Selected quad for the lemma: religion_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
religion_n consist_v evil_n great_a 37 3 2.0925 3 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
A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

There are 19 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

woodden thigh or dry arm to the body of a natural man For they want life sense and motion and receive no influence from the Head they are as is commonly said in the Church not of the Church 1 Iohn 2. 19. Hence arose the distinction of the Church into Visible and Invisible The Invisible Church consists only of those who are endued with true faith and holinesse but these are known to God and Christ alone 2 Tim. 2. 19. Iohn 10. 14. therefore in respect of us that Church which alone truly and properly is the Church on earth is called Invisible The Church is a society of men not as men for so a number of Turks or a nest of Arians might be the body of Christ but as beleevers and therefore the Church as the Church cannot be seen but beleeved Bellarmine himself saith Videmus coetum hominum qui est Ecclesia sed quod ille coetus sit vera Christi Ecclesia non videmus sed credimus and what say we more That is the visible Church which consists of men professing the true Faith and Religion any way whether in truth or counterfeitly and falsly of good and evil of elect and reprobate This Church is mixt whence it is compared to a great house in which there are not onely vessels of gold and silver but also wood and clay some for honour some for reproach 2 Tim. 2. 20. To a field in which there are Tares as well as wheat Matth. 13. to a net in which fishes of all kinde good and bad are gathered See Dr Featley against Fisher about the visibility of the Church Iacksons raging Tempest on Matth. 8. 23. p. 25. Dr Taylor on Rev. 12. p. 294. Mr Baxters Infants Church-membership pag. 176. Par. on Rom. 11. vers 4. pag. 160 161. Again The Church is either Particular viz. a company of the faithful which is contained in some particular place 2 Cor. 1. 1. 1 Cor. 16. 19. Col. 4. 15. Or Universal Catholick which consists of all that every where call upon the name of God 1 Cor. 1. 2. The Apostle cals it The general Assembly Heb. 12. 23. It is General 1. In respect of time it had a being in all times and ages ever since the giving of the promise to our first parents in Paradise 2. In respect of the Persons of men it consists of all sorts and degrees of men Act. 16. 34. 3. In respect of place because it hath been gathered from all parts of the earth specially now in time of the New Testament Revel 5. 9. 4. In respect of Doctrine therein professed This name Catholick is not given to the Church in Scripture but was imposed by men yet consonant to the Scripture The Church was first intituled Catholick in opposition to the visible Church of the Jews Act. 10. 15 34. the full importance of this term Catholick is set down Revel 5. 8 9. This Catholick Church is called Holy 1 Cor. 14. 33. Revel 11. 2. because Christ the Head of it is holy Heb. 7. 26. and he makes the Church partaker of his holinesse Iohn 17. 19. because it is called with a holy calling and is separated from the world 2 Tim. 1. 9. because the holy Word of God is committed to it Rom. 3. 2. Object But the Church doth not only contain in it those that are holy but also hypocrites and such as are openly wicked How therefore is it holy Answ. Hypocrites and prophane persons are but in name and outward profession of the Church indeed and in truth they are not those which are truly of the Church are holy and therefore the Church is rightly called and is holy 2. Although the visible hath good mingled with evil yea almost overwhelmed with their multitude yet it is deservedly denominated from the better part As we call that a heap of corn where there is more chaff then corn It is the priviledge as well as duty of Gods people to be holy Deut. 26. 18. 28. 9. it comes in by way of Promise Reward Priviledge Revel 20. 6. The Reasons of this are taken from the Cause the Nature and Effects of Holinesse First From the cause of it it flows from Union with God Iohn 17. 17 21. 2 Pet. 1. 4. 4. 14. Secondly The Nature of Holinesse consists in a likenesse and conformity to God Be ye holy as I am holy Levit. 26. 44 45. There is a four-fold Holinesse 1. Of Dedication so the vessels of the Temple and Tabernacle were holy 2. Of Exemplification so the Law being the Epistle or exemplification of Gods will was holy Rom. 7. 12. 3. By Profession as 1 Cor. 7. 14. 4. By Participation or Communion The people of God are holy all these wayes 1. They are dedicated to God Rom. 1. 1. 2. By Exemplification They are the Epistle of the Lord Jesus Christ. 3. By Profession 4. By Participation Thirdly If we consider the Effects of Holinesse 1. Upon our selves it is the end of our Election Ephes. 1. 14. of our Vocation 1 Thess. 4. 17. Redemption Luke 1. 74. 2. Upon others even the Enemies of it wicked men 1. Affectation the hypocrite affects it that there are so many pretenders to it though but in shew discovers the dignity of it 2. That awfulnesse which it strikes in the hearts of wicked men Saul stood in awe of Samuel Herod of Iohn Baptist Mark 6. 20. 3. Envy it works this in the worst 1 Iohn 3. 17. Quest. Whether every one which sincerely professeth the belief of this Article of the holy Catholick Church be bound to beleeve that he himself is a true lively member of the same Church Answ. No all men are not bound to beleeve that they are actual or real members of the Catholick Church for none can truly beleeve thus much of himself but he that hath made his election sure and is certain that his name is written in the book of life A note mark or character is that whereby one thing may be known and differenced from another That which is proper to a thing and peculiarly found in it may serve as a note or mark of distinction The marks of the Church are An entire profession of the Gospel and saving truth of God the right use of the Sacraments Holinesse of conversation the sound preaching of the Word of life servent and pure calling upon Gods Name subjection to their spiritual guides mutual communion in the Ordinances of Worship Christian Fellowship with all Saints and true visible Churches of Jesus Christ. All these are proper to the Church but not perpetually to be found in it no● alike pure in all ages Where all these notes are to be found purely the Church is excellent for degree pure and famous where any of these are wanting or impure the Church is so much defective or impure though it may be pure in comparison of others But all these things be not of equal necessity to the being of a
Leigh's Body of Divinity A SYSTEME OR Body of Divinity Consisting of TEN BOOKS Wherein the FUNDAMENTALS and main Grounds of RELIGION are OPENED The Contrary ERROURS REFUTED Most of the CONTROVERSIES Between US the PAPISTS ARMINIANS and SOCINIANS Discussed and handled SEVERAL SCRIPTURES Explained and vindicated from corrupt Glosses A Work seasonable for these times wherein so many Articles of our Faith are questioned and so many gross Errours daily published By EDWARD LEIGH Esquire and Master of Arts of Magdalen-Hall in OXFORD Quisquis bonus verusque Christianus est Domini sui esse intelligat ubicunque invenerit Veritatem August de Doctrina Christiana l. 2. LONDON Printed by A. M. for William Lee at the Sign of the Turks-head in Fleet-street over against Fetter-lane M. DC LIV. TO ALL THE Orthodox and Godly MAGISTRATES MINISTERS AND PEOPLE of ENGLAND who are Lovers of Truth and Holiness I Am not ignorant that the Socinians make sport in their Books with the Protestant Authours because they call themselves the Orthodox and say We use that as a spell thinking thereby to charm all dissentiates And some that plead for Universal Redemption Apostasie of the Saints and such corrupt Doctrins seem to slight those mormolukes of Arminianism Pelagianism Socinianism Yet there are those who are Orthodox whose judgement is sound in matters of Faith and there are also without question many in these dayes who are Hetrodox and unsound in the Faith We have no such custome nor the Churches of Christ saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. 16. The concurrent judgement of the Reformed Churches is not to be slighted That saying of Vincentius Lirinensis cap. 5. in Commonit adversus Haereses is worthy our serious consideration Mos iste semper in Ecclesia viguit ut quò quisque foret religiosior eo promptius novellis adinventionibus contrairet That custome saith he hath still flourished in the Church that the more religious any one was the more readily he would oppose new inventions Truth is precious and should be maintained Errour is dangerous and should be opposed Buy the truth and sell it not saith Salomon Ierusalem is called a City of truth Zech. 8. 3. The Church is called the pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3. 15. Christ came into the world that he might bear witness to the truth Iohn 18. 27. The Prophet Ieremiah complains That none were valiant for the truth Contend earnestly for the Faith which was once delivered to the Saints We can do nothing against the truth but for the truth saith Paul It is made a sign of Christs sheep Iohn 10. 4 5. to take heed of errours and false teachers Our Magistrates should do well to follow the examples of our Iosiah King Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth Two things in King Edward 1. In his honouring the Word of God 2. In his opposing of errour and false worship When he was crowned they put into his hands three Swords he answered there was one yet wanting the Word of God the Sword of the Spirit which was farre to be preferred before all those When he was pressed by Bishop Ridley and others to tolerate his Sister Masse in her own Chappel he would not though importuned yeeld thereunto saying He should dishonour God in it and being much urged by them he burst out into tears and they affirmed That he had more Divinity in his little fingers then they in all their bodies Queen Elizabeth after her Coronation when the Bible was presented unto her at the little Conduit in Cheapside she received the same with both her hands and kissing it laid it to her brest saying That the same had ever been her chiefest delight and should be the Rule by which she meant to frame her Government Fregevill a wise French Writer in his Apology for the general cause of Reformation observes two memorable things in Queen Elizabeths Government 1. That under her first Reformation had free and full course throughout England 2. That she was a favourer of the Clergy She once in her Progress visiting the County of Suffolk all the Iustices of Peace in that County met her Majesty every one of them having his Minister next to his body which the Queen took special notice of and thereupon uttered this Speech That she had often demanded of her Privy Councel why her County of Suffolk was better governed theu any other County and could never understand the reason thereof but now she her self perceived the reason It must needs be so said she where the Word and the Sword go together It is the Duty of the Magistrate not onely to regard that the life of his Subjects be civil and honest but also that it be religious and godly Therefore we are taught to pray for them that we may live under them a peaceable life not onely in all honesty but also in all godliness or true worship of God as the word used by the Apostle doth signifie Therefore the King was commanded to take a copy of the whole Law and not of the second Table only implying that he should look to the execution as well of the first Table as the second Ministers also should appear for the truths of God and be able now if ever to convince the gain-sayers Tit. 1. 9. The Scripture is profitable for doctrine and for reproof 2 Tim. 3. 16. Shall we have the Pelagian Doctrine of Free-will and the power of nature pleaded for and our Bertii maintaining the Apostasie of Saints and shall we have no Bradwardines to write de causa Dei nor Augustines de bono Perseverantiae I remember when the worthy Prolocutor of the Assembly with other Divines brought in the Confession of Faith into the House of Commons he said They had been the longer and had taken the more pains about it that it might obviate the errours of the times Sozomen relates a very remarkable story to this purpose When the Synod of Nice was called against Arius many of the wiser Heathens came thither to hear the Disputation there One Philosopher among the rest behaved himself very insolently there and petulantly derided the Christian Ministers an old plain countrey-man ex illustrium confessorum numero being not able to brook his arrogancy desired to dispute with him and having a last gained liberty he began thus Philosophe audito VNVS EST DEVS COELI TERRAE c. Hear Philosopher making a Confession of his Faith there is one God maker of Heaven and Earth and all things Invisible and then shew'd how Christ was born of a Virgin and conversed here with men and died for them and should after come to judge men for all that they had done here on earth and then concludes That these things are so without any other curious search we certainly beleeve Therefore do not spend your pains in vain in a curious refuting of these things which are only rightly understood by faith or in searching how they
free gathering of Churches I would wish such to weigh well what M. Baxter hath in his Christian Concord pag. 34. to 4● For the judgement of divers Reformed Divines holding the Pope to be Antichrist see Vigniers Preface to that excellent Book of his entituled Theatre De L'Antichrist and M. Prinns Canterburian Doom p. 277 278 279. if that be true which I heard from the Professour of Divinity in the University out of the Pulpit Bellarmine saith That since that Doctrine prevailed amongst us that the Pope was Antichrist that they have been of the losing hand I wonder then why some of our Divines should speak and write so warily that way I might adde divers things to that I speak there of the Iesuites and Monks The Dominicans come nearer us then the Fraciscans Friar Francis is highly commended by the Papists for three notable acts First For gathering Worms out of the way Secondly For calling all manner of beasts as Worms and Asses his Brethren Thirdly For taking lice off beggars and putting them on himself yea into his own bosom See Lewis Owens running Register his unmasking of all Popish Monks and Iesuites and also his Speculum Jesuiticum In the seventh Book I speak of Our Union with Christ and the special Benefits by him Adoption John 1. 12. Iustification Act. 13. 38 39. Sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 1. Col. 2. 13. Rom. 12. 9. to the end 1 Cor. 13. 4 5 6 7. Gal. 5. 22 23 24. Ephes. 6. 14. to 19. Philippians 4. 4. to the 9. In the eighth of the Ordinances where I shew the need of them for the ablest Christians here and maintain the several Ordinances For that of Baptism Why should the Priviledge of Infants under the Gospel be straighter then it was under the Law Or actual Faith be more required in all that are to be baptized then it was in those that were to be circumcised when Cirlumcision as well as our Baptism was a Sacrament of Admission into the Church and a Sign and Seal of the righteousnesse of Faith Rom. 4. 11. In the ninth Book I speak of the Decalogue where I acknowledge I have received much help from a Manuscript of M. Wheatleys for the four first Commandments and of M. Bals for the first See M. Caudries second part of the Sabbath In the last I treat of Glorification Mat. 25. 46. 2 Cor. 5. 10. See an excellent Sermon of Master Thomas Goodwins of this Argument stiled The Happinesse of the Saints in Glory on Rom. 8. 18. I have not only gone over the several Heads of Positive Divinity but I have likewise handled many if not most of the chief Controversies betwixt Us and the Papists the Arminians Socinians and also discussed several things about Church-Government to make it more full and generally usefull to settle men in the main Truths It is reported of David Paraeus That his labour was bestowed in polishing the body of Christian Doctrine collected by Zachary Ursine and that he desired not to die till he had finished that task but when he had concluded it he joyfully uttered these words Now Lord suffer thy servant to depart in peace because I have done that which I desired I have cause to bless God as for that good esteem which my other Labours have generally found amongst both learned and pious Christians so for enabling me to accomplish this great work Some may perhaps blame me for gleaning some notions from such as I hear as well as from the Authors I reade To that I might say Habes confitentem sed non reum I know no such guilt in it if I do make use sometimes of some special Observations I hear from the Pulpit though I hear often the same things from several persons Some hold that a mans Sermon is no longer his own when he hath preached it and I think the ears as well as the eyes are senses of Discipline Besides many Divines and some Rabbies though I had but harsh language from one Divine have acknowledged themselves beholding to me for my Labours therefore I hope none will grudge if I do likewise benefit my self and also others by my Collections in that kinde I pray God to guide us all in the truth and to preserve us from Apostasie in these declining dayes Thy hearty Well-willer EDWARD LEIGH Imprimatur Iune 15th 1653 EDMUND CALAMY PROLEGOMENA Hebrews VI. I. THe Apostle chides the Hebrews in the former Chapter for their ignorance and uncapablenesse of Divine Mysteries from vers 11. to the end He tels them they were dull of hearing and that their ignorance was affected they might for their time and means have been teachers and yet now they must be taught and which is strange the very principles of the word of God Here in the beginning of this Chapter he earnestly exhorts them to increase both in knowledge and obedience Leaving The Apostle alludes to men running a race they leave one place and go on forward we must leave the principles of Religion that is not stick there but passe on to a greater perfection The Apostle hath reference to the Schools of the Iews where he was trained up there were two sorts of Schollers 1. Punies or petties 2. Proficients Perfectists Six Principles are named as so many Heads and Common-places of the ancient Catechism not but that there were many other necessary principles yet they might be reduced to these 1. Two main duties that is 1. The Doctrine of Repentance from dead works that every man is dead in sinne by nature and therefore had need to repent 2. The Doctrine of Faith in God in his Nature as manifested in the Word and revealed in Christ. 2. Two means 1. The Doctrine of Baptisms by which in the Plural Number he means both the Sacraments and also the inward Baptism of Christ and that outward Baptism of Iohn that is to say of the Minister though some referre it to the set times of Baptism 2. The Imposition or laying on of hands that is by a Trope or borrowed speech the Ministery of the Church upon the which hands were laid not the Sacrament of Confirmation as à La●ide expounds it So Cartwright in his Harmony See M. Gillespies Miscel. cap. 3. pag. 47 48. and M. Cartw. Rejoynd p. 278. 3. Two Benefits Resurrection of the dead that the same numerical body shall arise again that it dies not with the body and eternal judgement so called metonymically because in that Judgement sentence shall be given concerning their eternal state either in weal or woe Vide Grot. in Matth. 26. 45. Not laying again the foundations Three things are required in a foundation 1. That it be the first thing in the building 2. That it bear up all the other parts of the building 3. That it be firm and immoveable Simply and absolutely in respect of all times persons and things Christ only is the foundation upon which the spiritual building of the Church is
re-sound as by an Eccho and is applied even by Heathen Writers unto that kinde of teaching which is by word of mouth sounding in the ear of him that is taught and especially unto the teaching of the first rudiments of any Science whatsoever It signifieth any kinde of vocal instruction Acts 21. 21 24. viz. that whereby the principles of Christian Doctrine are made known unto the hearers as Luk. 1. 4. instructed or catechized Gal. 6. 6. taught or catechized See Acts 18. 25. Rom. 2. 18. 1 Cor. 14. 19. Catechizing is a plain and easie instructing of the ignorant in the grounds of Religion or concerning the fundamental Principles familiarly by Questions and Answers and a spiritual applying the same for practice Whatever the catechizing in the Primitive Church was in private for the publick it seems not to have been Dialogue-wise by Question and Answer but in a continued speech with much plainnesse and familiarnesse Catechizing differs from preaching Preaching is the dilating of one member of Religion into a just Treatise Catechizing is a contracting of the whole into a summe Preaching is to all sorts catechizing to the young and rude Catechizing is 1. Plain that none might excuse themselves that the most illiterate might not say at the day of Judgement O Lord thy wayes were too hard for us 2. That the manner of the teaching might be sutable to the hearers 3. That no Governours might pretend the difficulty of it 2. Instructing which implieth that original ignorance and blindenesse we were born with 3. It is such an instructing which is by way of distilling things in a familiar manner our Saviour did not give the people whole Loaves but distributed them by pieces 4. Such an instructing as acquaints them with the meaning of things and spiritually applies the same for practice It is not enough to say the Creed and Lords Prayer but to understand the sense and apply it to practice 5. An instruction by way of Question and Answer which is thereby made more plain and familiar The exercise of Catechizing hath been proved to be most ancient and very necessary and usefull and therefore it should be alwayes continued in the Church 1. Because there will alwayes be found Babes which stand in need of Milk not being able to bear strong meat 2. Because as no building can stand without a foundation and none can be expert in an Art except he learn the principles thereof so none can have sound knowledge in Divinity except he be trained up in the grounds thereof The best way to perform this exercise is 1. By short Questions and Answers the Minister demanding the Question the people answering 2. It must be done purely 2 Cor. 2. 4. 3. Plainly 2 Cor. 3. 2. Heb. 5. 11. 4. Soundly Tit. 2. 7. 5. Orderly 6. Cheerfully and lovingly 2 Tim. 2. 24. praising the forward encouraging the willing patiently bearing with all admonishing such as are unruly Amesius his Christianae Catechesios Sciagraphia is usefull this way and Nowels Catechism in Latine in English there are B. Ushers M. Bains M. Cartwrights M. Balls and M. Crooks Guide and now the Assemblies Here is a fault that both teachers and hearers must share between them Ministers do not teach principles sufficiently happy is that man which can say with Paul I have kept back nothing that was profitable 2. Those are too blame which will not be taught children and servants which are stubborn and unwilling to be catechized some say they are too old to learn but are they too old to repent and be saved Some say they are past principles they are not now to be grounded but we may say with the Apostle Whereas they ought to be teachers they had need themselves to be taught Such people rebell against their Minister or Master whose duty is to teach them and God who commands it Let men be exhorted to practise this duty Ministers Masters Parents Schoolmasters teach the A B C and the Grammer Suffer little children to come unto me Consider 1. Thou broughtst thy children into the world blinde and deformed 2. Thou canst not else have comfort in thy children or servants many are crost in their family for want of this and many at the gallows will cry out If they had lived where they had been instructed they had never died a dogs death Greenham saith Thy children shall follow thee up and down in hell and cry against thee for not teaching them He that will not provide for his family saith Paul is worse then an Infidell and he that will not teach them is worse then a beast The old Nightingale teacheth the young to sing and the old Eagle her young ones to flie Children ill brought up were devoured by Bears to teach Parents that since they have done lesse then Bears who shape their whelps by much licking and smoothing them though Vossius and Dr. Brown deny this they therefore by Bears were bereft of them It is good therefore to season our children with wholsome truths betime a vessel will long keep the savour of that with which it is at first seasoned and the Devil will begin betime to sow his seed Master Belton upon his death-bed spake unto his children thus I do believe saith he there is never a one of you will dare to meet me at the Tribunall of Christ in an unregenerate condition It will be a great comfort to thee and benefit to them when they are instructed in the points of Religion If thy children die yet thou mayest have great hope of them when thou hast acquainted them with the principall grounds of Religion The Papists in the Preface to the Catechism of the Councel of Trent confesse that all the ground we have got of them is by catechizing and let us look that we lose not our ground again for want of it Iulian himself could not devise a readier means to banish Christian Religion then by pulling down the Schools and places of educating children Egesippus saith That by vertue of catechizing there was never a Kingdom but received alteration in their Heathenish Religion within fourty years after Christs passion All ignorant persons though they be grown in years must be willing to be instructed and catechized Ignorance in principles is a great sin 1. The Lord appointed a Sacrifice for ignorance Heb. 9. 7. 2. He requires repentance for it 3. It is the original of all the errours in a mans life both in doctrine and worship 1 Cor. 15. 34. Ioh. 4. 22. such will be a prey to false teachers Col. 2. 8. 4. The ground of all instability in the wayes of God Ephes. 4. 14 15. and of that non-proficiency that is in men the way to damnation Act. 4. 12. Theophilus a Noble-man and of ripe years was catechized as the Greek word shews ignorance bringeth men to the very pit and gulph of destruction Hos. 4. 1. and
the Mysteries of the Revelation the exposition rather of modern Interpreters then Fathers is to be received because in our times not theirs there is an accomplishment of those Prophecies and many things were more clearly known by them in those days the Ceremonies and Types of Moses his Law were better perceived by the Jews then us God the Author of the Scripture could speak perspicuously for he is wisdom it self and he would speak so because he caused the Scripture to be written to instruct us to our eternal salvation Rom. 15. 4. and he commands us to seek in the Scripture eternal life We do not account the prophecy of Isaiah touching Christ which the Eunuch read to be a dark and obscure prediction but we know it was clear and plain enough though the Eunuch a raw Proselyte understood not the meaning of it The Fathers proved their opinions out of the Scriptures therefore the Scriptures are more clear then the writings and Commentaries of the Fathers To every one which readeth with humility and invocation of God the Book of the Apocalipse the obscurest and hardest Book to understand of all other blessedness is promised when it cannot befal to any that understandeth nothing it is manifest that the promise of blessedness includeth a warrant of understanding of it so much as is necessary to salvation We affirm that many places in the Scripture are very obscure and that either from the obscurity of the things as in the Prophecies of future things the event must interpret them as Daniels Prophecies of the four Monarchies were in times past very dark but easier since when all things were fulfilled so the coming of Antichrist in the New Testament drew the Fathers into divers opinions so even yet there are many things obscure in the Revelation which are not accomplished So those things which are spoken of the Messiah in the Old Testament are either not understood or not fully without the New Testament Sometimes the ambiguity of words breeds a difficulty as I and the Father are one the Arians understood it of a union of will as when Christ prayed Iohn 17. that the Disciples might be one Hitherto may be referred those places which are to be understood allegorically as the Canticles the first Chapter of Ezekiel 3. Some places are obscure from the ignorance of ancient Rites and Customs as that place 1 Cor. 15. 29. of Baptizing for the dead is diversly explained by Interpreters both old and new There are six Interpretations of it in Bellarmine l. 1. de purgatorio c. 8. Viginti praeter hujus loci expositiones deprehendo saith one in a Theological disputation De baptismo veterum Ambrose saith Paul had a respect to that custom of some who baptized the living for the dead Piscator and Bucane say The custom of the ancient Church is noted here who baptized Christians at the Graves that so it might be a symbole of their belief and confession of the Resurrection of the Dead Tarnovius proves that that rite was not in use in the Apostles time Calvin interprets it of those who were baptized when they were ready to die but Beza thinks by Baptizing is understood the Rite of Washing the bodies before the Burial that ablution used upon the dead as if the Apostle should thence confirm the Resurrection of the dead q. d. that that is a cold vain and foolish Ceremony if the dead should not rise again And truly it is certain that those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being considered in themselves may as well be rendred Super mortuos as pro mortuis Andreas Hy●●rius sheweth in a particular Tract what various opinions there are about this place Voetius hath written a Tract D● insolubilibus Scripturae Estius and Dr Hall on the hard places of Scripture Divers reasons may be rendred why God would have many things in the Scripture obscure and difficult 1. To make us diligent both in Prayer to him to open to us the meaning of the Scriptures and likewise in Reading Meditating searching and comparing the Scriptures 2. To remove disdain from us we quickly slight those things that are easie 3. That we might more prize heavenly Truths gotten with much labor 4. To tame our arrogance and reprove our ignorance Ioh. 16. 12. 5. God would not have the holy Mysteries of his Word prostituted to Dogs and Swine therefore many a simple godly man understands more here then the great Rabbies 6. That order might be kept in the Church some to be Hearers some Teachers and Expounders by whose diligent search and travel the harder places may be opened to the people Here the Lamb may wade and the Elephant may swimme saith Gregory The Scriptures have both Milk for Babes and strong Meat for Men saith Augustine It is a note of a learned Interpreter That the benefit of knowing the Prophecies concerning the Church Christ before he was slain had it not so as he had after his death it was the purchase of the blood of Christ to have those things opened We do not therefore hold that the Scripture is every where so plain and evident that it needs no interpretation as our Adversaries do slander us and here they fight with their own shadow We confesse that the Lord in the Scriptures hath tempered hard and easie things together But this we affirm against the Papists First That all points of Faith necessary to Salvation and weighty matters pertaining to Religion are plainly set forth in the Scriptures Secondly That the Scriptures may with great profit and to good edification be read of the simple and unlearned notwithstanding the hardnesse of some places which in time also using the means they may come to the understanding of Therefore I might save that labour in answering the Arguments of our Adversaries since they are of no force against us nor indeed touch our cause proving onely that some places in the Scripture are difficult which we deny not But I shall first take off their Answers whereby they would evade the strength of our Reasons for the perspicuity of the Scripture and then refute their own Objections First When we urge divers places to prove the Scripture to be a Light the use of which is to dispell darknesse which it would not if it self were obscure Bellarmine answereth That those places are not to be understood of all the Scripture but only of the Commandments and that these also are called a Light not because they are easily understood although that be true but because being understood and known they direct a man in working 2. If it be understood of all the Scriptures they are called Light not because they are easily understood but because they illustrate the minde when they are understood But the Apostle Peter speaks not only of the Precepts of the Decalogue but of all the Scripture of the Old Testament which if it be Light much more shall the
in the life to come is called the Beatifical vision 3. Difficult God being infinite and our understanding finite betwixt which two there is no proportion who knows the things of God save the spirit of God A created understanding can no more comprehend God then a vial glass can contain the waters of the sea His wisdom is unsearchable Rom. 11. Iob 11. 7. and 26. 13. The Holy Fathers thought no word lawful concerning God which he hath not in his holy word granted us to use Euclide answered very fitly to one asking many things concerning the gods Coetera quidem nescio illud scio quod odêre curiosos Simonides being asked by Hiero What God was required some days time to be given him to think of it and as many more at the end of them still doubling his time for inquiry till at last being by Hiero asked a reason of his delays he answered him Because saith he quò magis inquiro ●ò minus invenio how much the more I inquire the less I understand The glorified Saints in heaven though they know God to their own perfection being spirits of just men made perfect yet they shall never know God to his perfection None but God himself can know God perfectly Iohn 1. 18. 1 Tim. 6. 16. Tunc enim dicitur aliquid comprehendi quando pervenitur ad finem cognitionis ipsius hoc est quando res cognoscitur ita perfectè sicut cognoscibilis est Aquinas part 1. Quaest. 14. Art 3. qui prè infinita prosequitur et si non contingat aliquando tamen proficiet prodeundo H●l de Trin. l. 2. We know God per viam eminentiae negationis causationis 1. All perfection which we apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himself by himself and of himself that he is one true good and holy 2. We must remove from him all imperfections whatsoever he is Simple Eternal Infinite Unchangeable 3. He is the Supreme cause of all Ier. 2. 13. There is a threefold knowledge of God 1. An implanted knowledge which is in every mans conscience a natural ingrafted principle about God O anima naturaliter Christiana said Tertullian Apologet. c. 17. 2. An acquired knowledge by the Creatures Psal. 19. 1. that is the great Book in every page thereof we may behold the Deity Praesentemque refert quaelibetherba Deum 3. Revealed knowledge of faith spoken of Heb. 11. 6. and this is onely sufficient to Salvation The Heathens had the knowledge of God in a confused manner they might know there was a God and that he was to be worshipped but could not learn who God was or what kinde of God he was and how to be worshipped 2 Tim. 1. 10. Rom. 1. 19 21. and 2. 14. a practical knowledge v. 15. Which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts not the gracious writing promised in the Covenant the light of nature is not sufficient to bring men d to salvation Onely in ludah is God known Psal. 76. 1 2. and 1●7 19. See Iohn 14. 6. and 1● 27. Ephes. 2. 11 12. The Heathens might know Gods Nature and Attributes that he was the Creator of the world that by his providence he did preserve and rule all things but they could not by the most industrious use of all natures helps attain unto any the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ they know not the truth as it is in Jesus Ephes. 4. 21. Vide Barlow exercitat Metaphys de Deo exercit 4. In God we will consider 1. His Nature 2. His Works In his nature two things are considerable 1. That he is 2. What he is That God is is the most manifest clear evident ungainsayable truth in the world It is the first verity and the principal verity from which all other truth hath its original and it is the foundation of all true goodness and Religion truly to believe it so saith the Author to the Hebrews He that cometh to God to do him any service or to receive any benefit from him must believe that is be firmly and undoubtedly perswaded that God is Some think this is a needless subject to treat of but it is necessary 1. Because the most universal and incurable disease of the world is Atheism Psal. 14. 1. fond surmises are wont to grow in the hearts of all where Religion is not setled Foundation-stones indeed cannot be guarded so much by argument as divine testimony 2. Supreme truths should be laid up in the greatest certainty if the principles of Religion were firmly assented to confidence would follow of its own accord 3. It is good often to revive this truth of the being of God the forgetfulness of God is a kinde of denial of him Psal 9. 17. and 10 4. By a God we mean an essence better then all other things and before all other things and of whom all other things are such a first essence is God and such an essence there must needs be neither is any thing of absolute necessity but this one thing even the Divine essence Reasons to confirm this that there is a God are taken from authority or Testimony and reason The Testimonies are 1. Of God himself 2. The Creature 1. General of all men 2. Particular of each mans conscience Reasons may be drawn from two chief places viz. The effects and the contrary The effects are either 1. Ordinary and those 1. Natural both General the making and preserving of the world and Special the framing or maintaining of each man or other like creature in the world 2. Civil the upholding and altering the States of Kingdomes and particular Countreys 2. Extraordinary miracles Arguments from the contrary are two 1. The Being of the Devils 2. The slightness of the reasons brought to disprove this truth or to shew the Contrary Though no man can prove â causa why there should be a God yet every man may collect ab effectu that there is a God By that wisdom which we see to have been in the making that Order in the Governing and that Goodness in the preserving and maintaining of the world All which prove as effectually that there needs must be a God as either warming or burning that the fire must needs be hot That there is a God is proved 1. By Testimony 2. By Reason 1. By the Testimony of God himself he that testifieth of himself either by word or writing is God hath written a Book to us in which he affirms of himself that he is every page almost and line of Scripture point to God He begins his Book with himself saying In the beginning God made heaven and earth He concludes this Book with himself saying If any man shall take ought from this Prophecie God shall take away his part out of the Book of life In every particular prophecie he testifieth the same thing
holinesse of God Rev. 4. 9. Ephes. 5. 1. his holinesse is a rule to it self we should have the Law written in our hearts Amongst the Turks Jews Indians Persians and the Papists themselves at this day the most zealous and holiest as they conceive them in their Religion are most esteemed and honored and onely in the greater part of the Protestant Churches the most knowing and tenacious of the Evangelical truth and the most strict and godly in their lives are hated nicknamed disgraced and villified Sir Simonds D' Ewes Primitive practice for preserving truth Sect. 17. 1. This condemns the Pope who proudly arrogates the Title of the most holy and holinesse it self the high Priest was to be holy Numb 16. 7. but he will be termed most holy 2. Hypocrites civil honest men and prophane men who scoff at purity and holinesse which is Gods excellency it was the Devils device to bring that slander on earthly holinesse A yong Saint an old Devil Angelicus juvenis senibus satanisat in annis Erasmus in his pietas puerilis saith that proverb was devised by the Devil himself it is contrary to that of Solomon Prov. 22 6. It was a great commendation of Origen that he learned the Scripture of a childe Eusebius The like Paul saith of Timothy 2 Tim. 3 15. 3. Confutes merits the Angels are impure in his sight 4. We should be holy like God not in degree but in resemblance 1 Pet. 1. 15 16. we should be holy in our affections actions Holinesse should be prized and admired the Seraphims sing one to another Holy holy holy Isa. 6. 3. They choose this out of all Gods Attributes to praise him for We should pray to God with pure hearts worship him holily Iohn 4. 24. Zach. 14. 20 21. that is men should be holy in those ordinary natural actions of eating and drinking 5. This ministers comfort to the Saints and assures them that they shall finde favor with him and is for a terror to the unholy which are altogether carried to themselves led by themselves and set up themselves and these things below They love that which God loathes God must necessarily hate sin because it is so contrary to him That he doth so it appears 1. In his depriving man of an infinite good infinite glory and happinesse 2. In inflicting on him infinite torments A holy heart may draw much comfort from Gods holinesse 1. He will distinguish between the precious and the vile they have to do with a holy God Num 16. 2 3. Mal. 3. ult 2. Thou hast communion with this holy God there is sweetnesse and comfort in conversing with holy men after this life they shal behold the beauty of Gods holinesse and give him the glory of it 3. He will take special care of them that they shall not be polluted Exod. 29. 33 34. 4. What holinesse is there in any of their services it shall be accepted and their holinesse begun shall be perfected 6. We should labor after holinesse 1. To go quite out of our selves and all creatures and go wholly as it were unto God making him the ground measure and end of all our actions striving above all things to know him esteem him and set all our powers upon him This is the felicity of the creature to be holy as God is holy this is the felicity of the Saints in heaven they care for nothing but God are wholly and altogether carried to him and filled with him He is all in all unto them as he is all in all unto himself In being thus carried to him they are united to him and enjoy him and are blessed There are Saints on earth as the Scripture shews Psal. 16. 3. and 132. 9 though the Papists deny this Men are said to be Saints here 1. In regard of Sacramental holinesse Baptism is called the laver of Regeneration Tit. 3. Sanctum quasi sanguine tinctum Isidore Such are dedicated to God and set a part for a holy use 2. In regard of inherent holinesse the denomination is from the better part so man is called a Reasonable creature from his reasonable soul and men though in part corrupt are called Saints from the image of God in the better part 3. In regard of imputed holinesse Christ is made to us Wisdom Righteousnesse Sanctification Sanctification is 1. The end of our Election Ephes. 1. 4. 2. Of our Redemption Luke 1. 75. Holinesse is 1. A beautiful thing Psal. 110. 3. therefore Christ calls his Spouse The fairest of all women 2. A beneficial thing makes one bear all afflictions easily makes all our services acceptable to God will give us a sight of God Matth. 5. 8. 9. God is Kinde Exod 34. 7. Keeping Kindenesse for thousands so it should be rendred he spake of Gods mercy in the sixth verse see Ephes. 2. 7. Titus 3. 4. it is called Great kindenesse Neh. 9 17. Marvellous kindenesse Psalm 31. 21. Merciful kindnesse Psalm 119. 2. Everlasting kindenesse Isa 54 8. Excellent loving kindenesse Psalm 36 7. Multitude of loving kindenesse Isa. 63. 74. We should shew loving kindenesse unto Christ and one unto another 2 Peter 1. 3. 1 Corinth 13. 4. Some mention two other vertues 2. Gods Jealousie by which he will have all due glory given to him and suffers not the least part of it to be communicated to the creature This care of his honor and fame is manifest by the grievous punishments inflicted on those who have dared to arrogate part of the Divine glory to themselves as on the building of Babel Gen. 11. ● the Bethshemites 1 Sam. 6. 19. Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4. 29 30. and Herod Acts 21. 22 23. 2. His Humility by which God descends to our capacity and graciously provides for our weaknesse examples of which are both Gods familiar conversing and conference with Moses and Abraham interceding for Sodom with David and others and especially the incarnation of Christ. CHAP. XIV Of GODS Power SO much be spoken concerning Gods Will Affections and Vertues there followeth Power in God by which God by the bare beck of his Will effecteth all things which he will and howsoever he will perfectly without labour and difficulty and can do perfectly all things which he wills this is called Absolute Power by which he can do more things then either he doth or will Actual Power is when God causeth those things to exist which he will have exist Both Gods Absolute and Actual Power is Active onely and no way Passive This Power of God is Infinite First In respect of the Divine Essence since it slows from the Infinite Nature of God for it is a most certain Rule that the faculties and powers of the Subject slow from the form and agree with the form Secondly In respect of the Object and Effects for God doth never so many and so great works but he can do more and greater although we must hold that God
and all the rest are nought for they came from Satan and serve to set him up in mens mindes and to quench the respect and fear of God Division All creatures in their natural estate are severed and divided one from another 1. They are divided from God the only and chiefest good 2. From the Angels 1 Cor. 11. 10. 3. One from another Isa. 19. begin 4. From themselves We are joyned to Satan and comply with the Idols of our own hearts Ezek. 14. begin 1. The nature of this division is not only local as that of Reuben Judg. 5. 15 16. by the river Iordan or in externals but spiritual which is the worst as spiritual union is the best This makes the difference in mens mindes judgements wils consciences Acts 26. 9. Iohn 16. beg divided in the very ends they propound and the means that lead to those ends and the rule The causes of it are sad the lusts and sins of our own hearts the just indignation of God These sins especially 1. Idolatry Iudg. 5. 8. 2. Covenant-breaking Levit. 26. 25. 3. Pride Ier. 13. 9. compared with 14. 4. Hypocrisie Isa. 10. 6. 5. Apostasie Arguments against division and falling into parties First Divisions are a judgement of God upon a Nation Zech. 13. 14. Secondly Consider the several sins that falling into parties puts men upon 1. It puts them on great thoughts of heart Iudg. 5. 15. 2. Men break forth into bitter censuring and reviling of those which are not of their own party Prov. 21. 24. Iames 4. 11. they set up their own will in opposition to God 3. It causeth men to be glad to hear evil one of another and take up any report for truth Nehem. 6. 6. and glad of any mischief that shall befall them Ezek. 25. 6. 4. This layes upon men a necessity of joyning with any to oppose that party though they be never so contrary in religion or affection Thirdly Falling into parties is a certain way of ruine 1. In the just judgement of God Hos. 10. 2. 2. In the nature of the thing Iudg. 5. 5. In cause of religion every subdivision is a strong weapon in the hand of the contrary part Hist. of Councel of Trent lib. 1. pag. 49. Two earthen pots floting with this Inscription Si collidimur frangimur If we knock we crack were long ago made the embleme of England and the Low countries but may now be extended to all Christians We shall finde in our English Chronicles that England was never destroyed but when divided within it self our civil divisions brought in the Romans the Saxons Danes and Normans Though our Civil and Ecclesiastical breaches be very great Lam. 2. 13. yet God can and will heal all the breaches of his Saints 1. Because he hath promised to do it Isa. 2. 4. 11. 6 7 8 9 13. 30. 26. 32. 18. 33. 20. Ezek. 28. 24. Ier. 32. 39. Zeph. 3. 9. Zech. 14. 9. 2. Christ hath prayed for it three times in Iohn 17. viz. 21 22 23. verses 3. Christ died to make his people one Ephes. 2. from 14. to the later end See 1 Cor. 12. Rom. 8. to the end There are some cementing or reconciling graces faith repentance charity Col. 3. 14. and humility There is much talk of peace and unity peace with truth or peace and holiness are joyned together in Scripture We should pray to Christ to heal our divisions that he would make us one we should put on love which is the bond of perfectnesse Col. 3. 14 15. See Phil. 3. 14 15. Drunkennesse Drunkennesse is a great sin Isa. 28. 1. Deut. 32. 32. Prov. 23. 29 30 31. The Scripture condemns it Be not drunk with wine saith the Apostle Salomon forbids to keep company with a wine bibber the Prophet denounceth a woe to the drunkards of Ephraim Drunkennesse is one of the fruits of the flesh and a drunkard one of those whom Paul excludes from heaven Nature condemns it it trampleth under foot at once the whole Law and Gospel too First For the Law it violates each Commandment The first the drunkard makes his belly his god he cannot exercise knowledge of God love fear confidence remembrance of sin or any vertue It breaks the second Commandment it is a direct breach of our vow made in Baptism and renewed in the Lords Supper for this is one of the works of the Devil which we then renounced Again it hinders a man from praying reading meditating or doing any good and religious duty It breaketh the third Commandment because it is an abuse of one of Gods creatures and so takes Gods name in vain it causeth that one can neither see God in his works nor do any works to his glory nor shew forth thankfulness for benefits nor patience in crosses and because it fils the mouth full of foul and desperate oaths The fourth he is unfit to sanctifie the Sabbath and if one be drunk on the Lords-day it is a great prophanation of it for it is farre from a holy work The fifth it makes one despise Parents Magistrates all Governors it makes him abuse Wife Children Servants and all his Inferiours it makes him lift up himself above his equals and despise all in comparison of himself The sixth it is a hurt to his own body and breeds vile diseases dropsie fever rednesse of eyes makes him rail revile quarrel and kill and commit all insolent injuries and hazards himself to untimely death Gal. 5. 21. The seventh for it fils heart and tongue and all full of filthinesse it inflames the body to lust a drunken Lot will commit incest Rom. 13. 13. The eighth it is a wasting of time and goods and a robbing of a mans self and family it often enciteth to cozenage and beguiling it is grosse injustice The ninth it makes him full of bragging and boasting and backbiting his tongue is as full of vanity as his head of vapours The tenth it fils the minde full of leud imaginations and exposeth him to Satans suggestions Perkins on Revel 2. 14. shews that Popery breaks every Commandment Mr Paget in his admonition touching Talmudique allegations pag. 422. to 436. shews how the Jewish Rabbins break every Commandment It is against the Gospel it oppresseth the heart and takes away reason that a man grows hard-hearted and fils men full of presumption There was a street in Rome called Vicus sobrius the sober street but is there a village in England that may be called Villa sobria the sober village If a man though he loaths drunkennesse should to symbolize with wicked company drink immoderately yet it is drunkennesse it is true he is not ebriosus an old soaking drunkard yet he is ●brius he hath committed the sinne of drunkennesse There is a two-fold privation of reason 1. Aptitudinal when a man drinks so immoderately that there is a disposition to disturb reason yet because he is of a strong brain and
brought to a sense of his sin and to repentance for it Matth. 21. 31. 2. In the life to come because they have sinned against greater means and light they shall receive the greater damnation Matth. 11. 24. Many an hypocrite will 1. Constantly hear and frequent the best Ministry Isa. 58. 2. Ezek 33. 31 32. 2. Will keep a constant course in prayer and that not in ordinary prayer only but even in extraordinary too Luke 18. 12. compare Zach. 7. 5. 8. 19. together 3. Is a strict observer of the Sabbath day Luke 13. 14 15. Iohn 5. 10. 4. Loveth the sincerity of Religion and hateth Popery will-worship and idolatry with all the reliques and monuments of it Rom. 2. 22 23. 5. Goeth a great deal farther in the reformation of his life then the civil man doth 2 Pet. 2. 20. Luke 11. 42. We should labour for a spirit without guile Psal. 2. 2. That spirit is 1. An humble spirit before in and after duty 2. An honest spirit carried equally against all sin 3. A plain spirit Idlenesse Idlenesse is a vice of spending time unprofitably It is vivi hominis sepultura Salomon often condemneth sluggishnesse Prov. 6. 9 10 11. which saying he repeats again Proverbs 24. see Proverbs 20. 13. An idle man is a burden to himself a prey to Satan the devils cushion semper aliquid age ut te diabolus inveniat occupatum A grief to Gods Spirit Ephes. ● 28. 30. Bodily sloth you cannot bear and soul-sloth Christ cannot bear Matthew 25. 26. Sins accompanying idlenesse 1. Inordinate walking 2 Thess. 3. 11 12. 2. Talebearing 1 Tim. 5. 13. Prov. 11. 13. 3. Theft Ephes. 4. 28. 2 Thess. 3. 12. 4. Drunkennesse Amos 6. 1. 5. Filthinesse see 2 Sam. 11. Ezek. 16. 49. Idlenesse is the mother and nurse of lust Quaeritur Aegistus quare sit factus adulter In promptu causa est desidiosus erat Otia si tollas periere cupidinis arcus Ovid. Water standing still will putrifie and breed toads and venemous things so ease will breed diseases The punishments of idlenesse 1. Diseases Cernis at ignavum corrumpunt otia corpus 2. Dulnesse idlenesse is the rust of wit 3. Poverty Prov. 10. 4. 20. 13 19. 6. 10 11. 24. 34. 4. Shame Prov. 10. 5. 6. 6. 12. 11. It is against the order of nature which God set in all his creatures at the first the heavens stand not still but by miracle Adam laboured in Paradise much more since the fall Iob 5. 7. The rust fretteth unused iron and the mothes eat unworn garments This is the sin of great persons who ●●ve received great mercies from God Cretians idle slow-bellies This sin is condemned 1. Exceedingly in the word by Salomon Prov. Eccles. Isaiah and by Paul and in morall Philosophy 2. It is a mother-sin as was shewed before 3. Produceth many plagues rheums obstructions and other inconveniences as hath been also shewed and exposeth one to great danger A good remedy against idlenesse is diligence in some honest calling Iacob and his sons Moses and David were shepherds 1 Sam. 12. 1 2. Let him that hath an office wait upon it This humbleth the minde profits the estate and makes a man able to do good to himself and others interests a man to the things of this life he that labours not must not eat in all labour there is abundance It fits him for religious duties if it be moderate makes the life cheerfull prevents evil fancies Impenitence Impenitence is a great sin under the Gospel Acts 8. 22. The longer one lies in any sin the more is the heart hardened Ier. 16. 1. Ephes. 4. 18 19. He which hardeneth his heart against many reproofs shall surely perish obstinate impenitent sinners shall be destroyed 1 Sam. 12. 25. Impenitence perfectly conforms one to Satan who is in malo obfirmatus and sins without remorse In malo perseverare diabolicum Reasons 1. Repentance is Gods gift therefore denying of it is Gods curse 2. Hereby the highest favour of God is despised the offering of repentance is a mercy that belongs to the second Covenant obstinacy in sinning is a denying of Gods justice and abusing his mercy 3. So long as one lives in any sin without repentance so long God looks on him as continuing in that sin his minde is not changed 4. Without repentance there is no remission Acts 5. 31. Luke 24. 47. therefore the sin against the holy Ghost is unpardonable Heb. 6. 6. because one cannot repent 5. Final impenitency is a certain evidence of ones reprobation Rom. 2. 5. Heb. 12. 17. 6. Under the Gospel there are the greatest arguments and motives to repentance Matth. 3. 2. Acts 17. 30. Christ himself sent Iohn before him to preach the doctrine of repentance and he himself did also preach it he bad men amend their lives because the Kingdom of God was at hand and his Apostles also preacht the same doctrine of repentance He is a wilfull sinner which either holds in himself a purpose that he will sin or is irresolute and not settled in a firm purpose of not sinning or that purposeth to mend but not till hereafter Injustice Injustice is a sin Every man is to have his own and to be permitted the quiet enjoyment of that wherein he hath interest They execute no judgement Salomon saith in the place of judgement there was iniquity I looked for judgement and behold oppression Isaiah Reasons 1. The excellency of the thing abused judgement is a part of Gods authority It is Gods judgement which you execute saith Iehosaphat therefore it is a foul thing to abuse a thing so sacred and of such high respect 2. The causes of it are covetousness distrust of Gods providence shaking off the fear of God and extinguishing the light of nature denying Gods Lordship over the whole world 3. The effects of it are bad 1. It defiles a mans conscience Iudas cast away the thirty pieces which he came unjustly by 2. It will ruinate his state and family A man shall not rost what he caught in hunting 3. It blemisheth the name and stains a mans reputation The Publicans were in such hatefull esteem among the Jews that they were ranked with the very harlots and most notorious sinners because they cared not what nor from whom they gat 4. Riches deceitfully gotten is vanity tossed to and fro by them which seek death a man shall be damned for unjust gain unlesse repentance and restitution come between The Apostle saith God is an avenger of all which do such things Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Intemperance It is an inordinate appetite or immoderate desire and use of meat and drink and this is when a due mean is exceeded either in the costly preparation of them for our selves or others or in the too liberall and excessive use of them so prepared Degrees of intemperance 1. More secret
of him Unkindnesse Unkindnesse is a fault This is contrary to a plain precept Put on kindnesse and Be kindly affected one toward another Reasons 1. It springs from bad causes some habitual distempers of self-conceit pride malice or ill education and a kinde of testy and pettish temper or some present passion of anger grief or fear which withdraws the minde from the consideration of that which is comely and convenient 2. The fruits of it are evil It discontenteth and offendeth those to whom it is shewed We must consider of our slips in this kinde and be humbled for them 2. Let us learn to mend this fault and to be plentifully constant in the practise of the contrary duty even to be kinde affable and gentle in our whole carriage and at all times to all men so far as just occasion offers it self and not to give over our selves so farre to any passion either of grief or anger as not to exercise this vertue Unsetlednesse See Gen. 49. 4. Iames 1. 8. Such Christians as are unstable are easily seduced 2 Tim. 3. 6. 2 Pet. 2. 14. One Theophilus Bishop of Alexandria was nicknamed Euripus because of his ebbing and flowing One sort of Sect●ries there is which will not ingage to hold any thing but are known by beleeving nothing these passe now under the name of Seekers The usual way in these daies is to play the Scepticks and question almost every thing in Religion and hold nothing or else to place Religion in some new opinion Unstedfast Christians are rotten-hearted Psal. 78. 36 37. and will never hold out in time of danger Rivet Discus Grot. Dialy si Sect. 8. p. 262. taxeth Grotius of great inconstancy Causabone Epist. 513. to Scaliger saith thus of Lipsius Omnino magnam literae jacturam in eo fecerunt majorem tamen facturae si quam verbis docuit constantiam vita exhibuisset Such Christians should be carefull to wait on the Ordinances the Ministry Ephes. 4. 14. Pray to God to stablish them see 1 Thess. 3. ult 2 Thess. 2. ult and frequent the company of setled and stablished Christians and take heed of seducers Unthankefulnesse Unthankfulnesse to God or man is a great sin It is contrary to plain precepts Col. 3. Be ye thankefull and in respect of God he saith In all things give thanks The nine Lepers are secretly taxed by our Saviour for not returning to give thanks unto him when he had delivered them from that foul and infamous disease of the leprosie The Apostle also taxeth the Gentiles for it saying That they glorified not God as God neither were they thankfull Reasons 1. It springeth from evil causes either from the strength of pride and self-conceit in that a man thinketh himself worthy of all that which is done for him and more and conceiveth that all should serve his turn or from notable folly and unreasonablenesse that he wanteth wit to consider of his own need of benefits or at least from some sudden and vehement passion and distemper 2. The effects of it are also naught it offendeth men it causeth them to repent of their labour cost love and if it be practised toward God it offendeth him also and hindereth him from bestowing benefits Let us blame our selves and be humbled for our unthankfulnesse in defrauding God or men of their due praises and acknowledgement for mercies received unthankfulnesse to God shews great blindnesse of minde great want of humility in the consideration of our own un worthinesse and want of faith in Gods providence let us be humbled for it and crave pardon of it 2. Let us be carefull to reform it and be constant in the contrary duty Usury Usury say some is a lending for gain One describes it thus Usury is when a man makes a gain of lending and binds the party borrowing without consideration of his gains or losses to repay the principall with advantage It is hard to desine some vices as Heresie Sacriledge and also Usury It is matcht with theft Ezek. 18. 13. with adultery vers 10. and with violence vers 11. It is condemned there amongst the great transgressions of the moral Law therefore that Law Levit. 25. 36. is not Judicial as some say but Moral see Exod. 22. 25. Deut. 23. 19. Psal. 15. 5. To borrow a thing on usury is to covenant with the lender to return him not only the thing lent in the full quantity of it but something over and above only in liew and recompence of the lending of it which is unlawfull saith Mr Elton on the eighth Commandment and he proves it by Ier. 15. 10. and answers there the chief objections brought for usury of any kinde Sir Francis Bacon cals it the bastard and barren imployment of money and the bastard use of money Vel minimus fructus ex pecunia percipi non potest sine Dei offensione proximi injuria Calvin Epist. 226. see his Epist. 383. where he gives strict cautions to those that take use See B. And. Theologic determinat de Usuris B. Downames Treatise on Psalm 15. against it and Knewstub on the eighth Command Thom. Aquin. 2ª 2ae quaest 78. Artic. 1 2 3 4. and Theatre of Gods Judgm part 1. c. 42. and especially Dr. Fentons Book Rivetus in Catholico orthodoxo Tractatu quarto quaest 15. Salmasius de Usuri● c. 4. and Zanchy on Ephes. 4. and Mr. Perkins on 8th Cammand and Dr. Ames on Psal. 15. and de Consc. l. 5. c. 44. and Dr. Hall in his Cases of Consc. seem to allow of it in some cases Yet Dr. Hall in his Practicall cases of Conscience saith All usury which is an absolute contract for the meer loan of mony is unlawfull both by law natural and positive both divine and humane There is not a toleration of usury by that Act Eliz. 13. c. 8. but a limitation of it the Title of it is An Act against Usury and it calleth it a detestable sin CHAP. XXV Of Witchcraft VVItchcraft is a great sin 1 Chron. 10. 13 14. God would not have Witches to live therefore he would not have others to use their art and counsell Deut. 18. 10 11. he forbids all to consult with familiar Spirits and more plainly Levit. 19. 31. Reasons 1. The cause which moveth any to seek unto them is distrust in God or impatience under Gods hand or some inordinate desire of knowing or doing things which the Lord allows not to know or do things secret and strange 2. The persons sought to are in league with the devil and so are an abomination to God Deut. 18. 11. 3. The effect of seeking unto them is dangerous it works confidence in them and so in Satan whose vassals they are and withdraws the heart from God Bodin lib 4. Daemon proveth by many examples and confessions of Witches that witchcraft hath no power upon the Regenerate or upon Magistrates who execute the Laws against them which is fully
men of most fame and reputation not for command and wealth alone but also for learning and piety These did seek to discredit him out of their repining envy these vilified his Person depraved his best actions and did cast the worst imputation they could upon him They vilified our Saviours person by the basenesse of his parents his kindred and profession Is not this Iosephs son is not Mary his mother and his brethren Iames and Ioses Simon and Iude Is not he the Carpenter They gave it forth that he was a drunkard a glutton a rioter a companion with the basest fellows even Publicans and sinners they depraved his actions 1. His Doctrine as heretical crossing Moses his Law and treasonous that he forbad to pay tribute unto Caesar. 2. His miracles as magical they reported that he did all those miracles for which the people did so much honour him not by the power and singer of God but by the black Art of hellish conjuration even by the aid and working of Beelzebub the chief of Devils These said he was a wicked and prophane fellow a man that did not regard the Sabbath of the Lord. These were bold to lay to his charge that horrible and sacrilegious crime of blasphemy saying Why doth this man blaspheme and for thy blasphemy we seek to stone thee Lo to be traduced of men famous for knowledge and religion and for honour and wealth as a boon companion as a wine bibber a fellow for harlots a prophane polluter of the Sabbath an horrible blasphemer of God this was the bitter cup which our Lord Jesus was fain to drink Could he suffer greater and more intollerable ignominy Nay at one time they were so audacious as to tell him to his face Thou art mad and hast a Devil Now consider thirdly his Labour his travel on foot many a weary step and long journey from Galilee to Ierusalem from Ierusalem to Galilee and from quarter to quarter and Countrey to Countrey sometimes on foot with sweat and toil till he was even weary and tired again glad to sit down and rest him as once at the Well of Iacob sometimes by Sea in a Ship when the furious windes conspired against him and raised such a storm as if the ship must have been swallowed up in the vast belly of the waves and as if the Devil would have watched his opportunity to have drowned him sleeping for as for riding upon a beast he never took that ease unto himself except alone one time and that the last of all that he went to Ierusalem and then poorly mounted upon the bare back of a silly fole of an Ass that was never accustomed to the saddle before with a jerkin or a coat or two cast on him in stead of better furniture A toilsom life indeed to do nothing else but go afoot from City to City and sometimes also to be ready to be prest to death with the throng of a rude and unmannerly multitude You have his Labours now consider Fourthly His Dangers He lived in quietnesse and safety enough during his Carpenters imployment but when he came to be a Minister he was still persecuted At Nazareth his own City where he was not born but bred up the first Sermon as I think that ever he preached there because he was somewhat plain in telling them of their faults they laid violent hands upon him and would have broke his neck down a steep hill on which the Town was built After as he grew more famous for wonders so he was more hated and maligned by the Rulers many times they conspired to take and intrap him sent Officers to apprehend him took up stones to dash out his brains and commanded that whosoever knew where he was should make it known that they might apprehend him and that he which would confesse him to be the Christ should be excommunicated insomuch that he was called A stone of offence and a sign to be spoken against and he saith The world hateth me yea they have hated me without a cause Insomuch that he could not walk openly amongst them but was fain to hide himself after a sort and to flie for his life for they were scarce ever without some or other device to take him and put him to death You have heard of his Perils let us speak Fifthly of his Sorrows He was a man of Sorrows full of grief and tears for he was not a stone or a piece of iron that all these things did not touch him but he was sensible of these evils and felt the heat of his Fathers displeasure against him for our sins for which he had undertaken to answer in all these things and especially the memorial of his last passion did wonderfully grieve and trouble him Luk. 12. 50. How am I straitned or pained till it be accomplished not with such a grief as made him unwilling to come to it but with such as made him desire that it were once over He often set his thoughts a work upon his last sufferings he foretold his Disciples of it some four or five times no question but he considered of it himself many hundred times and not one of them without a vehement working of sorrow as if one of us should know that some two or three year hence he must be put to the rack or burned at a stake he could not but bestow full many a heavy thought upon that hour so did our Lord without all controversie with many frequent requests and humble tearfull mournfull prayers supplicating to God for aid and help against that hour according as the many complaints and praiers made by David his Type in the Psalms do manifestly evince Now come we to the last scene of this Tragedy his end The conclusion of his life just like a Tragedy was most distressed and lamentable of all the other parts whether you consider the things he suffered from God immediatly or the things he endured before in and after his death The first and great work of his Passion was the agony and bloudy sweat grief astonishment and extream heavinesse which he sustained in the garden He began to be heavy and greatly grieved saith one Evangelist and To be astonished saith another and He was in an agony saith the third in so much that great drops of bloud trickled from him to the ground The two tormentingst passions that man doth wrestle withall in this life more insufferable then any rack or disease of the body are sorrow and fear which if they be in the greatest extremity that can be are the greatest miseries that can be Now so they were in him for the word saith he complained thus My soul is sorrowfull round about even to death so much as was enough to have killed him not with the suddennesse of it for that kils easily and quickly but with the extream inwardnesse and weight of it and his fear is called astonishment and amazement There is 1. An amazement
Lord and his glory It is nothing but heat or warmth whence zealous men in Scripture are said to burn in the Spirit but it is a spiritual heat wrought in the heart of man by the holy Ghost improving the good affections of Love Joy Hope for the best furtherance of Gods glory using the contrary affections of hatred anger grief against Gods enemies Dr Holland when he went any journey was used to say to the Fellows Commendo vos dilectioni Dei odio Papatus All the servants of God should be zealous for the Lord Revel 3. 19. This is required in the Minister Act. 18. 25. the hearer Luke 24. 32. of them that would pray with comfort Iam. 5. 16. in every part of the service that we do unto God Rom. 12. 11. it is in general required of us in our whole profession and practice of Religion Tit. 2. 14. Iehosaphat is praised for it 2 Chron. 17. 6. See Chap. 31. 25. 2 King 23. 25. Reasons God is a Spirit a pure act with whom we have to do therefore we must be spiritual he would not accept the first-born of an Asse because it is a dull sloathful creature Secondly It is conversant in matters of Religion which are of highest concernment in the world all the heart soul and strength are to be laid out about them Thirdly This is an excellent grace 1. Because it is the best evidence of a Christian the Spirit of God works like fire 2. The greatest means to draw out the soul to service for Christ Isa. 6. when he was toucht with a coal from the Altar then he cries Send me 3. It will save a sinking Church Numb 25. 10. Ier. 5. 1. 4. It is the glory and beauty of all our services as varnish adds a lustre to all other colours makes them amiable Two Cautions 1. It must be guided by knowledge Rom. 10. 2. Zeal without knowledge is like mettle in a blinde horse Knowledge without zeal is like a precious stone in an old Toads head 2. Mannaged by wisdom we must not go beyond our calling Signs of holy Zeal 1. One is impatient for injuries done against God so Moses Exod. 32. 2. It is ready to be imployed in any service which may advance God as Isa. 6. 3. It makes a man do it couragiously a zealous man is bold for God Shall such a man as I flee said Nehemiah 4. He will spare no cost in the cause of God Cant. 8. 7. 5. What ever it hath done for God it never thinks it hath done enough Phil. 3. 12 13. 6. This heavenly fire shines abroad but burns most within 7. Makes one take pleasure in the zeal and forwardnesse of others I would all the Lords people were Prophets CHAP. XXVII Of the Sensitive Appetite THus I have done with sanctifying the intellectual Nature the Understanding Will Conscience Memory and the Affections Now I come to Appet●tus Sensitivus The Sensitive Appetite It is an inclination of the soul to imbrace those things which are good or evil according to the judgement of the sense There are five external Senses Seeing Hearing Smelling Touching and Tasting and three internal the Memory Fancy Common Sense In these men and bruit beasts are alike In man this sensitive appetite differs from that in a bruit beast in three things 1. That in a bruit beast is all the soul which he hath but in man it is not a distinct soul but an inferiour faculty of the reasonable soul. 2. The motions of a bruit beast according to sense are not guided by reason 3. In a bruit beast his sense is all the guide he hath by which he is to make his judgment mans rule is reason guided by God All the motions of the will which the soul takes upon the representation of the senses is the bruit part 1. The rectitude of it before the fall or the image of God in it It was wholly at the command of reason is was to be a servant to the soul only to bring intelligence and represent all the things which were done abroad A man in his pure condition had not a desire to a thing till reason had judged of it Since mans fall much of our depravation lies in this low brutish faculty the Scripture saith Every man is a beast The Apostle ten times in the sixth seventh and eigth of the Romans cals concupiscence sin Some think it is but the depravation of this he there means Man falling off from God and making him his portion turns to the creature and makes it his portion 1. The power which this brutish part hath over reason 2. Over the will and affections 3. The abominable fruits which slow from both these Of the first Whereas reason should impartially take all things without prejudice and weigh them in the right balance it puts out the eye or deludes it 2. It takes up the will before any thing be propounded to reason it often ravisheth the will which the Scripture expresseth by madnesse 3. The woful fruits of this Hereupon man who was made after Gods Image and most like him becomes a carnal earthly brutish man the spiritual part is drowned Iude v. 10. His joy is in his musick wine horse garden cloaths Though he have an intellectual nature yet his reason invents wayes and means to follow some sensual good and to avoid some sensual ev●l and in this case are all natural men Corruption first came into the soul by the sensual appetite Eve by seeing the fruit hearing the Serpent touching and tasting the fruit and by imagining what good might come to her by it was deceived Scholars and wise men when corrupt are often taken up more with the things which work upon the senses then with what works upon reason Many among the Arabians are learned in the Tongues and Mathematicks yet their happinesse and all their Religion from Mahomet is what pleaseth the sense Popery is a meer pompo●s sensual Religion Men often do vertuous things that they may have the reward of vertue and hate punishments because they are sensual The work of Gods grace in sanctifying this part The proper office of it was to present the intellectual nature with what of God may be found in the creature The Sanctification of it stands in two things 1. God by his grace spoils the relish of that good which is presented to us by the senses it discovers to the soul better good to feed upon the taste of spiritual things the consolations of Christ. 2. The soul is not much troubled at the evil which the senses present sicknesse reproach Though grace do not so far subdue the appetite that it shall not be medling yet it stayes the will In a gracious man the dictates of reason and conscience conclude the businesse as in Samsons love of an uncircumcised Philistim if grace had prevailed that had soon ceased There is a great deal of wickednesse in the sensual appetite it is impetuous since the fall 2.
Petition we pray for perseverance B. Carlet against Mount c. 7. See more there 5. The perpetual inhabitation of the Spirit of God Iohn 14. 16. He is Christs Deputy Object Christ prayed conditionally keeps them if they will if they be not wanting to themselves and he prayes for the Apostles Answ. There is no condition and he prayes for all those which his Father had given him Iohn 17. 20. 6. The Lord hath ingaged his omnipotency to uphold them against all difficulties Iohn 10. 28 29. That is a fond exception that none can take them away whilst they remain sheep but they may cease to be sheep for that cannot be done except they be snatched out of Christs hand whose sheep they are See 1 Pet. 1. 5. Self-denial All Christs Disciples must deny themselves Matth. 16. 24. and Mark 8. 34. Luke 18. 26. There is a three-fold self 1. Natural self a mans being and well-being life learning parts riches possessions relations these must be denied upon supposition if the glory of God and the good of the Church call for it Acts 21. 13. 2. Sinful self all sinfull desires temptations Iam. 1. 14. these must be bsolutely and utterly denied without any reservation or limitation and above all a mans da●ling sin Hos. 14. 8. Rom. 6. 2 6. 8. 10 13. 3. Renewed self which consists in habits infused by God Faith Hope Love or in the acting and improving of these all these must be denied when they come in competition with the righteousnesse of Christ either that I should expect acceptation of my own righteousnesse or look upon my self as the spring of life The extent of this Duty 1. In regard of the object and thing to be denied We must especially deny our selves where the wisdome of the flesh works I. In our understandings or wits in three several things 1. In the Mysteries of Salvation which are above our reason 2. In the Means of Grace which are against them The foolishnesse of preaching 3. In the Dispensations of Providence which are beyond them II. In our Wils 1. In what we do by self-resignation as Abraham 2. In what we suffer Iam. 5. 11. 3. In what we have and are Paul a patern of contentment Phil. 4. 12. III. In our Affections 1. In principling them 2. In right ordering them 4. Our excellencies of parts and outward priviledges 5. Our own comforts and carnal interest Secondly In regard of the Subject All Callings Sexes Ages Degrees 1. Magistrates Ioseph had no great possessions in Aegypt Ioshua in dividing the Land of Canaan took his own lot last Iosh. 19. 49. 2. Ministers of all men must denie their own ends in their learning parts 3. Private men must be content to suffer losse for publick and pious reasons Luk. 19. 8. Acts 19. 24. 4. Women must deny themselves in the delicacies of life that they may not wax wanton against Christ. God will try every Christian some time or other in this duty Genesis 22. 1. Matth. 19. 22. Prayer and praise is a practice of self-denial prayer an humble appeal to mercy praise a setting the Crown on Christs head This is a difficult work its hard to conquer the World and Satan more to resist and conquer a mans self self-love is natural Proximus egomet mihi 2. This self-love is universal all men agree in seeking themselves 3. Self is subtil and deceitful gets into Religion Gen. 34. 23. Acts 9. 9 13 21 22. 20. 29. Mat. 6. beginning Reasons 1. No man can be a Disciple of Christ but he that enters in at the straight gate which is conversion the great thing God hath to deal with in Regeneration is self 2. Whosoever will be a Disciple of Christ must close with him in a work of faith there is no benefit by Christ unlesse we be united to him 1 Iohn 5. 12. Faith is the great instrument of union it receives all from another therefore supposeth an emptinesse in ones self Isa. 55. 1. one goes out of himself for righteousnesse Cant. 4. 15. Phil. 3. 8 9. to deny self-righteousnesse is to deny the highest part of self Rom. 10. 3. Therefore it is so hard to convert hypocrites and temporary believers because they look on themselves as such who need no repentance Phil. 3. 9. Secondly Faith returns all to another upon him is all our fruit found he works all our works for us Thirdly He that will be Christs Disciple must follow him 1 Iohn 2. 6. all that he did in a way of moral obedience was for our example 1 Pet. 2. 21. what ever he did he did in a way of self-denial so must we Phil. 2. 7. he was obedient to his Parents subjected himself to the creatures denied his own glory Iohn 1. 14. and ease Fourthly All the Saints went to heaven by self-denial Abraham Isaac and Iacob that lived in Tents See Numb 32. 32. Rom. 9. 3. Fifthly Christs Disciples are not their own men Rom. 14. 6 7. We are servants such are not sui juris children such are under government the Spouse of Christ 1 Tim. 2. 12. Rules to know whether we deny our selves 1. Such a one is carried purely with respect to God and community though there be nothing for self 2. He shuts out private interests if the good of community come in the way 3. He is content to be nothing in service 1 Kings 3. 17. 4. Is contented that others be exalted though he be abased 1 Sam. 23. 17. 5. He is meek towards all men Rom. 12. 16. 6. He is willing to his utmost to do that service which others refuse Phil. 2. 30. Motives to Self-denial First Your condition both as creatures and Saints cals for it 1. As creatures God hath absolute Soveraignty over you he is the first cause therefore should be the last end Rom. 11. 26. 2. As Saints you were created for him Psal. 102. 18. Secondly Self-opposition to God makes us like the devil 1 Tim. 3. 6. Pride is an overweening of a mans self 2 Thess. 2. 4. Thirdly Self supports Satans Kingdome Revel 12. 9. cast down self and you cast out Satan Fourthly The spirituality of religion chiefly consists in self-denial Abraham and Iohn Baptist denied themselves and Christ himself for you Fifthly This is a general or universal grace not a particular grace as Faith Love Hope Joy There are three universal or general graces which have an influence upon all the rest Sincerity Zeal Self-denial It fits a man to do or bear any thing from God God onely honours such as deny themselves Luke 12. 34 35. Sincerity It is the grace of the will whereby it refuseth evil and chooseth good for Gods sake when one laboureth to walk well out of this intention and purpose to please God 1 Thess. 4. 1. When the thing moving us to be good is Gods command and the end whereat we aim is the glorifying and pleasing of God then we serve him in truth Iosiah
pulled down the Images of Baal and broke his Altar so did Iehu too but alone for his own sake to establish his Kingdome by pulling down the Religion which Ahab had set up but Iosiah was upright because he did it to please God and for Gods sake This grace is much commended Psal. 51. 6. 45. 18. Iohn 1. 47. Isa. 38. 3. 1 Cor. 5. 8. Ephes. 6. 14. David being an upright man is entituled A man after Gods own heart 1 Sam. 13. 14. such a one as God would have him to be all the promises are made to such Blessed are the upright in heart Lord do good to those which are upright in heart it becometh upright men to rejoyce No good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly It is a defence 1. At time of death so to Hezekiah Remember O Lord how I have walkt before thee in truth and with a perfect heart See Iob 33. 6. The devil will tell thee all thy holy duties were done in hypocrisie the devil laboured to perswade Iob all was false 2. In calumnies and reproaches of men so Paul was slandered by false Apostles but saith he We have the testimony of a good conscience that we did it in sincerity Signs of it 1. He is fearful of himself fulfilling his salvation with fear and trembling 2. Such a one will presse Gods Commandments and Threatnings upon himself in secret and laments before God and confesseth and resists the secret evils of his heart and life 3. Extends his desire and endeavour of doing good and shunning evil to all kinds and degrees of evil and good to all times and places Psal. 18. 22. desiring in all things to live honestly 4. Is still humbled for his imperfections and failings 5. Gives the praise of goodnesse he hath attained to God alone 6. It makes him easie to see and confesse a fault in himself 7. Rejoyceth to see others exceeding him in good and pities those that are bad 8. Loves him that plainly admonisheth him and is thankful for the admonition 9. Is at peace with those that differ from him in judgement 10. Suffers wrongs patiently There are three main signs of it 1. Such a one is set against every known sin especially his darling sin Psal. 18. 23. 2. Hath universal respect to all the Commandments Psal. 119. 6. 3. He is much in examination of himself and jealous of his own heart Ps. 26. 2. The right Causes of it The Spirit the Word Faith Love The right ends the pleasing and glorifying of God and obtaining his favour The right Subject both the inward and outward man too the will is chiefly the seat of it We are perswaded saith the Apostle that we have a good conscience which is never separated from this uprightnesse willing in all things to live honestly It is a firm purpose of the will not a slight weak and sudden qualm or motion as was sometimes in Saul to leave persecuting David and in Pharaoh to let Israel go but a well-grounded stable setled lasting durable purpose which holds out constantly and is rooted in the heart such as David noteth in himself saying I have sworn and will perform it to keep thy righteous judgements Motives to it 1. The Lord hath pleasure in uprightnesse 1 Chron. 26. 2. Iob 14. 15. Isa. 26. 3 4 Psal. 147. 10. 2. God will be upright with thee if thou wilt be upright with him Psal. 18. 25. if you be upright in the waies of obedience he will be upright in his rewards Psal. 11. 7. Means to get Truth or Sincerity 1. See ones want of it 2. To see the great danger of wanting it 3. To desire it and to pray to God for it 4. To muse and meditate much of the goodnesse of God in his great worthiness in himself and to accustom our selves to direct our thoughts and intentions actually to him in the particular deeds we do The End of the seventh Book THE EIGHTH BOOK OF Ordinances OR Religious Duties CHAP. I. Something general of the Ordinances HOw a Christian stands affected to the Ordinances of divine worship the exercises of Religion in general 1. He makes great account of them and finds more good benefit and comfort by them then by any other thing as David saith He loves the place where Gods honour dwelleth and when he could not enjoy his Ordinances his life was no life he envied the Swallows One thing have I desired that I may live in the house of God all the dayes of my life and enquire in his Temple he loves them as the Babe the brest 2. He findes God and the power of God in them else he is not satisfied he rests not in a bare outward performance of them but looks for the efficacie of them to unite him to God and to strengthen and confirm his soul and to make him grow by them in godlinesse David saith That he may enquire in his Temple and Peter That he may grow thereby His life is sweet and joyful when he feels the Ordinances of God in power that they work on his heart to humble reform him beat down his flesh edifie him in grace then he is like a healthy man with a good stomack at a good meal 3. This respect to Gods Ordinances is joined with a care of Righteousnesse Mercy and Charity to men also and the more forward he is in Religion the more he abounds in all other parts of good conversation Iam. 1. ult Christ is present in his Ordinances 1. In Majesty Revel 4. 2 3. 2. In Beauty Revel 4. 6. David cals it the beauty of Gods house 3. In Communion Exod. 20. 24. 4. In waies of Bounty and Communication Gods people are transformed into his Image that place in Exodus proves this also Ordinances shall continue in the most flourishing times and most glorious estate of the Church Matth. 20. 18 19. I am with you not your persons but successours with you preaching and baptizing Ephes. 4. 9 10 11. The Ministry is to continue till all the Saints be perfected therefore till Christs second coming 1 Cor. 11. 27. You shew the Lords death till he come viz. to judgement therefore the Ordinance of the Lords Supper must continue till Christs coming to judgement Some in these dayes cry down all Ordinances as things carnal and unbecoming a spiritual and raised estate they call them low administrations and our walking by them to be a walking by Moon light They say these had their time and may be of some use to some low sort of people but it is but an abasement for seraphical and spiritual men to use them The Papists deny the prohibition of the second Commandment they set up Image and Angel-worship these the precept of it it enjoyns instituted worship Christ and the Apostles made use of the Ordinances and pressed them upon the Churches See Mat. 5. 19. Acts 2. and 3. ch They urge Isa. 60. 19. which speaks not of the
of each Church are bound unlesse they have some very just cause to come in due season to the Congregations and attentively and reverently to joyn with them and continue so doing till the end and that not only in the Morning but also in the Evening Secondly The Churches are then to make collections for the use and behalf of the poor and other acts of mercy as the Apostle appointed them to do in Corinth 1 Cor. 16. 1 2 3. and as he saith He had ordained in all Churches These are publick duties The private are some with reference to the publick to prepare for it and make use of it before and after fitting our hearts to hear by prayer and meditation and the like and by praying and meditation applying that to our selves which we have heard as the Bereans examined the Doctrine of Paul some again without such reference as all holy exercises of singing of Psalms prayer meditation reading together with actions of mercy in laying aside as God hath blessed us for the use of the poor and in visiting and relieving the sick comfortlesse needy and the like all which are acts as well of holinesse toward God as of mercy toward men Especially we must know that it is our duty to meditate upon the great works of our Creation and Redemption and our eternal rest in heaven seeing the Sabbath is given us as a memorial of the two former and an assurance of the later that being the excellent rest our entring into which this holy rest doth point at and help unto We must not onely keep the Sabbath in the Church-meetings and solemn Assemblies though it be specially appointed for the publick worship but at home in our houses Levit. 23. 3. We must awake with God in the morning begin with him rise early spend not much time in dressing of our selves that day it is the Sabbath of the Lord have holy thoughts while we are dressing our selves pray to the Lord to pardon all our sins and to put us into a holy frame and yet finish all this so soon that we may be with the first in the publick Assembly We may after the first Sermon eat and drink but for spiritual ends and purposes that our bodies being refreshed we may be the fitter to serve God but must take heed of spending too much time or feeding too liberally which may cause drousinesse We must then season all with heavenly discourse Luke 4. from v. 1. to 25. We must not speak our own words After the publick worship is ended we must call our Families together and repeat what we have heard and catechize them in the principles of Religion Heb. 2. 1 3. the fourth Commandment sing Psalmes and pray At night we should blesse God for the mercies of the day lie down with a great deal of soul-refreshment sleeping in the bosom of Jesus Christ. And this is the matter of the duties to be performed the manner is to consecrate the same as a delight unto God with comfort and joy serving him on that day as we do with comfort and cheerfulnesse follow our common businesse on the week dayes as the Prophet Isaiah chap. 58. 13. expresly requireth And call the Sabbath a delight Call that is make or count an Hebrew phrase often used in Isaiah Sabbath Some by it understand the extraordinary Sabbath or day of Fast because in the beginning of the Chapter there is an expostulation about it Levit. 16. 31. but the Lord is now speaking of an entire reformation My holy day the Sabbath agree not so properly to an arbitrary Sabbath A delight LXX thy delicate things i. one of the choisest priviledges God hath given thee These are common duties The duty of Superiours specially is to look to their Inferiours and at least to keep them from prophanation of the Sabbath and so farre as their authority will bear to drive them at least to the outward celebration of it by resting and by joyning in the publick exercises of religion as the good Nehemiah did cause the people to sanctifie the Sabbath in his time and forbad Merchants to bring wares to Ierusalem on that day and as we see in the very words of the Commandment the Governour is appointed to rest and not himself alone but his whole Family There is 1. No liberty granted more to the Superiour then to the Inferiour but all of what state or condition soever must sanctifie the Lords day 2. Every Superiour standeth charged before God not onely for himself but for all those which the Lord hath put under his government that both he and all they sanctifie the Lords Sabbath or day of rest Ford on Command 4. This delight is spiritual in God as the proper object and in the Ordinances as the onely means to lead us unto God Iob 27. 10. Psalm 43. 4. Cantic 2. 3. Isa. 56. 7. Reasons 1. Because the duties of that day are higher we have then all the means of Communion with God 1. We have them in a more raised solemn way without any interruption there is then a double Institution not only of the worship but the time 2. It s a spiritual Feast a day of Gods appointment our recompence as well as our duty Neh. 2. 26. Ordinances are fodinae gratiae Isa. 12. 3. 3. This day we come to remember the highest favours of God to the creature to contemplate the works of Creation Gods rest and of Redemption Christs rest 1 Pet. 4. 1. and our own eternal rest Heb. 4. 9. the Sabbaths of the faithful are the suburbs of heaven Heb. 12. 23. the Lords Supper is heaven in a map Luke 14. 15. Mat. 26. 29. 4. Many of the duties of the day are but spiritual recreations meditation is the solace of the minde in the contemplation of Gods works Psa. 104. 34. Singing of Psalms is a vent for spiritual mirth Iam. 5. Eph. 5. 18 19. then God should be solemnly praised Ps. 92. 1 2. 5. It is the temper of the people of God to delight in his solemn worship Psa. 2. 1 Cor. 2. 12. Male concordat canticum novum vetus homo Aug. Psal. 84. 1 10. Psal. 122. 1. 6. Delight in the Sabbath is the best way to discharge the duties 1. With comfort delight sweetens all how will men toil at their sport Neh. 11. 8. 2. With profit Isa. 64. 5. God will not send them away sad which come into his presence with joy Means to delight in the Sabbath 1. Labour after the assurance of the pardon of your sins 2. Solemnly prepare for the duties of the Sabbath 3. Wean the heart from temporal pleasures Psal. 26. 8. 119. 37. 4. Esteem the Sabbath a priviledge that after six dayes of labour God should appoint us a day of rest he might have taken all our time 5. Treasure up the experience of former Sabbaths Psal. 63. begin 6. In case of deadnesse plead with your souls as David doth Psal. 42. Shall I go
sensibus It may be questioned how far the Magistrate may use compulsory power for suppressing of Heresies and grosse errors 1. He must use no violent course till care be had of an information Tit. 3. 10. 2. In things indifferent and matters of lesse moment Christian toleration takes place Rom. 15. 14. Ephes. 4. 2. so far as it may stand with faith salva fidei compage Aug. 3. A grosse error kept secret comes not under the Magistrates cognizance Cogitationis poenam nemo patitur saith the Civil Law while it is kept in 4. Errors according to their different nature and degree meet with different punishments Ezra 7. 26. 5. Blasphemies Idolatry and grosse Heresies are to be put in the same rank with grosse breaches of the second Table because it is to be supposed they sin against the light of their consciences Tit. 3. 9 11. that therefore they are not punisht for their consciences but for going against their consciences Baals Prophets were slain 1 King 18. 18. See Exod. 21. 20. Levit. 24. 10. Magistrates ought not to plant or propagate Religion by Arms. The cruelty of the Spaniards upon the Indians is abhorred by all True Religion should be planted by true Doctrine Instruction Example but it may be defended by Arms. Mariana the Jesuite saith Princeps nihil statuat de Religione But the publick Magistrates chief care should be concerning God and the things of God Iob 31. 26 27 28. Ezra 7. 25 26 27. It is prophesied of the New Testament Isa. 44. 28. Isa. 49. 23. that Magistrates shall be nursing Fathers to the Church God promiseth Zac. 13. 2. to cause the Prophets and the unclean spirit to passe out of the Land See ver 3 4. They are Shepherds Isa. 44. 29. Fathers of their Country the Lords Servants Rom. 13. 3. Pollutions in Doctrine and Worship make way for the destruction of a State and the ruine of the Governours thereof Ezra 7. 23. Magistrates are Officers under Christ the Mediator therefore as Christs Officers they must not onely do his work but aim at his end They must serve God not onely as men but as Magistrates The connivance and toleration of Magistrates in things of Religion hath brought in the greatest judgements and cruellest persecutions The Christian Emperours connived at the Arrian Heresie and when they got head they more cruelly persecuted the Orthodox Christians then the Pagans or Turks Iulianus haereticis libertatem perditionis permisit Aug. in Epist. That is now stiled liberty of conscience The insurrection of the Arminians in the Netherlands and of the Anabaptists in Germany is sufficiently known Object This is to make the Magistrates judgement a rule in matters of Religion and will subject us to a continual change Answ. There is a threefold judgement in matters of Religion 1. Propheticum 2. Politicum a Magistrate must know how God will be worshipt 3. Privatae discretionis as a man must believe for himself so he must know for himself Object 2. This is to teach men to persecute the Saints Answ. Persecution is suffering for righteousnesse sake not for poysoning mens souls The Magistrate is not to determine matters of faith there is one rule for him and the people To the Law and to the Testimony Isa. 8. 20. But he ought to see that the rules of the Gospel be observed 1. None are to preach but Prophets 2. The spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets 1 Cor. 14. 32. So much for Superiours authority The Superiours without Authority follow and their inferiours Which are either in Gifts Age. Duties of Inferiours are 1. To acknowledge their gift and reverence them for the same 2. To imitate them Duties of Superiours They must use their gifts for the good of others Rom. 15. 1. Thus much for Superiours and Inferiours in Gifts those in Age follow Duties of younger persons to those that are ancient 1. To conceive reverently of them and to carry our selves respectively toward them Levit. 19. 32. Duties of elder persons are To give a good example Tit. 2. 2. and by a wise and grave carriage to procure reverence to themselves The duty of Equals Is to live together sociably and comfortably not to exalt themselves above their fellows but in giving honour to go one before another Rom. 12. 10. CHAP. VII The sixth Commandment THou shalt not kill or Thou shalt do no murder THis Commandment respects the person of our neighbour requiring us to procure his welfare and safety both in soul and body and to avoid all kinde of cruelty and unmercifulnesse We are forbidden to do any violence injury or wrong to the body and life of our neighbour and commanded to defend maintain and cherish the same Knewstubs Lect. 6. on Exod. 20. See more there It enjoyns all such common duties as appertain to our selves and our neighbours in regard of their and our person The substance is Thou shalt by all good means procure and by no ill means hinder thine own or thy neighbours personal safety There is no lawful taking away of life but in these three cases 1. Of enemies to ones Countrey in a just warre by souldiers appointed to that end 2. By the Magistrate 3. By a private man in his own true and just defence This Commandment is set next to the former for two reasons 1. Because the Lord having in that established degrees amongst men and humane societies nothing is more necessary for the continuance and safeguard of humane societies then that the life of man be preserved 2. Because murder commonly comes from the breach of the fifth Commandment Cains murder came from a desire of superiority because he thought himself not so greatly favoured of God as Abel so Esau so Iosephs brethren And it is set before the other four because the greatest hurt and wrong that can be done to a man is touching his life Iob 2. 4. death taking away a mans being simply which other wrongs do not This Commandment and the rest following are all negatives and the Lord beginning here with the greatest trespasse that one man can possibly commit against another even murder proceedeth by degrees downward from a great offence to a lesser till he come to the least desire that is in mans heart to covet any thing that belongs to our neighbour and forbiddeth them all He forbids here the killing of a man not of a beast or plant as the Manichees understood it Vide August de civit Dei l. 1. c. 20. 21. and that appears from the Hebrew word for Ratsach agrees to man alone whereas Charag is used generally Our neighbour is the object of the second Table whose life is provided for all the interpretations of this Law are referred to man only yea it seems to be a repetition of the Law given Gen. 9. 6. This word sometimes comprehends all the causes and occasions of murder and all ill will conceiv'd against the
Regeneration ibid. How the Scripture is to be read l. 1. p. 23 24 Reason Reason the uses of it in matters of Religion l. 9. p. 87 Rebaptizing condemned l. 8. p. 676 Rebellion against God and man l. 4. p. 373 374 Recovery What mans Recovery is l. 5. p. 389. to 392 Redeemer Redeemer Christ how l. 5. p. 408 409 Redemption what l. 5. p. 414 Religion Three characters of the true Religion l. 7. p. 5 Remora able to stay the greatest Ship under sail l. 3. p. 262 Repent How God is said to Repent and how not l. 2. p. 151 Repentance what in us l. 8. p. 649 650 Reproach Christ reproached for our sakes l. 5. p. 427 428 Reprobation Reprobation what it signifies and what it is l. 2. p. 222 The word taken three wayes and five evil consequences of it ibid. Resurrection Christ Rose from the dead and why l. 5. p. 438 to 441 Our Resurrection l. 10. p. 857 858 Revelation The manner of Gods Revealing his will threefold l. 1. p. 5 The Book of Revelation why so called l. 1. p. 52 It is canonical l. 1. p. 51 52 Difficult ibid. The best Interpreters of it l. 1. p. 53 Revenge l. 4. p. 374 375 376 Reverence Reverenco l. 7. p. 577 578 In worship l. 9. p 779 780 Righteousnesse Whether original Righteousnesse was natural to Adam l. 3. p. 291 The Properties of original Righteousnes l. 2. p. 292 Christs Righteousnesse is ours l. 7. p. 522 523 Marks to try whether we have it and means to get it ibid. Rivers Rivers Their original use and motion l. 3. p. 251 252 The River Nilus l. 3. p. 246. 252 Romans Romans an excellent Epistle l. 1. p. 47 Who best expound it ib. Rule The properties of a Rule l. 1 p. 82 83 The Scripture is the Rule of faith and life ibid. 84 Ruth Ruth by whom written l. 1. p. 32 The best Expositors of it ibid. S Sacraments SAcraments their name and nature l. 8. p. 655 656 The Church hath ever had Sacraments l. 8. p. 656 The use of Sacraments and their parts l. 8. p. 656 657 The necessity and efficacy of the Sacraments l. 8. p. 657 658 How the Sacraments of the Jewish Church and ours agree and how they differ l. 8. p. 659 660 The Sacraments of the New Testament only two l. 8. p. 660 Sacraments are to be dispensed only by a Minister l. 8. p. 661 The use of the Sacraments of the New Testament ibid. Sadduce● confuted l. 3. p. 279. 289 Samuel The Authors of the two books of Samuel and the best Expositors of them l. 1. p. 33 Sanctification Sanctification what l. 7. p. 530 53● Its parts and properties l. 7. p. 532 Why all godly men must be pure and holy l. 7. p. 532 The excellency of Sanctification l. 7. p. 533 It is imperfect here and why l. 7. p. 533 534 Evidences of Sanctification and means to get it l. 7. p. 534 The Sanctification of the whole man soul and body l. 7. p. 540 541 Of the minde l. 7. p. 541 Of the will l. 7. p. 542 543 Of the conscience l. 7. p. 544 545 Of the memory l. 7. p. 546 Of the affections l. 7. p. 546 to 579 Of the sensitive appetite l. 7 p. 579 580 Of mans body and all the external actions l. 7. p. 580 to 584 Satisfaction Christ satisfied for us l. 5. p. 416 417 It was convenient Christ should satisfie for us l. 5. p. 417 418 The difference between merit and Satisfaction ibid. Saviour Christ is our Saviour and how l. 5. p. 405 406 Scandal l. 4. p. 376 Schism l. 4. p. 376 377 Schoolmen taxed l. 1. p. 25 Scientia media an errour l. 3 p. 120. m Scripture It is the rule of Divinity l. 1. p. 5 Three general characters to know any word to be the word of God ibid. God revealed himself divers wayes to the Fathers ibid. The divers Epithetes of the Scripture l. 1. p. 5 6 Why called the word of God l. 1. p. 5. m Why the Scripture ib. The Divine Authority of the Scriptures proved by many reasons l. 1. p 6. to 16 A description of the Scripture l. 1. p. 7 The Scripture is not repugnant to humane reason and policy l. 1. p. 17 It is for it self worthy to be believed and known to be of God by it self ib. It hath its Authority from it self not the Church l. 1. p. 17 18 It is to be read by the common people l. 1. p. 20 21 How it is to be read l. 1. p. 22 23 24 Many contemn and unreverently handle the Scripture l. 1. p. 25 26 27 The Canonical Books of Scripture l. 1. p. 28 Of the Old and New Testament l. 1. p. 30. to 54 What parts of Scripture have been questioned l. 1. p. 43 The Authentical Edition of Scripture l. 1. p. 58. to 61 Whether any books of the Scripture be lost l. 1. p. 72 73 Whether the Scriptures of the Old Testament had points from the beginning l. 1. p. 73 74 The end of the Scripture l. 1. p. 80 The Properties of the Scripture its Divine Authority truth it is the rule of faith and life necessity purity perfection perspicuity l. 1. p. 81 to 105 The interpretation of the Scripture 1. It s divers senses 2. To whom belongs the chief authority to expound Scripture 3. The means which must be used in the Interp●e●ation of it l. 1. p. 105. to 121 Sea Sea a great work of God the making of it l. 3. p. 249 252 253 Why called m●re ib. m. Divers Questions about it answered l. 3. p. 249 250 251 Sedition l. 4. p. 377 378 379 Self love l. 4. p. 379 Self-denial l. 7. p. 600 Self seeking l. 4. p. 379 380 Septuagint Septuagint The Greek Translation of the Old Testament l. 1. p. 62 Is not authentical l. 1. p. 75 76 Serpents Serpents a three-fold profit redounds to us from them l. 3. p. 267 268 Why Satan is called the old Serpent l. 4. p. 304 Servants Two kindes of them three things commend a Servant l. 9. p. 843 844 Severity l. 7. p. 588 589 Ship the materials of it wonderful l. 3. p. 254 255 Signs several sorts of them l. 8. p. 655 656 Simple God is most Simple l. 2. p. 138 139 Sincerity l. 7. p. 602 Singing of Psalms a duty and how to be performed l. 8. p. 609 610 Sinne. Sin what it is l. 4. p. 307 Divided into original and actual ibid. l. 4. p. 315 That there is original sin its names and what it is l. 4. p. 308 309 310 The subject of it l. 4. p. 310 It is not the substance of a man l. 4. p. 310 311 Many hereticks extenuate it ib. All equally guilty of original sinne l. 4. p. 312 313 How it is propagated l. 4 p. 313 314 We are all guilty of Adams sin l. 4. p. 306 307 What actual sin is l. 4 p.
influence upon the act and function of Christian life Principia Theologia or Fundamentalia dogmata fundamenta salutis are not the same but differ formally though some of them may be materially coincident Mr Mede in a letter to Mr Hartlib As there are in points of saith fundamental Articles so there are in points of practice fundamentall Duties Master Raynolds on Hosoa 14. 2 3. The foundations of religion must 1. Be held with great certainty 1. Speculative foundations John 17. 3. We must hold one God in three Persons Christ the Mediator 2. Practical John 16. 8. We must be convinced of the sinne of nature the righteousnesse of Christ and the necessity of a holy life and suspect those opinions which advance nature depresse Christ decry good works 2. We must be earnest about the particular explication of these truths 1 Cor. 5. 6. Errour in matter of Justification is dangerous Corollaries n Haeresis est pertinax defensio erroris in fide opinionem aliquam pugnantem cum fundamento ejus ponentis Voet. Haereticus non est nisi qui inverbum fidei peccat Luther in Epist. Galat. c. 1. v. 8. Haereticum tota Ecclesia Christiana inde ab initio in hunc usque diem vocavit cum qui haeresiarcham aliquem sequ●tus negat doctrinam aliquam fundamentalem ad salutem necessariam inter Christianos controversiam Vedel de Arcan Armin. lib. 1. cap. 1. Vide plura ibid. There are damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2. 1. and errours that are capital Not holding the head Col. 2. 19. and such as destroy the faith 2 Tim. 2. 18. o Vide Altingii loc com part 2. p. 262. et Z●nc misc de Magist. Non omnis error est baeresis sed illa tantum quae est contra fundamentum a●t in fundamento fidei pertinaciter defenditur Voet. Some errours do not touch the foundation others do concutere and others do evertere We hold the Lutherans to be true Churches agreeing with us in fundamental points of faith and likewise in being free from Idolatry for albeit they have Images in their Churches which we conceive to be a very dangerous thing yet they do not worship them and although they hold reall presence in the Sacrament yet they do not adore it Dr Twiss his doubting conscience resolved My Lord Faulkland in his Reply to him that answered him about the Romane Infallibilitd pag. 220. to 231. seems to hold the negative Bellar. Tom. 2. l. 3. c. 21. T. Aquin. part 2. Quaest. undecima Articulo tertio Vide Gerhardi loc commun de Magistratu p Part. 3. Philos. Sob Sect. 2. q. 6. Zanch. tom 2. Misc. in cap. de Magistratu Aretius hath written the history of Valentinus Gentilis put to death at Bern. There was a Statute against Lollardi in England and Hugonots in France Haereticus ego tibi tu miht See Statut. of Qu. Eliz. c. 1. Propriè Heretici vocantur qui ea pertinaciter rejictunt quae in sacris Scripturis docentur Daven de judice controv Haeresis est error pugnans cum ●undamento religionis Christianae isque pertinax Altingius Tom. 2. Problem Theol. part 2. Prob. 14. Heresie is an errour in the foundation of Christian Religion taught and defended with obstinacy Perk. on Gal. 5. 20. See more there q Lib. 3 of the Church ch 3. See D. Prideaux his Sermon on 1 Cor. 11. 19. Vide Grotium in Tit. 3. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicuntur ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eligere praeferre est enim haeresis priv●●a aliqua opinio quam quis prae dogmate Christiano fide Catholica sibi amplectendam eligit eamque pertinaciter defendit Gerh. loc commun de ministerio Ecclesiastico c. 8 Ut quis sit propriò dictus haereticus requiritur 1. Ut sit person● in Ecclesiam visibilem per Baptismi Sacramentum recepta 1 Cor. 11. 9. Act. 20. 13. 2. Ut erret in fide sive errorem illum noviter introducat sive ab alio acceptum amplectatur quamvis illud haeresiarchae hoc vero haeretici proprium videri possit 3. ut error directè in ipsi fidei fundamentum impingat 4. Ut errori conjuncta sit malitia ac pertinacia per quam etiam aliquoties admonitus nihilominus obstinatè errorem suum defendat 5. Ut dissensiones scandala in Ecclesia excitet ejusque unitatem scindat Id. ibid. Haeresis consideratur vel in doctrina vel in persona haeresis doctrinae est quando id ipsum quod proponitur est contra sidem Catholicam Orthodoxam Haeresis autem personae quum quis haeresin doctrinae ita proponit ut asserat etiam convictus Cham. de Occ. Pontif. l. 6. Errours are practical or doctrinal onely fundamental or circa-fundamental or neither of the two r See Master Clarks Sermons on Matth. 8. 13. and Master Cranfords Haereseomachia on 2 Tim. 2. 17. s Arius in Alexandria una scintilla fuit Sed quoniam non statim oppressus est totum orbem ejus flamma populata est Aquin. t Ubi supra Cum agitaretur de ista quaestione An morte mulctandi cogendi haeretici in Synodo quadam Londini perrogarentur singulorum sententi● surrexit quidam senex Theologus atque hoc planum esse asserit ex ipso Apostolo Haereticum hominem post unam aut alteram admonitionem d● vita De vita inquit ergo manifestum est haereticos istos homines post unam aut alteram admonitionem ● vita tollendos Erasm. Annotat. in Tit. 3. Vel sola modestia potuisset vitam redimere said Galvin of Servetu●●n opusc Here the Spirit of God sets forth 1. The office of a Magistrate to bear the sword 2. The end which is double 1. The Minister of God for thy good in general 2. To execute wrath on him that doth evil God never committed to any that charge of the body onely and not proportionably the charge of the soul as to Masters Parents Heirs Judg 7. 10. u Magistrates in the Scripture in the Hebrew are called Masters of restraint Qui non vetat peccare cum potest jubet Sene. x M. Hildersam on Psal. 51. 7. Lect. 146. As all blasphemous hereticks Levit. 24. 16. so seducing hereticks are to be put to death The whole 13 Chapter of Deut. is spent about the seducing of false prophets Are not Moses moral Laws of perpetual equity and therefore to be observed in all ages Is blasphemy more tolerable in the New Testament Mr. Cotton on Rev. 16. third Vial. We are not obliged saith Beza to the judicial Laws as they were given by Moses to one people yet so farre we are bound to observe them as they comprehend that general equity which ought to prevail every where By the judicial Laws of the Jews the false prophets and Idolaters were to be put to death Deut. 13. 8 9. 17. 5 6. where there is a moral equity in the precept it is perpetual 1. That
were Transcribere animas publish their own faults Dr Preston They dispraise all mankinde abase man and make him the vilest of all creatures except the devils 1 Tim. 1. 13. Revel 22. 8. o Matth. 9. 9. The Writers of the Scriptures wrote them when the world bare greatest hatred against them and yet never any durst write a Book against Moses in his time or against the Gospel in these dayes Acts 4. 13. Dan. 1. Exod. 5. 2. Levit. 18. 3. Ezek. 8. p Solls Canonicis d●b●tur fides Caeteris omnibus judicium Lutherus q Incredibilis quaedam planè divina conspiratio atque concordia tot virorum qui diversis locis temporibus linguis occasionibus sacra volu mina conscripserunt ut non tam ipsi Scriptores diversi quam uuius Scriptoris diversi calami fuisse videantur Bellar. Tom. 10. d● verbo Dei l. 1 c. 2. Amicae sunt Scripturarum lites The Socinians hold Dari in Scriptura res leviores minoris nullius momenti in quibus Scriptores sacri facilè errare potuerint dissidere inter se atque pugnare whom Hoornbeck in his Antisocinianismus confutes l. 1. c. 1. controv 1. Sect. 1. 2. c. This is one of the three hundred sixty seven places or as others ●eckon three hundred and seventy which are cited out of the Old Testament in the New Dr Prideaux on Acts 23. 5. See Bifield on 1 Pet. 1. 16 r Ezechiel prophetans in Babylone concordat cum Ieremia prophetante in Iudaea See Dr Hals Passion Sermon 2. Arguments extrinsecal acts of God and works of his providence about the Scriptures Num. 11. 9. 20. 10. Mark 16. 20. Joh. 3. 2. 2. 23. 10. 37. Acts 5. 12. Joh. 5. 36. In caecitate surditate natis Christus videndi audiendiusum non quem amiserant reddidit sed largitus est omniuo novum Deambulavit super ●umentes undas ut nos super solidam terram imperavit ventis mari tempestati parucrunt dicto Expulit daemones ex humanis corporibus abstulit l●pram roboravit membra compages humani corporis dissolutas sanavit omne genus morborum reddidit lucem vitam mortuis Lod. Viv. de veritate Fidei Christ. lib. 2. cap. 12. Many of the Bibles were taken from Christians and burnt in those cruel persecutions ●nder Dioclesian and Maximinianus his Collegue Deut. 31. 24. Jer. 36. 23 27 28. ult t Veritas odiunt parit u Cartwright in his Preface to the Confutation of the Rhem. Annotations on the New Testament Tertullian said That Gospel must needs be good which Nero persecuted x Many delivered the Bible to the Emperour to be burned whence the name of Proditores Traditores Bibliorum Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae Foecundi sunt Martyrum cineres Vide Lod. Viv. de verit 1. Fid. lib. 2. cap. 19. de verb. 1. People by seeing the sufferings of the Martyrs came more to look into and understand that profession then formerly which made them patiently endure such torments Qui enim scit illum intelligere potest non nisi grande aliquod bonum à Nerone damnatum Terrul Apolog. cap. 5. A precious Gospel that was purchased by the bloud of Christ and sealed with the bloud of Martyrs Miracula quae sunt à Deo mu●tis notis distinguuntur à fictis miraculis daemo●●m Nam daemon ut qui Deum odit nos à Deo vellet avertere omnia quaecunque potest Divina aemulatur Et tanto accuratius miracula quod videt eam rem maximè ad potentiam Divinitatis accedere quae est supra naturam Lod. Viv. de verit Fid Christ. l. ● c. 13. Miracula has habent notas rei ipsius veritas essentia qualitas modus actionis causa efficiens causa movens ante rem finis Ad hos tanquam ad lapides Lydios examinanda sunt miracula tum Christi sanctorum nempè divina tum ficta diabolica Idem ibid. vide plura y They are Miranda non miracula A ma●vel or wonder is nature mightily improved a miracle is nature totally cross'd if not contradicted If miracles be ceased yet marvels will never cease Dr Hals Select Thoughts z There were six hundred thousand witnesses of the Seas rising up in wals Deut. 4. 3. See Mat. 27. 45. a See Dr Willet on Exod. 7. 9. what a miracle is and how true and false miracles differ And Dr Prideaux on Psal. 9. 16. the distinction between miracles signs prodigies and Portenta out of Aquinas Christi miracula tanta tam manisesta suerunt orbi ●t nulla unquam gens fuerit vel tam impudens vel tam Christo inimica infensa ut ea sit negare ausa Itaque Gentiles Iudaei Agareni omnes grandia mirabilia esse edita opera consitentur sed alii alias in causas referunt Agareni Deum authorem illorum fatentur Iudaei Gentiles daemonem Sed res ipsa clamat apertissimè Deo authore atque approbatore illa omnia esse acta Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 13. b When many agree in a thing and they wise and learned men and one generation after another this is much All those generally which professe Christian Religion consent in this main truth To which testimony these things give weight 1. To them were committed the Oracles of God Ro. 3. 2 2. They have constantly professed the truth in great misery whereas by the only denying thereof they might have been partakers both of liberty and rule 3. Notwithstanding the High-Priests and others persecuted the Prophets while they lived they yet received their writings as Prophetical and Divine c Vide Croii observat in Novum Testamentum cap. 15. By universal tradition we know much better that those Books were written by Christs Disciples who are sufficient witnesses of what he taught then the Aristotelians know that these were Aristotles works or the Academicks knew Plato's since Christians have both kept them with more care and in the acceptance of them used more caution as thinking them so much more important My L. Falkl. Reply concerning the infallibility of the Church of Rome part 2. Ecclesia totum mundum convertit sanguine oratione Luther Christian Religion's chiefest glory is that it increaseth by being persecuted and hath that advantage of the Mahumetan which came in by force In the two Dominions of France and the seventeen Provinces within the space of little more then five years under Charles the ninth of France and Philip the second of Spain two hundred thousand suffered as Martyrs See Foxes Martyrology Meteranus de rebus Belgicis and Fullers prophane State of the Duke of Alva p. 440. d A Martyr answered Bishop Bonner My Lord I cannot dispute but I can die for the truth Iohn Hus said when he had a Cap of paper wherein were 3 devils painted with the title Haerefiarcha Shall I grudge to wear this paper Cap for