in heauen and things in the earth and things vnder the earth Phil. 2.10 For this cause Augustine saith thus The whole Sonne was with the Father the whole Sonne in the wombe of the virgin the whole in heauen the whole in the earth the whole on the Crosse and the whole in Hell VVhat thinke you of this iudgement of the Fathers I dare not condemne it seeing it is not against the holy Scriptures and hath in it no absurditie And the consent of Fathers when as it manifestly doth not disagree with the Scriptures is not lightly to be accounted of Yea more this opinion may seeme probable to be gathered out of the Apostles words Ephes 4.9 Now that he ascended aboue all heauens what is it else but that hee had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth For here there is a manifest opposition betwixt aboue all heauens and the lowest part of the earth But the first is taken according to the letter therefore also the second as it seemeth must be vnderstood according to the letter but there is no part of the earth lower then hell which is the place of the damned Although others by the lowest parts vnderstand simply the whole earth which is the lowest part of the world into which Christ descended and liued in it for many yeares What is the fourth opinion Of them who saie that
place Of Christs Resurrection VVhat is meant by rising againe THat properly riseth againe saith Hierom which before fell by dying and therfore neither the diuinitie nor soule of Christ properly but the same bodie which fell by death rose again Notwithstāding the Resurrection of Christ belongeth also to his soule but in some respect onely that is so farr forth as by the resurrection it was restored to the owne body What therefore is the resurrection of Christ It is the first degree of his exaltation whereby he according to his humane nature by the power of God putting off infirmity mortality his soule returning into his bodie reuiuing came the third day out of the Sepulcre as conquerour tryumphed gloriously ouer death hell that he might quicken all that beleeue in him and that the dead being raised againe in the last day he as a king of the Church might giue to all the elect a ioyfull victorie and immortall life casting the wicked away into perpetuall torments By what power did Christ rise againe Not by any power begged from others or any power of a nature created but by the proper power of his Godhead Iohn 10.18 No man taketh my life from mee but I lay it downe of my selfe I haue power to lay it downe and I haue power to take it againe For which cause his true Doctrine is shewed by his resurrection Rom. 1.4 in these words And declared mightily to be the sonne of God touching the spirit of sanctification by his rising from the dead Yet because the workes of the trinitie ad extrà without are vndiuided therefore this rising againe being taken actiuely is attributed both to Christ himselfe to the father and the holy Ghost Ephes 1.20 according to his mightie power VVhich he vvrought in Christ vvhen hee raised him from the dead and set him at his right hand in heauenly places Also Coloss 2.12 and Rom. 8.11 If the spirit of him that hath raised Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that hath raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his spirit vvhich quickneth dvvelleth in you For that power wherby Christ was raised againe is essentially common to the three persons Did the humanity of Christ vvorke together vvith the Godhead in his resurrection According to the Diuine nature Christ himselfe wrought his resurrection a 2. Cor. 13 14. he suffered through the infirmitie of the flesh and liueth by the povver of God But properly hee rose againe according to the humane nature which obeyed the Godhead raising it vp and moued it selfe as the will and power of the Godhead directed it Wherupon came this common effect or worke of both natures Death was swallowed vp in victorie 1. Cor. 15.54 the Resurrection is attributed to the whole Christ b Rom. 1 4. but actiuely according to the spirit of sanctification passiuely according to the flesh From whence is the confirmation and certaine knowledge of Christs resurrection to be taken From the adiuncts or testimonies both those which went before which concurred at the time of it and which came after VVhat are the testimonies going before Partly prophecies partly figures or types by which the resurrection of Christ was aforehand signifyed Prophecies are euident and plaine affirmations concerning the resurrection of Christ which was to come As among others these 1. Out of Moses Gen. 3.15 The seede of the woman shall bru●e the head of the Serpent that is Christ shall ouercome sinne death and Sathan which he could not do otherwise then by rising againe 2. And Psal 16.8 where Dauid in the person of Christ saith Thou wilt not leaue my soule in the graue nor suffer thine holy one to see corruption 3. Out of the Prophets Esai 53.10 VVhen he shall make his soule an offering for sinne he shall see his seede and shall prolong his daies and the will of the Lord shall prosper in his hand therefore hee shall rise againe And Daniel 9.24 saith that Christ shall bee slaine and yet hee ascribeth to him a perpetual kingdome in which iniquitie shall be taken away euerlasting righteousnesse brought in place Therefore he foresaw that Christ should be raised againe Which prophecies are proued true by the euenr What figures of the resurrection were there 1. Adam who was cast into a sleepe againe raised vp out of whose side whilest he slept was Eua made Gen. 2.21.22 was a type of Christ who died was raised again out of whose side being opened issued forth both water bloud by which the Church was bred and purged 2. Isaac who was laid on a pile of wood and was deliuered by an Angel a Gen. 21.9.11 was a type of our Redeemer who died so for vs in regard of his humanitie in his sacrifice for vs that notwithstanding in regard of his Diuinity he remained immortall 3. Ioseph who was cast into prison afterward brought out againe and aduanced to great honours b Gen· 39.20 41.41 did resemble Christ rising again from death who receiued the rule of heauen and earth 4. As Samson when he was shut vp the city gates being locked did notwithstand securely go forth breaking the lock and carying away the gates c Iudg. 16.3 so the Lord opening the Sepulcre which was sealed vp was deliuered from death 5. Ionas being cast quick out of the fishes belly d Mat. 12.5 40 resembled Christ who came out of the graue aliue To conclude Dauid hauing scaped so oft out of persecution and being aduanced to the kingdom did shadow forth the death resurrection of the Lord. And what is the vse of all this which hath beene said That our faith may therby be confirmed for the certainety of our faith as Augustine saith consisteth in this that all things which haue bin foretold of Christ haue fallen out vpon Iesus the son of Marie Therefore he is the true Messiah and Sauiour of the world What are the adiuncts of Christs resurrection which cōcurred with it The time At what time did Christ die and was raised aaaine At that very time when the Patriarch Iacob foretold that he should come whilest Moses his forme of gouernment yet lasted stood but bended to ruine Gen. 49 10. The Scepter shall not be taken from Iuda and the lawgiuer from betweene his feete vntill Silo come And Daniell doth expresse the verie yeare of his passiō Whence may be perceiued the certainty of gods promises and our faith concerning the promises not yet fulfilled is confirmed and the error of the Iewes who holde the messiah is not yet come is confuted At what time of the yeare did he rise againe In the Springe time that the time it selfe might admonish put vs in minde of the power of Christes death and resurrection as Lactantius hath elegantly expressed it in these verses Ecce renascentis testatur gratia mundi Omnia cum domino dona redisse suo Namque renascenti
female sexe 3. To the two Disciples Cleophas and his fellowe as they were going to Emaus c Luk 24.13 31. of whome when hee was not discerned at the first because their eyes were held from discerning him hee was afterwards knowne of them in the breaking of bread their eyes beeing then opened and againe hee vanished from them not in respect of himselfe absolutelie but in respect of his Disciples and therefore it is added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from them that is hee ceased to bee seene of them who notwithstanding in himselfe was visible Which came to passe either because of his sodaine departure from them or because their sight was againe dimmed that they could not see him 4. To Simon Peter alone Luk. 24.34 d 1. Cor 15 d 1 Cor. 15.5 5. To the Apostles the eleuen as Marke hath it e Mark 16.14 or as Paule the 12. f 1. Cor. 15.5 they being so called because of the cōmon title of their society fraternity being gathered together all saue Thomas at Ierusalem Vnto whome he entring Iohn 20.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gates being shut not through the gates being shut but after the gates were shut and no man opened to him seeing the wall or gates by the almightie power of God might in one moment make entrance to his bodie which pierced them in a moment and the creature shall giue place to the Creator he stood in the middest of them and when they doubted whether it were hee hee gaue himselfe to bee seene and handled of them And proued his bodie to bee a true bodie and tooke away all suspition of spirituall entrance penetration of dimensions incircumscription inuisibilitie illocability and lastly of the appearing of a Ghost g Mark 16 14. Luk. 24 26 Iohn 20 19 seq What appearances made hee in the daies following Sixe 1. On the eight day after the resurrection he appeared to his Disciple Thomas being present when he entred againe to them the gates being shut h Iohn 20 26. 2. At the sea of Tyberias he appeared to seauen of his Disciples who were fishermen a Iohn 21.1.2.3 3. To eleuen Disciples at once in a certaine mountaine of Galilie as he had appointed with them b Math 28 16 4. To more then 500. brethren at once c 1 cor 15.6 5. To Iames by himselfe d Ibid v 7 concerning whom the testimonie of Paule is sufficient for vs. 6. On the verie day of his ascention hee appeared to the Apostles on mount Oliuet when he was taken vp into heauen out of their sight e Luk 24.50 Act. 1 6 12 Why doe not the Euangelists and Paule 1. Cor. 15.5 keepe a like order in rehearsing his appearances but some haue not some some other appearances That not so much the order of the appearances which might bee also greater as the trueth of his resurrection in which our saluation standeth might bee regarded and that varietie might euidently proue that the Euangelists did not agree and deuise amongst themselues to write those Histories but that they might shew that the Lord rose againe truely But why appeared he not to all or at least to the chiefe Priests and Elders of the people 1. Because as the kingdome of Christ is not of this world a Io. 18.36 so neither doth it depend of mans patronage 2. As with God there is a time of mercie so also there is a time of iudgement 3. Because the resurrection of Christ was foretold by the Prophets publickly preached by the Apostles proclaimed to all nations and confirmed enough and more then enough by testimonies which followed the ascension as First by the visible giuing of the holy Ghost in the day of Pentecost 2. By the gift of tongues 3. By the admirable audacitie and confidence which appeared in the Apostles 4. By the efficacie of the Gospell in conuerting very many 5. By the miracles done by the Apostles by inuocation of Christ f Act. 2.2.43 3.6 4 13.31.33 6. By the appearance of the Lord himselfe vnto Stephen when he was stoned g Act. 7 55 and to Paule when he went to Damascus h Ac● 9.3 1 Cor 15.8 17. By the preseruation of the Church according to Christs promises Mat. 16.18 The gates of hell shall not preuaile against it 8. By Baptisme and the Supper of the Lordi. 9. Lastly by the feeling of Christ dwelling in the hearts of the godly and by the earnest of the spirit 4. Because the condition of Christs kingdome which is of grace is this that it is not manifest to bodily eyes but to the eies of the minde and faith according to that Iohn 20.29 Blessed are they who haue not seene and beleeue 1 Rom 6 4 How differ the Resurrection of Christ and of other dead men 1. In the efficient cause for Christ rose againe by his owne power that which no man besides himselfe could euer do 2. In the end for others who haue beene raised vp haue risen againe subiect to the miseryes of this life and being to die againe But Christ first swallowing vp mortalitie and laying away at once all the infirmities of mans life rose againe vnto immortality a Rom. 6. ● 3. By the effectes What manner one was Christ when he rose againe Wholy glorious 1. In respect of the Diuinitie for whereas before it was hid in Christ now it was fully manifested and reuealed 2. In respect of his humanitie because all infirmities and accidentall properties with which Christ was borne as also all aduersities and miseries and all necessities of hauing meate drinke sleepe c. being laid away it was fully and to the highest degree of perfection adorned with new qualities but such as were created aboue besides the common order of nature as in the soule wisdome ioyfulnes c. In the bodie incorruptibilitie subtilitie nimblenesse brightnesse and shining through the power of the Godhead dwelling in it by which also it was exalted farre aboue all creatures b Psal 45.7.8 But the essentiall properties of it being still kept so that his body being now in glorie is still according to the ordinarie dispensation of nature to be seene and felt composed of instrumentall parts finite and conteined in place as Christ himselfe after his resurrection teacheth See ye my hands and my feete for it is euen I my selfe For a Spirit hath no flesh and bone as yee see me haue Luk. 24.39 For whome did Christ rise againe Onely for and to the elect for the vngodly shal rise againe not because of Christs resurrection but by the iust iudgement of God they shall rise againe vnto eternall damnation and by the force of that sanction and decreee which was added to the commaundement giuen to Adam Gen. 2.17 In what day thou shalt eate of the tree of the knowledge of good and euill thou shalt die the death namely as well the first as
humanitie because as Augustine saith he gaue vnto it immortalitie but tooke not from it the proper nature thereof but by distributing the gifts of the Spirit into the hearts of all the elect in what place soeuer they be To the same purpose a●so Iohn saith cap. 7.39 The spirit was not yet giuen because Christ was not yet glorified 3 Away was opened for vs into our heauenly countrie for till that time Paradise was kept with a flaming sword but by Christs ascension heauen was opened from which we were by Adams transgression excluded 4 Possession of our heauēly inheritance is taken in all our behalfs so that we do not now in a bare hope only expect saluatiō but do indeed possesse it in our hart in our fl●sh Eph. 2.6 God hath raised him vp hath made vs sit togither with him in the heauēly places Therfore Tertullian speaketh thus Euen as he hath left vnto vs the earnest of the spirit so also he hath taken of vs the earnest of the flesh hath caried into heauen a pledge for the whole summe whith hereafter shall be receiued of him there Be ye therefore secure ye flesh and bloud for ye haue taken possession both of heauē the kingdom therof in Christ 5 As Leuit. 16.2 The high Priest yearely entred within the veile into the most holy place not without bloud that he might stand before God in the behalfe of the people so Christ is entred into heauen to make intercession for us as it is said Heb. 9.24 Christ is not entred into the holy places that are made with hands which are similitudes of the true Sanctuarie but is entred into verie heauen to appeare now in the sight of God for vs. Where he so turneth the eies of God vpon his owne righteousnes as he turneth them away from our sinnes and maketh vs a way to his throne and causeth him to become mercifull and gracious vnto vs who otherwise was very terrible to wretched sinners VVhat is the vse of this 1 That in the fear of sin death we may fly to the ascensiō of christ which is a most certain seale to vs of his cōquest ouer our enemies 2 That in temptation we may assure our selues there is one for vs in heauen which maketh intercession for vs and reconcileth vnto vs the father 1. Ioh. 2.1 My babes these things write I vnto you that ye sinne not and if any man sinne we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust 3 That by our hope of ascending to him hereafter we should comfort our selues in our losses 4 That seeing our bodie now liueth and reigneth in heauen and our conuersation is there we should abandon the delights of this life and aspire vnto heauenly things Coloss 3.1 If ye haue risen againe with Christ seeke the things that are aboue 5 That wee know how he seeth all things that all things are open to his eies a Heb 4.13 so that there is now no cause why we should be faint hearted VVhat is against this doctrine of Christs ascension 1 The position of the Vbiquitaries who make a doubt of the asascension who by ascending vnderstand vanishing or becomming inuisible as though in Christs ascension there were no motion of his bodie from place to place but onely a change so that he who before was visibly conuersant in the earth now being become invisible is notwithstāding truly corporally but yet inuisibly present with vs the same Sectaries make heauen the same thing that glory is and also make heauen a certain spirituall place without body which is euerywhere But this their doing is nothing else but to confound mingle the highest thing with the lowest and the lowest with the highest to denie the truth of Christs body 2 The manners of them who fauour their wicked affections are fast bound to this earth who do follow the works of the flesh and do by their deeds testifie they haue little care of heauenly things and by their vngodlines do rather plunge themselues into hell then labour to clime vp to heauen The eight and twentieth common Place Of the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the Father Is the sitting of Christ at the right hand of his father a d●stinct article from that of his ascension IT is For Saint Mark in his 16 chapter and 19. verse doth manifestly distinguish them when he saith that the Lord after he had spoken vnto them was receiued into heauē sat at the right hand of God Besides the ascension into heauen if ye respect the change of place is common to the word Incarnate to the Angels to Elias and the rest of the elect But to which of the Angels hath he said at anie time sit thou at my right hand Heb. 1.13 Therefore his sitting neither can nor ought to be confounded with his ascending What signifieth the right hand The right hand and left are proper differences of corporall positions are proper to man and not to God who is a spirit hauing no body Io. 4.24 and therfore hath neither right nor left side but is altogether vnmeasurable and infinite But because in the right hand a mans strength both most consisteth and is most perspicuous and the right hand is most fit for any action or exploit and more vsuall for the confirmation of faith therefore sometimes the right hand of a man is taken for a mans power stength hope or promise which he maketh as Psal 144.8 Their right hand is a right hand of falshood Moreouer from men by the Figure Metaphora or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is tra●slated vnto God And then 1. It signifyeth as the hand and the arme do the verue power helpe of God as Psa 44.3 Their owne arme shall not saue them but thy right hand and thy arme and the light of thy countenance And Act. 2.33 By the right hand of God Christ is exalted· 2 It signifieth the maiestie authoritie glorie and honour of the diuinitie Psal 110.1 Christ is commaunded to sit at the right hand of the Father 3 It signifieth the place of blisse and happines which we shall enioy in the life euerlasting Psal 16.11 At thy right hand are pleasures for euermore And Ephes 1 20· and he set him at his right hand in heauenly places VVhat signifieth sitting It properly signifieth that manner of setting of the bodie that is opposite to standing or motion But by the figure Metalepsis it signifieth to dwell to abide to conuerse to rest and sitting signifieth dwelling as Luke 24.49 Tarie ye in the Citie of Ierusalem vntill ye be endued with power from on high in the originall it is sit ye After which sort we say of a man he staied in that countey three yeares or he sate there three yeares Secondly it signifieth to rule and gouerne as 1. King 1 30. Salomon my sonne shall sit vpon my throne after mee and Pro. 20.8 A king that sitteth in
Whereupon Gregorie in his homilie of the Ascention To sit saith hee is proper to him that iudgeth to stand proper to him that fighteth and defendeth Stephen therefore beeing in the laboure and trauell of his combat saw him standing whome hee had for his helper but then after his ascention Marke describes him sitting because after the glorie of his Ascention hee shall in the end bee seene as a Iudge thus farre Saint Gregorie Doth not the omnipresence or the beeing euery where of his bodie follow vpon the sitting of Christ at the right hand of his Father seeing the right hand of the Father at which he sitteth is euerie where Surely no no more then eternitie or vncorporallenesse doth inasmuch as the same right hand is without bodie and eternall 2. The bodie is not said to bee the right hand but figuratiuely To sit at the right hand Now it is no good argument to reason from a figuratiue speach to a proper 3. Wee shall also be placed at the right hand of Christ and yet we shall not be euery where 4. A man may raigne in many seuerall places although hee bee not essentially in them and therefore it is but a least to make the essence of Christs humanitie to stretch as farre as his rule and gouernment or on the contrarie to hemme in his power and essence within the same limits Neither doth this sitting take away the essentiall properties of his humane nature which beeing taken away the nature of man should not bee glorified but vtterly abolished But what then is not Christ euery where Hee is but by communication of properties to signifie that great coniunction of two natures in Christ alone according to that Iohn 3.13 No man ascendeth vp into Heauen but he that hath descended from Heauen the Sonne of man which is in Heauen For Christ is so one as that which is proper vnto him in regard onely of one of his natures is sometimes attributed to whole Christ in respect of the vnitie of his person How many parts are there of this sitting Two 1. Exceeding great glorie and that both humane and inherent in the humane nature as in a subiect and by habituall grace shining ouer euery Creature and also Diuine proceeding from the deitie dwelling in humane nature In this respect Act. 7.55.56 Stephen sawe the glorie of God and the heauens open and Christ sitting at the right hand of the father that is in an estate exeeeding glorious or shining with the Diuine and humane nature 2. A full administration of a kingdome whereby Christ being so exceeding glorious doth exercise dominion ouer all things created in heauen and in earth Ephe. 1.20.21 22. This Iesus when he raised him from the dead hee set him at his right hand in heauen farre aboue all principalitie and power and might and Dominion and euery name that is named not onely in this world but also in that that is to come And 1. Pet. 3.22 which is at the right hand of God gone into heauen to vvhome the Angels and powers and might are subiect VVhat is the end 1. That such exceeding maiestie and glorie might follow such extreame humiliation and infamie 2. That he might enioy most blessed rest both in body and in soule 3. That both heauenly and earthly creatures might looke vp vnto his maiestie might bee gouerned by his hand attend vpon his becke and might be subiect to his power Phil. 2.9.10 God hath highly exalted him giuen him a name aboue euerie name that at the name of Iesus euery knee should bow both of things in heauen things in earth things vnder the earth What are the effectes or fruites 1. That he subdueth all his and his seruants enemies 2. Hee gouerneth his seruants by his spirit and by little little perfecteth them 3. By his intercession to his father and by the perpetuall force and efficacie of his sacrifice hee obtaineth peace for his seruants Heb. 7.25 Hee euer liueth to make intercession for them and he doth bring to passe that the father doth account all his seruants acceptable and beloued in his sonne and doth alwaies embrace thē with a fatherly affection and hee doth alwaies appeare before his father in heauen that as the onely Mediator hee may sanctifie their prayers by the sweete smelling sauour of his sacrifice and may offer them to his father and make them acceptable Rom. 8.34 Christ sitteth at the right hand of God and maketh request for vs. 4. Hauing all thinges in his power he doth most mightily defend and preserue his Chrurch yet militant on earth and that by diuers meanes against all the assaults of Sathan 5. Hee admitteth his members according to that they are able to receiue euen to the fellowshippe of his eternall glorie not only in potentia in power nor in right or in hope alone but euen in act but yet in himself as in the head as members ioyned vnto the head and that by a threefold maner of coniunction or knitting together 1. Of his eternall predestination whereby he hath chosen vs to bee his members 2. By the coniunction of his flesh whereby he hath coupled our flesh vnto himselfe by an hypostaticall vnion although not in generall for then it should agree with euery man to be the word of God as it agreeth with Christ but yet in the particuler and in indiuidno as Damascen speaketh in his first booke and 11. Chapter 3. By the coniunction of his spirit whereby communicating vnto vs his spirit he doth ioyne vs most neerely vnto himselfe and maketh vs flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones Ephe. 2.6 And hath raised vs vp together and hath made vs sit together in Heauen in Christ Iesus But in the world to come hee will indeed really admit vs to the fellowshippe of this eternall glorie in full possession For Mat. 25.23 Hee will place the sheepe on his right hand And Mat. 19.28 It is saide That wee shall sit together with Christ in heauen And 1. Cor. 6.2.3 that wee shal iudge the world and the Angels and shall raigne together with Christ Apoc. 3.21 To him that ouercommeth will I graunt to sit with me in my throne euen as I ouercame and sit with my father in his throne And Ioh. 17.24 Father I will that they vvhome thou hast giuen me be vvith me euenvvhere I am yet so that Christ as the head alwaies hath the preeminence What meaneth Christ then vvhen hee saith Mat. 20.23 To sit at my right hand and at my left hand is not mine to giue but it shall be giuen to them for vvhome it is prepared of my Father Hee speaketh according to their opinion by whome hee wa● demaunded and which dreamed of a kingdome of the Messias in this world neither doth hee derogate any thing from his owne power but declareth that it was not enioyned him by his father that hee should assigne vnto euery man a degree in the kingdom of heauen but that hee
seruants of God and 8.2 Christ hath set mee free from the law of sinne and death The other whereby wee shall bee wholy redeemed into full and perfect libertie a Epb 1 14. And this is called the redemption of liberty that is freedome of libertie or of deliuerance And Rom. 8.21 The glorious libertie of the sonnes of God b Luk. 21.28 And the redemption of our bodies Rom. 8.23 Wee may tearme that onely begun this perfect For though wee be made free by the first kinde of liberty yet in some part we are held in some slauerie by the power of sinne so as wee cannot doe that we would c Gal. 5.17 And the seruitude of corruption yea euen death it selfe doth hold vs fettered in her chaines vntill that day of redemption d Eph. 4.30 when Christ shall by his power set vs free being redeemed by himselfe For wee are onely saued by hope Rom. 8.24 and 1. Iohn 3.2 Now are we the sonnes of God free indeed e Mat 5.17.25 but it hath not yet appeared what we shall be but wee knowe that when he shall appeare wee shall bee like vnto him euen as he is Like vnto this shall that our deliuerance be or the restauration of the creature not of the Angels or of euery particuler man but of the frame of the heauens and of the elements whereby it shal be deliuered from the bondage of corruption whereunto now it is subiect into the libertie of the glorie of the sonnes of god that is into that happy estate of incorruption which shal be made manifest when the sonnes of God shal be exalted into glorie For there shal be new heauens and a new earth 2. Pet. 3.13 f 2 pet 3.21 Ro. 8 19.20 21 now in this place we doe especially speake of the first kinde of libertie What is christian libertie It is a spirituall liberty whereby we that truely beleeue are freed and sett at libertie by the bloud of Christ from the slauery of sinne and the tiranny of the deuill 2 From the accusation burthen and curse of the lawe the weight of Gods anger Damnation and eternall death 3 And being indued with the spirit of adoption of libertie illumination we are deliuered from the vaile of the heart that is from the miserable blindenes of error and the bondage of darknesse which was brought vpon vs by Adams sinne lastly from the yoke of the ceremonies of the law of meates drink daies of apparrell of the bodie and from such necessary obseruing of d●fference in thinges indifferent and so from all humane traditions to the end that wee might willingly and cheerefully as well in soule as in body serue God in righteousnesse and holinesse all the daies of our life Rom. 4.12.13.14 a 1. Cor. 9.27 Gal 3.45 Tit. 2.11 12 VVhat is the cause of this libertie The chiefe efficient cause is god the meritorious is Christ alone the deliuerer as Ioh. 8.36 It is expressly said If the sonne make you free you shal be free indeed And. Gal. 5.1 stand fast in that libertie whereby christ hath made you free For he hath purchased this libertie for vs with his owne pretious bloud b Col. 1.14 1. Pet. 1.18 The cooperator is the holy Ghost 2. Cor. 3.17 where the spirit of the Lorde is there is libertie who is also both the earnest and witnesser of the same There be two instrumentall causes namely the trueth or the gospell wherein this libertie is propounded Ier. 34.15 Behold I preach libertie Iohn 8.32 yee shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free And faith whereby it is imbraced Rom. 5.2 By faith are we brought into this grace wherein we stand the subiect is euery one that beleeueth whether Grecian or Iew whether male or female whether bond or free 1. Cor. 7.22 c Gal. 3.28 The manner or forme of this spirituall liberty is not perceiued by the sence of man but it is wrought secretly whilest that the soules of the faithfull are besprinkled and washed in the bloude of the sonne of God and are reformed by the holy ghost and their consciences purified by faith from dead workes to serue the liuing god Heb. 9.14 By which meanes it commeth to passe that this liberty wheresoeuer it is hath these accidents or properties righteousnesse peace a good conscience and ioy in the holy ghost a Rom. 14.17 1. Ti. 3.3 And therefore Ioseph inioyeth this liberty although a slaue and bound in prison b Gen. 39 20.21 Daniell sitting amongst the lions c Dan. 6.17 23. Lazarus full of botches and boiles d Luk. 16.20 22. In what thinges doth it consist or how manie partes hath it or how manie degrees be there of this libertie Foure 1. The first is a deliuerance from sinne and death which is wrought by the remission of sinne that it be not imputed by the mortifieng of the flesh least it preuaile and by freeing vs from the second death according to the saying of Paule Rom. 8 1.2 there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ For the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus that is the spirit of Christ or the grace of regeneration hath freed me from the lawe the authority and force of sinne and death and therefore this is called the libertie of righteousnesse d Col 1 14 Heb. 9.15 and of life and the remission of sinnes e Eph. 1.7 and transgressionsg. the lawe of the spirit of life that is Christs holinesse inherent in Christe which is in Christ Iesus himselfe hath freed me from the lawe of sinne and of death How are we said to be freed from sinne seing it doth alwaies dwell in vs and. Iohn 1.8 If ye say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs We must distinguish betweene sinne raigning and sinn subdued Rom. 6 6. c. so also betweene the matter and the forme of sinne For we are freed from the raigning and dominion of sinne which dwelleth in vs also from the forme or the guilt of sinne whereupon is that 1. Iohn 3.6 we reade whosoeuer abideth in him sinneth not that is greedily with desire to obey it slavishly and without all resisting of it a that is to say he that is truly partaker of Christ doth not giue himselfe ouer to sinne Againe verse the. 9. euery one that is borne of god sinneth not that is he doth not sinne with full purpose And we do not deny that sinne is in the faithfull or dwelleth in them but that it raigneth not b Rom. 6 12 And touching the guilte Psal 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered blessed is the man vnto whome the Lord imputeth no sinne But of sinne subdued and the matter of it Eccle. 7.20 it is written there is no man iust vpon earth which doth good and sinneth not VVhat is the vse ef this part
b 2 Cor. 1 10.11 4.14 2 The soules new birth which is when wee rise ftom sinne that wee may liue vnto righteousnesse which is also called a Repentance and spirituall Resurrection Whereof Paule If ye bee risen vvith Christ seeke those things that are aboue Colloss 3.1 and Reuellat 20.5 It is called The first Resurrection vvherein they that haue their part the second death shall haue no power ouer them verse 6. to which there is a later Reuel 20.13 which is called The resurrection of the flesh and is also called of Christ a new birth Mathew 19.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby all the Elect indeed shall beginne to liue a newe life and by Analogie an awakening or raysing vp chap. 27.53 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Greeke word that signifieth to raise vp or to awaken whereof heere we must entreate What is resurrection It is the restoring of the same humane bodie to life in the same substance taking away the mortality which by the mighty power of God shall be in the last day to the glorie of God Or It is a certaine new birth or second vnion and insoluble coupling of humane bodies and soules which before by death were seuered one from another as death being ouercome men in all points made immortall may be preserued and may liue for euer some in glory some in paine after the course of their life before led Hovv manifold is Resurrection Twofold Generall or finall which none shall escape which is reserued vntill the last day a Iob 15 12 which we confesse in the Creed I beleeue the Resurrection of the flesh Particuler or going before whereof there are singuler examples in the Scriptures both of the Old and New Testament As 1. Of the widowes sonne of Sarepta raised vp of Elias b 1 Kings 17 22 2 of the Shunamitih womans sonne which Elizaus raised vp c 2 K●ngs 4 33 3 Of a certaine man at the touching of Elizaeus bones lying in the Sepulchre d Cap. 13 21 4 Of Iairus daughter e Math 9 25 5 Of the onely sonne of a widow in Naim f Luk 7 15 6 Of Lazarus the Bethanian g, Ioh. 11 43 7 Of Christ himselfe which obtaineth the chiefe place h, Math 28 6 8 Of some Saints whose Sepulchres though when the stones cleft at the death of Christ they were opened yet they went out of their graues after Christs resurrection 1. Not that they might conuerse amongst men any more to die againe as Lazarus and others but rather that they might accompanie Christ into life eternall by whose power they had risen that they might be vndoubted testimonies of Christs quickening power i Math 27 52 53. 9 Of Tabitha the woman of Ioppa at the word of Peter k, Act 9 40 10 Of Eutychus railed by Paule l Cap 20 10 May the generall Resurrection be declared by Phylosophicall arguments No for to the Philosophers it alwaies seemed ridiculous strange and hard to be beleeued m Act. 17 18 20 and to Festus the President madnes n cap. 26 24 2 Because if we consider the efficient cause and meanes it is a supernatural action which exceedeth the whole power of nature Neyther are the principles thereof first and by themselues knowne in nature 4 And those things which are beleeued cannot be knowne by nature for faith is the euidence of things not seene Hebr. 11.1 Lib. de Resur carnis Whereupon Tertullian saith The hope of Christians is the Resurrectiō of the dead Moreouer there are many arguments effectual apparantly enough But if they be diligently sifted they are probable argumēts onely and not necessarie if we consider naturall things On what foundations then doth the faith of the Resurrection consist 1 On the wil of God that is in the will of god laid open in the w●itten word or on the infallible immoouable certainty of the whole Scripture albeit common sense reason nature likewise be altogether contrarie therunto that is by the manifest testimonies of Scripture such as among many other these are 1 Gen. 3.15 The seede of the woman shall bruise the serpents head that is shall destroy the works of the diuell 1. Iohn 3.8 And therefore shall abolish sinne and the wages of sinne which is death which could not be if the dead were not raised vp 2 Iob. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liueth and he shall stand on the earth in the last day and though after my skinne wormes destroy this bodie yet shall I see God in flesh whom I my selfe shall see and mine eyes shall behold and none other for me that is I my selfe shall rise againe in the qualitie of my person and in the veritie of eyther substance 3 Esay 26.19 Thy dead shall liue and thy slaine shall rise againe c 4 Ezech. 37.12 Behold my people I wil open your graues and cause you to come out of your Sepulchers and will put my spirit in you and ye shall liue for although figuratiuely vnder the resemblance of the resurrection he describeth the restoring of the people out of the habitacles of captiuitie yet euen thereby doth hee prooue the Resurrection For that must needs first bee to it selfe that is compared to another For a similitude of that vvhich it vvast and idle fitteth not a parable of no bodie doth not accord of nothing there is no metaphor and allegorie saith Tertullian 3 Dan. 12.2 Many of of them that sleepe in the dust of the earth shall awake some to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetuall contempt that is All indeed shall rise but many of them to life many to eternall death or the Prophet speaketh so because all of vs shall not die but wee shall bee all chang●d But Christ that is priuie to the will of God and the interpreter thereof prooueth it by a firme argument Math. 22.32 That God was not as though they now were not but is euen yet and for euer the God of Abraham Isaacke and Iacob and that truly of the whole person not of the one part thereof viz. the soule onely for so doth he assure those that are his that we will saue both bodie and soule and will not giue them an halfe but a full and perfect saluation Therefore doe they liue and God hath care ouer them and they shall liue For though God be not the God of the dead according to the Sadduces argument who thought that their bodies should neuer rise againe because he cannot be called a God in respect of them who neither are nor euer shall be yet God is Lord ouer the dead Rom. 14.9 according to the argument of Paule namely for that dead bodies are not quite brought to nothing And Christ in his due time shall quicken them againe for euer being ioyned againe to their soules that he may be true in the couenant made with those Fathers For how are they happie saith
delectable because the elect shall enioy al their desires for whatsoeuer saith Bernard shall be delightfull will there bee present and there shall bee nothing to be wisht for that shall bee wanting there and they shall feele most excellent and sincere pleasure both in soule and bodie by the presence of Christ and dailie heholding of God Psal 16.11 Thou wilt shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore And 17.15 When I awake from the dead I shall bee satisfied with thine image For how great will the delight be in the beholding of that soueraigne good which is the storehouse of all good things and of all ioyes Hence proceedeth that eternall gladnesse or perpetuall and vnspeakable ioy which the holy Ghost shall stirre vp in the Elect and which none shall take from vs. Ioh. 16.22.5 A participation of Diuine nature that is not a powring out of the diuine essence but of diuine qualities into vs that is a cōmunication of Gods immortalitie glorie vertue wisdome iustice and image c 2 Pet. 14 which shall bee those white garments of the Saints the long white robes and garments of pure fine linnen and shining wherewith the elect shall be cloathed d Reue. 3.4.5 6.11 1.13 19.8 6. There shall be also a clarifying of bodies excellent beauty maiesty wherein they shall be made like to the glorious bodie of Christ Phil. 3.21 and the iust men shall shine as the sunne e Math. 13.43 and they shall glister as the brightnesse of the firmament Dan. 12 3. And they shall be as the Angels of God f Luk. 20 36 7 There shall be the Tryumph of the elect ouer the Diuel Death and Hel g Rom 16.20 Revel 20.10 14 Fellowship with al the blessed conuersation with the holy Angels perfect Loue of God and our neighbour Concord and exceeding quietnesse of all things for there they shall bee all of one minde because their will shal be none other but the will of God so that whatsoeuer they desire shal come to passe Melodie for there wee shall sing with quiers of Angels praising god without end for euer Last of all there shal be al the good gifts of body and soule such as neither the eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor heart of man imagined 1 Cor. 2 9. who then would not desire to passe through thither with Christ by death Shall the glorie of euerlasting life be commune to all the elect after an equall measure No but as God bestoweth his gift on the elect in this life not alike vnequally so wil he crowne those gifts of his in the elect with an vnequal measure of glory in heauen For that saying of Christ is proper to the Apostles Ye shall sit iudging the twelue tribes of Israel Mat 19 28. And Paule doubteth not but that there is a peculier crowne laide vp in store for him according to the proportion of his labours 1. Thes 2.19 and so Dan. 12.3 The wise saith he shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And the Scripture doth not onely promise life eternall to the faithfull but in the same a speciall reward to euerie of them a Math 19 29 2 Tim. 4.8 This is probably perceiued by the reason of the contrary b Math 11 22.24 Hither may bee also alluded that saying of Paule 1 Cor. 15 41 For one starre differeth from another starre in glorie When shall eternall life take beginning It is begun in the minds of the faithfull in this life already when the holy spirite by the preaching of the worde doth endue their mindes with the true knowledge of God and bendeth their will to a readie obedience of his commandements yea they feele an earnest peny therof haue a most true tast of it Eph. 1.4 whence floweth that hope which cannot faile the faithfull Ro 5.2.5 We greatly reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God And hope maketh not ashamed Finally we haue passed alreadie from death to life by faith in Christ c Ioh 5.24 1 Ioh. 3.14 because what we possesse through hope we know shal be as certainly as if it were in verie deed already bestowed on vs. Yet shal we attaine the full possession consummation therof afterward in the time that God hath ordained in which after the number of those that shal be saued is fulfilled Christ our redeemer will appeare vnto vs from heauen Doe the soules of the godly already separated from their bodies enioy a perfect and absolute happinesse It is sufficient for vs to knowe that presently after the departure from the bodie the spirit returneth vnto God which gaue it Eccl. 12.7 and after the dissolution or vncoupling of the soule from the bodie it is with Christ d Phil. 1.23 In Paradise e Luk. 23.43 in peace f wisd 3.3 in rest g Heb 4.11 in comfort h Luk. 16.25 in refreshing or ease i Wisd 4.7 in securitie k Ioh. 11.15 18 in the hand of God that no anguish at all may touch it so much as slightly l Wisd 3.1 in glorifying of the name of God Yet because they looke for a resurrection of their bodies a most plentifull fruition of all good things which God hath promised to all that loue him they cannot be said to bee in a perfect absolute but in an vnperfect happines 2 Tim 4 8. There is a crowne of righteousnes laid vp for me which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue me at that daie not to me only but vnto all them also that loue that his glorious appearing And Reue. 6.9 I saw vnder the Altar the soules of thē that were killed for the word of God they cryed with a loud voice saying How long Lord which are holy true doest not thou iudge auenge our bloud on thē that dwell on the earth Then long white robes were deliuered vnto euery one it was said vnto them that they should rest for a little vntil their fellow seruāts their brethren that should be killed euen as they were were fulfilled On the contrary 2. Pet. 2.9 saith that the vniust are so punished either with the losse of this life or with other punishments as that they are neuerthelesse reserued against the day of iudgement to be tormented with far sharper torments namely eternall punishments both in body soule What is the place of eternall life Not this earth or aerie or Elementarie Region which as yet death horror and sinne the power of darknesse and wicked spirits doe inhabit a Iob. 10.22 Eph. 6.12 2 8 and which at length shall be dissolued b 2 pet 3.10 But the heauen of heauens or the highest heauen whereinto Christ as he was man ascended being made higher then the
remnant of the Elect. And the holy Ghost foretold of a generall Apostacie from the faith b 2. The. 2.3 1. Tim. 4 1 and Reuel 13.3.7 the whole earth followed the beast and wondred and power was giuen him ouer euerie kinred nation and all the inhabitants of the earth saith Iohn worshipped him All saith he whose names were not written in the booke of life that is all sauing the Elect. Where then was the Church Tertullian in his booke de poeniten saith that the Church may bee in one or two Wherefore if in those desperate times of the Church there were but one or two faithfull seruants of God it sufficeth that it may be called a Church Therefore it is not our part to determine at what certaine time the Church began to fall away but to labour rather by what meanes it may be freed from this calamitie What are the causes of a Church The principal cause is God the Father who hath chosen a church and at length calleth and gathereth it vnto himselfe Ephe. 1.4 Iohn 1.13 The faithfull are not borne of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And 6.44 No man commeth to me except the father draw him a Exod. 13.21 Mat 18.18 The second or helping cause is the sonne of God himselfe Iohn 14.6 No man commeth to the father but by mee who also hath purchased a Church with his owne blood Act. 20.28 The fellow labourers are the preachers of the word the Prophets and Apostles and their true successours who are therfore called builders b Ro 15 20 1. Pet. 2.7 and maister builders c 1 Cor 3.10 but in respect of the ministerie onely The outward instrumentall cause is the preaching of the word whereby God gathereth himselfe a Church The inward and verie efficient cause is the holy Spirit The formall cause is the syncere profession both of faith and of true Doctrine likewise The Materiall cause whereof are men chosen out of the whole world according to the commaundement of Christ Goe into all the vvorld Preach yee the Gospell to euerie Creature Marke 16.15 16. Are not the blessed Angels likewise a Materiall part of the true Church They are surely and so are the soules of the blessed and that the most beautifullest part d Psal 103 20. Hebr. 1.6.7 12.23 The Apostle acknowledgeth a companie of innumerable Angels and an assemblie and congregation or Church of the spirits or soules And Christ also as he is man is head and Lord of euerie creature and so of the Angels also e Col. 1.17.18 But we speake of the Church insomuch as God hath purchased it by his bloud and doth gather it together by his word but God redeemed not the blessed Angels who neuer fell as neither did he take their nature on him Hebr. 2.16 Neither doth he call them to the cōmunion of this Church by the ministery of his word but onely established them in their first blessed beginning Therfore we affirme that the Church is to be reckoned of men onely according to the promise of the father made to the sonne Psa 2.8 Hath the Church an head Seeing the Church is a bodie not naturall or mathematicall but mysticall a 1 Cor. 10 17. 12.12 Col. 1.18 it must needs haue a head of whom it may be gouerned nourished and cherished and of whom it may depend for euerie liuing bodie hath it head to which it is subiected by the Creator himselfe and from whom it draweth life The Church therfore hath her head not many heads but one onely for it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 headlesse nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a beast of many heads succeeding one another by deaths preuention because it must haue died as often as it should be depriued of it head by death and must haue reuiued as often as it got any new head which were altogether monstrous but it hath one onely head to wit Christ who is the head of his Church as the man is of the woman b Eph. 5 27 1 23. 1 By perfection because he is the only true God and verie man that in all things he may haue the preheminence Col. 1.18 2.10 2 By office Because Christ onely is King Prophet and High Priest who hath rule dominion and excellencie ouer the Church as the head hath ouer the bodie c Reue. 1.6 3 By efficacie because he onely inspireth vigour sense motion spirituall life and all goodnesse into his members d Ioh 6 5 7 15 1 2 and he onely being fastened to the bodie by the bond of the spirit giueth to the whole Church his reedifying coniunction ioyning or fastening together and communion of the members betweene God and themselues e 1. Ioh 1 3 Ioh 17.22 Eph 4 12 he alone is neuer absent but euer present with his Church by his spirit f Mat 28 20 and he onely giueth life to the bodie g Eph 5 24 and neuer dieth Death shall haue power ouer him no more Rom. 6.9 So that hee needeth no head by deputation as one Bride receiueth not two heads nor two Bride-groomes 4 By Decree because he alone is the shepheard of one sheepfold h Ioh. 10.16 and the chiefe shepheard as Peter himselfe affirmeth 1. Pet. 5.4 Neither is the condition of any of the Pastors of the Christian Church equall to that of the high Priest long agoe vnder the Lawe for that one high Priest was a true type of Christ a Psal 101.4 Heb. 7.17 7.9.11 but none of the Pastors of the christian Church is a type of Christ Besides hee had charge but ouer one small quarter and but ouer one Temple and ouer one people by the ordinance of God but none can haue charge ouer the whole world through which the Church is dispersed for this were to desire to include the world in one Citie saith Hierome Therefore is not the Pope the Ministeriall head of the Catholicke Church because it cannot be prooued by any testimony of Scripture and seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world he hath no need of a Vice-Roy or Vicar and the Ecclesiasticall ministerie which consisteth in the administration of the Gospell and Sacraments cannot be performed through the whole world by 〈◊〉 any one man But concerning Constantines Donation made to Pope Syluester that voyce which Syluester heard from heauen This day is poyson entered into the Church doth sufficiently testifie what we must thinke of it Finally he that calleth himselfe the Vniuersall Bishop Lib. 4. Epist 76 is the most true forerunner of Antichrist as witnesseth Gregorius Magnus who was himselfe Bishoppe of Rome Hath the Church any foundation Seeing it is a Spirituall house b 1. pet 2 5 it hath a foundation which is twofolde 1 Ministeriall in respect whereof the Church is said To bee built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles to witt euen on
was identical rightly expressed in these words this is the bloud of the couenant But Christ gaue to his disciples wine contained in the cup and sacramentally signified the thing by the signe of wine Therfore in the enuntiation of Christ this namely the wine which was contained in the cup is one thing that bloud of the new Testament that is the thing it selfe of that sacrament is an other thing And therfore the enuntiation of Christ is rightly expressed in these words hoc est sanguis this is bloud What is the new testament in the bloud of Christ They acknowledge that the name of Testament is the same here that Couenant is who do take it to answere to the Hebrew name Berith and therfore to declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is an agreement begun betweene them which first did disagree which signification doth especially heere accord although it commeth all to one reckoning whether we vnderstand the new couenant begun by the bloud of christ or the wil of christ dying which is signified by the word testamēt established confirmed by his own bloud shed For the particle In in the Hebrew phrase doth not signifie a simple coniunction inexistence or reall concomitancie as though it had beene said with my bloud but the cause the manner the instrument and the adiuuant cause of any thing as Psal 33.16 The King is not saued in multo exercitu that is by the multitude of an host and Rom. 5.2 In the bloud of Christ that is by the bloud as it is expounded Coloss 1.22 Rom. 3.14 But this Testament is not any corporal draught of the bloud of Christ or drinking of wine but it is the couenant of grace reconciliation or agreement and a couenant betweene God and the beleeuers wherein God doth promise vnto vs that he forgiueth vs our sins and giueth the holy Ghost righteousnes and life eternall of his meere mercie by faith for the bloud of Christ shed vpon the crosse and wee in like manner to binde ourselues to God to receiue these his benefits by true faith in Christ and to shew thankfulnes by true obedience towards him in the whole course of our life Of which couenant Esay speaketh chap. 59.24 and Ier. 31.31 and 32.40 Heb. 9 15. Gal. 3.17 Why said not the lord This is my body of the new Testament as he said this cup is the new testament in my bloud Because although the Testament or new couenant was established by the oblation of whole Christ and by the intercession of his death Heb. 9.15.16 yet notwithstanding his death was more euident in the bloud shed then in the matter it selfe of the flesh Therfore vnder the old couenant Moses said Exo. 24.8 Heb. 9.20 Behold the bloud of the couenant which the Lord hath made with you And therfore Christ that the relation of the truth might be more plaine he applied the appellation of the New Couenant rather to his bloud then to his bodie yet so that he excluded not his bodie the bloud whereof was shed from the confirmation of the couenant and redemption of the soule Add to this that when Christ had made mention of drinking wine which he calleth his bloud he remembred the new couenant because vnder the old the vse of bloud was forbidden a Leuit. 17. Verse 10.16 which in the other signe of bread was not necessarie to expresse Which is the other branch Which for you in Luke and for many in Mathew and Marke is shed for the remission of sinnes The subiect of which speech is the Relatiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which and it is referred properly to the bloud not to the wine Truly if you look to the construction of the words in Luke it must be referred to the cup but because neyther the cup nor the wine was shed for vs that subiect is altogether to be vnderstood of the bloud The predicate Effunditur is shed again by Enallage for Effundetur shall be shed as the common translation doth also expound it Yet the Lord doth seeme vpon set purpose in the institution of this mystery although speaking of a thing to come yet to haue vsed in both places the words of the Present Tense that the Disciples might be admonished that this is the vse of these signes that with the eyes of faith the things forthwith to be should be seene as it were alreadie present in them like as we must behold them in this action by faith as it were being before our eyes although alreadie performed long agoe that is to say the whole historie of the passion as if with these our eyes wee did see the bodie of Christ hanging and pierced through and the bloud dropping out of his wounds Therefore it is shed saith hee that is to say vpon the Crosse not into the cup or into a mouth whereby againe is signified in what manner the bloud of Christ is liuing drinke to vs not simplie as it is now clarified but as shed for vs and truly for you and for many Marke 14.24 although not for all but for the elect onely that is for their cause for the remission of sinnes which is a most exceeding wholesome end of the bloud of Christ shed not of the drinke of wine For of this it is said In remembrance of me but of the shedding of bloud For the remission of sinnes From whence doe you gather besides that Christ spake Tropically 1 From the nature and sacramentall speaches of all other Sacraments alreadie instituted from the beginning of the world wherein it commeth to passe that the name of the thing signified is giuen to the signe it selfe or the signe is named for the thing signifyed as Genes 17.10.13 Circumcision is the Couenant that is the signe of the Couenant Exod. 12.11.27 The Lambe is the Passeouer that is the signe and memoriall of the Lord The Rocke was Christ that is a signe of Christ a Exod. 17.6 1. Cor. 10.4 2 From the knowne speech concerning the same Sacrament in Paule 1. Cor. 10.16 The bread which we breake is the communion of the bodie that is to say Metonymically like as the Gospell is called the power of God that is the effectuall instrument of God Rom. 1.16 And VVe that are many are one bread and one bodie And 1. Cor. 11.29 He that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth drinketh his owne damnation which things vnlesse a trope be vsed cannot be vnderstood and the bodie it selfe of Christ cannot be said to be eaten but tropically 3 Because the Ascension of Christ into heauen and the veritie of the humane nature which hee tooke admitteth not a proper speech For Augustine teacheth That one place is not to bee interpreted so that it may be contrarie to many others but so that it may agree with many other De Doct. Christ 4 Because the Fathers had the same meate and drinke not only among themselues but also with vs that is to say in respect of the matter
1. Cor. 10.3 VVhat is the same but that which also wee haue saith Augustine Therefore the same meat and the same drink but to the vnderstanding and beleeuing But to the not vnderstanding that Manna alone Book de Vti lit paenitent vpon Ioh. tract 21 that water alone but to the beleeuers the same which now for then Christ was to come now he is come was to come and is come are diuers words but the same Christ 5 Because it could not be that Christ locally sitting at the table and communicating with the disciples as it is Mat. 26.29 I will not drinke henceforth of this fruit of the vine should himselfe eate himselfe really and corporally Did Christ Iesus take part of the same signes Truly no lesse then of the Paschall Lambe Concerning which let him which doubteth thinke 1 That the Lord Iesus sanctified the ordinarie Sacraments of both the Testaments in the vse thereof 2 And in instituting of the supper by his example went before in sayings doings that the whole Church may know that the first paterne is to be respected of her in that regard that it was the greatest cause why he did not abstaine whereupon Hierome saith ipse conuiua conuiuium ipse comedens qui comeditur that is Epist ad Hed. biam he is the guest and the feast he is eating and that which is eaten Is there that vertue and that sense of the words of Christ wherewith he instituted this Sacrament that as often as vpon the bread and wine they are recited by the Priest who hath a purpose to consecrate then the substance of bread and wine eyther by Analysis is resolued into the first matter or euen into nothing so that in steed thereof doe succeed the bodie and bloud of Christ or by a simple mutation is turned into the substance of the true bodie and of the true bloud of Christ so that the substance of bread is formed into the flesh of of Christ the bare accidents of breas and wine remayning hanging without a subiect God forbid 1 Because it were magicall to attribute the power of changing the substance of the signes to certaine words mumbled ouer 2 Because in expresse words of the Apostles and Euangelists the true natural substance of bread and wine is affirmed before and after consecration as they call it 1. Cor. 10.16.17 and 11.26 27.28 The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ And wee that are many are one bread and one bodie because we all are partakers of one bread and As often as yee shall eate this bread ye shew forth the Lords death till he come And Whosoeuer shall eate this bread and drinke this cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guiltie of the bodie and bloud of the Lord. And Let a man examine himselfe and so let him eate of this bread and drinke of this cup. For whereas they say that it is called bread not which is now but which was before it is confirmed by no testimonie of Scripture or iudgement of sense and besides Math. 26.29 I will not drinke saith hee henceforth of this fruit of the Vine Thus spake Christ after consecration 3 Because the kingdome or God is not corporall meate and drinke Rom. 14.17 4 Because in the proposition the pronoune hoc this demonstratiue doth not demonstrate the bodie of Christ For the transubstantiation saith Thomas is not accomplished but in the last instāt of the pronouncing of the words neither doth it demonstrate the accidēts alone of the bread For the accidētes are not the body of Christ neither doth it demōstrate any wandring thing or singular thing vncertainly determined For there is no Indiuiduum or singular thing which is not something And therefore certaine not wandering vndetermined or indefinite and especially the Demonstratiue Hoc this doth signifie some certaine thing 5 Because it is a wicked thing to be thought and spoken that the bread it selfe is properly and substantially the bodie of Christ 6 Because of this conuersion neither doth the Scripture giue sentence nor sense or reason iudge as of the rod of Moses turned into a Serpent a Exod 4.3 and of the water turned into wine Iohn 2.9 Where the Euangelist said not simply Water but Made wine For the accidents of bread doe plainely shew that bread doth remaine and they which partake of those holy signes doe feele in themselues a taste of wine and the power of the bread and wine This is an vnanswerable reason Framed thus euerie miracle is sensible transubstantiation is not sensible therefore it is no miracle 7 Because the substance the accidents thereof remayning cannot perish neyther can the accidents subsist without a subiect nor be the accidents of bread which are not the accidents of bread 8 Because the substance being remooued and the nature of the signes the similitude affinitie habit relation and Analogie of the signes to the thing signified come to nothing For the bread signifieth the bodie of Christ because it nourisheth strengtheneth and sustaineth which accidents cannot doe 9 Because heere is no word of Christ which may signifie a conuersion or transubstantiation For the verb Est doth not signifie to be made to be changed to be turned And note that which is said to be made cannot properly be said to be for Esse to be and Fieri to be made are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say contradictorily 10 Because a carnall eating of the bodie of Christ is no where prooued in the Scriptures 11 Because it should follow that both the faithfull and vnbeleuers doe receiue the bodie of the Lord and his quickening spirit which neuer can be feuered from his bodie And Augustine saith that They doe not eate the bodie of Christ but which are in the bodie of Christ Because that bodie cannot be spoyled of quantitie nor in an instant and without locall motion be together in heauen in earth vnlesse vpon necessitie we should make an vbiquitie of Christs bodie which the verie transubstantiators do refuse to doe and the Fathers denie and they doe determine contrarie things which say that a bodie and the quantitie are truely present and yet not by meanes of the quantitie 13 Because now the bodie of Christ cannot be separated from the bloud nor the soule from his bodie and concerning Concomitancie there is nothing extant is the word of God 14 Because they write that Victor the third Bishop of Rome died hauing drunk poyson out of a chalice giuē him by his Subdeacon and that Henrie the seuenth Emperour of Lucelburge tooke poyson from the bread taken in the Eucharist by a Monke of Senens one of the preachers order 15 Because infinite discommodities doe follow this Transubstantiation as that the accidents must remaine without a subiect that if it happen that Mice do gnaw the bread they shal be said to gnaw accidēces or that if worms do breed of the bread it
vpon the Sacrament doth cease For the Sacraments are religious and continuall actions to which signes are added not that the minde should stay it selfe in them but that they might moue them to whom they are giuen to thinke vpon and doe another thing 2 Is is manifest also out of the word of God that it was plainely forbidden of the Lord that any of the Paschall Lamble being the expresse type of our Eucharist and of Manna should be kept till the next day vndoubtedly that the least entrance to superstition might be shut vp 3 And this worshipping of bread Dan. chap. 11.38 Doth attribute to Antichrist when he saith He shall honour the God Mauzzim as if he should say Missarie that is to say crustie or breaden In Gold and siluer and precious things 4 Neyther said Christ lift vp offer lay vp carie about worship but take eate drinke in remembrance of me What is the second end That the Lord may visibly represent his inuisible giftes neere to all the senses to the sight to the hearing to the taste to the feeling that the whole man being mooued in bodie and soule may celebrate this most pleasant and holy thing with greater ioy Which is the third end That it may be an effectuall token symbole pledge testification and confirmation of our communion coniunction and incorporation with Christ the head and by him as it were by a Mediator with the Father and the holy Ghost a 1 Ioh. 1.3 Of which end the Apostle saith the cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the bloud of Christ and the bread which we breake is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ 1. Cor. 10.16 that is to say Metonymically like as the Gospell is called the power of God to saluation Rom. 1.16 That is an effectuall instrument of God which ende the promise of the Lord doth also note Iohn 6.56 Hee that eateth my flesh dwelleth in mee and I in him Of how many sorts is the coniunction of our nature with Christ 1 Threefold the first is of natures that is of our nature by Incarnation but yet in the particular and truly of the seede alone of Abraham and a ioyning together of the diuine nature in the person of the sonne into one person b Ioh. 1.14 Heb. 2.14 16 which is called Hypostaticall and according to this we say that the sonne of God is of our flesh and of our bones because hee tooke flesh of our kinde 2 There is a ioyning together of our persons but yet being absent and on pilgrimage from the Lord and of the person of Christ God and man yea of both natures both of the Diuine and of the humane nature of Christ into one mysticall bodie which in regard of the extreams See Zanch. his Spiritual mariage betwixt Christ his church his comment vpon Eph. 5. de communione cum Christo is called Substantiall Essential but in regard of the bond or manner whereby the extreames are vnited meerely spirituall and mysticall that is to say secret Whereupon dependeth the participation of the operation and of the graces of Christ that is of remission of sinnes of regeneration and of life eternall Concerning which 1. Cor. 1.9 God is faithfull by whom ye are called vnto the fellowship of his sonne Iesus Christ our Lord. And according to this wee are said to be of his flesh and of his bones not in respect that we are men but in regard that wee are Christians and ingrafted into Christ and by this Christ is the Spouse of one Church that is of all the Elect a Eph. 5.30 3 And there is a coniunction of our persons but present with the Lord and of the person of Christ into one glorious bodie and that is called glorious Of which coniunctions the third dependeth vpon the second and the second vpon the first What doth the word Felowship signifie in the saying of Paule b 1 Cor 1.9 that is which coniunction of those three doth it signifie Not the concord or coniunction of consent and will onely but the habitation and dwelling c 2 Cor. 6 6. and consociation or participation of our persons with Christs person Although 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is participation doth seeme to be referred properly to the signes and to the seuerall persons eating the same bread but yet broken and distributed seuerally by parts as the same Apostle noteth 1. Cor. 10 17. as Chrysostome interprets it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Because we all are partakers of one bread But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Felowship is to be referred to whole Christ to be applied to themselues by faith that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is participation may be an exception of the part but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is fellowship a fruition and possession of the whole And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is participation may be said of the signes taken by parts but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is felowship of the thing signified that is to say whole Christ Verily how straight this is it is euident Ex nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by the name of vnitie or coniunction which Christ vnfolding saith I desire of thee O father that they which thou hast giuen me may be one as thou O Father art in mee and I in thee euen that they also may be one in vs. Iohn 17.21 Else where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifye both fellowship in prayers and in breaking of bread and also almes or contribution or collation or abilitie d act 2 42 Rom. 15.26 2 Cor 8 4 Heb. 13.16 and also consent in doctrine Gal. 2.9 What is it to communicate with Christ It is not onely to professe Christ or onely to communicate with his incarnation whereby he was made a certaine one thing in speciall with all mankind although this incarnation be the foundation of this Vnion whereof wee intreat neyther onely in affection in loue in consent and concord to bee vnited to Christ nor to communicate only with the merits of Christ But it is to haue Christ dwelling and liuing in vs and vs to dwell and liue in Christ a Ioh. 6.55 and that in verie deed as Chrysostome speaketh and naturally as Cyrill saith that is in the verie communication also of the humane nature of Christ to be vnited and ioyned with Christ to cleaue to him and Christ to bee made ours and wee in like manner to bee made Christs and moreouer to bee nourished with Christ or to be ioyned to him to be ingrafted into him so that more more growing vp into his mystical bodie in one spirit we be members of his bodie b 1 Cor. 6.15 of his flesh and of his bones And that we may all meete together in the vnitie of faith and knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the
the wicked eate the flesh and drinke the bloud of Christ vnto the iudgement of their owne condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truely and not refusing but receiuing it are made guiltie of Christs bodie No for 1. To eate vnto themselues Iudgement or to bring Iudgement vpon themselues is not to eate Christ who is made vnto vs righteousnesse and life 2. Because the promise of grace doth promise onely to the faithfull the participation of Christ himselfe and they are Sacramentall Seales to none but to the faithfull onely For what part hath the beleeuer with the Infidell light with darknesse Nor must wee say saith Augustine that hee eateth Christs bodie that is not in Christs bodie and therefore their vnbeleefe cannot make void the faith of God and the institution of the supper 3. Because no man saith the Apostle can bee partaker of the Lords Table that is of the meate set vpon the Lords table and of the table of Diuels that is haue any thing common with Diuels and vncleane spirits 4. Because the thing signified is receiued with the heart and not with the mouth for indeede Christ is not receiued by the instruments of the body but by faith alone a Ephe. 3.17 which the wicked do want 5 Because God giueth not holy things to dogs seeing the Lord forbiddeth the same to be done Math. 7.6 6 Because there are not contrarie effects of the participating and communciating of the bodie and bloud of Christ And the power of quickening or giuing life cannot be separated from the communion of the bodie of Christ and the wicked haue not life eternall but are condemned alreadie but he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternall life saith our Sauiour Christ Iohn 6.51 7 Because Christs bodie eaten worketh life but being despised refused and reiected it worketh death and condemnation but this accidentally not in respect of participation but of priuation 8 Because Christ can discharge the office of a Iudge although the vnbeleeuers eat not his bodie with their mouth they eat then the Lords bread but not the bread which is the Lord hereunto tendeth that excellent saying of Augustine If thou receiue it carnally it ceaseth not to be spirituall but it is not so vnto thee Againe A good man receiueth the Sacrament and the matter of it an euill man the Sacrament onely and not the thing it selfe And againe He that disagreeth from Christ eateth not Christs bodie nor drinketh his bloud though he daily receiue the Sacrament of so great a thing vnto his owne iudgement Whereas therefore the Fathers Tract 25. vppon Iohn but especially Augustine say that the Lords bodie is sometimes receiued euen of the wicked by the word Bodie they meane the signifying signe and not the thing signifyed or matter of the Sacrament And the bodie of the Lord that is to say his symbolicall bodie is distinguished from the bodie of the Lord that is to say from the verie matter of the Sacrament 9 And lastly this consequence of our aduersaries is ridiculous Christs bodie is giuen or offered therefore it is receiued It is not receiued therefore it is not giuen Can a man be guiltie of the bodie and bloud of Christ which eateth not his bodie nor drinketh his bloud Essentially Hee may by reason of the abuse of the holy signes which is contumelious to the thing signified euen as they which dispise Christs seruants are guiltie of contemning our Lord Iesus Christ yea and of the father also Luke 10.16 And a contumely done to an Embassador redoundeth to the Prince that sent him and whosoeuer spitteth vpon teareth or trampleth vpon the kings Image or letters is guiltie of offence to the maiestie of the king himselfe to conclude the vnworthie receiuer is guiltie in that he doth not spiritually receiue and eate Christs bodie offered vnto him Whether may the minister without perill of conscience admit all to the Lords Supper seeing he cannot know who are worthie and who are vnworthie As the Church iudgeth not of hidden things that is to say doth not prye into the secret corners of our hearts but iudgeth the outward actions hauing the Decalogue rightly vnderstood for a rule therein so the ministers dutie is to leaue to God the iudgement of euerie mans heart admitting all that are not tainted with open crimes but he must restraine those that are bewitched with errors repugners of the foundation of doctrine blasphemers heretickes worshippers of Idols drunkards cozeners theeues tyrants adulterers euill and filthie speakers and those that any other way liue vngodly and walke not worthie of the Gospell which giue no signes of repentance the Ecclesiasticall Consistorie hauing first taken knowledge of them for to them belongeth that of the Poet. Procul hinc procul este profani People profane and wanting grace Packe hence and come not neare this place For Christ giueth a weightie and serious prohibition Giue not holy things vnto dogs Mat. 7.6 Neither must we communicate with other mens sinnes 1. Tim. 5.22 therefore Chrysostome saith He would rather giue his bodie to be shamefully torne in peeces then wittingly willingly reach out the bodie and bloud of our Lord to a wicked man that liueth without repentance And for this abuse Paule witnesseth that among the Corinthians many were weake and sicke and many slept Is it a thing arbitrarie or indifferent to vse the Supper of the Lord or to abstaine from it No but the contemners of the Lords table sinne grieuously for they contemne 1 That edict not humane but diuine Doe this 2 The memorie of Christs death whereby we are redeemed 3 They neglect the communicating of the bodie and bloud of Christ 4 And lastly they shew themselues vnworthie to be accounted Christs disciples Shall wee need any sacramentall signes of Christs bodie and bloud in that life that shall be euerlasting No for we shall be with our Lord Iesus Christ euen in bodily presence for there will be no place for any sacrament when Christs corporall presence shall be restored to the Church and the Church by the way of faith shall be restored to the heholding of Christ euen face to face a Rom. 8.24 1 Cor. 13.12 5.7 1 Ioh. 3.2 What is contrarie to this doctrine First the error of the Aquarians who vnder pretence of sobrietie vsed not wine but water in the Lords Supper Secondly the errors of the Papists who doe horribly profane the Supper of the Lord and disdaining the name thereof 1 Borrow the name of the Masse from the rites of Isis 2 They faine that the Masse as it is now retained among them was celebrated by Iames the brother of the Lord or by the other Apostles 3 They adorne it with Gold Siluer and pretious stones as if it were a whorish Thais to allure the more to loue and affect it 4 They doe superstitiously vse bread that is meerely without leauen 5 They doe necessarily mingle water with wine 6 They transforme the
innocent bloud for reward whom God hath pronounced worthy of cursing destruction Deut. 27.25 What kind of authority hath the magistrate In diuine matters it is fully contained within the limits of Gods word Deut. 12.8 Let not euery man doe that which seemeth right in his owne eies And Math. 15.9 They worship me in vaine teaching for doctrines mens precepts But in the outward gouernment of the Church the king ought to confirme the decrees of the Ecclesiasticall Synod which himselfe hath assembled 1. Chro. 23.2 c. But in humane matters it extendeth it selfe a great deale further For the magistrates law is 1 To commaund his subiects necessarie duties tending both to the publike weale and safetie and to euery particular mans profit and commoditie 2 To compell euerie man in his order and estate whether it be Ecclesiasticall or ciuill to doe his dutie and to punish those that are found rebellious 3 He hath power also ouer the goods of his subiects and they are all the kings as we vse to say not simply or for occupation possession for Gen. 47.20.24 Ioseph bought the whole land of Aegypt for Pharao and afterwards let it againe to the Aegyptians that they should be the perpetuall tillers of it and should answere vnto Pharao a fift part of the increase But they are the kings as concerning protection defence and lawfull administration of Iustice which wee see confirmed by the historie of wicked Achab who was punished by God for taking away by violence Naboths vineyard 4 The king hath right to require ordinarie tributes or tolle of the heads grounds and immoueable goods of his subiects a 1 K. 21.2 and portage or custome of wares brought in or caried out and tribute of their fields subsidies according to the estimate of their whole substance And these ought still to be ordinarie for the vpholding of the publike charge of his office and to maintain the glorie and dignitie of his house Math. 17.25 and 22.21 Giue vnto Caesar those things which are Caesars Rom. 13.6.7 Giue vnto all men their dutie tribute to whom tribute custome to whom custome belongeth b 1 Sam. 8 11 Gen 41.34 47.2.6 Dan. 2.4 8 And the king hath right also to demaund extraordinarie tribute when any vrgent necessitie requireth it but not to spend wastfully or riotously His exactions therefore must be moderate least they being immoderate he doe thereby ouerthrow exhaust and deuoure his people c Psal 53 5 1 King 12.11 And let Princes remember that what tribute or custome soeuer they haue of the people it is the publicke good and must not be an instrument of priuate lust or tyrannie The saying of Tiberius is well knowne It is the part of a good shepheard to sheare his sheepe but not to fleece them And therfore in Daniell d Dan. 4.7 12 a king is described to be like a tree vnder which many gather fruit are fed and shadowed and in which many build And to the publicans officers of Princes Saint Iohn Baptist preacheth Luc. 3.13 Require no more then that which is appointed vnto you 5 He hath right to determine all controuersies according to the law and to make lawes and edicts such as may be requisite for the right ordering of ciuill gouernment as namely concerning Iudiciall proceedings punishment of offenders contracts successions and the like according to the diuers circumstances of place time and persons But he cannot take away the fundamentall lawes of the kingdome or commonwealth but by the free consent of all estates and degrees Seeing that 1. Sam. 8.11 Samuel saith This shal be the maner of the king that shall reigne ouer you 1. He will take your sons and daughters make them his seruants 2. He will take your fields your vineyards and your best Oliue trees and giue them to his seruants 3 He will take the tenth of your seed and of your vineyards giue it to his seruants 4. He will take your men seruants and your maid seruants and your choise young men and will put them to his work 5. He will take the tenth of your sheepe 6. And lastly you shall be his seruants Doth Samuell in this place arme kings with an infinite or absolute power circumscribed within no lawes ouer the bodies and substance of his subiects No. For. 1. It is onely spoken of God and it is only true in him He hath done whatsoeuer he would Psal 115.3 For God alone is truly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his owne proper power and rule and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 free and at liberty from giuing account to any bound and obliged to none as Nabuchadnezzer confesseth Dan. 4.35 No man may say vnto him what doest thou And surely to proud is that speech for any mortall man to vse Sic volo sic iubeo stat pro ratione voluntas So I will and so I commaund So for reason shall it stand And Aristotle calleth none 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but him that is a tyrant Pol. 4 2 Because Deut. 17.18 and the verse following Deut. 22.37 commandement is giuen that the king should learne the law and follow the same in all his gouernment Lib 1. God Iustin Tit. 14. Cap. 4 And Achab was punished because he would take away the distinction of gouernment appointed by the law when he had taken away Naboths vineyard against his will 1. King 21.18 And the Emperours themselues haue a saying It is a speech worthy the Maiesty of a ruler to professe himselfe to be bound by the law so much doth our authoritie depend vpon the authority of the law But Samuel in that place 1. Threatneth the diminution of those liberties and freedomes which the Israelites before time enioyed vnder the Iudges 2. He admonisheth and warneth them of their hard estate that was to ensue which they notwithstanding must not cast off vnder the gouernment of a Monarchie worse then that Aristocratie or gouernment of some few great men which they had before because it seldome commeth to passe but that kings do stray beyond their bounds and abuse the power they haue And the law he calleth the maner or course of gouernmēt rule which they must of necessity obey and ought not to resist Hath the chiefe magistrate free power in his subiects affairs causes beside or cōtrary to the laws receiued for the determining of any matter Surely he hath vpon iust cause and vpon a serious and wise vnderstanding of the matter for he himself is a liuing law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which ought to interpret and moderate the lawes that are already made according to Equum Bonum equitie and right where the conscience of himselfe being the chiefe Magistrate and the manner of the fact doth require such moderation And therefore in many things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Equitie and moderation of the written law must be admitted VVhat is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Equitie It is deriued as it were