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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

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as appears Iohn 17. 4. compared with Verse 6. See of glorifying God Church his Miscellanies p. 11. to 18. * 1 Cor. 1● 42 43. There is say the Schools Beatitudo objectiva so whatever is the chiefest good of the soul is the souls blessednesse 2. Formalis when the soul and its beatifying object are united as the fruition of God The soul is here united to God remotely and imperfectly there immediately and perfectly 2 Sam. 22. 47. 1 King 1. 48. Paul entituleth him God blessed for ever the only blessed Potentate Vide Amesium in Psal. 1. 1. * Beatitudo status est omnium bonorum aggregatione perfectus Boetius de consol Phil. 1 Tim. 6. 15. * He that is the cause of al welfare to other things and makes them in their several kinds happy he must needs be therefore most happy himself God is the author of all blessednesse Psal. 132. 1. 2. Dicimus nos ea re frui quam diligimus propter se ea re faciendum nobis esse tantum qua efficimur beati Caeteris ver● utendum Lombard lib. 1. Distinct. 1. Happinesse is taken two wayes 1. Objectively for the object wherein one is happy as Gods infinite Essence is the object both of Gods Angels and mens happinesse 2. Formally for those acts whereby we possesse that object God is happy formally because he knoweth loveth and enjoyeth himself therefore it is said Our goodnesse extendeth not to him so Angels and men are formally happy when they know and enjoy God Beatitudo objectiva consists in the vision of God and the glorious excellencies that are in him Beatitudo formalis is that glory which shines from God to the creature by which he is made conformable to God in holinesse and happinesse for ever We should praise God 1. Intensivè Psal. 36. 19. and 103. 1. 2. Extensivè with all praise Psal. 9. 14. and for all mercies Psal. 71. 7 8. Dicique beatus ante obitum nemo supremaque funera possit Vide Aquin. summam 1 2. Quaest. 5. Art 3 Consectaries from Gods blessednesse Happinesse consists in two things when the soul enjoys a proportionable good and a good that it hath a propriety in a good of his own The happiness of man consists in the enjoying of God All other things are no otherwise means of happinesse or helps to it then as we see and taste God in them We must account our selves happy in this thing wholly and onely in that God is ours Happinesse is the enjoyment of good commensurate to our desires Ad perfectam beatitudinem requiritur quod intellectus pertingat ad ipsam essentiam primae causae Et sic perfectionem suam habebit per uniouem ad Deum sicut ad objectum in quo solo beatitudo hominis consistit Aquinas 1● 2ae Quaest. 3. Art 8. * Bishop Lake Man in the state of blessednesse cannot see God absolutely as he is in himself for that which is infinite cannot be comprehended of that which is limited Visio beatifica est cognitio non comprehensiva sed quid ditativa But God doth manifest himself so far forth as a creature is able to know him As a vessel may be filled with the water of the Sea but it cannot contain all the water in the Sea The Apostle saith We shall know God even as he also is known But as is not a note of equality but of likenesse As God knoweth me after a manner agreeable to his infinite excellency so shall I know God according to my capacity * The word Essence or Trinity are not found in Scripture but Essence is duly derived thence for seeing God saith that He is Exod 3. Essence is fitly ascribed to him Trinity hath a sufficient ground There are three that bear witness in heaven 1 John 5. 7. and the most ancient Fathers use the word The word Person is extant Heb. 1. 3. therefore these words are rightly used in the Church Calvinus ait in Trinitate non comprehendi essentiam quasi una ●it ex numero tr●um sed includi in omnibus tribus quod quidem verissimum est atque utinam sic semper erraret Calvinus Bellarm. de Christo l. 2. c. 5. Origo verbi Hebraei radix non fine arcano ternarii divini cujus potestate omnia consistunt tribus literis notatur Bibliander de optimo genere Grammaticorum Hebraicorum Omne thema seu primogenium Hebraeae linguae constat tribus literis substantialibus ficut per totum Dictionarium cernis idque non sine magno mysterio Nam ut una est dictio ea tribus subsistit literis substanti alibus ita una est divina essentia tribus Personis realiter distincta Forster praefat ad Dictionarium Hebraicum Par. on Rom. 11 23. Vix contuli unquam cum aliquo ex Iudaeis qui vel aliquantulum esset s●piens in oculis aliorum qui non concederet Deum trinum unum Verum Personae nomen Patris Filii unanimiter omnes usque adeo detestantur ut nullatenus valeat eis pulchrum fieri tale aliquid de Deo etiam somniare Raymundi Martini Pugio Fidei adversus Iudaeos part 3. cap. 4. Vide plura ibidem Iudaeorum populus maximè ad idololatriam pronus erat ne igitur in eorum qui plures Deos colebant errorem incid●rent Cautè à divina providentia factum est Ut ipsum divinae Trinitatis arcanum non explicitè sed implicitè eis traderetur Sed quoniam idololatria per Messiam penitus explodenda erat universusque orbis ad unius Dei cultum reducendus Idcirco mysterium illud Trinitatis explicitè atque apertè revclandum ad dies Messiae reservatum suit Galatinus de arcanis Cathol verit lib. 2. cap 1. Exod. 33. 20. 1 Cor. 13. 9. * Si rectè dicuntur tres Elohim etiam rectè dici possit tres Dii nam Elohim Latinè sonat Dii vel Deus Drusius de Quaesitis per Epistolam Epist 66. Vide Drusii Tetragrammaton cap. 6. Sic concidit gravis quaerela expostulatio viri Docti adversus libri cujusdam titulum De tribus Elohim Non enim voluit author libri illius voce Elohim propriè significare personas ac proinde tot esse Elohim quot fides Christiana agnoscit esse personas in D●vinis cum Scriptura apertè contrastet quae testatur Deum nostrum esse Deum unum Non sic erravit aut caecutiit doctus ille Theologus ut diceret doceret Tres esse propriè loquendo Elohim Sed quoniam vocis illius terminatione plurali Scriptura innuere voluit S. S. Trinitatis mysterium ipse huc respicient et volens in libri quem de S. S. Trinitate scribebat titulo alludere cata●hre●i non infrequenti sed ordinaria Capel Davidis Lyra. Vide illius Diat de nomine Elohim cap. 7. 12. Rivet Grot. Discus Dialys Sect. 16. In Deo una substantia sed tres persone
determine all controversies 2. It is true and certain verity is affirmed of the Scriptures primarily interternally and by reason of it self which is called the truth of the object which is an absolute and most perfect agreement of all things delivered in the Scripture with the first truth or divine will of which the Scripture is a symbole and lively image so that all things are delivered in it as the Holy Ghost hath dictated whence those honorable Titles are given to it the Scripture is called A sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. Psal. 19. 7. The Scripture of truth Dan. 10. ult words of truth Eccles. 1● 10 Yea truth it self Iohn 17. 17. having the God of truth for the Author Christ Jesus the truth for the witness the Spirit of truth for the Composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of those which hear it 2 Pet. 2. 2. The Apostle prefers the Scripture before the revelation made by Angels Gal. 1. 8. Christ commend● the certainty of it above all other sorts of revelation 1 Pet. 1. 19. above information from the dead Luke 16. 31. The word of God is not onely true but eminently true truth it self Prim● veritas and pura veritas The Scripture hath a twofold truth 1. Of assection it containeth no error 2. Of promise there is no unfaithfulness in it The first truth refer to the matter which is signified properly called Truth o● Verity The second refers to the in●ention of the Speaker which is properly called veracity or fidelity the latter is implyed Psal. 19. Thy Testimonies are sure and so th● sure mercies of David the former is implyed in that the word is purer then gold seven times refined There are two signs of truth in the Scripture 1. The particularity of it it names particulars in geneolagies dolosus versat●r in generalibus 2. Impartiality toward friends and their adversaries the most holy men have their faults described they give due commendation to their adversaries The truth of Scripture is 1. More then any humane truth of sense or reason 2. Above all natural reason as the Doctrine of the Trinity the ●ncarnation of Christ Justification by faith in Christ. 3. A truth which evidenceth it self 4. The standard of all truth nothing is true in Doctrine or Worship which is not agreeable to this 3. The Scripture is the rule of faith and manners It is termed Canonical generally by the Fathers of the word Canon which signi●ieth a rule because it contains a worthy rule of Religion faith and godliness according whereunto the building of the house of God must be fitted These properties saith Suarez are required in a rule 1. That it be known and easie the Scripture is a light 2. That it be first in its kinde and ●o the measure of all the rest 3. It must be inflexible 4. Universal 1. It is a perfect rule of faith and obedience able to instruct us sufficiently in all points of faith or doctrinals which we are bound to believe and all good duties or practicals which we are bound to practise Whatsoever is needful to believe or to do to please God and save our souls is to be found here whatsoever is not here found is not needful to beleive and practise for felicity Christ proveth the resurrection of the dead being an Article of our faith against the Sadduces Mat. 22. 32. and the use of the Sabbath being a rule of life against the Pharisees by an inference made from the Scripture Mat. 12. 7. The heads of the Creed and Decalogue are plainly laid down in Scripture therefore there we have a perfect rule of faith and manners It is a rule 1. For Faith Ierome in his controversie with Helvidius saith Credimus quia legimus non credimus quia non legimus We believe because we read we do not believe because we do not read Christ often saith Have ye not read is it not written what is written in the Law Luke 10. 26. Faith and the word of God must run parallel This we first believe when we do believe saith Tertullian that we ought to believe nothing beyond Scripture When we say all matters of Doctrine and Faith are contained in the Scripture we understand as the Ancient Fathers did not that all things are literally and verbally contained in the Sripture but that all are either expressed therein or by necessary consequence may be drawn from thence All controversies about Religion are to be decided by the Scripture Deut. 12. 32. and 4. 2. Iosh. 1. 7. Franciscus de Salis a Popish Bishop saith The Gospel was honored so much that it was brought into the Councel and set in the midst of them and to determine matters of faith as if Christ had been there Erasmus in his Epistles tells us of a Dominican that when in the Schools any man refuted his conclusion by shewing it contrary to the words of Scripture he would cry out Ista est argumentatio Lutherana protestor me non responsurum This is a Lutheran way of arguing I protest I will not answer to it 2. It is a perfect rule for our lives and practice Psal. 19. 11. and Psal. 119. 9. In Scriptures there are delivered remedies against all vices and means are there laid down for the attaining of all vertues We must follow the Scriptures exactly and not swerve to the right hand or left a metaphor taken from a way or rule saith Chamier When Linacer a learned English man heard the beginning of the 5 of Matthew read Blessed are the poor in spirit c. he broke forth into these words Either these sayings are not Christs or we are not Christians 1. It is a perfect not a partial and insufficient rule as the Papists make it As God is a perfect God so his word is a perfect word if it be but a partial rule then it doth not perfectly direct and he that should perfectly do the will of God revealed in Scripture should not yet be perfect Secondly if the Scripture be a partial rule then men are bound to be wise above that which is written that is above the Law and Gospel Regula fidei debet esse adaequata fidei aut regula non erit Whitakerus 1. All addition and detraction are forbidden to be made by any man to the word Deut. 4. 2. and 12. 32. Deut. 5. 32. Gal. 1. 8. 2. The Scripture is said to be perfect to beget heavenly and saving wisdom Psal. 19. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. 3. Men in the matter of Faith and Religion are sent to the Scripture onely 2. The Scripture is an infallible rule Luke 1. 4. of which thou hast had a full assent Regula rectè definitur mensura infallibilis quae nullam vel additionem vel detractionem patitur 3. It is a just rule Lastly It is an universal and perpetual rule both in regard of time and person ever since the Scripture hath been it hath been the onely
ha●endi eandem Essentiam Subsistentia in Schools signifies a being with an individual property whereby one is not another Person say some is a Law term it is any thing having reason with an individual property A Person is such a subsistence in the Divine Nature as is distinguished from every other thing by some special or personal property or else it is the God-head restrained with his personal property Or it is a different manner of subsisting in the God-head as the nature of man doth diversly subsist in Peter Iames Iohn but these are not all one It differs from the Essence as the manner of the thing from the thing it self and not as one thing from another one Person is distinguisht from another by its personal property and by its manner of working We have no reason to be offended with the use of the word Person if we adde a fit Epithete and say The Father is a Divine or Uncreated Person and say the same of the Sonne and holy Ghost The word Person signifies an understanding Subsistent 2 Cor. 1. 11 Persona quasi per se una This word doth expresse more excellency then the word subsistence as one doth import for it is proper to say that a beast doth subsist but it is absurd to say a beast is a person because a Person is an understanding subsistent Dr Cheynels Divine Trin-unity The personal property of the Father is to beget that is not to multiply his substance by production but to communicate his substance to the Sonne The Sonne is said to be begotten that is to have the whole substance from the Father by communication The holy Ghost is said to proceed or to be breathed forth to receive his substance by proceeding from the Father and the Sonne joyntly in regard of which he is called The Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Sonne both Gal. 4. 6. The Father only begetteth the Sonne only is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedeth both procession and generation are ineffable When Gregory Nazianzen was pressed by one to assign a difference between those words Begotten and Proceeding Dic tu mihi said he quid sit generatio ego dicamquid sit processio ut ambo insaniamus Distinguere inter Processionem Generationem nescio non vel●o non sufficio Aug. In the manner of working they differ for the Father worketh of himself by the Sonne and through the holy Ghost the Sonne worketh from the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Sonne by himself There is so one God as that there are three Persons or divers manners of being in that one God-head the Father Son and the holy Ghost 1. Whatsoever absolutely agrees to the Divine Nature that doth agree likewise to every Person of the Trinity 2. Every Person hath not a part but the whole Deity in it self A Person is one entire distinct subsistence having life understanding will and power by which he is in continual operation These things are required to a Person 1. That it be a substance for accidents are not Persons they inhere in another thing a person must subsist 2. A lively and intelligent substance endued with reason and will an house is not a Person nor a stone or beast 3. Determinate and singular for man-kinde is not a Person but Iohn and Peter 4. Incommunicable it cannot be given to another hence the nature of man is not a person because it is communicable to every particular man but every particular man is a person because that nature which he hath in particular cannot be communicated to another 5. Not sustained by another therefore the humane nature of Christ is not a person because it is sustained by his Deity 6. It must not be the part of another therefore the reasonable soul which is a part of man is not a person That there are three Persons in the Deity viz. Father Sonne and holy Ghost is manifest by expresse Testimonies of Scripture Gen. 1. 26. Let us make man in our image after our likenesse Deus qui loquitur ad Deum loquitur Ad Patris Filii imaginem homo conditur nomen non discrepat natura non differt Hilary lib. 5. de Trin. Vide plura ibid. Gen. 19. 24. Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and Gom●rrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of Heaven The Lord rained from the Lord the Son from the Father Mercer on the place saith Sed efficaciora in Iudaeos aut alios qui Trinitatem negant argumenta sunt proferenda Num quid saith Hilary de Trin. non verus Dominus à vero Domino aut quid aliud quàm Dominus à Domino vel quid praeter significationem Personae in Domino ac Domino coaptabis memento quod quem solum verum Deum nosti hunc eundem solum justum judicem sis professus Adime filio quod iudex est ut auferas quod Deus verus est Vide plura ibid. Psal. 110. 1. The Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy foot stool Rabbi Saadia Gaon on Daniel interprets this of the Messias Vide Grotium in Matth. 22. 42. It is of Christ that he speaks so Peter Paul and Christ himself shew Mat. 22. 43. and the Pharisees acknowledge it since he cals him His Lord although he ought to descend of his race and should be called the son of David Psal. 33. 7. there three are named the Word the Lord and the Spirit Isa. 6. 3. Holy Holy Holy But this truth is most clearly taught in the New Testament Matth. 3. 16. Luke 3. 22. The first Person in the Trinity utters his voice from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne The Sonne is baptized in Iordan the holy Ghost descends in the shape of a Dove upon Christ. Pater auditur in voce Filius manifestatur in homine Spiritus Sanctus dignoscitur in Co●umba Aug. Tract 6. in Joh. Adde to this the History of Christs Transfiguration described Mat. 17. 5. Mark 9. 7. Luke 9. 35. In which likewise the voice of the Father was heard from Heaven This is my beloved Son the Son is transfigured the holy Ghost manifests himself in a bright cloud Matth. 28. 19. The Apostles are commanded to baptize in the Name of Father Son and holy Ghost Cameron thinks that is the most evident place to prove the Trinity But that it is as apposite a place as any for this purpose 1 Iohn 5. 7. For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost The Arrians wiped this place out of many Books 2 Cor. 13. 14. The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all The Arrians Samosate●ians Sabellians Photinians and others deny the Trinity of Persons in one Essence of God Servetus a Spaniard was burnt
and praise him Gods great works call for great praise Commend him with our tongues and speak good of his Name Psal. 19. 2. The Heavens declare the glory of God i. e. give occasion to man of declaring it 5. This is a comfort to those who acknowledge God to be such a one as he is Is not he rich enough to maintain them Wise enough to direct them Strong enough to protect them If thou want goodness he can create in thee a new heart it may comfort the godly in regard of the Resurrection God can raise them up at the last day 6. It is a great terror to the wicked which do not fear but despise him God will hate despise and destroy them God can do it he made Heaven and Earth and he will do it because he is true he hath threatned it Oh the misery of that man which hath him for his enemy 7. We may learn from all the creatures in general 1. To bewail our Rebellion against God which all of them reprove for they all stand in their kinde and station in which God set them at first The Sunne rejoyceth to runne his course the Sea keepeth her bounds the Earth stands upon her foundation the Heavens keep their motion and declare Gods glory the very Windes and Seas obey him 2. All of them teach the invisible things of God Rom. 1. 20. as was before-shewed 8. We should make a right use of the creatures use them 1. Devoutly 1 Tim. 4. 5. in Faith Rom. 14. 14. ult with Prayer and Thanksgiving Mat. 15. 36. Act. 27 35. 2. Soberly 1 Cor. 10. 31. 3. Thankfully 1 Tim. 4. 4. Having handled the works of Creation in general I now proceed according to Moses his Method to a more particular enarration of each dayes work The whole first Chapter of Genesis may be thus divided 1. The Author of the worlds Creation God 2. The Work 3. The Approbation of it Verse 1. In the beginning of time or being therefore the World was not eternal Iohn begins so and took it hence But beginning there may mean from Eternity or as here Christ did not begin then but was then Prov. 8. 22. Bara Elohim Gods Created That difference between the Noun Plural and Verb Singular saith Rivet signifieth not the mystery of the Trinity but is an Idiotism of the Hebrew Tongue in which such Enallages are frequent as Numb 32. 25. Most of our men take the joyning of a Singular Verb with the Plural Elohim for a mystical expressing the holy Trinity But the Jewish Grammarians make it an Enallage of number chiefly to expresse excellency in the Persons to whom it is refer'd Mr Seldens Titles of Honour part 1. chap. 6. However there is no difference in the thing it self for the Name of Gods being taken here essentially not personally is common to the three Persons Gods created is as much as the Father the Sonne and holy Ghost created for elsewhere it is manifest from Scripture that not only the Father but the Sonne and holy Ghost also created the world Created signifieth an act of infinite power and is not communicable to any creature i. Ex nihilo fecit quidem potentissimè ac magnificentissimè Junius Heaven and Earth In the first day were created Heaven and Earth as it were the foundation and roof of the building Psal. 104. 5. Isa. 40. 21 22. The work of the first day was 1. Heaven under which name are comprehended partly the Empyraean first and immovable Heaven which is called in Scripture the third Heaven and Heaven of Heavens Ephes. 4. 10. 2 Chron. 6. 18. Acts 1. 11. and partly the celestial Spheres which it is probable were made the first day but without those lights of the Stars with which at length in the fourth day they were adorned the Hebrew word for Heaven being of the Dual number may imply both The heavenly Intelligences or Angels the Inhabitants of the invisible Heaven were then made as is probable saith Chemnitius Coelum id est extimum illum hujus universitatis ambitum cum super coelestibus incolis illius spiritualibus formis atque intelligentiis Gen. 2. 1. Job 38. 7. Iunius in loc 2. The four first simple things or elements as some think Earth Water Air Fire and the fitting of them for use by making day and night Though others hold that the Air and Fire are comprehended under Firmament the work of the second day For the Earth there is He emphatical this Earth which we dwell in though then unpolished The Earth is described in the second verse It was without form and void Informity and Vacuity in the original without inhabitants and without ornament the Earth and Waters were joyned together among themselves the waters at first did encompasse and cover the Earth round about as it were a cloathing and garment Psal. 104. 6. Darknesse was on the face of the deep that is the waters which inclosed the earth in themselves Vers. 3. There is an extraordinary Light mentioned the ordinary fountain of light is the Sunne which in what subject it did inhere is not certain Some say water in the thinner parts of the Superficies some the heavenly Spheres others say the Element of fire for that say they is either included under light or we know not whether to referre it and God created not accidents without subjects The works of the second day were twofold First That most vast firmament viz. that space between the Earth and Skie The Hebrew word signifieth the extending of any thing or the thing it self Secondly The division of the waters above from the Waters below that is of the clouds which are in the middle Region of the Air from the Fountains Rivers and Sea which remain under the lowest Region But by the name of Clouds and Waters above the Firmament we may understand all the Meteors both watery and fiery which were created then in their causes Ier. 10. 13. The approbation given of other dayes is here omitted in the Hebrew not because Hell was created on this day as the Hebrews say but because this work of distinguishing the waters was yet imperfect and finished on the third day The work of the third day was threefold First The conflux or gathering of the waters below into one place in regard of the greater part of them called Sea that so they might not overflow the Earth and by this command of Gods they still continue so Luther said well that all a mans life upon the Earth is as great a miracle as the Israelites passing thorow the red Sea Secondly The drying of the earth to make it habitable and fit for nourishing plants and living creatures Thirdly The producing of Herbs and Trees of all kindes The works of the fourth day were the Lights both greater as Sun and Moon and lesser as the other Stars placed in the Heavens as certain receptacles or vessels wherein the
Name What is meant by Gods Name l. 9. p. 789 What it is to take Gods Name in vain ibid. Navigation The art of Navigation a great work l. 3. p. 252 253 Useful l. 3. p. 254 Nazianzen commended l. 1. p. 114 Necessary The Scripture is Necessary l. 1. p. 84 85 God is a Necessary Essence l. 2. p. 157 Nehemiah Nehemiah why so called l. 1. p. 34 The best Expositors of it ibid. Night Night what l. 3 p. 241 Its usefulnesse l. 3. p. 242 Numbers Numbers why the fourth Book of Moses is so called l. 1. p. 32 The best Expositors of it ibid. O Oath OAth the nature and use of it l. 9. p. 790. to 793 The abuses of it l. 9. p. 800. to 804 Obadiah Obadiah when he prophesied l. 1. p. 39 Dt Rainolds expounds him well ibid Obedience Obedience what it is l. 7. p. 543 Its kindes ibid. Obey We should Obey God and why l. 2. p. 166. l. 7. p. 543 544 Obscure Many things in the Scripture Obscure and difficult l. 1. p. 101. to 103 And why l. 1. p. 102 The difference between Mare and Oceanus l. 3. p. 252 Omnipotent God is Omnipotent l. 2. p. 191. to 194 Omnipresent God is Omnipresent l. 2. p. 144 Christs body is not l. 1. p. 104 Omniscient God is Omniscient l. 2 p. 160. to 163 One God is wholly One l. 2. p. 157. to 160 Oppression l. 4. p. 368 Ordination Ordination of Minister● l. 6. p. 457 458 Distinguished from election l. 6. p. 458 Origen Origen commended for his diligence l. 1. p. 113 114 Censured l. 1. p. 113 P PAlm-tree what l. 3 p. 257 Papists confuted l. 2. p. 177. l. 4. p. 311 321 358 Paradise Paradise where l. 3. p. 293 Whether destroyed by the floud ibid. Paraphrase The use of the Chaldee Paraphrases is very great l. 1. p. 61 Parents duties to their children l. 9 p. 825 826 827 Pastors Pastors their names they were of years before they entred into that function l. 6. p. 454 Their Office vindicated l. 6. p. 454. to 457 Patient God is Patient l. 2. p. 186 What Patience is in us ib. Paul a great Champion of grace l. 2. p. 177 Peace l. 7. p. 597 600 Pearls which best and why they are called uniones in Latine l. 3. p. 249 Perfect The Scripture is Perfect l. 1. p. 85. to 92 God is Perfect l. 2. p. 153 154 Person Person in the Trinity the word used in Scripture l. 2. p. 204 The word may well be used ibid. What a Person is l. 2. p. 207 Several things required to a Person l. 2. p. 207 The communion and distinction of the Persons in the Trinity l. 2. p. 213 214 Pelagius Pelagius mentions grace often but hides his meaning l. 2. p. 177 He saith grace is given for our merits l. 2. p. 175 Pelagians confuted l. 4. p. 316 Pentateuch Pentateuch why so called l. 1. p. 30 Contains a History from the beginning of the world to the death of Moses ibid. Who have written well on it l. 1. p. 31. See l. 1. p 21 People the duty of People to their Ministers l. 9 p. 831 832 Perjury l. 4. p. 368 Perseverance l. 4. p. 369 600 Peter Whether he exercised a primacy at Rome l. 6. p. 474 Peter who best expound both those Epistles l. 1 p. 51. Philemon who best interpret him l. 1. p. 48 Philippians who best interpret it ibid. Piscator commended l. 1. p. 115 116 Plain The Scripture is Plain in fundamentals l. 1. p. 99 100. to 105 Polygamy l. 4. p. 369 Poor Christ was Poor for our sakes l. 5. p. 425 427 Postils Postils what they are l. 1. p. 11. m. Censured l. 1. p. 117 Prayer Prayer must be to God alone not Saints l. 8. p. 614 615 And in Christs name ibid. Kindes of Prayer l. 8. p. 625 Mental and vocal Prayer l. 8. p. 631 632 Sodain and composed Prayer l. 8. p. 632 Set and prescribed Prayer ibid. What gesture we should use in Prayer l. 8. p. 635 The place and time of Prayer l. 8. p. 635 636 What we must do after ibid. The Lords Prayer opened l. 8. p. 637. to 655 Corollaries from the defects of our Prayers l. 8. p. 618 619 620 Motives and Means to Prayer l. 8. p. 62● 621 The efficacy of Prayer l. 8. p. 621 622 The godly must pray and persevere in Prayer l. 8. p. 622 623 Objections against Prayer answered l. 8. p. 625 Who not to be prayed for l. 8. p. 628 Preaching Preaching what it is l. 6. p. 461 462 Whether private persons not in office may preach l. 6. p. 462 463 Ministers must preach often and denounce Gods judgements against sinners l. 6. p. 463 464 Predestination Predestination what l. 2. p. 218 How it differs from Election and Providence ib. The parts of it l. 3. p. 219 The errour of the Predestinati l. 3 p. 223 Prescience Gods Prescience or fore-knowledge l. 2. p. 164 Distinguished l. 3. p. 121 Pope Pope what the word signifies l. 6. p. 484 Whether the Pope of Rome be Antichrist l. 6. p. 474 475 Whether he be Christs Vicar above all other Bishops above Kings can make Laws to binde the conscience determine controversies of faith l. 6. p. 476 477 478 Whether he can pardon sins l. 6. p. 478 The Papists make the Pope a god in divers particulars l. 6. p. 483 Present God is every where Present l. 2. p. 144 145 146 147 Presumption what l. 7 p. 570 Pride Pride a great sinne l. 4. p. 370 371 372 Principle A double Principle in Divinity l. 1. p. 5 How Principles may be demonstrated l. 2. p. 123 Prophaneness what l. 9. p. 780 Prophets How the Prophetical Books are divided l. 1. p. 39 Why twelve Prophets are called the lesser ibid. Who expound the lesser Prophets ibid. Proverbs Proverbs by whom written their excellency l. 1. p. 36 The best Expositors of it ibid. Providence Providence whence l. 3. p. 295. m. That it is and what it is l. 3. p. 295 296 The object of it l. 3. p. 296 297 The kindes of it l. 3. p. 298. to 302 Psalms Psalms how called in Hebrew l. 1. p. 35 Often quoted in the New Testament ibid. Who the Author of them ibid. And how divided ibid. The best Expositors of it ibid. A choice Book ib. p. 36 The Turks swear solemnly by Davids Psalms l. 1 p. 36 Pure The Scripture is Pure l. 1. p. 85 Purgatory confuted l. 10. p. 866 867 R RAbbins some censured others commended l. 1. p. 112 Rain Rain a great work of God l. 3. p. 246 247 Rain-bow the cause of it l. 3. p. 247 It s several colours ib. Railing l. 4. p. 372 Reading Who are commanded to reade the Scripture l. 1. p. 21 The Scripture is to be read publickly and privately l. 1. p. 23 What Reading the Scripture is ibid. The Scripture read may be the instrument of
a Candlestick doth a Candle Revel 2. 1. 4. To interpret the Scripture by the Scripture Since many things in Scripture are doubtfull and hard to be understood without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. it doth belong to the Church to expound the same to interpret and give the sense Nehem. 8. 8 9. Luke 24. 27. provided that this exposition be by the Scriptures Some of the Papists say That the Church may condere articulos fidei facere Canonicum quo ad nos and though they talk of Councels and Fathers yet all is as the Pope concludes The testimony and tradition of the Church especially the Primitive Church is necessary to know that the Gospel of Matthew is divine Scripture by an historical and acquired faith to know this by a divine and infused faith besides the Authority of the Church the matter character and contents of every Book and comparing of it with other Scriptures do serve as an inward cause to produce the said infused faith Object We are sent to the Church to determine all Controversies 1 Cor. 11. 16. Sol. Controversies are either Dogmaticall concerning Faith or Rituall concerning true Order The Proposition is about these not the first Secondly From this fundamental truth that the Scripture is immediately from God the Basis indeed of all Religion 1 Cor. 15. the wickednesse of the Church of Rome is farther to be condemned which will not suffer the Scriptures to be read in their Churches but in an unknown tongue nor in private by the common people without special leave and certain cautions from their superiours Of old they would not suffer them to be read at all of late they are forced to give licences to some and they teach them that they should not make the Scripture judge of the Doctrine and Practice of the Church but the Doctrine and Practice of the Church must be the Interpreter and Judge of the meaning of the Scripture that is they must take the Scripture to mean none otherwise whatsoever it seem to say then what is agree●ble to that which the Pope doth teach and practise There cannot be a surer sign of a bad cause then that it fears to be tried by the writings which it self cannot deny to be written by God for correction for reproof for instruction in righteousnesse Some Papists are more modest herein as Bellarmine lib. 2. de verb. Dei c. 15. Catholica Ecclesia statuit ne passim omnibus concedatur Scripturae lectio some more rigid as Huntly and Hosius The Papists object the obscurity of Scriptures as an argument to hinder Lay-men from reading them and account it a matter of profanation to allow men women and children and all promiscuously the use of the Vulgar Translation and think they will rather be hurt then benefited by them taking occasion of erring from them Hosius urgeth that Give not holy things to dogs Cast not pearls before Swine to prove the people must be barred from reading of the Scriptures It is Pope Innocents Glosse a Beast might not touch the Mount a Lay-man may not meddle with Scripture Lindan saith Nihil noxae inferretur in Ecclesiam salvo traditionis fundamento if there were no Bible and another Scriptura citius faciet Haereticum Lutheranum quam Catholicum Because we will have all proved by Scripture and make that the compleat Rule for what we believe or do in all Theological matters they call us Scripturarios Scripture-men and Atramentrarios Theologos and so to carry or read a Bible is matter of scoff we may stile them in Tertullians phrase Scripturarum Lucifugae and Traditionaries St Gregory who is blessed in their Church exhorteth a Lay-man to the serious study of the Scriptures that thereby he might learn the will of God alledging that the Scripture is the Epistle of God unto his creature Quid est autem Scriptura sacra nisi Epistola omnipotentis Dei ad Creaturam Greg. lib. 4 epist. 40. ad Theodorum medi●um Proving further That obscurity of Scripture is so frothy an argument for perswading any devout Christian not to reade it that it should rather incite them to greater Diligence therein and therefore he elegantly comp●res the Scripture to a River wherein saith he there are as well shallow Fords for Lambs to wade in as depths and gulphs wherein the Elephant may swim Chrysostom held it a thing necessary for all men daily to read the Scriptures Audito quaeso saeculares comparate vobis Biblia animae pharmaca St Ierom did exhort divers women thereto and commended them for exercising themselves therein he writes to Laeta and Gaudentia and shews them how they should bring up their daughters Scripturas sacras tenebat memoriter Hieron de Paula in Epitaphio He commends the Husbandmen about Bethlem for being so perfect in the Scripture That they had the Psalms of David by heart and sang them as they followed the Plow Arator stivam tenens cantat Davidicum melos Epist. ad Demetriad The Apostle would not have commended this in Timothy 2 Tim. 3. 15. That from his childehood he knew the holy Scriptures nor noted it to the praise of his Grandmother and Mother that they had trained him up so if he had not known that the holy Scriptures are so plain that even a childe may be able to understand them What may we judge of the other easier books when the holy Ghost would have the Revelation the obscurest book of all the Scripture to be read Revel 1 3 The people took occasion of erring and blaspheming from the humiliation of Christ many abuse Preaching and the Sacraments 2. By this reason the Latine Bibles should not be suffered to be read publickly because many understanding Latine from the reading of them may take occasion of erring There is a greater reason to be had of Gods elect which are edified by reading of the Scripture then of those who wrest them Peter by this reason stirred up the faithfull to reade the Scriptures with greater devotion 2 Pet. 3. 14 15 16 17. 3. This is common both to the Ecclesiastical Persons and Laity to take occasion of erring and blaspheming from the Scripture If we peruse the Histories of times past we shall finde that learned and Ecclesiastical men did oftner fall into Heresies and Blasphemies from misunderstanding and wresting the Scriptures then any of the common sort of people who were often also by the learned drawn into Heresie The Papists are not afraid the people should be corrupted by reading their legends and lying fables by their Images which doe naturally teach Idolatry The Papists further object That the Hebrews did not permit young men to read part of Genesis Canticles Ezekiel We must know that the reading of those Scriptures non ablatam hominibus sed dilatam fuisse was not taken away from them but delayed only They permitted all men before thirty to read all other Chapters of holy Scripture and after thirty these
also 2. This tradition concerning the age of men did drive away as well the Ecclesiastick as the Lay persons Notwithstanding all this that hath been objected by the Papists we hold that the Scriptures ought to be translated into the Vulgar and mother Tongues of each Nation and that all men ought to read them and meditate diligently in them and that for these reasons 1. From the Commandment and will of God revealed in Scripture He hath commanded all that live in the Church to study the Scriptures and read them Deut. 11. 18 19. Ioh. 5. 39. He speaks not to the Scribes and Pharisees but to the people in general They must try all things 2. From Gods intention which commanded it to be written for that end that it might be obvious to all Ioh. 20. 31. Rom. 15. 4. 3. Those are commended which did reade the Scripture as the Eunuch Acts 8. 22. the Bereans Acts 17. and dispraised which neglected it as the Israelites Hosea 8. 12. they are pronounced Blessed who diligently meditate in the Scriptures Psal. 1. 2. How unlike to Peter ●2 Pet. 1. 19. are those whith pretend to be his Successours 4. From the fact of the Apostles who as they publickly preached the mysteries of salvation to the people so also in their Epistles they commended the whole doctrine of salvation to be read by them The Epistles of the Romans Corinthians Galatians Ephesians were written to the people therefore to be read by them One Epistle of Iohn was written to Gaius a Lay-man another to the elect Lady 5. From the Profit and Necessity of this study men are illightned and converted by reading of the Scriptures Psal. 19. 8 9. they are directed by them as most faithfull counsellors in all their waies Psal. 119. 24. they are armed by them against the fiery darts of Satan Eph. 6. 16. One seeing a youth read the Scriptures said It was never well since such were permitted to turn over the Bible but he answered him in the Psalmists words Psal. 119. 9. 6. From the unanimous Conse●t of all the Fathers Chrysostom and Ierom especially who exhort the people to the private reading of the Scriptures and testifie that the Scriptures were publickly read in their Ecclesiastical Assemblies not in an unknown tongue but in a tongue understood by the people It was decreed by the Councel of Nice That no Christian should be without a Bible in his house And the Jews at this day suffer no house amongst them to be without the Bible Christ and his Apostles teaching and disputing before the people appeal to the Law and the Prophets without the name of the Author Book or Chapter because they knew the Bible Text to be familiar to the Israelites In an unknown tongue they cannot profit the people Ergo They ought to be translated into a Tongue known to the people 1 Cor. 14. The Apostle in divers verses treateth of this subject vers 6 7 19. He saith All things ought to be done in the Church for the edifying of the people that no man should speak in an unknown tongue without an interpreter and saith That he had rather speak five words and be understood then ten thousand words in an unknown tongue Those Arguments before urged for the peoples reading of the Scripture prove this also for they cannot reade them in every Nation unlesse they be translated into a Tongue they understand Christ and his Apostles taught the people the Scripture in their mother Tongue In the next age after the Apostles saith Grotius lib. 3. de veritate Religionis Christ. the New Testament was translated into divers Vulgar Tongues the Syriack Arabick Aethiopick and Latine which Versions are yet extant and differ not mainly from the Greek In the elder and purer times the Scriptures were translated into innumerable yea into all Tongues usual amongst men See Gregories Preface to the Notes on passages of Scripture The plain and usual words the phrase and manner of speech most frequented the comparisons and similitudes in Scripture most familiar taken out of the shops and fields from Husbandry and Houswifery from the Flock and the Herd shew that the Scriptures were written for the capacity and understanding of the unlearned Iohn 5. 39. a speciall place if it be indicative it shewes the custome of the Jewes if imperative it shewes what they ought to doe Many amongst us are to be blamed for not having the Scripture in their houses and for not reading it constantly in the same as they ought to do or else they read it as other Books not with such respect to it as the greatnesse of its Authour deserveth I mean with a desire and purpose to believe and obey all that they finde there which must needs be the Duty of those that confesse these writings come from God We should receive it with reverence believe it with confidence exercise our selves in it with diligence and delight practise it with obedience Reading the Scripture is a rehearsing out of the Book such things as are there written ●arely without any interpretation It is to be done publickly as it was in the Synagogues of the Jews who had the reading of the Law and Prophets amongst them The Prophets were read in their ears every day saith Paul and after the lecture of the Law and the Prophets in another place From hence hath been continued the custom of Lessons of the Old and New Testament to the same purpose saith Mr Thorndike We honour God more by a publick then a private reading of it 2. P●ivately The godly Jews of B●rea did search the Scriptures and both King and people are commanded to read the Law Deut. 17. 19. and 6. 7. 8. 9. What is written in the Law How readest thou Luke 10. 26. Matth. 12. 5. and 21. 16 42. Christ Peter and Paul in their preaching quote not the Chapter and verse only say Isaiah saith Isaiah is bold It is written in the Psalms because people should be so acquainted with the Scripture as to know where it is See Grotius on Heb. 4. 4. Some good Divines hold that the Scriptures barely read though preaching be not joined with it may be the instrument of Regeneration since the Doctrine of the Gospel is called The ministration of the Spirit Psal. 19. The Law of the Lord converteth the soul it is so when not preached The word is a means of conversion whether written preacht or lived 2 Cor. 3. 2 3. 1 Pet. 3. 1 2. Psal. 51. 13. But the Word of God is made effectual by the Spirit more often more ordinarily to beget a new life in the preaching that is the interpreting and applying of it then in the b●re reading 1 Tim. 4. 13. Matth. 28. 29. Christs custome was as we may collect out of Luke 4. where one instance is recorded to make us conceive his ordinary practice when he had read to interpret
most unjust means extort money from Gojim that is the Gentiles Paulus Fagius in his Annotat. on Deut. 17. 17. Scripture Arguments are the chiefest to convince an unbeliever Christ by divers Arguments Iohn 5. labours to convince the Jews that he was the Messiah promised 1. Iohn bare witnesse of him vers 33. 2. His works bare witnesse of him verse 36. 3. The Father did bear witnesse of him vers 37. 4. He produceth the Testimony of the Scriptures vers 39. They are they which testifie of me Will you not believe Iohn my miracles my Word from Heaven then believe the written Word If we believe not the Testimomy of Scripture nothing will convince us though one rise from the dead nor Christ himself if he were here in the flesh and should preach unto us Ioh. 5. ult The Lord in executing of his Judgements commmonly observes proportion and retaliation Antichrist is the greatest opposite to Gods Law and Word he is called therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thess. 2. 8. The lawlesse one He is without Law above Law against Law He abuseth Scripture takes upon him to jud●● and interpret Scripture therefore it shall be his ruine 2 Thess. 2. 8. God shall destroy him with the Spirit of his mouth id est Verbo suo Beza God hath consecrated the Word to this purpose the end of it is not only to save but destroy being the savour of death to some and it is a fit instrument for such a work Antichrists strength is in mens consciences only this will pierce thither Heb. 4. 12. God useth the Word for the destruction of Antichrist these wayes 1. It discovers him his doctrine his errors 2. It hardens him 3. It condemneth him and passeth sentence against him CHAP. III. II. The Books of Scripture FRom the Divine ●lows the Canonical Authority of the Scripture The books of Scripture are called Canonical books say some from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word is used 2 Cor. 10. 13. Phil. 3. 16. Gal. 6. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mark the double Emphasis this notable Canon because they were put into the Canon by the Universal Church and acknowledged to be divinely inspired by it and also are made a perfect Canon or Rule of all Doctrine concerning Religion Credendorum agendorum of Faith and Manners of all things which are to be believed or done toward salvation But Cameron thinks it is not termed Canonical because it is a Rule for that book saith he is called Canonical which is put into the Catalogue which the Ancients called a Canon of those writings which are esteemed Divine Becanus saith They are called Canonical both because they contain a Rule which we ought to follow in faith and manners and because they are put into the Catalogue of Divine books The Conditions of a Canon are these 1. It must contain Truth or be an expresse Form and Image of Truth which is in the Divine minde 2. It must be commanded sanctified and confirmed by Divine Authority that it may be a Canon to us in the Church These books were sanctified either commonly all of both Testaments by the Testimony of the Spirit and Church and Canon it self or the books of the Old Testament were specially and singularly confirmed by Word Signs and Event as the Pentateuch but the Prophetical books and Hagiographa before their carrying into Babylon by extraordinary sign the Cloud and Veil in the Temple 1 King 8. 10. Levit. 16. 2. and Gods answer by Ephod Urim and Thummim Exod. 28. 30. after their carrying away into Babylon by singular testimonies of events The books of the New Testament are confirmed by the Son of God revealed in flesh by his sayings and deeds Heb. 1. 2. and by the powerful Ministry of the Apostles by Signs Vertues and Miracles Mark 16. 20. There is a three-fold Canon in the Church Divine Ecclesiasticall and False The Divine Canon is that which properly and by it self is called the Word of God immediately inspired of God into the Prophets and Apostles This according to the divers times of the Church is distinguished into the Old and New Testament 2 Cor. 3. 6 14. this is a common division of the sacred Bible among Christians as in the version of Tremellius and Iunius Testamenti veteris novi Biblia sacra and the Geneva gives that Title to their Bible La Bible qui est toute la Saincte Escriture du vi●l noveau Testament Augustine thinks they are better called Vetus novum Instrumentum Heinsius Grotius Vetus novum Foedus Vide Grotii Annotat. in libros Evangelii A Covenant is an Agreement between two a Testament is the Declaration of the Will of one It is called in regard of the Form Convention and Agreement between God and man a Covenant in regard of the manner of confirming it a Testament For 1. In a Testament or last Will the Testators minde is declared so is the Will of God in his Word therefore it is called a Testimony often Psal. 19. and 119. 2. Here is a Testator Christ a Legacy eternal life Heirs the Elect a Writing the Scripture Seals the Sacraments 3. Because it is ratified by the death of Christ Heb. 9. 16 17. The Books of the Old Testament are the holy Scriptures given by God to the Church of the Jews shewing them what to believe and how God would be worshipped The New Testament containeth the books which treat of salvation already exhibited and Christ already come in the flesh All the books of the Old Testament were written originally in Hebrew because they were committed unto the Hebrews Rom. 3. 2. except what Daniel and Ezra wrote in the Chaldee The Jewish Church receiving them from God kept them and delivered them to Posterity Many grave Authors hold That the Hebrew was the first Tongue and Mother of all the rest and it may probably be collected from the names of our first Parents It was called Hebrew saith Erpenius not from Heber of the Posterity of Shem as Iosephus Ierom and others think when it is manifest that he rather spake Chaldee then Hebrew because Abraham the Patriarch which drew his original from him was a Chaldean but it was so called saith Erpenius as all the Rabbins Origen and others testifie from the Hebrews which people arose from Canaan It is honoured with the Title of the Holy Tongue saith the same Erpenius because the most holy God spoke it to his Prophets delivered his holy Will written in it to the Church and because it is very probable from the opinion of great men that holy men shall use it with God hereafter in Heaven Vide Buxtorfium de Linguae Hebraeae origine Antiquitate Sanctitate There are many Hebraisms also in the New Testament many words and phrases rather used according to the manner of the Hebrews then the Greeks by which it is manifest that the same Spirit was
he followeth it for the most part and preferreth it before all the rest Maxima ex parte amplector caeteris omnibus antepono He speaks of the New Testament onely and of that Latine Translation of the New Testament in comparison of all other Latine Translations which were before him as Erasmus Castalion and such like These places may serve to shew that the vulgar Latine is corrupt no Book being entire or free from error Isidore Clarius Brixianus praefat in Biblia a great learned man of their own affirmeth That it hath 8000 places in which the sense of the Holy Ghost is changed Since the Councel of Trent two Popes have set forth this vulgar Edition diversly which of these shall be received as authentical How often do the Papists leave the vulgar in all their controversies when it is for their advantage so to do it is a matter ordinary with them and needless to be proved There is no Edition Ancienter then the Hebrew if the Latine hath been used a 1000 years in the Church the Hebrew hath been used almost 3000 years the Chaldee Arabick Syriack and Greek Editions also have been used above a 1000 years and so should be authentique by the Papists Argument Having spoken of the authority of the Scriptures the Canonical Books and the authentical Editions I now go on to treat of the end of the Scripture its adjuncts or properties fitted to that end and Interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture comes next to be considered of this I have spoken somewhat afore but shall now inlarge my self The end of the Scripture is considered 1. In respect of God 2. In respect of us In respect of God the end of the Scripture is a glorifying of him Iohn 7. 18. 2 Cor. 4. 6. by it we may learn to know love and fear him and so be blessed The glory of God is the chief end of all things Prov. 16. 4. In respect of us The end of the Scripture is 1. Intermediate Temporal Edification which is fitly referred to five principal uses The two first respect the minde the other three the heart will and affections It is profitable for Doctrine it serves to direct to all saving truth nothing is to be received as a truth necessary to salvation but what is proved out of Scripture Where that hath not a tongue to speak I must not have an ear to hear Hoc quia de scripturis non habet autoritatem eadem facilitate contemnitur qua probatur Hieron 2. Reproof or Confutation to refute all errors and heterodox opinions in Divinity By this sword of the Spirit Christ vanquished Satan Mat. 4. 4. 7. 10. by the Scripture he opposed the Jews Iohn 5. 45. 46. 47. 10. 34. by this he refuted the Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 9. 13. and 22. 1. Luke 10. 25 26. 27. Matth. 19. 34. and 21. 12 13. the Sadduces Matth. 22. 29. Thus Apollus convinced the Jews who denied Jesus to be the Christ Acts 18. 28. Thus the Apostles convinced those which urged Circumcision and the observation of the Jewish Law Acts 15. 15. H●reticks are to be stoned with Scripture-Arguments Lapidandi sunt Heretici sacrarum literarum argumentis Athanasius By this Austin refuted the Pelagians Irenaeus the Ualentinians Tertullian the Mareionites Athanasius the Arrians 3. Correction of iniquity setting straight that which is amiss in manners and life 4. Instruction to righteousness Instruunt Patriarchae etiam errantes Basil saith The Psalms are a common Store house and Treasury of good Instruction The Title of the 32 and some other Psalms is Maschil that is A Psalm of Instruction 5. Comfort in all troubles Psal. 19. 8. and 119. 50. and 92. the Greek word for Gospel signifieth glad-tidings The Promises are the Christians best Cordials as Gods Promises are the rule of what we must pray for in faith so they are the ground of what we must expect in comfort All things which belong to the Gospel are comfortable 1. God the Author of the Gospel and revealed in it is the God of all comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3. 2. Jesus Christ the Subject of the Gospel is called Consolation in the abstract Luke 2. 25. 3. The Holy Ghost which breathes in the Gospel is called The Comforter Iohn Chap. 15. 16. 4. The Ministers or Ambassadors of the Gospel are the Messengers of peace and comfort 2. Ultimate and chiefest our Salvation and Life eternal Iohn 5. 39. and 20. 31. 2 Tim. 3. 15. It will shew us the right way of escaping hell and attaining Heaven It will shew us what to believe and practise for our present and eternal happinesse This was Gods aim in causing the Scripture to be written and we shall finde it fully available and effectual for the ends for which it was ordained by God CHAP. VIII Of the Properties of the Scripture THe properties which the Scripture must have for the former end are these It is 1. Of Divine Authority 2. True and Certain 3. The rule of Faith and Manners 4. Necess●ry 5. Pure and Holy 6. Sufficient and Perfect 7. Perspicuous and Plain 1. It s of Divine Authority we must believe it for its own sake It is Divine 1. In its Efficient cause and Original which is God the Father dictating in his Son declaring and publishing by his holy Spirit confirming and sealing it in the hearts of the faithful He wrote the Decalogue immediately with his own finger and commanded the whole Systeme and all the parts of Scripture to be written by his servants the Prophets and Apostles as the publique Actuaries and Pen-men thereof therefore the authority of the Scripture is as great as that of the Holy Ghost who did dictate both the matter and words Those speeches are frequent The Lord said and The mouth of the Lord hath spoken 2. In the subject matter which is truth according to godliness certain powerful of venerable antiquity joyned with a sensible demonstration of the Spirit and Divine presence and with many other things attesting its Divine Authority Whence it follows that the Authority of the Holy Scriptures is 1. Infallible which expresseth the minde and will of God to whom truth is essential and necessary 2. Supreme and Independent into which at last all faith is resolved from which it is not lawful to appeal By which singular authority the Scripture is distinguished both from all prophane and Sacred writings and Paul honors it with this Elogie A faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1. 15. A more sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. the Comparative for the Superlative in which there is no doubting and uncertainty but all things firm As God is Iehovah of himself so is his word Authoritative of it self and is true and to be obeyed whether thou think it Scripture or no. There is no higher authority for thee to appeal to it is above opinions of men conscience and therefore it must
there promised is happinesse It is a wonderful thing that all the particulars which the Canticles contain being taken from marriage are handled so sincerely that no blemish or spot can be found therein Therefore the Scriptures should be preached read and heard with holy affections and should be reverently mentioned The Jews in their Synagogues will not touch the Bible with unwashed hands they kiss it as often as they open and shut it they sit not on that seat where it is laid and if it fall on the ground they fast for a whole day The Turk writes upon the outside of his Alcorar Let no man touch this Book but he that is pure I would none might meddle with ours Alcoran signifieth but the Scripture you need not be afraid of the word but such as indeed are what other men do but think themselves 6. The Scripture is Perfect The perfection of the Scripture is considered two ways 1. In respect of the matter or the Books in which the holy doctrine was written all which as many as are useful to our salvation have been kept inviolable in the Church so that out of them one most perfect and absolute Canon of faith and life was made and this may be called the integrity of the Scripture 2. In respect of the form viz. Of the sense or meaning of these Canonical Books or of Divine truth comprehended in them which Books contain most fully and perfectly the whole tru●h necessary and sufficient for the salvation of the Elect and therefore the Scriptures are to be esteemed a sole adequate total and perfect measure and rule both of faith and manners and this is the sufficiency of the Scriptures which is attributed to it in a twofold respect 1. Absolutely in it self and that in a threefold consideration 1. Of the principle for every principle whether of a thing or of knowledge ought to be perfect since demonstration and true conclusions are not deduced from that which is imperfect therefore it is necessary that the holy Scripture being the first onely immediate principle of all true doctrine should be most perfect 2. Of the subject for it hath all Essential parts matter and form and integral Law and Gospel and is wholly perfect Both 1. Absolutely because for the substance it either expresly or Analogically contains the doctrine concerning faith and manners which is communicable and profitable for us to know which may be proved also by induction that all necessary opinions of faith or precepts of life are to be found in the holy Sc●ipture 2. Relatively because as it hath a perfection of the whole so of the parts in the whole that perfection is called essential this quantitative For all the Books are sufficient with an essential perfection although integrally they have not a sufficiency of the whole but onely their own yet so that at distinct times every part sufficed for their times but all the parts in the whole are but sufficient for us 3. In its effect and operation it makes men perfect 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. Rom. 15. 4. Iohn 2. ult 5. 39. 2. As opposed to unwritten Traditions all which it excludes by its sufficiency but we do not understand by Traditions generally a Doctrine delivered in Word and Writing but specially all Doctrine not written by Prophets or Apostles whether Dogmatical Historical or Ceremonial for a perfect reason of the primary opinions belonging to Faith and Manners is delivered in Scripture and those things which are out of beside or against the Scripture do not binde the Conscience 2. Historical the Sayings and Deeds of Christ and the Apostles are perfectly contained in the Scriptures as many as suffice us for our salvation Iohn 20. 30 31. Those things which are delivered out of Scripture are to be esteemed mans writings 3. Ceremonial or secondary opinions concerning Ecclesiastical Rites and Customs are for Essentials Substantials and Fundamentals generally contained in the word of God the accidentals accessaries and circumstantials are free and mutable If Traditions agree with the Scripture they are confirmed by it if they oppose it they are disproved by it The perfection of the Scriptures is not First Infinite and unlimitted That is an incommunicable property of God every thing which is from another as the efficient cause is thereby limitted both for the nature and qualities thereof Secondly we do not understand such a perfection as containeth all and singular such things as at any time have been by Divine inspiration revealed to holy men and by them delivered to the Church of what sort soever they were for all the Sermons of the Prophets of Christ and his Apostles are not set down in so many words as they used in the speaking of them for of twelve Apostles seven wrote nothing which yet preached and did many things neither are all the deeds of Christ and his Apostles written for that is contradicted Iohn 20. 30 31. and 21. 25. but we mean onely a Relative perfection which for some certain ends sake agreeth to the Scripture as to an instrument according to which it perfectly comprehendeth all things which have been are or shall be necessary for the salvation of the Church Thirdly The several Books of Scripture are indeed perfect for their own particular ends purposes and uses for which they were intended of the Lord but yet not any one Book is sufficient to the common end the whole Scripture is compleat in all the parts thereof one speaking of that which another doth wholly pass over in silence one clearly delivering what was intric●te in another Paul speaks much of Justification and Predestination in the Epistle to the Romans nothing of the Eucharist or Resurrection Fourthly Since God did reveal his will in writing those writings which by divine hand and providence were extant in the Church were so sufficient for the Church in that age that it needed not Tradition neither was it lawful for any humane wight to adde thereto or take therefrom but when God did reveal more unto it the former onely was not then sufficient without the latter Fifthly The holy Scripture doth sufficiently contain and deliver all doctrines which are necessary for us to eternal salvation both in respect of faith and good works and most of these it delivereth to us expresly and in so many words and the rest by good and necessary consequence The Baptism of Infants and the consubstantiality of the Father and of the Son are not in those words expressed in Scripture yet is the truth of both clearly taught in Scripture and by evident proof may thence be deduced That Article of Christs descent into Hell totidem verbis is not in the Scripture yet it may be deduced thence Acts. 2 27. Some Papists hold That we must not use the principles of Reason or Consequences in Divinity and require that what we prove be exprest in so many words in scripture These are opposed by Vedelius in
his Rationale Theologicum l 1. c. 3. 4 5. 8. and l. 2 c. 5. 6. and also by Daillè in his Book entituled La●foy fondee sur les Sainctes Escritures 1 Partie He shews there That Christ and his Apostles and the Ancient Fathers in disputing against their Adversaries used consequences drawn from the scripture Mat. 12. 32. Acts 17. 2. 3. and 18 23. Acts 17. 3. opening and alledging St Luke there useth two words very proper for this subject the first signifies to open the other to put one thing neer another to shew that the Apostle proved his conclusions by the scriptures in clearing first the prophecies and in shewing the true sense and after in comparing them with the events the figures with the things and the shadows with the body where the light of the truths of the Gospel of it self shined forth Mat. 22. 29 31 32. He blames them for not having learned the Resurrection of the dead by this sentence of the scripture therefore they ought to have learned it Now the sentence which he alledgeth saith nothing formally and expresly of the Resurrection of the dead but infers it from what he had laid down Hic Dominum uti principiis rationis naturae adeo manifestum est ut ne Veronius quidem Magister Artis negandi negare illud possit Vedel Rat. Theol. l. ● c. 6. vide plura ibid. c. 5. The Ancient Fathers prove by consequences drawn from scripture that God the Father is without beginning against the Sabellians and that the Son is consubstantial with the Father against the Arrians that Christ hath two Natures against the Eutychians The Papists will not be able to prove their Purgatory and many other of their corrupt opinions by the express words of Scripture We shall now lay down some Propositions or Theoremes about the sufficiency of Scripture First In every Age of the Church the Lord hath revealed so much supernatural truth as was for that age necessary unto salvation his wayes he made known to Moses Psal. 103. 7. and his statutes to Israel Deut. 4. 6. Psal. 147. 20. Heb. 1. 1. Therefore that is an erroneous opinion that before the Law written men were saved by the Law of nature and in the time of the Law by the Law of Moses and since in the time of the Gospel by the Word of grace Secondly The substance of all things necessary to salvation ever since the fall of Adam hath been and is one and the same as the true Religion hath been one and unchangeable 1. The knowledge of God and Christ is the summe of all things necessary to salvation Ioh. 17. 3. Col. 2. 2. but this knowledge was ever necessary Ier. 9. 23. Act. 4. 12. the fathers indeed saw Christ more obscurely and aenigmatically we more clearly distinctly and perspicuously but yet they knew him and believed in him unto salvation as well as we Ioh. 8. 56. 2. The Covenant of grace which God made with man is an everlasting Covenant therein the Lord hath revealed himself to be one and unchangeable as in nature so in will Heb. 13. 8. Rom. 3. 29. shewing that as God is one in nature truth and constancy and that as well toward the Gentiles as toward the Jews so he would justifie both the Circumcision and Uncircumcision the Jew and the Gentile by one way of Religion that is to say through faith and belief in his Sonne Jesus Christ. 3. Christ and his Apostles professed and taught no new Religion but the same which the Scriptures of the Old Testament did before instruct Matth. 5. 17. Iohn 5. 39. Acts 10. 43. Luke 24. 25 26 27 44 45. Acts 18. 28. and 17. 7. and 26. 22. and 28. 23. Rom. 6. 26. Therefore the believing Jews and the converted Gentiles are stiled the children of faithfull Abraham being justified by Faith as Abraham was Whence we may conclude that before under and after the Law since the fall of Adam there was never but one true Catholick Religion or way to Heaven and happiness Thirdly The Word of God being uttered in old time sundry wayes was at length made known by writing the Lord stirring up and by his holy Spirit inspiring his servants to write his will and pleasure Fourthly So long as there was any truth in any Age necessary to be more fully and clearly known then was already revealed in the Books of Moses it pleased God to stirre up holy men whom he divinely inspired and sufficiently furnished to make the Truth known unto the Church thus after Moses during the time of the Law the Lord raised up Prophets who opened the perfect way of life unto the Church of the Old Testament more clearly then it was before manifested in the Books of Moses the Time and Age of the Church requiring the same The Church of the Jews in the several Ages thereof was sufficiently taught and instructed in all things necessary to Salvation by the writings of Moses and the Prophets which appears 1. In that our Saviour being asked of one What he should do that he might inherit eternal life answered What is written in the Law and Prophets How readest thou Luke 10. 25 26. and out of the Scripture he declared himself to be the Saviour of the world fore-told and promised Matth. 21. 44. and 26. 31. Luk 4. 21. and 24 25 26 27 44. Ioh. 3. 14. 2. The answer of Abraham to the rich man sending his friends to Moses and the Prophets sheweth that they sufficed to instruct the faithful Jews in all things necessary to Salvation Luk. 16. 29 30. by them they might learn how to obtain Life and escape Death when he saith Let them hear them he meaneth them only as that place is meant Mat. 17. 5. The Jews themselves acknowledged the sufficiency of those writings to lead them unto life and happiness Ioh. 5. 39. Fifthly The Prophets did expound the Law of God and speak more plainly precisely and distinctly touching the coming of the Messias then Moses did but the last full and clear Will of God touching the Salvation of man was not manife●●ed by them that was together and at once to be published and taught by the Messias who also at his coming did establish that order in the Church of God which was to continue therein for ever For 1. Christ was ordained of the Father to be the great Doctor of his Church a Prophet more excellent then the rest that were before him both in respect of his Person Office Manner of receiving his Doctrine and the excellency of the Doctrine which he delivered 2. This was well known not only among the Jews but also among the Samaritans insomuch that the woman of Samaria could say I know when the Messias is come he will tell us all things Joh. 4. 25. 3. The time wherein God spake unto us by his Sonne is called the last dayes or the last time Heb. 1. 2. 1 Pet. 1. 20. to note that
when ye become men ye must put away these childish things Blow at the Root p. 82 83. The expresse testimonies of Scripture forbidding even Angels to adde any thing to those things which are commanded by the Lord do prove the perfection of the Scripture Deut. 4. 5 12. and 12. 32. and 30. 10. and 5. 12 13 14. and 28. 58. Ioshua 1. 7 8. Prov. 30. 5. wherefore the Apostle commands That no man presume above that which is written 1 Cor. 4. 6. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Divers reasons may be drawn from this last place to prove the perfection of the Scripture 1. The Apostle teacheth That the Scriptures are able to make a man wise to salvation therefore there needeth no further counsel nor direction thereunto but out of the Scriptures 2. The Scriptures are able to make the man of God that is the Minister of the Word perfect and compleat unto every work of his Ministery whether it be by teaching true Doctrine or confuting false by exhorting and putting forward to that which is good or dehorting from that which is evil Paul would not have us think that all and every writing viz. of Plato Aristotle is divinely inspired for in ver 15. he not only useth the plural number calling them the holy writings thereby to note the word of God and not one sentence or Book but all the sentences and Books of the Scripture and also useth the Article which hath force of an universal note therefore the Greek words the whole Scripture signifieth the whole altogether and not every part severally in this place 2. No one part of holy Scripture is able to make the Minister perfect therefore it must needs be understood of the whole body of holy Scripture wherein this sufficiency is to be found The Ancient Fathers and other Divines have from this place proved the perfection and sufficiency of the Scripture in all things necessary to salvation We do not reason thus as the Papists charge us it is profitable therefore it is sufficient but because 1. The Scripture is profitable for all these ends viz. to teach sound Doctrine to refute false opinions to instruct in holy life and correct ill manners therefore it is sufficient or it is profitable to all those functions of the Ministery that a Minister of the Church may be perfect therefore much more for the people Argumentum non nititur unica illa voce utilis sed toto sententiae complexu Chamierus Hitherto of the perfection of the Scripture absolutely considered now follows the sufficiency thereof in opposition to unwritten traditions or verities as the Papists speak D Davenant premiseth these things for the better understanding of the sufficiency of the Scripture 1. We speak of the state of the Church saith he in which God hath ceased to speak to men by the Prophets or Apostles divinely inspired and to lay open new Revelations to his Church 2. We grant that the Apostles living and preaching and the Canon of the New Testament being not yet sealed their Gospel delivered Viva Voce was no lesse a rule of Faith and Worship then the writings of Moses and the Prophets 3. We do not reject all the traditions of the Church for we embrace certain Historical and Ceremonial ones but we deny that opinions of faith or precepts of worship can be confirmed by unwritten traditions 4. We call that an opinion of Faith to speak properly and strictly when a Proposition is revealed by God which exceeds the capacity of nature and is propounded to be believed as necessary to be known to Salvation Fundamentall opinions are those which by a usuall and proper name are called Articles of Faith 5. What is not in respect of the Matter an Article of Faith may be a Proposition to be believed with a Theological Faith if you look to the manner of revealing as that the Sun is a great light the Moon a lesse Gen. 1. 16. that Rachel was beautifull Leah blear-eyed The Papists do not cease to accuse the Scripture of imperfection and insufficiency as not containing all things necessary to salvation The Councel of Trent Sess. 4. decret 1. saith That the Truth and Discipline is contained in libris scriptis sine scripto traditionibus The Papists generally divide the word of God into the word written and traditions They affirm that there are many things belonging to Christian faith which are neither contained in the Scriptures openly nor secretly This opinion is maintained by the Papists but it was not first invented by them The Jewish Fathers did use the traditions of the Elders and it hath been said of old Mark 75. Matth. 5. 21. for their errors and superstitions yea at length they affirmed that God gave to Moses in Mount Sinai the Scripture and the Cabala or a double Law the one written the other unwritten The Tridentin Fathers S●s 4. do command Traditions to be received with the same reverend affection and piety with which we imbrace the Scripture and because one Bishop in the Councel of Trent refused this he was excluded In the mean space they explain not what those Traditions are which must be so regarded none of them would ever give us a List and Catalogue of those Ordinances which are to be defended by the authority of unwritten Traditions not of the Word committed to writing onely they affirm in general whatsoever they teach or do which is not in the Scripture that it is to be put into the number of Traditions unwritten The cause of it self is manifest That at their pleasure they might thrust what they would upon the Church under the name of Traditions Vide Whitak de Script contro Quaest. 6. c. 5. See also Moulins Buckler of Faith p. 51. Lindan the Papist was not ashamed to say That it had been better for the Church if there had been no Scripture at all but onely Traditions For saith he we may do well enough with Traditions though we had no Scripture but could not do well enough with Scripture though we had no Traditions Baldwin saith a Testament may be either Scriptum or Nuncupativum set down in writing or uttered by word of mouth But a Nuncupative Testament or Will made by word of mouth without writing must be proved by solemn witnesses The solemn witnesses of Christs Testament are the Prophets and Apostles Let Papists if they can prove by them that part of the Testament of Christ is unwritten Any indifferent Reader will conceive that the Scriptures make most for them who stand most for their Authority and perfection as all the reformed Divines do not only affirming but also confirming that the Scripture is not only a most perfect but the onely infallible rule of faith Titus 1. 2. Rom. 3. 4. God cannot lie and Let God be true and every man a lier that is subject to errour and falshood Every Article of Divine Faith must have a certain and
infallible ground there is none such of supernatural truth but the Scripture Because our Adversaries do contend for Traditions not written hotly and zealously against the total perfection of the Scripture that they might thrust upon us many points by their own confession not contained in Scripture and usurp to themselves irrefragable authority in the Church it shall not be amisse largely to consider of this matter And first to enquire of the signification of the words Greek and Latine which are translated Tradition and then to come to the matter which is controverted between us and the Papists The Greek word signifying Tradition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the New Testament is used onely in these places Matth. 15. 2 3 6. Mark 7. 3 5 8 9 13. 1 Cor. 11. 2. Gal. 1. 14. Colos 2. 8. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and in the vulgar Latine is rendred Traditio Mat. 15. 2 3 6. Mark 7. 3 5 8 9 13. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 6. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and Praecepta 1 Cor. 11. 2. Whereto the Rhemists translation which seemeth to be but a bare translation of the Vulgar Latin doth wholly agree using the word Tradition every where excepting 1 Cor. 11. 2. where they use the word P●ecepts but set in the margent the word Tradition Arias Montanus in his interlineal Translation doth render it Traditio Beza doth commonly express it by the word traditio In the English Geneva Bible we translate it by the word Instruction Tradition calling mens precepts Traditions the Apostles Doctrine Ordinances or Instructions not that we feared the word Tradition but because we would not have the simple deceived as though the unwritten verities of the Papists were thereby commended or as though we had some honourable conceit of them and what we did herein the signification of the word doth give us free liberty to do in our last English Translation we use the word Tradition as often as the Vulgar Latine or the Rhemists have done not that we were driven by fear or shame to alter what was done before but because we would cut off all occasion of carping at our Translation though never so unjust First We contend not about the name Tradition the word may lawfully be used if the sense affixed thereto be lawful 2. All Traditions unwritten are not simply condemned by us 3. The Apostles delivered by lively voice many observations dispensable and alterable according to the circumstances of time and persons appertaining to order and comelinesse only we say That they were not of the substance of Religion that they were not general concerning all Churches 4. We receive the number and names of the Authors of Books Divine and Canonical as delivered by tradition but the Divine Truth of those Books is in it self clear and evident unto us not depending on the Churches Authority The Books of Scripture have not their Authority quoad nos from the approbation of the Church but win credit of themselves and yield sufficient satisfaction to all men of their Divine Truth whence we judge the Church that receiveth them to be led by the Spirit of God yet the Number Authors and Integrity of the parts of those Books we receive as delivered by Tradition 5. The continued practice of such things as are neither expresly contained in Scripture nor the example of such practice expresly there delivered though the Grounds Reasons and cause of the necessity of such practice be there contained and the benefit and good that followeth of it we receive upon Tradition though the thing it self we receive not for Tradition Of this sort is the Baptism of Infants which may be named a Tradition because it is not expresly delivered in Scripture that the Apostles did baptize ●nfants nor any expresse precept there found that they should so do yet is not this so received by bare and naked Tradition but that we finde the Scripture to deliver unto us the ground of it Bellarmine and Maldonat both do confesse That the Baptism of Infants may be proved by the Scripture and therefore Maldonat concludes Nobis verò traditio non est Bellarmine as Whitaker shews contradicts himself for first he saith That the Baptism of Infants is an unwritten Tradition and after That the Catholicks can prove Baptism of Infants from the Scriptures To this head we may referre the observation of the Lords-day the precept whereof is not found in Scripture though the practice be And if for that cause any shall name it a Tradition we will not contend about the word if he grant withall that the example Apostolical hath the force of a Law as implying a common equity concerning us no lesse then it did them If any man shall call the summary comprehension of the chief heads of Christian Doctrine contained in the Creed commonly called The Apostles Creed a Tradition we will not contend about it For although every part thereof be contained in Scripture yet the orderly connexion and distinct explication of those principal Articles gathered into an Epitome wherein are implied and whence are inferred all Conclusions Theological is an Act humane not divine and in that sense may be called a Tradition But let it be noted withall that we admit it not to have that credit as now it hath to be the Rule of Faith for this is the priviledge of holy Scripture The Creed it self was gathered out of Scripture and is to be expounded by the Scripture therefore it is not given to be a perfect Canon of faith and manners By Tradition is noted 1. Whatsoever is delivered by men divinely inspired and immediately called whether it be by lively voice or by writing 2. In special it notes the word of God committed to writing 1 Cor. 15. 3. 3. It signifies Rites expresly contained in writing Act. 6. 14. 4. It betokens that which is not committed to writing but only delivered by lively voice of the Apostles 5. It signifieth that which is invented and delivered by men not immediately called In Scripture Tradition is taken 1. In good part for any Rite or Doctrine of God delivered to his Church either by word or writing whether it concern faith and good works or the external Government of the Church 2 Thess. 2. 15. 1 Cor. 11. 15. and 23. 2. In ill part it noteth the vain idle and unwarrantable inventions of men whether Doctrine or Rites Mat. 15. 3. Mar. 7. 8 9. When the Fathers speak reverently of Traditions by the word Tradition either they understand the holy Scripture which also is a Tradition it is a Doctrine left unto us Or by Traditions they understand observations touching Ecclesiastical policy Du Moulin Reasons confirming the sufficiency of Scripture against Popish Traditions 1. The whole Church is founded upon the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles which were not true if any Doctrine was necessary to Salvation not revealed by the Prophets and Apostles 2.
The Prophets and Christ and his Apostles condemn Traditions Isa. 29. 13. Mat. 15. 3 6. Col. 2. 8. Therefore they are not to be received Christ opposeth the Commandment and Scriptures to Traditions therefore he condemns Traditions not written If the Jews might not adde to the Books of Moses then much lesse may we adde to the Canon of Scripture so much increased since 3. Those things which proceed from the will of God only can be made known to us no other way but by the Revelation of the Scripture all Articles of Faith and Precepts of Manners concerning substance of Religion proceed from the will of God only Mat. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 2. 9 10 11. Gal. 1. 8. As in this place the Apostle would have nothing received besides that which he preached so 1 Cor. 4. 6. He will have nothing admitted above or more then that which is written See Act. 26. 22. Iohn 20. ult Whence it is manifest that all necessary things may be found in Scripture since full and perfect Faith ariseth from thence which eternal salvation followeth Bellarmine saith Iohn speaks only of the miracles of Christ that he wrote not all because those sufficed to perswade the world that Christ was the Son of God Those words indeed in ver 30. are to be understood of Christs miracles but those in ver 31. rather are to be generally interpreted for the History only of the miracles sufficeth not to obtain Faith or Life The Question betwixt the Papists and us is De ipsa Doctrina tradita non de tradendi modo touching the substance of the Doctrine delivered not of the manner of delivering it and of Doctrine delivered as the Word of God not of Rites and Ceremonies They maintain that there be doctrinal Traditions or Traditions containing Articles of Faith and substantial matters of Divine Worship and Religion not found in the holy Scriptures viz. Purgatory Invocation of Saints Adoration of Images Papal Monarchy Bellarmine and before him Peresius distinguisheth Traditions both from the Authors and the Matter From the Authors into Divine Apostolical and Ecclesiastical From the Matter into those which are concerning Faith and concerning Manners into perpetuall and temporall universall and particular necessary and free Divine Traditions that is Doctrines of Faith and of the Worship and service of God any of which we deny to be but what are comprized in the written Word of God Apostolick Traditions say they are such Ordinances as the Apostles prescribed for ceremony and usage in the Church as the observation of the memorial of the Nativity Death and Resurrection of Christ the alteration of the seventh day from the Jews Sabbath to the day of Christs Resurrection Ecclesiastical ancient Customs which by degrees through the Peoples consent obtained the force of a Law Traditions concerning Faith as the perpetuall Virginity of Mary the Mother of Christ and that there are onely four Gospels of Manners as the sign of the Crosse made in the Fore-head Fasts and Feastings to be observed on certain dayes Perpetual which are to be kept to the end of the World Temporal for a certain time as the observation of certain legal Ceremonies even to the full publishing of the Gospel Universal Traditions which are delivered to the whole Church to be kept as the observation of Easter Whit sontide and other great Feasts Particular which is delivered to one or more Churches as in the time of Augustine fasting on the Sabbath-day which was kept only at Rome Necessary Traditions which are delivered in the form of a Precept that Easter is to be celebrated on the Lords Day Free which are delivered in the form of a Councel as sprinkling of holy Water Object The Scripture is not perfect with a perfection of parts because many parts are either defective or excessive 1. Some labour with a defect as Genes 11. 12. a person is omitted in the Genealogy of Canaan which was the Sonne of Arphaxad but it is reckoned in Luke in Christs Genealogy not in the Old Testament therefore there is a defect Answ. Luke reckons it according to the vulgar opinion of the Jews Iunius in his Parallels would have the fault to be in the Septuagint whom Luke followed not approving of their errour but yielding to the time least the Gospel otherwise should have been prejudiced but Beza's opinion is rather to be approved of that this word is inserted from the Ignorance of those who undertook to correct this Text according to the Translation of the Seventy Interpreters For in an Ancient Manuscript which Beza followed this word Canaan was not to be found therefore he omitted it in his Translation and so hath our great English Bible Object There is something found in the Scripture against the Commandment of God Deut. 4. 2. therefore there is excess as well as defect for many Books which we believe to be Canonical are added Answ. He doth not forbid adding by Gods Command but from the will of man for God himself added afterward The Papists Arguments for Traditions answered Object Bellarmine saith Religion was preserved for two thousand years from Adam to Moses onely by Tradition therefore the Scripture is not simply necessary Ans. By the like reason I might argue That Religion was long preserved not only without the Pope of Rome but also without Baptism and the Lords Supper with the like Institutions therefore they are not simply necessary yet none of ours hold the Scriptures simply necessary 2. It is false that Religion was preserved all that while by ordinary Tradition only for the living voice of God sounded most perpetually in the Church and the Doctrine of Religion was conveyed successively from the Father to the Son which living voice of God by little and little ceasing writing afterward succeeded and hath the same necessity now which Gods living voice had before Object Whatsoever things are commended from Scripture are necessary but so are Traditions Ergò They are necessary Iohn 16. 12. I have yet many things to say unto you but ye cannot bear them now therefore say they the Lord spake many things which are not written Answ. 1. He saith not that he had many things to tell them which he had not taught them before but which they were not now so well capable of For it appeareth that he taught them that which they understood not and therefore they needed to be further taught of them by the holy Ghost which should not teach them any new thing that Christ had not taught but onely make them understand that which they had been taught of our Saviour Christ. 2. If the holy Ghost did teach them any thing which our Saviour Christ had not before spoke unto them of yet that makes nothing for Traditions seeing that which the holy Spirit taught them he taught them out of the Scriptures 3. If the holy Ghost should have taught the Apostles some things which neither
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
place part whereof consisteth in the Story part in the Allegory So that the whole sense is contained in them both So for the second example of the Tropological There is not a two-fold sense of that place but one general sense that as the mouth of the Ox was not to be muzled so the Minister of the Gospel must be provided for Likewise of the Anagogical kinde It is not one sense to understand the rest of Canaan another the Kingdom of God But there is one whole sense that as they for their Idolatry were deprived of the Land of promise so we should take heed least by our disobedience we lose the hope of the Kingdom of heaven So we conclude that those are not divers senses but one sense diversly applied The literal sense is the only sense of the place because out of that sense only may an argument strongly be framed wherefore seeing Allegories and Tropes do not conclude they are not the senses of the place and Allegories devised beside the sense prove not though they may illustrate It is manifest that is always the sense of the holy Ghost which is drawn from the very words But we are not so certain concerning any mystical sense unlesse when the holy Ghost himself teacheth us as for example it is written Hos. 11. 1. Out of Egypt have I called my Sonne and Exod. 12. 46. Ye shall not break a bone of him It is evident that the first place is understood of the people of Israel the later of the Paschal Lamb. Who durst have applied those things to Christ unlesse the holy Ghost had first done it and declared his minde and meaning to us viz. That Son in the first place doth not only signifie the people of Israel but Christ also and by bone in the later place not only the bone of that Lamb but of Christ also is understood Secondly To whom the chief Authority to expound Scripture is committed It was decreed in the Councel of Trent That Scripture should be expounded as the Church expoundeth it and according to the common and unanimous consent of the Fathers If the Fathers agree not the matter is referred to a generall Councel If there it be not determined we must have recourse to the Pope and his Cardinals We say also that the Church is the Interpreter of Scripture and that this gift of interpreting resides only in the Church but we deny that it belongs to certain men or is tied to a certain place or succession of men The Ministry of judgement the Lord hath given to his Church 1 Cor. 2 15. and 10. 15. 1 Ioh. 4. 1. Act. 15. 16. 2 Cor. 14. 29 31 32. but the Soveraignty of judgement he hath reserved to himself The holy Scripture knows not the ancient Fathers acknowledge not as long as we have the Scripture there needs not any such standing Judge in the Church These three things Mr Down proves in his not consent of Fathers but Scripture the ground of faith p. 261. to 266. The holy Ghost is the Judge and the Scripture is the sentence or definitive Decree We acknowledge no publick Judge except the Scripture and the holy Ghost teaching us in the Scripture He that made the Law should interpret the same 1 Cor. 1. 12. 1 Ioh. 2. 27. Arguments brought by the Papists for their opinion Object 1. They object that place Exod. 18. 13 26. Answ. Moses was a Prophet indued with singular wisdom adorned by God with extraordinary gifts sent immediately by him and commended by Divine Testimonies to the people the Pope is not so He had chiefest Authority from God over all the Israelites but the Pope hath not so over all Christians Moses his Authority was extraordinary no man succeeded in his place Ioshua was a Captain only or Judge in Civil things Aaron only a Priest to administer in things sacred but Moses exercised both functions Object 2. They urge that place Deut. 17. 9. Answ. Here the Civil Magistrate and the Judge are joyned together as vers 12. If it will follow hence that the Pope must be Supreme Judge in all Ecclesiastical matters the Emperor ought to be as well in Civil 2. The Pope doth not hold the same place among Christians that the high-Priest did among the Jews For he was the chiefest having all the rest of the Priests subject to him but the Pope is one amongst all having collegues many Bishops as at first or a few Patriarchs as after Object 3. Eccl. 12. 11. If the chief Pastor in the Old Testament had such authority much more the chief Priest in the New Answ. This one Pastor signifieth neither the High-Priest in the old Law nor the Pope in the new but Jesus Christ the high Shepherd for our souls Object Matth. 6. 19. Christ saith to Peter To thee will I give the Keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven Therefore the Pope hath Authority to expound Scripture Answ. First By the Keyes here is meant Commission to preach the Gospel not Authority of interpreting the Scriptures When the Gospel is preached the Kingdome of Heaven is opened to the Beleevers and shut to the unbeleevers Secondly That Authority of the Keys was not committed to Peter only but to the other Apostles also Mat. 28. 18 19. There is a two-fold Judgement 1. Of Discretion 1 Cor. 10. 15. 2. Of Authority as the Parliament judgeth capital crimes If the Papists understand the word Iudge to signifie Discerning as when we judge of meats by the taste every faithful person ought to pray unto God for grace to judge to discern and to know the true sense of the Scripture But if by judging they understand to pronounce Decrees definitive and infallible Judgements touching the sense of the Scriptures thereby to binde other mens consciences there is no man in the world that hath that power See Moulins Buckler of Faith We have a more compendious way to come to the understanding of the Scripture It were too long when we doubt of any place to stay till we have the general consent of the Pastors of the Church or to expect a general Councel or to go up to Rome But the word of God is amongst us the Scriptures themselves and the Spirit of God opening our hearts do teach us how to understand them And yet we say not as the Papists fals●y charge us that we allow every private mans Interpretation of Scripture refusing the judgement of the Pastors of the Church Panoruitan saith The opinion of one godly man ought to be preferred before the Popes if it be grounded upon be●ter authority of the Old and New Testament 2 Pet. 1. 20. No prophecy of the Scripture is of any private Interpretation Stapleton saith Iuterpretation is private either Ratione personae when the man is prviate or Ratione medii when it is not taken out of the Context and Circumstances or Ratione finis when it is for a false end Now private Interpretation in regard of
the person if it be publick in regard of the means is not forbidden for it is lawful for one man with Scripture Toti resistere mundo saith the Glosse of the Canon-Law the meaning of this place is That the Prophets were no Interpreters or Messengers of their own mindes but Gods The Catholicks hold saith Chamier meaning still by that Title the Protestants that the Scripture is to be interpreted by private labour and industry viz. of Augustine Ierom Chrysostom but not in a private sense that is in a sense arising from the brain of the Interpreter It is true saith Cartwright against the Rhemists that the Scriptures cannot be expounded of every private spirit nor which is more of any private spirit nor yet of all private spirits together but only of those which are inspired of God viz. the Prophets and Apostles which are here opposed unto private Interpretation And therefore it is evident That the Exposition of the Scripture ought not to be fetched from Ecclesiastical either Fathers or Councels which speak not by Inspiration but from the Scriptures themselves what he meaneth he declareth in the next verse where he sheweth the reason of his saying namely that it must be interpreted as it was written and by as high Authority Seeing therefore it was first spoken by holy men which spake as they were led by the holy Spirit and were inspired of God it followeth that it must be interpreted by the same Authority The Interpretation therefore that is brought out of the Apostles and Prophets is not private although it be avowed by one man only On the other side that Interpretation which is not brought from thence although it have the allowance of whole general Councels is but private This is a principal meaning of our Saviour Christ when he willeth that we should call no man Father or Master in the earth that is in matter of Doctrine we should depend upon the Authority of no man nor of all men in the earth but only upon Christ and upon God Our reasons by which we prove that the chiefest Judgment and Authority of interpreting Scriptures is to be given not to the Church but to the Scriptures themselves and the holy Ghost 1. That which only hath power to beget faith that only hath the chiefest Authority of interpreting Scripture and of determining all Controversies concerning Faith and Religion but the Scriptures onely and the Holy Ghost have this force Rom. 10. 17. The Holy Ghost onely can infuse saving Faith into our hearts which is called by the Schoolmen Infusa Fides The Faith which we have from the Church is acquired and sufficeth not to a certain perswasion 2. The Scriptures cannot be interpreted but by the same Spirit wherewith they were written that Spirit is found no where but in the Scripture whosoever have promises from God to understand the Scripture may interprett it but so have all the faithfull 3. Christ himself makes the Scripture a Judge Iohn 12. 48. and still appealed to it 4. Although the Fathers were men indued of God with excellent gifts and brought no small light to understanding of the Scriptures yet learned men in our dayes may give a right sense of sundry places thereof which the Fathers saw not yea against the which perhaps they consent Hath any man living read all the Fathers Nay have all the men living read them Nay Can they shew them Can they get them I had almost said Can they name them In the Exposition of those words Tu es Petrus super hanc petram almost every one of the Fathers at least the most part of them and the best expound it of Peters faith yet the Papists understand it non de fide sed de persona Petri. Here they disagree themselves from the Fathers Iohn 10. 16. by the title of one Shepheard Augustine Chrysostome Ierome Cyril Theodoret Theophylact Euthimius Rupertus Cyprian and other Fathers agree that Christ is theredesigned but Stapleton saith the Pope is there meant In the Division of the Law they go clean contrary to the greatest part of the Fathers for they divide the Commandments as we do but the Papists make the two first one and the tenth two 2. They have no father to countenance them in this but Augnstine Revet de Authoritate Patrum c. 5 6 7. There were no writings of the Fathers for a time many of them wrote 400 years after Christ but some 500 and 600 years after Christ what rule had they before that time of interpreting Scriptures The Fathers were given too much to allegorizing Cajetane therefore in the Preface of his Commentaries upon the Books of Moses saith That the exposition of the Scripture is not tied by God to the sense of the Fathers therefore he admonisheth his Readers not to take it ill if he sometime dissent from the stream of the Fathers 4. The Doctrine of the Church must be examined by the Scriptures Acts 17. 11. If Pauls doctrine much more may the decrees of the Pope Church Councels be examined by the Scriptures 5. The interpretation of the Scripture is a gift freely given by God for the edification of the Church Rom. 12. 6. 1 Cor. 12. 10. therefore it is not tied to a certain kinde of men but common to the faithful 6. The faithful are commanded diligently to try and examine every doctrine 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 Iohn 4. 1. which cannot be altogether done without interpretation What means must be used in the interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture we heard was to direct the Church to all saving truth The means to be used for the attaining of that end by the Minister is diligent study and humble Prayer by the People attentive reading hearing prayer and meditating First the Teachers must pray earnestly to God for his spirit to inlighen them Mat. 7. 7 8 9. Rom. 15. The Scriptures are understood by that spirit that dictated them Secondly The Pastors and Teachers of the Church must diligently and painfully study the Scriptures giving themselves to read compare place with place Iohn 5. 39. Search the Scriptures it is a metaphor taken from such as search for Gold and Silver Oar in the earth who will search and sift and break every clod to finde out the gold Solomon useth the same metaphor Prov. 2. 4. and to this diligence in searching doth the Apostle exhort Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 13. This diligence of often exprest in Scripture in the Old Testament by the phrase of meditating in the word Iosh. 1. 8. Psal. 1. 2. Thirdly they must labour for a competent knowledge in the original tongues the Hebrew and Greek in which the Scripture was written that so they may consult with the Hebrew Text in the Old and the Greek in the New Testament and see with their own not anothers eyes as Gen. 3. 15. The Papists read it corruptly She shall break here the original soon determines the
controversie wherein the pronoun Hu can signifie nothing but He or It both which are all one in effect in this place Fourthly They should likewise be expert in all the liberal Arts especially in Grammer Logick Rhetorick general Philosophy and History All the Treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hid in the Scriptures the Treasures of natural Phylosophy in Genesis of Moral Phylosophy in Exodus Deuteronomy and Ecclesiastes of the Politicks in the Judicials of Moses and the Proverbs of Solomon of Poetry in the Psalms of History in the Books of Chronicles Iudges and Kings the Mathematicks in the dimensions of the Ark of the Temple of the Metaphysicks in the Books of the Prophets and Apocalyps Fifthly They must consider 1. The several words 2. The phrases In the several words they must consider 1. Whether the word be taken properly or tropically and that they may the better understand the words an inspection 1. Of Lexicons is needful some of which observed the order of the Alphabet but so as they distinguished between the roots and the Derivatives as Pagnine hath done for the Hebrew and Stephanus for the Greek The best Lexicons for understanding the Hebrew Text are Buxtorf Avenarius Forster Schindler Mercer on Pagnine and Marinus Brixianus his Arca Noae for the Greek are Stephanus Budeus Scapula my own two Critica I hope may be useful for understanding both Testaments 2. Of Concordances some much extoll Buxtorf for the Hebrew Kirchers is a very useful one both for the Hebrew and the Septuagint Stephanus for the Greek is the best Cottons Concordance as it is now inlarged by Newman is esteemed the best for the English See Dr. Featlies and Dr. Gouges Prefaces to it commending it and shewing the use of Concordances in general They must 1. Consider the Text exactly in it self the Grammer of it must be sifted the nature of every word by it self and the alteration it admits in diversity of construction 2. The Rhetorick whether any word leaving the proper signification receiveth a borrowed 3. Above all the Logick as to know what he proveth and by what 2. Compare paralel places and obscure with plainer To interpret that place This is my body make use of that other The Bread which we break is the communion of the body of Christ because both places are not onely concerning the Eucharist but also one and the same kinde Illyricus calls the conference of places Ingens remedium saelicissimam expositionem sanctae scripturae Paul is much in this compare Heb. 3. 7 11 15 17. with Chap. 4. 4 5 9. ye shall see he makes out the sense of Psal 95. 7. by comparing it with other Scriptures 3. Make use of Paraphrases and Versions among which the Chaldee and the Septuagint for the Old Testament the Syriack and the Arabick for the New excel 4. For the knowledge of the phrase they must proceed the same way and to understand the better both the words and phrases they must diligently consider of the scope and circumstances of the place as the coherence of that which went before with that which follows after and of the matter whereof it doth intreat 5. All Expositions ought to agree with the Analogie of faith Rom. 12. 6. Analogy is either of faith comprehended in the Doctrine of the Creed L P. Command Sac. and gathered out of evident places of Scripture or of the Text by the coherence of Antecedentia Consequentia by the propriety of the phrase 6. The Jewish Expositors the ancient Fathers and other Interpreters ancient and modern Popish and Protestant are useful for the right understanding of the Scripture if they be read with judgement Not many but a few and those the best Commentaries are to be consulted with of the Hebrew Interpreters and Rabbins two were most learned R. David Kimki and Rabbi Aben Ezra saith Dr. Rainolds The pure Masters of the Hebrews saith Mayerus in Philologia Sacra are specially Maymonides Rabbi David Kimchi wise Aben Ezra Rabbi Solomon Iarchi although the last two much favor Talmudical dreams The Cabalists and many of the Rabbines are very fabulous and men in a burning fever cannot dream of things more ridiculous then some of the Rabbines have seriously written and taught saith Muis against Morinus Vide Spanh●m Dub. Evangel parte tertia Dub. 21. Dub. 129 Glass Philol. Sac. l. 2. partem primam Tract 1. Thalmud liber fabulosissimus Chamier Abarbanel hath done well on the greatest part of the Old Testament Scriptor fam●sissimus saith Buxtorf of him in D●●alogo Iudaeorum doctissimus L'Empereur on Dan. Authorest perquàm solidi ingenii Doctrinae Muis Assert 3. veritat Heb. Yet he was unknown it seems to Mercer for he doth not mention him The most curious that ever handled the Tongue though not the soundest saith Broughton The Jews say of Rabbi Moses Ben-Maymon that From Moses to Moses there arose not such a Moses He was the first of the Rabbines that ceased to dote Maimonides antiquus celeberrimus inter Iudaeos Scriptor Capellus de Literis Ebr. Mr. Gregory stiles him the very learned Maimon The Church of God is much beholding to the Hebrew Rabbines * being great helps unto us for understanding holy Scripture in many places as well of the New Testament as the Old Vide Capel Critic Defens p. 59. There are divers places both in the Old and New Testament which cannot be well understood unless we borrow Candle-light from the Hebrew Doctors as Exod 6. 3. Ruth 4. 7. Isa. 1 29. 12. 13. Ier. 16. 7. Ezek. 8. 14. and 9. 4. Matth. 5. 22. and 21. 9. and 23. 7 8. and 26. 23. Mark 7. 11. Rom. 5. 7. Iohn 7. 37. and 3. 20. 1 Tim. 3. 8. Rev. 4. Cálverts Annotat. on the demonstrat of the true Messias 2. The Fathers Doctores scil probati antiquae ecclesiae qui scriptis Fidem suis illustrarunt as Vo●tus speaks not one of them but hath his error because God would have them known to be but men Of the right use of the fathers see Daille's excellent 〈◊〉 They are called Fathers in respect of their age they preceding our times many hundreds of years and in respect of their Doctrine which they diligently inculcated to those that then lived and endeavoured to propagate many of their worthy labours being transmitted to posterity Rivet de Patrum Authoritate cap. 1. There was an eminency of Office and Dignity in them because they were Pastors and Teachers in the Church Of Time because they were neerer to the Apostles Of Science because they were more learned then many of those that succeeded and of Conscience because they were of an unblameable life lesse subject to ambition covetousnesse envy and other evil affections with which the succeeding generations were too much tainted Those Fathers of the first six hundred years we reverence more and rather admit then those of the thousand years following because they were freer
from error as living neerer the Apostles and before the first discovery of Antichrist which was about the six hundred and seven when Boniface the third purchased of that bloudy Tyrant Phocas the title of Universal Bishop and with it the Supremacy over all Churches Erasmus accuratissimus Patrum vetustiorum censor was much exercised in the writings of the Fathers and hath bestowed great pains in restoring and illustrating Ierom Augustine and others of them For the Fathers Ierom among the Latines and Origen among the Greeks were learned in the Hebrew saith Chamier Ierom w●s the chiefest among them for skill in the Hebrew Chaldee Greek Latine Tongue and the most diligent searcher of the Jewish affairs he spared no labour cost nor time that he might attain to skill in that Tongue He made use of the Jews for that purpose and the skilfullest amongst them whose labour he purchased with a great deal of money this he often witnesseth of himself five times saith Morinus he made use of them That one labour of his deserveth eternal praise that he translated the Scripture out of the Hebrew into Latine That was a most laborious work of Origens in gathering together divers Editions of Scripture 1. The Greek of Aquila Symmachus the Septuagint and Theodosion into one Volume distinguisht by four Columns called Tetrapla to which he after added two more one in Hebrew the other in Greek Characters and called it his Hexapla at last he joyned two other Editions and then called it Octapla by them one might have compared the several Greek Editions together and with the Hebrew Text. Vide Erasm. Epist. l. 28. p. 1155. It is manifest saith Buxtorf that the most and best of his writings are lost It was said of him Ubi benè nemo melius Ubi malè nemo pejus Quod attinet ad Origenem meacertè nihil interest quid ille senserit quem scio Theologum fuisse a●daciorem quam saniorem Chamierus Tomo 2. de S. Trinitate cap. 8. Salmasius Whitaker Sixtus Senensis and others say Origen was skilfull in the Hebrew He wrote so many Books that Ierom saith Quis nostrum tanta potest legere quanta ille conscripsit Vir tantae fuit eruditionis ingenii ut ei parem doctissima Graecia faelicissimorum ingeniorum parens nunquam habuerit Sixtus Senensis Bibliothecae sanctae l. 4. He saith much more there in his commendation Tantum in Scripturas divinas habuerit studium ut etiam Hebraeam linguam contra aetatis gentisque suae naturam edisceret Hieronymus de viris illustribus He lived a little after the year two hundred Augustine for the Latine Church and golden mouth'd Chrysostom for the Greek Church were most famous He is abridged by Theophylact. A Father so ancient so learned so godly so skilfull in the Scriptures saith Rainolds of Chrysostome Augustine for disputations Ierom for the tongues Gregory for Morals Augustine Vir supra omnes qui ante eum post eum huc usque fuerunt mortales admirabili ingenii acumine praeditus omnibus liberalibus disciplinis instructus Divinis Scripturis longè omnium eruditissimus in earum explanatione ultrà quam dici queat incomparabili subtilitate sublimis omnes Latinae Ecclesiae scriptores scribendi labore l●cubrationum multitudine superavit Sixtus Senensis Bibl. Sanct. l. 4. Subtilissimus Patrum Augustinus D. Prideaux lectione 4. Gregory Nazianzen the learnedest of all the Greek Fathers and firnamed the Divine D. Featleys Transubstantiation exploded He lived about the year 375. Chrysostomus habet nescio quid submolestae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gregorius Nazianzenus nonnihil affectatae argutiae in verbis in Basilio nihil est quod off●ndi● Erasm. Epist. l. 24. Reginaldo Polo Irenaeus saith Capellus was almost the Ancientest of all the Fathers whose genuine writings are extant He was Polycarpus his Disciple and lived about the 172 year after Christ. Tertullian was one of the Latine Fathers most Ancient and very near the Apostles ●lourishing in the Reign of Severus the Emperour about two hundred years after Christs Birth and not past one hundred after the death of Iohn the Evangelist Ierom being urged with his authority said De Tertulliano nihil aliud respondeo quam Ecclesiae hominem illum non fuisse In Graecia celebres agnosco Patres Clementem Athanasium Cyrillum Damascenum Montacutius Analect Eccles. exercit 1. Sect 6. Cyprian the Martyr was of great authority amongst all for his holiness of life Dr Hall cals Lactantius the Christian Cicero Ierom cals him Eloquentiae Tullianae Fluvium Epist. ad Paul Tom. 1. and M. Selden de Dis Syris cals him Politissimum Patrum He lived about the year 250. Sententious Tertullian grave Cyprian resolute Hierom flowing Chrysostome divine Ambrose devout Bernard heavenly Augustine Bishop Hals 4th Decade of Epist. Epist. 3. Vide Hieron Epist. ad Paulinum de Institutione Monachi One saith He that looks upon the Fathers Works would think they did nothing but Write he that looks on their Devotions would think they did nothing but Pray he that lookes on their Learning would thinke they did nothing but Reade Bernard was a worthy man in the corrupt age in which he lived but Bernardus non vidit omnia say the Papists Bernardum non admitto utpote recentiorem longè post confirmatam Romani Pontificis tyranidem scribentem ex more errore sui temporis Chamier de Canone lib. 3. cap. 3. cap. 5. Danda venia bonis illis sanctis patribus qui ignorantia linguarum multa saepe aliena à germana Scriptura senserunt pio alioquin attulerunt 3. For Prot●stant Interpreters Calvin is not onely commended by our own Writers but by the very Papists I would content my self among the new Writers with Mr Calvin who performeth best of all others that which he of himself professeth that a man in reading his Expositions reapeth this benefit that for the shortness he useth he departeth not far from the Text it self Cartw. letter to M. Hildersham Calvin was the notablest instrument that the Lord hath stirred up for the purging of his Churches and restoring of the plain and sincere interpretation of the Scriptures which hath been since the Apostles times Cartw. Reply to Dr Whitgift in defence of the Admonit p. 19. Name me one Papist who preached so often and wrote so accurately upon the holy Scriptures as Calvin Dr Featleys Stricturae in Lyndo-Mastigem c. 14. I so honour the judgement of reverend Calvin that I reckon him amongst the best Interpreters of Scripture since the Apostles left the earth Dr Hals Revelation unrevealed p. 33. Piscator hath done well in his Scholia on all the Bible He follows Iunius for the Old Testament and Beza for the New and in his Aphorisms he follows Calvins Institutions Piae venerabilis memoriae propter eruditionem textualem singularem sanctitatem parem Joan. Piscator
saith Dr Twisse Bucer also was an excellent Divine He hath written a two-fold Exposition on all the Psalms one more large and Paraphrastical the other briefer and ad verbum Francis Iunius the very Oracle of Textual and Scholastical Divinity as Dr Hall cals him Epist. 7. Decad. 1. Vatablus his Annotations upon the Old Testament and Beza's on the New are commended by Zanchy in his Miscellanies But Arnoldus Boot in his Index Autorum before his Animadversiones Sacrae saith Robert Stephens and not Vatablus was the Author of those Scholia which are in Vatablus his Bible Doctus Vatablus prae caeteris quos adhuc videre contigit omnibus abstrusa quaequ● in Psalmis explicuit partim suo sano judicio partim doctissimorum Hebraeorum testimonio quem etiam admirandus Calvinus studiose sequitur ferè ubique quasi à sententia Vatabli non tutum esset discedere Foord in Ps. 45. 1. Quid hac phrasi denotetur optimè exposuit D. Beza suis in Novum Testamentum nunquem satis laudatis notis Constantin L'Empereur in Dan. 2. 8. See more of him in Zanchies Epistles Amama Paulus Fagius Drusius Ludovicus Capellus Livelie Cameron Ludovicus de Dieu have been great Lights and by their skill in the Tongues have excellently interpreted Scripture Peter Martyr Lavater Musculus Zanchy Paraeus Rollock Rivet are sound Expositors Ex omnibus antiquis recentioribus medullam variarum interpretationum circa eos disceptationem collegit Willetus in hexaplis ad Genesin Exodum Leviticum Danielem Epistolam ad Romanos in libros Samuelis sibi dissimilis est compendio atque alia plane methodo commentatur optandum esset telam illam à Willeto tam foeliciter coeptam eadem methodo in reliquos Scripturae libros pertexi Voetius Biblioth Theol. lib. 1. cap. 14. 4. For Popish Expositors Aquinas is esteemed by the Papists as the Oracle of the Romish School whom for his profound learning and search into the mysteries of all Divinity they sirnamed Angelical He was the first thorow-Papist of name that ever wrote and with his rare gifts of wit learning and industry did set out Popery most Maximo altissimo ingenio vir cui ad plenam absolutamque totius tam divinae quam humanae eruditionis gloriam solus defuit linguarum eloquentiae usus quem eruditi istius saeculi utpote sublimioribus studiis intenti neglexere Sixtus Senensis Vide plura ibid. Luther on Gen. 9. chiefly commends Lyra for following the literal sense Nicolau● Lyranus Vir tanta tamque pura vera germana Sacrae Scripturae scientia praeditiu ut in illa exponenda nullum habeat illius temporis parem Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 1. praelect 21. Vide plura Tom. 1. praelect 42. He was a Jew converted Ex antiquioribus tanquam universales communes Commentatores habiti fuerunt Lyranus Glossa Voetius in Biblioth Theol. Jansenius eruditus moderatus Interpres Neque Pontificiorum quisquam doctius interpretatus est Evangelicam historiam Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 2. Praelect 194. Cajetane went over all the Scripture saving the Canticles and Prophets which dying he left begun and the Revelation Quam de industria attingere noluit He was both a learned and moderate Papist as Chamier and Whitaker both shew He was chiefly intent on the literal sense and that according to the Hebrew truth of which Tongue he had little knowledge but had by him those that were skill'd in the Hebrew who would interpret ad verbum not onely exactly but superstitiously and often absurdly which often drew the like Expositions from the Cardinal Tostatus was admirable for his deep skill and almost incredible pains in interpreting holy Scripture There are now five Papists joyned together in several Volumes on the whole Scripture Immanuel Sa Estius Gagneius Tirinus and Menochius the last of which Grotius commends in his Preface to his Annotations on the Old Testament Estius doth excellently on all the Epistles The Commentaries of Immanuel Sa the Jesuite upon the Bible are shorter then the Text it self Familiam ducant inter Commentatores Jansenius Maldonatus Montac Analecta Exercit. 6. Sect. 4. Maldonate doth well on the Evangelists but was a most supercilious Writer and no marvel since he was for his Countrey a Spaniard and his Profession a Jesuite Masius hath written learnedly on Ioshua Quanta vir ille linguae Graecae sed praesertim Hebraicae Rabbinicae Syriacae cognitione fuerit imbutus nemini docto opinor incognitum Morinus lib. 1. exercitat 9. c. 6. exercit 1. c. 4. Andraeas Masius linguae Hebraicae Syriacae peritissimus atque in lectione Rabbinica egregiè exercitatus The Popish Postils are the burden of many Camels as Lipsius speaks of the Books of the Law and are sitly stiled by godly Divines Pigrorum pulvinaria Vide Zepperi Artem Habendi Andiendi conciones sacras lib. 1. cap. 4. pag. 38 39. c. Ministers to all the means formerly mentioned for the interpreting of Scripture must adde a conscionable practice of what they know and must in all humblenesse of minde seek the peoples edification The means to be used by the people to understand the Scripture and finde out the sense and meaning of it 1. If they be learned they may make use of most of the former means prescribed to Ministers 2. Such as are unskilfull and know not how to make use of those means are 1. Diligently to read the Scripture in which are to be considered 1. Antecedent Preparation that they come to the reading and study of the Scriptures with Prayers and greatest Reverence relying on the Divine Promises for the inlightening of their minds by the holy Ghost The Scripture may well be called The Revelation of Christ Rev. 1. 1. See Rev. 5. 5. 2. The Adjuncts of reading which are 1. Chiefest Attention in reading and a pious disposition and spiritual frame of the heart that they may not understand only but cordially affect what they understand 2. Application of all things to the Examination Correction and amendment of their own lives 3. Diligent Meditation 4. Conferring of it with others and catechizing 2. They ought to have recourse to those that are more skilfull then themselves and to consult with the best Commentaries and Expositions of the Scripture and reade them judiciously We teach concerning our Means that they all together do make a perfect way whereby we may finde the right sense of the Scripture Our Adversaries prescribe this method and course to be taken in expounding of Scripture which consists in four Rules The general Practice of the Church The Consonant Interpretation of the Fathers The Decrees of general Councels Lastly The Rule of Faith consisting partly of the Scriptures partly of Traditions unwritten In all these means the Pope is implicitely understood for the Rule of Faith is that which the
Pope approves The Practice of the Church is that which the Pope observes the Interpretation of the Fathers is that which the Pope follows the Determination of Councels what the Pope confirms so that the Pope must interpret all Scripture But divers Reasons may be alledged to shew that the true Interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought for from the Popes of Rome 1. Because the Popes of Rome have frequently and grosly erred in interpreting of Scripture as in Rom. 8. 8. Those that are in the flesh cannot please God that is Those that are married said Siricius the Pope Innocent so expounded those words Iohn 6. Unlesse you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his bloud you shall have no life in you that he thence concluded That there is no salvation without receiving the Eucharist and that it is to be given to Infants Pope Boniface interpreted Luke 22. 38. of the Temporall and Spirituall Sword delivered to the Pope 2. Because the Popes of Rome doe differ among themselves in interpreting of Scripture as Matth. 16. 18. Some Popes say rightly that by the Rock Christ or the Confession of Faith given by Peter concerning Christ is meant others interpret it of the person of Peter the Apostle others expound it to be the Romane Seat or Chair 3. Because many of the Popes of Rome have not only erred but been grosse and wicked Hereticks Liberius the Pope about the year 350 was an Arian and subscribed to the unjust condemnation of Athanasius and afterward as an obstinate Heretick was deposed Honorius the first was a Monoth●lite he held that Christ had but one will and so but one nature and for this Heresie was condemned in three General Councels Some Popes were Atheists as Leo the tenth who called the Gospel Fabulam de Christ● One cals the Pope that great Heteroclite in religion another saith The Pope is the worst of Cardinals who are the worst of Priests who are the worst of Papists who are the worst of Christians That the general consent of Fathers is no good Rule for interpreting Scriptures See Ia●●●us Laurentius his singular Tractate entituled Reverentia Eccles. Rom. erga S. Pat. veteres subdola Artic. 2. Proposit. 9. In his Auctarium he proves that the Protestants do more esteem the Fathers then the Papists and Jesuites For Councels Gregory the Pope equalizeth the four first General Councels to the four Gospels not in respect of Authority but in respect of the verity of the Articles defined in them He saith not They could as little erre but they did as little erre in their decisions or to speak more properly That their Doctrine was as true as Gospel because the Determinations in those first General Councels against Hereticks are evidently deduced out of holy Scriptures Dr Featley's Stricturae in Lyndomastigem concerning the 7 Sac. For if these four general Councels be of equal Authority with the four Gospels the Popes Authority as Papists say being above the Authority of the Councels it followeth That his Authority is greater then the Evangelists then which what can be more blasphemously spoken We say the true Interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought from general Councels First Because even universal Councels have erred the Chalcedonian Councel one of the four so much magnified by Pope Gregory in rashly preferring the Constantinopolitane Church before that of Alexandria and Antioch Those that condemned Christ were then the universal visible Church Matth. 26. 65. Iohn 11. 47. See Act. 4. 18. Secondly General Councels have been opposite one to another that of Constance to the other of Basil whereof one setteth down that Councels could erre and so also the Pope and that a Councel was above the Pope the other affirmeth the quite contrary Thirdly There were no general Councels after the Apostles for three hundred years till the first Councel of Nice when yet the Church had the true sense of the Scriptures Fourthly The general Councels interpreted Scripture by Scripture as Athanasius and Ambrose teach concerning the first Councel of Nice Fifthly Because they cannot be so easily celebrated to declare any doubtfull sense of Scripture They have expounded but few places of Scripture neither is it likely the Pope will assemble them to expound the rest The Papists say That the Scripture ought to be expounded by the Rule of Faith and therefore not by Scripture only But the Rule of Faith and Scripture is all one As the Scriptures are not of man but of the Spirit so their Interpretation it not by man but of the Spirit like wise Let Councels Fathers Churches give their sense of the Scripture its private if it be not the sense and interpretation of the Spirit Let a private man give the true sense of the Scripture it s not private because its Divine the sense of the holy Ghost and private in 2 Pet. 1. 20. is not opposed to publick but to Divine and the words are to be read No Scripture is of a mans own Interpretation that is private contrary to Divine The word is interpreted aright by declaring 1. The Order 2. The Summe or Scope 3. The Sense of the words which is done by framing a Rhetorical and Logical Analysis of the Text. In giving the sense three Rules are of principal use and necessity to be observed 1. The literal and largest sense of any words in Scripture must not be imbraced farther when our cleaving thereunto would breed some disagreement and contrariety between the present Scripture and some other Text or place else shall we change the Scripture into a Nose of wax 2. In case of such appearing disagreement the holy Ghost leads us by the hand to seek out some distinction restriction limitation or figure for the reconcilement thereof and one of these will alwayes fit the purpose for Gods word must always bring perfect truth it cannot fight against it self 3. Such figurative Sense Limitation Restriction or Distinction must be sought out as the Word of God affordeth either in the present place or some other and chiefly those that seem to differ with the present Text being duly compared together The End of the first Book THE SECOND BOOK OF GOD. CHAP. I. That there is a God HAving handled the Scripture which is principium cognoscendi in Divinity I now proceed to Treat of God who is principium essendi or thus The Scripture is the rule of Divinity God and his works are the matter or parts of Divinity This Doctrine is 1. Necessary 1. Because man was made for that end that he might rightly acknowledge and worship God love and honor him 2. It is the end of all Divine Revelation Iohn 5. 39. 3. To be ignorant of God is a great misery Being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them 2. Profitable Our welfare and happiness consists in the knowledge of God Ier. 9. 23. Iohn 17. 3. the knowledge of God
at Geneva in Calvins time he denied that Christ was Gods Son till Mary bore him Servetus Trinitatem idolum item Cerberum Tricipitem vocabat The Ministers of Transylvania in a most pestilent book of theirs often contumeliously call him Deum Tri-personatum whom we holily worship Hoornbeeck Anti-socin l. 2. c. 5. sect 1. p. 415. Those of Polonia in their Catechism say That there is but one Divine Person and urge Iohn 17. 3. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Ephes. 4. 1. Zanchy long since hath vindicated the truth and refuted them Socinus cals him Deum tripersonatum ridiculum humanae curiositatis inventum Infaustus Socinus omnium haereticorum audacissimus saith Rivet See Cheynels rise of Socinianism chap. 3. and ch 1. p. 6. Some glory in this as a great argument against the three Persons in the Trinity If there be Persons in the Trinity they are either something or nothing Nothing they cannot be Non entis nullae sunt affectiones if something they are either finite or infinite finite they cannot be nor infinite then there should be three Infinites It is 1. plain in Scripture there is but one God 1 Cor. 8. 4. 2. The Scripture speaks of Father Sonne and holy Ghost or Spirit these are said to be three 1 Iohn 5. 7. 3. The God-head is attributed to all and the essential Properties belong to all 4. Something is attributed to one in the Scripture that cannot be said of all The Sonne was made flesh and the Sonne is begotten this cannot be said of the other the Sonne and the Spirit are sent but this cannot be said of the Father It is not strange among the creatures that a Father should be distinguished from himself as a man the Persons are something and infinite each of them infinite as each of them is God yet not three Infinites nor Gods so Athanasius in his Creed A Person is Essentia divina cum proprietate sua hypostatica the divine Nature distinguished by an incommunicable property though we cannot expresse the manner of this great mystery yet we should believe it The ground of Arminianism and Socinianism is because they would examine all the great truths of God by their Reason That saying of Bernard here hath place Scrutari haec temeritas est credere pietas est nosse vero vita aeterna est That the Father is God is confessed by all and it is manifest from Scripture we are directed to pray to him The Apostle saith Grace to you and peace from God our Father Philem. v. 3. See Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Ephes. 1. 3. That Christ is God is proved 1. By clear Texts of Scripture affirming this truth in so many words The Prophet fore-telling of him saith this is his name by which you shall call him Iehovah or The Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23. 16. and The mighty God Isa. 9. 6. Paul saith Rom. 9. 5. Who is God over all blessed for ever and St. Iohn saith 1 Iohn 5. 20. This is very God and St. Paul saith 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of Godlinesse God manifested in the flesh and accordingly Thomas made his confession Ioh. 20. 28. My Lord and my God which title he accepteth and praiseth Thomas for believing and that he could not have done without extream impiety had he not been God Vide Bellarm de Christo l. 1. c. 4 5 6 7 8 9. 2. By evident Reasons drawn from the Scripture He hath the Name Titles Works essential Attributes and worship of God ascribed unto him in Scripture 1. Divine Names and Titles are given to Christ He is the only blessed Potentate 1 Tim. 6. 15. The King of Kings Revel 1. 5. and Lord of Lords Apoc. 17. 14. and 19. 16. He is called The Image of the invisible God Col. 1. 15. The brightnesse of his glory Heb. 1. 3. The word and wisdom of the Father Prov. 8. 12. and 9. 1. He is called the Word because he is so often spoken of and promised in the Scripture and is in a manner the whole subject of the Scripture he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cum articulo Joh. 1. 1. Act. 20. 28. 1 Tim. 3. 16. The great God Titus 2. 13. The true God 1 John 5. 20. God over all or Blessed above all Rom. 9. 5. The most high Luk. 1. 76. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which name the Septuagint have expressed Iehovah the proper name of God alone Iohn 20. 28. My Lord Jude 4. The only Lord Acts 10. 36. The Lord of all 1 Cor. 15. 48. The Lord from Heaven 1 Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of Heaven and Earth Matth. 28. 18. These Titles are too high and excellent to be given unto any meer man whatsoever God therefore who will not have his glory given to another would never have given these Titles to another if he were not God 2. The works of God even the principal and most eminent of all which are proper to the Lord only are ascribed to Christ. 1. The work of Creation even of creating all things Iohn 1. 3. and Col. 1. 16. He for whom and by whom all things were created is very God For Christ and by him all things were created therefore he is very God Heb. 1. 10 11 12. The foundation of the earth and the creation of the Heavens and the change which is to happen to both at the last day are attributed to the Sonne of God 2. The work of Preservation and Government is attributed to him also he is before all things and by him all things consist Heb. 1. 2. He who upholds all things by his powerful word is God So doth Christ therefore he is God 3. The working of Divine miracles raising up the dead by his own power is given to him Ioh. 6. 54. and Ioh. 5. 21. He that can quicken and raise the dead is God So doth Christ therefore he is God 4. Redeeming of mankinde Luke 1. 68. Matth. 20. 28. Ephes. 1. 7. Revel 1. 5. 5. Sending of the holy Ghost Iohn 21. 22. and 14. 16. and of Angels is ascribed to him Mat. 13. 41. Revel 1. 1. He forgives sins Mark 9. 2 5. He gives eternal life 3. The principal and incommunicable Attributes of God are given to him 1. Omniscience Iohn 2. 24 25. He knew all men and he knew what was in them Ioh. 21. 17. Lord thou knowest all things 2. Omnipotency Revel 1. 8. and 4. 8. and 11. 17. Phil. 3. 21. 3. Eternity Ioh. 17. 5. Revel 1. 18. Iohn 1. 1. Isa. 9. 6. He is called The everlasting Father 4. Omnipresence Matth. 18. 20. 5. Unchangeablenesse Heb. 1. 11 12 13. and 13. 8. He that is Omniscient Omnipotent Eternal Omnipresent Unchangeable equal to the Father in Majesty and Glory Phil. 2. 16. is God So is Christ therefore he is God Lastly Worship due to God is ascribed to him Heb. 1. 6. Let all
the Angels of God worship him Revel 5. 13. The Lamb that is Christ hath the same worship rendred to him that the Father hath We are commanded to call upon his name to believe and trust in him Iohn 14. 1. 3. 16. 6. 40. to hope in him Isa. 11. 10. we are baptized in his name Matth. 28. 19. Act. 8. 16. and swear by him Rom. 9. 1. The mystery of the Sons generation is so profound that it is difficult and dangerous to wade further in it then we have clear ground from Scripture that the Sonne was of the Father begotten from eternity and is one with him and of equal power and dignity seems clear from Prov. 8 23 26. Iohn 1. 3. 10. 30. and 17. 5. Phil. 2. 6. but Modus quo genitus fuerit seems to some beyond humane reach Some of our Divines say Christ is begotten of the Father by a communication of the Divine Essence if this be granted say others it will be hard to defend the God-head of Christ. He that is God must have his being from himself à se Deus à Patre Filius Mr Wotton on Ioh. 1. goes this way and some others But some say then he should be his adopted Son Vide Bellar. de Christo l. 2. c. 15. The Athanasian Creed hath it God of God and Christ saith of the holy Ghost that he shall receive of him Illud arctè nobis tenendum à persona Patris per generationem Filio esse communicatam essentiam ingenitam R. Usser Ignat. Clem. Interpolator haeresi suspectus cap. 15. That Christ hath his God-head from the Father makes not against his God-head but for it if he hath the same God-head which the Father hath though from the Father then he is the same God with the Father Object Matth. 19. 17. Christ denieth that he was good because he was not God Answ. Christ applieth himself to him to whom he spake now he called Christ good in no other sense then he would have done any other Prophet and in this sense Christ rebuked him for calling him good Object Ioh. 17. 3. God the Father is called the only true God Answ. Some referre both these to God himself and Christ but others give a general rule that the Word alone is not opposed to the other Persons but to the creatures and feigned gods and so Ioh. 8. 9. the woman is not excluded but her accusers the added expressions shew him to be God because it is life eternal to know him as well as the Father Object Ephes. 4. 6. Answ. The word Father is not there used relatively or personally for the first Person in the Trinity but essentially as Mal. 2. Is there not one Father of us all and so he is God called Father in regard of his works ad extra Object Iohn 14. 28. My Father is greater then I. Answ. As he was man only or Mediator the Father was greater then he but as he was God that is true Iohn 10. 38. I and my Father are one not in union of will as Ioh. 17. 21. but in unity of nature See Phil. 2. 6. Object Prov. 8. 22. Ariu● objected this place The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way Answ. This place much puzled the Fathers for want of skill in the original Tongue it is in the Hebrew Possessed me the beginning of his way So Arius Montanus reads it See vers 25. It is spoken of Christ as Mediator Object Col. 1. 15. Christ is called the first-born of every creature therefore he is a creature Here the Arrians say Christ is imanifestly called a creature Cum Christus prim●genitus omnis creaturae sit eum unum ● numero creaturarum esse oportere necesse est Ea enim in Scripturis vis est primogeniti ut primogenitum unum ex eorum genere quorum primogenitus est esse necesse est Catechis Eccl. Polon c. 1. de persond Christi Ans. There are three answers given to this Text in the Annot. Edit 2. Vid. Bez. in loc It is a figurative speech Christ had the pre●eminence over the creatures was Lord over them as the first-born An Arrian executed at Norwich for blasphemy against Christ in the dayes of Queen Elizabeth being moved to repent that Christ might pardon him replied to this effect and is that God of yours so merciful indeed as to pardon so readily those that blaspheme him then I renounce and defie him The Socinians deny Christ to be God and oppose his merits and satisfaction unto God for our sins they hold Christ is God salvo meli●ri judicio or prout mihi videtur till they can examine it better They are more vexed with Athanasius then with any other and call him for Athanasius Sathanasius he stood against three hundred Bishops in a Councel and maintained the Divinity of Christ against the Arian faction He hath written also most copiously against the Arrians and hath solidly refuted their arguments against the Divinity of Christ. The Gospel of S. Iohn was chiefly penned for this end to prove the Deity of Christ Christ there gives a resolute and constant testimony of himself that he was the Son of God and very God never any creature took this title upon him to be called God but the fearful judgements of God were upon him for it Mr Perkins on the Creed See him also on Iude. Vide Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 12. 14. Many Hereticks denied the God-head of Christ as Ebion Cerinthus Arrius the Jews also and Mahometans some denying him to be God others saying that he was not absolutely God but inferiour to him He is God not by office nor by favour nor by similitude nor in a figure as sometimes Angels and Magistrates are called Gods but by nature he is equal and co-essential with his Father there is one God-head common to all the three persons the Father the Sonne and the Spirit and therefore it is said Phil. 2. 6. that He was in the form of God and thought it no robbery to be equal with God Lo an equality to God the Father ascribed to him he is not God in any secondary or inferiour manner but is in the very form of God equal to him the God-head of all the three Persons being one and the same To beat down Arius his heresie the first Councel of Nice was called the Nicene Creed made The difference between the Councel of Nice and Arius was but in a Letter whether Christ was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● like in essence or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coessential to the Father The Arian Heretick presseth Augustine to shew where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is read in Scripture Angustine asketh what is Homoousion Consubstantiall but I and my Father are one See of Arius his Heresie and end Heilins Geograph pag. 725. Amphil●chius a worthy Bishop petitioned Theodosius the Emperour that the Arians might not have publick
as that they had made an inequality between the Persons But since their forme of speech is That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father by the Sonne and is the Spirit of the Sonne without making any difference in the Consubstantiality of the Persons it is a true though an erroneous Church in this particular Divers learned men thinke that a Filio per Filium in the sense of the Greek Church was but a Question in modo loquendi in manner of speech and not fundamental 3. The personal propriety of the holy Ghost is called procession or emanation Iohn 15. 26. Bellarmine proves the Procession of the holy Ghost from the Sonne by Ioh 16. 14. and from Iohn 20. 22. by that ceremony Augustine and Cyril say Christ would signifie that the holy Ghost proceeds from him and Bellarmine produceth fifteen Latine and as many Greek witnesses who most evidently taught before the Grecians denied the Procession of the holy Ghost that the holy Ghost proceeded from the Father and the Son Bellarm. de Christo l. 2. c. 22. Neither hath the Word defined nor the Church known a formal difference between this Procession and generation The third internal difference among the Persons is in the number for they are three subsisting truly distinctly and per se distinguished by their relations and properties for they are internal works and different and incommunicably proper to every person There follows an external distinction in respect of effects and operations which the Persons exercise about external objects namely the creatures for though the outward works are undivided in respect of the Essence yet in respect of the manner and determination all the persons in their manner and order concurre to such works As the manner is of existing so of working in the Persons The Father is the original and principle of action works from himself by the Son as by his image and wisdom and by the holy Ghost But he is said to work by his Son not as an instrumental but as a principal cause distinguished in a certain manner from himself as the Artificer works by an Image of his work framed in his minde which Image or Idea is not in the instrumental cause of the work but his hand To the Son is given the dispensation and administration of the action from the Father by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 8. 6. Iohn 1. 3. 5. 19. To the holy Ghost is given the consummation of the action which he effects from the Father and the Son Iob. 26. 13. 1 Cor. 12. 11. The effects or works which are distinctly given to the Persons are Creation ascribed to the Father Redemption to the Sonne Sanctification to the holy Ghost all which things are done by the Persons equally and inseparably in respect of the effect it selfe but distinctly in respect of the manner of working The equality of the Persons may be proved 1. By the work of Creation joyntly Psal. 33. 6. severally for the Father those places prove it 1 Cor. 8. 6. Heb. 1. 2. the Sonne Iohn 1. 3 10. Col. 1. 16. the holy Ghost Iob 33. 4. 2. By the work of Redemption the Father sends and gives the Sonne the Sonne is sent and given by him the holy Ghost perfects the work of Conception and Incarnation Luke 1. 35. 3. By the work of Sanctification the Father sanctifieth Iohn 17. 17. Iude v. 1. the Son Ephes. 526. the holy Ghost 2 Thess. 2. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 2. 4. By the worship of religious adoration The Father is religiously adored often in the Scripture Ephes. 1. 17. the Sonne Acts 7. 59. Heb. 1. 6. the holy Ghost Act. 28. 25 26. Rom. 9. 1. This is a wonderful mystery rather to be adored and admired then enquired into yet every one is bound to know it with an apprehensive knowledge though not with a comprehensive No man can be saved without the knowledge of the Father he hath not the Father who denieth the Son and he receives not the holy Ghost who knows him not Ioh. 14. 17. 2. We must worship the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity as it is in Athanasius his Creed We must worship God as one in substance and three in Persons as if Thomas Iohn and Matthew had one singular soul and body common to them all and entirely possessed of every one we were baptized in the Name of Father Son and holy Ghost We worship another God then the Idolaters could imagine their God to be they conceived him to be the Creator and Governour of all things Omnipotent Eternal but they worshipped not one God in three Persons the Father who accepts the Spirit who works and the Sonne who presents our services One main intendment in the New Covenant was not onely to honour the Attributes of the nature but the glory of the Persons Ephes. 1. 3 7 13 14. 2. All the Persons have a special hand in the salvation of a sinner and every believer hath a special interest in the promises of the Persons Ioh. 5. 19. 3. The order of working in the Persons is sutable to the order of their subsisting the Father is first in order therefore in working therefore Adoption is reckoned by some Divines as the first of spiritual benefits then Redemption and Sanctification 4. We should walk in the love of them all 1 Ioh. 4. 16. See Iohn 5. 9. 14. 23 16. 27. and fear to offend them all not only the Father but the Son Ezek. 21. 10. and the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 3. We should praise God for revealing this mystery to us in his Word and be assured that what he promiseth or threatens shall be accomplished being confirmed by three witnesses Prudentius hath exercised his Poetry well in defending and illustrating the whole Christian religion against the Jews Heathens and Hereticks and in celebrating the holy Trinity The End of the second Book THE THIRD BOOK OF Gods Works CHAP. I. Of Gods Decree and especially of Predestination and the Parts thereof Election and Reprobation HAving spoken of the Scripture and God the works of God in the next place are to be handled which some make two the Decree and the Execution of the Decree others three Decree Creation Providence The works of God whereby he moves himself to his Creatures are three Decree Creation Providence not three individually for so they are innumerable but in the species and kinds of things The works of God are 1. Before time or eternall his Decree 2. In time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Gubernation and Sustentation Government and Preservation Or thus Gods Works are 1. Internall which are in the very will of God from eternity and they are called the Decrees of God by which God determined from eternity what he would do in time We follow the received Phrase of Divines when we call the Decrees the works of God and speak of God after our capacity Therefore we call Decrees of God his Works because
and practice 2. A prosecuting such intent and practice with might of any kinde as in one instance the Prophet noteth They covet fields and take them by force A man of violence is he who will bear out a bad matter with mony favour wit strength or any outward helps he can use for that purpose That this is evil appears by that place where David affirms of God that the man which loveth violence his soul hateth that is he hates him in all extremity with an utter hatred the reason is because he hath sold over himself to sin he sins of wilfulnesse is an obstinate sinner a despiser of God he hath buried all justice and equity love and charity and shamefully abuseth those gifts to mischief which God hath furnished him with for better purposes it begins in very children the stronger bigger and craftier will wrong the weaker and sillier Violence bursting forth into any extremities of dealing was in the old law punished with the like of that that was done Lev. 24. 17. Unbelief Infidelity was the first sin Gen. 3. 4 and is the mother of all sins Heb. 3. 12. The evil heart is called the heart of unbelief as faith is the fountain of all graces Act. 15. 9. Our Saviour often checks his disciples for this Matth. 6. 30. It is against those most lovely and soul-ravishing Attributes of God his mercy goodnesse free-grace longanimity patience bowels of compassion It is called a provocation Psal. 78. 4. Heb. 3 8. which notes the highest act of displeasure the unbeliever is abominable to God and good men Psal. 15. 4. It is a departing from God Heb. 3. 12. see Iohn 3. 33. Christ marvelled at it Mark 6. 6. It is hard to finde out unbelief to be a sin not that unbelief whereby we assent not to the doctrine of the Scripture but that whereby we do not apply Christ for our only Saviour for seeing the Law of God is partly ingra●ted in our nature we easily beleeve that what opposeth that is a sin but the Gospel being wholly supernaturall and meerly by divine revelation therefore what opposeth that is not presently acknowledged to be a sin the Scripture discovers this unbelief The Spirit convinceth us of unbelief and the sinfulnesse of that state Iohn 16. 9. 1. It discovers the nature of it and therein our ignorance 2 Cor. 4. 4. 1. In respect of the reality of the Gospel that there is such a thing as pardon a reconciled justified state faith hope 2. In respect of the glory of the Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2 Cor. 3. ult Christ is precious to them that beleeve 2. Shews the distance that unbelief makes between God and us in our approaches to him Heb. 3. 12. 3. Discovers our rebellion and opposition to God and the righteousness of Christ Rom. 10. 3. by cavilling objecting and hard thoughts of Christ. Secondly The Spirit convinceth us of our unbelief in respect of the objects and effects of it 1. Its objects 1. Christ as he hath all merit and satisfaction in our approaches to God we cannot set that which is in Christ by way of satisfaction against our own guilt 2. We are not able to see pardoning promises speak pardon to us through the bloud of Christ as that promise Isa. 1. 18. 2. We improve not the Covenant we look not upon Christ as the Head of it As he is the party that makes good the Covenant with God for us though I have many miscarriages yet he hath fully satisfied and made reconciliation with God for me as he is the Head of the Covenant also to us what need I doubt but I shall have strength pardon is given into the hands of my Mediator 2. In reference to the effects of unbelief 1. The Spirit shews a man what weaknesse and corruption he lies under still by reason of unbelief 2. Le ts him see how much terrour and guilt he still lies under he cannot call God father Heb. 10. 22. 3. Discovers the comforts and joyes of beleevers both from Scripture and the experiences of others of Gods people 1 Iohn 1. 4. 15. 11. and yet much wrath and guilt still lies upon his conscience 4. The Spirit convinceth of unbelief by a Saints often being at a losse in the things of the Gospel 1. He goes a long time together and cannot meet with one promise to suit his condition 2. When he hath a promise he can make no use of it cannot plead it with faith and expectation 3. He cannot walk in the strength of a promise Lastly Gods Spirit convinceth us also of the sinfulnesse of unbelief 1. By clearing up to the soul that he lies under the breach of the great Gospel-command 2. By shewing what it is to neglect the love and grace of the Gospel Heb. 2. 3. Matth. 24. 51. 3. By presenting to the soul how ill God takes it when we will not beleeve him There are divers aggravations of this sin 1. Other sins deserve damnation but this formally opposeth the way of salvation Some say only unbelief damns a man which is not true in a rigid sense for every sin damns a man unrepented of but only unbelief is more opposite to the way of curing then other sins 2. It is opposite to the chiefest grace faith Illud est optimum cujus privatio est pessima The Scripture honours faith giving remission of sins the righteousnesse of Christ and salvation it self to it 3. It dishonours God and Christ and the holy Ghost it is the glory of Gods love that he becomes thy God though he so great and thou so vile this is the honour of Christ to thee A Son is born a Childe is given God shews the riches of his free-grace here thou grudgest him the honour to be the pardoner of thy sins 4. It is most rooted in us hence the Lord so often checks his disciples for their unbelief and faith is called The work of God in a speciall manner because of the difficulty of it and the contrariety of our natures Hence Comfort you comfort you again and again because the heart of man terrified for sin doth utterly refuse all true comfort in a right way 5. It hath more fair pretences for it more arguments then any other sin that is a dangerous sin which comes upon us as a duty I am unworthy 6. It puts the lie upon God Iohn 1. 5. God saith he will be thy God Christ saith he will put away thy sins thou saiest he will not 7. The devil most tempts a godly man to this sin as the incestuous person the devil had almost tempted him to finall despair as he would hold the prophane man in security so the penitent sinner in irksome unbelief 8. It hath the most terrible and sad effects it breeds daily unsetlednesse and tossings of heart therefore doubting and uncertainty is opposed to faith at last it will breed secret impatience and grudging against God and in the end open hatred
tell of it and St Luke again in the Acts of the Apostles Mark hath it thus Chap. 16. 19. He was received up into Heaven Luk. thus Chap. 24. 51. He was parted from them and caught up into Heaven Again in Acts 1. 9 10 11. While he spake thus he was taken up and a Cloud received him up out of their sight Now this Ascension be fell fourty dayes after his Resurrection Act. 1 3. when he had conversed with them and informed them of all things necessary for their Apostolical function both that he might thus confer with them of all such necessary things and that by often shewing himself he might give sufficient and undeniable proof of his Resurrection And after this was done Luke telleth how an Angel spake to them about it and told them of his returning again and that the Heavens should contain him till the time appointed Thus did he fulfill the Prophecy that went before concerning this matter for David had said long before Psal. 68. 18. Thou hast ascended up on high thou hast led captivity captive thou hast given gifts unto men This was also typed by the High-Priests entring into the most holy place upon atonement day after the Sacrifice of expiation offered therefore Christ the true High-Priest entered into the holy place not made with hands even into very Heaven there to appear before God for us Heb. 6. 20. 7. 26. 84. The cause of his ascending was because the earth was no fit place for a person so glorious to abide in for either he must shew forth that glory of his and then men could not have endured to converse with him or else he must not shew it forth and then he had deprived himself of his deserved glory Wherefore it was necessary that he should betake himself to a place and company capable of that glory even into the highest Heavens where he might enjoy and declare that infinite great glory which his Father was to bestow upon him for a reward of his sufferings And this his Ascension was even a taking possession of that glorious estate for us that we might be fully assured of his drawing us his members after him that at last in due time we might be where he is to behold his glory and therefore he told his Disciples That he went to prepare a place for them and that in the fit season he would return again to take them with him that head and body might be both together And in the mean space this his Ascension is become a means of drawing our hearts after him to a longing desire of being with him that we might set our affections on things above where Christ our Head is For seeing Christ our Lord did leave earth to go into Heaven it is evident that Earth is a far meaner place and Heaven a far more excellent Wherefore it is necessary for us to raise up our hearts to that which is the most happy place and state Now the third Degree of his Glorification follows that is His sitting down at the right hand of his Father whereof many Scriptures also make mention Heb. 10. 12. 1. 3 12. 2. 8. 1. Ephes. 1. 20. Now this is a figurative kinde of speech and denoteth the high advancement of his humanity next to the Divinity above all other creatures both in respect of admirable gifts and boundlesse authority For to be at Gods right hand signifieth a state of excellent glory as he that is next the King in honour standeth or sitteth at his right hand Gen. 48. 18. 1 King 2. 19. Psal. 45. 9. Matth. 20. 20 21. This is called a sitting at the right hand of the Majesty on high it is the dwelling of the fulnesse of the God-head in him bodily in that very body of Christ the God-head hath poured forth all sorts of excellencies as much as a creature is possibly capable of and he is actually invested with all power in Heaven and Earth Christ hath a Name above all names farre above all Principalities and Powers and Thrones and Dominions Where he must abide till he make all his enemies his foot-stool Our Lord Jesus Christ is adorned with more abundance of Wisdom Power Goodnesse Love Joy Mercy Holinesse and whatsoever qualities tend to make him in whom they are excellent glorious and happy then all the creatures of God laid together so that all the heavenly Army worship and adore him and cast themselves down at his feet and are most ready to yield him absolute and perfect obedience knowing him to be preferred by his Father to that Dignity That so he might receive a most ample reward for that exceeding great abasement to the lower parts of the earth to which he did voluntary submit himself for his Fathers glory sake and that he might become a fit Head and King to his Church able to guide and rule them at all times and to sub due all their and his enemies under him and them Dan. 2. 44. 7. 14 27. Mar. 14. 62. Rom. 8. 3. Ephes. 1. 21 22. I should now speak of Christs judging the quick and dead at his second coming which some Divines make the last degree of his glory but there will be a fitter place to handle that elsewhere I shall therefore in the next place draw some usefull Corollaries from the Glorification of our blessed Saviour FIRST We must labour so seriously to contemplate this unutterable glory of our Head Christ Jesus till we be translated into the same image from glory to glory endeavouring to shew forth the power of his Resurrection and Ascension in rising to newnesse of life and in ascending up on high in our desires and affections We must be raised up together with him and with him sit together in heavenly places If the Resurrection of Christ have not a powerful impression on our souls to make us rise out of the filthy grave and rotten Sepulchre of a wicked life to a holy and godly conversation If his Ascension and sitting at his Fathers right hand have not a like powerful impression upon our souls to raise us up to all heavenlinesse of minde making us in desire and will even as it were to ascend after him and sit there with him the bare saying that we beleeve these Articles shall little avail to our happinesse I beseech you therefore let us all endeavour to make a practical use of these heavenly and supernatural truths which are revealed to us Christ is risen say to thy self why do not I rise with him from all loosnesse vanity wickednesse uncleannesse injustice and abominable lusts Christ is ascended and hath taken his place in Heaven Why do not I cast off all earthly base affections and lift up my soul and aspire to that high-place We say we love Christ and that we are his members let us shew our love to him and union with him by being thus made conformable to his Resurrection and Ascension
Yea let us long for his appearance and thirst after the great Day when he shall come to judge the quick and dead What good wife would not often long for the coming of her absent husband and for her going to partake with him in his state of glory This world is a dunghil and all the things in it are baser compared to that estate of Christ then dirt and dung compared to gold O let us shew that we know and beleeve these things by filling our souls with holy and heavenly desires and affections Contemplate our Lord Jesus Christ rising out of the grave contemplate his ascending up to his Father contemplate him sitting at the right hand of his Father contemplate him coming to Judgement till these things have banished all love of sinne in thee all earthlinesse of Spirit and made thee in some measure like unto him in these things If the Spirit of grace and glory rest upon us it will thus glorifie us and raise us up A Christian man is not glorious because he hath obtained more outward preferment or wealth but because he hath obtained a more effectual and working knowledge of Christ his Head and is made more and more suitable to the spiritual glory of such a Mediatour Hitherto should our chief desires and indeavours runne What do we musing tiring and tormenting our selves in studying earthly things nay evil and sinful things Do these studies and cogitations accord with the heavenly nature which our blessed Saviour maketh them partakers of that are ingraffed into him by Faith and enlivened by the mighty work of his Spirit In vain do we call our selves Christians and look to be brought to that glorious estate wherto he hath already assigned all true Christians if we do not shew our selves thus in our measure for the present glorified with Christ. But secondly let this thought make us to loath our sins and heartily to lament them when we consider of them because they offend so great and wonderful a person that is so highly advanced over all and withal so good and glorious and one that hath done so much for us and doth so particularly know and observe us and all our actions That Lord of Lords and King of Kings that only blessed Potentate who inhabiteth eternity who dwelleth in that light which is inaccessible whom no creature saw nor can see this eminent person he seeth us at all times in all places and companies he is a witnnesse of all our actions that shall be the Judge he taketh particular and precise notice of our whole carriage O shall we dare to offend his pure and glorious eyes with things so abominable to him as those must needs be for which himself was put to suffer such things as he did suffer before he entred into his glory Do we not think that Christ hateth sinne with a most perfect hatred and shall not we strive to conform our selves to him and to please him that is so incomparably much greater then all other creatures Do but think what an one our Lord is and how displeasing sinne is in his sight and then it is not possible for us to love it if we either love our selves or him And it is a sure truth that God will sanctifie these Meditations to such as will exercise themselves therein to beat down sinne in them and to work an hatred of it in their souls Oh rhat each of us could retire our selves often from the world and put himself in minde of Christs glory and say to himself if I follow voluptuousnesse and give my self to wantonnesse drunkennesse gaming idlenesse riot or unthriftinesse these are the things that glorious Saviour of mankinde abh orreth and shall I dare to provoke him against me We are careful to shunne those things which we know will offend great men in the world not alone Kings and Princes but men of inferiour rank that are of place in the Countreys where we dwell and shall we not avoid that which will displease him whose greatnesse is so great that all height set in balance with his is meer meannesse basenesse and contemptiblenesse Admonish thy self often of this point beseech him that knows how loathsom sinne is to himself to make it abominable to thee for his sake and this will cause thee to loath it The true knowledge of Christ to conceive him to be so exceeding excellent as he is will force any reasonable creature to study to please him and to cast away farre from him all that will provoke him and that is all sinne and wickednesse for that his soul hateth and then is our leaving of sinne and casting away evil deeds truly acceptable to him when it hath its original in this knowledge of him and love to him Thirdly This glory of Christ following his sufferings must become a pillar to our Faith and a sure Argument to make us trust perfectly upon him and him alone For is he not able to the utmost to save those which come unto God by him hath he not made it more then manifest that he hath fully satisfied his Fathers justice and answered for our sins He bare the sins of mankinde even of the world as the Scripture speaketh indefinitely that no man should through unbelief exclude himself I say he bare all the sins of men upon his body on the Tree there he undertook to offer up a perpetual Sacrifice and to make an atonement to his Father for us Now you see him no more in an Agony no more Crucified no longer lying in the Grave but entred into his Glory O rest upon him rest upon him rest upon him perfectly How many how great soever those sins be that you have committed for his entring into Glory maketh it manifest that he hath satisfied for them all to the full and if you renounce your selves and all other merits he can and will cause them all to be pardoned and blotted out of the Debt-book of his heavenly Father If we can go to Christ for pardon of sinne he is so glorified that his intercession applying his Redemption to us shall surely make us safe To him therefore runne on him cast thy self on him rely for the plenary and certain remission of all thy sins all aggravations of them notwithstanding yea go to him and rest upon him for power against them all and for strength to overcome them and to vanquish all Satans temptations and to make thee a perfect conquerour for this glory hath he received as the Head of the Church for the use and benefit of his Church and of all and each of those in his Church that shall seek to him and beleeve in him He will justifie he will sanctifie he will save He can do it perfecty he will do it certainly onely so that we rest upon him for it and seek to and call upon him for it All that call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved all that long and desire to be saved and do trust
to the operation of the Spirit in a mans self so those that are for free-will Agimus nos sed acti volumus sed ipse facit ut velimus 2. Passiva able to receive man in conversion is meerly passive to grace but hath in him a principle of resistance 3. Obedieneialis as in the unreasonable creature Secondly Free-will may be considered in its operation and working about some objects then we distinguish about the objects which it may will For First They are either such as belong to our animal life as to walk eat shut or open our eyes and here we have the exercise of free-will Secondly Our outward civil conversation and obedience to the Laws required by a Magistrate here again we have free-will Thirdly They are holy actions and they again are either 1. Externally holy which concern the outward exercise of Religion as to come to Church to hear and reade and here still a man hath free-will Or 2. Internally and spiritually as to know God to beleeve in him and love him and so we must distinguish the states of men Man in the state of innocency had an excellent power and strength of free-will to serve God and love him but in the state of corruption though his liberty not only in the nature but use of it remaineth about natural civil and external religious actions yet for internal and spiritual actions he hath wholly lost his freewill Iohn 15. 5. Matth. 7. 18. Iohn 8. 36. therefore Augustine lib. 2. contra Julianum cals it Servum arbitrium And Luther called it not a free but enthralled and enslaved will to sinne and wrote a book De serv● Arbitrio Homo libero arbitrio malè utens se perdidit ipsum August ad Laurent Thirdly Man in his estate of Renovation hath again some power and free will being first freed by the grace of God from the power of sin Iohn 8. 13. Volunt as in tantum est libera in quantum est liberata August in Joh. Tract 53. yet this freedom is not perfect but wonderfully opposed and hindered Gal. 5. 17. The free-will must be as the understanding and will are saith Chamier but that the understanding and will are both corrupted in a natural man Vide Chamierum contractum per Spanhem Tom. 3. l. 4. c. 3. 4. There are several kinds of freedom or liberty 1. From compulsion when no external principle can compell to work but there must be an inward inclination to work from such coaction not only men but beasts are free 2. From obligation or debt to another and so no creature can be free because all that we have is Gods 3. From sin when the flesh is subdued so that the Spirit can and doth prevail over it 4. From misery which the Apostle speaketh of Rom. 8. 5. From necessity when the Agent is determined from an inward principle of nature to one object as the fire to burn Immutability and liberty may stand together as God doth most freely will the creation of the world yet unchangeably the Angels and Saints in Heaven are so confirmed in good that what they will they will unchangeably but freely Every man naturally cannot but sin yet he sins freely in regard of freedom from coaction and natural necessity though not in regard of freedom from immutability and as for the other liberties from obedience sin and misery he is obedient to God and under sin and misery The will hath no freedom to spiritual things The Papists though they say that the grace of God is requisite yet as a partial cause and that we are workers with the grace of God in our conversion as appears by their similitudes of two men carrying a great burden and the man half wounded Against which opinion these arguments may be alleadged 1. The slavery and servitude of our wils to any thing that is good those who are so defiled that they are nothing but flesh they cannot possibly have any power to what is good but so are all by nature Gen. 6. 5. Iohn 3. 6. Rom. 8. 6. To will is of nature to will ill is of corrupted nature but to will well is of sanctified nature Bernard 2. Those which can do nothing but sinne have no freedom to what is good every unregenerate man doth nothing but sinne Matth. 7. 17. An evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth evil Without faith it is impossible to please God To the unclean all things are defiled A man by nature non potest non peccare etiam damnabiliter Pet. Lombar 3. A man cannot turn himself to God Ioh. 6. 44. 1 Cor. 12. 3. therefore nature hath no power to dispose and prepare it self for grace nor can there be merits of congruity or condignity 4. Regeneration and conversion is attributed only to God as Ezek. 36. 26. Ier. 32. 39. See Ezek. 11. 19. Ephes. 2. 10. 1. 19. a stone cannot soften it self no more can our nature See Deut. 29. 4. 5. A man hath not the least thing to glory in 1 Cor. 1 that place 1 Cor. 4. 7. moved Augustine much but if I had power of my own to do that which is good or to receive grace when it is offered then I might glory in my own strength 6. Conversion and power to do good is prayed for Turn us O Lord therefore not in our own power it were vain to pray to God to convert or change me if I will if I have this of my own what need I go and pray for it or pray for others conversion they might convert themselves Psal. 80. 3. Before Pelagius his time the Fathers spake too liberally of mans free-will Nondum nato Pelagio securius loquebantur Patres August Epist. 103. which after upon his heresie they reformed and by Scripture abundantly confuted the Pelagians and especially Augustine Ierome Prosper Fulgentius Hilarie and others The first presumptuous advancer of free-will contrary to the Doctrine anciently received in the Church is by Vincentius Lyrinensis noted to be Pelagius the heretick In the ancient Church there were two sorts of hereticks concerning the point of free-will The Manichees denied free-will the Pelagian hereticks affirmed it and both were condemned by the Catholick Church The Manichees denied free-will in sinne and in the committing of evil The Pelagians affirmed a power and ablenesse of free-will for the performance of righteousnesse and doing of good In the meaning wherein the Manichees denied free-will we affirm and teach it and in that meaning did St Augustine write his books of free-will purposely against the Manichees we deny free-will onely in that meaning wherein first the Pelagians and since the Papists have affirmed it in which meaning St Augustine notably wrote against it The summe of the Controversie is Whether the grace which first moveth and exciteth the will unto good motions doth work the consent alone or whether the will have in it self any power
freely to consent and resist every such motion The Romanists plead for the power of mans will but Protestants for the efficacy of Gods grace If the Question be moved Whether free-will may resist grace It is apparent naturally in the unregenerate it may resist according to that Acts 7. 51. But if the Question be moved of them that are called according to Gods purpose Whether they resist the grace of their calling then removing the humour of contention the truth will easily appear The Question is Whether nature in this case doth resist the omnipotent power of God Deo volenti salvum facere nullum resistit hominis arbitrium There is a twofold resistance of the will say the Schoolmen 1. Connata born with it there is possibility to sinne in the best creatures as creatures 2. Actualis The Spirit of God by an Almighty Power overcomes this Psal. 110. 3. The Arminians have revived the old Pelagian heresie they say they magnifie Gods free grace and it was free grace for God to give Christ to be a Saviour and to send the Gospel to a place but then ask them about Gratia discriminans why Simon Peter receives the Gospel rather then Simon Magus they say God determines no mans will but because Peter receives it and the other rejects it it ariseth wholly from his determining himself then Christ should do no more in his own and Fathers intention for a sav'd then a damned person No man hath power to receive Christ when he is offered unlesse it be given him from above Object Why then doth the Lord exhort us to receive him or complain of us and threaten damnation if we receive him not Answ. The Lord useth these reproofs and exhortations as a means to work upon them whom he purposeth to save 2. To shew that some work is to be done on our part though not by our own strength it must be done à nobis though not ex nobis So the Papists argue from Gods commands God would not command us to do good works if we had not power to do them When our Saviour saith Make the tree good and then the fruit will be good He doth not imply that it is in our power to do so but only sheweth what our duty and obligation is See Rom. 7. 15. Gal. 5. 17. God gave the Law for these ends 1. To shew man his duty the obligation that lies on him I may put my debter in minde of his debt though he be turned bankrupt 2. To shew him his disability 3. To shew him the misery he should be in if God would urge this debt on him to discharge it himself 4. To shew the riches of his grace in providing a means to satisfie his justice and also the exceeding love of Christ in fulfilling the Law for him Object The Arminians say How can the will be free when it is determined How can omnipotent grace and free-will stand together and some talk of a Libertas contrarietatis when one can will good or evil This is a great controversie as between the Jesuites and Dominicans so between us and the Arminians Answ. The freedom of the will doth not consist in this that it is free and indifferent to choose either good or evil For so God and the good Angels should not be free seeing they cannot will any thing but that which is good There is no true liberty but unto that which is good because it is a perfection to be able to sinne is an imperfection 2 Cor. 3. 11. Ubi non est Spiritus Domini non est libertas arbitrii August A power to stand or fall was not a part of Adams liberty his power to fall came from his mutability not liberty It is a Question An faci●nti totum quod in se est ex naturae viribus dentur insallibiliter auxilia ad salutem supernaturalia Whether God will give supernatural grace to him that useth well his natural abilities Let any man use the power that God gives him and he shall have more There is not such an infallibilis n●xus that God hath bound himself in the use of our natural abilities to adde supernatural graces Mr F●nn●r on Ez●k 18. 31 32. A man in his natural condition can doe nothing but what is offensive to God No man ever yet by the right use of naturals obtained Evangelical grace that is a vain power which is never reduced into act It is a Question An naturae viribus possit aliqua vera tentatio superari Whether a man by strength of nature be able to conquer corruption or resist temptation Before Conversion we cannot resist sinne as sinne but exchange one sinne with another We cannot discern good from evil sinne is connatural to us Ier. 8. 6. No more are we able to resist temptation without grace All temptations are to draw us to the enjoyment of some temporal good or to the declining some temporal evil by leaving God Till a man be perswaded that God promiseth a greater good and threatneth a greater evil then the world can do he cannot resist such temptations we are saved by faith and stand by faith We had need all to pray Lord lead us not into temptation and keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins See Ephes. 6. 10. Some speak of reconciling Free-will with Gods Decree Grace and sin Others of the Concord of it and Gods Prescience and Providence Tully thought Prescience and Free-will could not stand together and therefore that he might assert the freedome of mans will he denied the Prescience of future things Atque ita dum vult facere liberos facit sacrilegos CHAP. IV. Of Saving Faith FAith in the New Testament is taken 1. For the Doctrine of faith Iude vers 3. Such are sound in the faith that are Orthodox This is the Catholick faith 2. For the habit or grace of faith whereby we receive Christ and accept him for our Saviour so it is often used in the Scripture Faith in its general nature is any assent unto some truth upon the authority of him that speaks it and the general nature of divine faith is to assent to the truth because God sayes it Our assent and perswasion of the truth in matters of Religion may be either huma●e meerly because of custome education and the authority of the Church or divine being enclined and moved thereunto because of divine authority Many Protestants have no more then a humane faith It is the Religion of their Fathers and of the place where they live In the grace of Faith there are three things 1. An act of the understanding an assent to the truths of Christ that he is such a one in respect of his Natures Offices Works as the Scripture reveales him 2. An act of the will consenting that Christ should do for me what the Lord sent him to do for poor sinners 3. A siducial assiance and dependance on him The Soc man by faith
ordinary custome among the Romans It is a gracious sentence of God the Father on a believer whereby for Christs sake he cals believers his children and really admits them into the state and condition of children He cals us sons Gal. 3. 26. 4. 4 5. and admits us into the state and condition of sons I will be their Father and they shall be my children It is amongst men a remedy found out for the solace of a father which hath no childe by taking one to the right of an inheritance who by nature hath no claim to it 1. There is the election of him that would have him 2. The consent of the adopted 3. He called him Son in the Court when the Lord makes believers his children he thus adopts them There is a difference yet between divine and humane adoption 1. Man puts not a new nature into the party adopted God when he adopts he makes them new creatures 2. Man is moved to this many times by some perfection or apprehended excellency in the party so Pharaohs Daughter because she saw Moses a fair childe took him for hers but it is not so with God there is no good but what he works Ezek. 16. 6. 3. They adopted for their comfort and because they had no sons on whom to bestow their inheritance but God infinitely delighted in his own natural Son and he needed not us he hath his Angels to glorifie him How this Adoption is wrought It is done by applying of Christs Sonship to them The applying of Christs righteousnesse to us makes us righteous and the applying of his Sonship to us makes us the sons and daughters of God Christ being the first-born is heir and all Gods people co-heirs with him Rom. 8. 16 17 18. What Benefits have we by it All the whole work of our Redemption is sometimes exprest by it Iohn 1. 11. The glory of heaven is laid down in this one word Rom. 8. 15. We groan that we might receive the adoption of Sons The Benefits thereof are brought to two heads 1. We are really cut off from the family from which we sprung old Adam sin hell we are now no more in a sinful condition 2. We are ingraffed into Gods family and have all the priviledges of a natural son By the Law of the Romans one might do nothing to his adopted childe but what he might do to his own begotten Son By this means 1. They receive the Spirit of Sanctification Rom. 8. 15. 2. They have the honour of sons Iohn 8. 35. 3. They have the boldnesse and accesse of sons May cry Abba Father they may come to God with open face as men freed from condemnation Ephes. 3. 12. 4. They have the inheritance of sons Rom. 8. 27. they have a double right to heaven Titulo Redemptionis Adoptionis Three things will shew our Adoption 1. Likenesse to the Spirit of Christ thou wilt be holy as he is 2. Thou wilt bear an awful respect to God the childe honours the Father 3. There is the Spirit of prayer the childe comes to the Father to supply his wants CHAP. VI. Of Iustification THis word is used in Scripture sometimes to celebrate with praise Luke 7. When they heard this they justified God 2. To commend ones self being puffed up with the thoughts of our righteousnesse so the Lawyer willing to justifie himself 3. To be freed as he that is dead is justified from sin 4. It is taken for the declaration of our Justification as some expound that Was not Abraham justified by works Justification or to justifie in Scripture is not to infuse in a man righteousnesse by which God will pronounce him righteous but is taken for Gods absolving of him in the Court of free-grace not laying his sins to his charge and withall giving him the right to eternal life because of the obedience of Christ made his It is a judicial act Psal. 143. 2. 2. It is opposed to condemnation a Law term Prov. 17. 15. Rom. 8. 33 34. taken from the Courts of Judicature when the party accused and impleaded by such adversaries is acquitted There is a great difference between Vocation and Justification Vocation precedes Justification follows Justification praesupponit aliquid viz. Faith and Repentance Effectual Calling ponit haec non autem praesupponit The Doctrine of Predestination is handled in the ninth Chapter of the Romans and the first of the Ephesians of Justification in the third and fourth Chapter of the Romans of the first sinne of Adam in the third of Genesis and fifth of the Romans of the Lords Supper in 1 Cor. 11. of the Office of Ministers 1 Tim. 3. of Excommunication 1 Cor. 5. of Assurance ● ep Iohn Some say Justification hath a twofold notion Sometimes to justifie us to make us just thus God did make Adam just and justified him by making him a perfect holy good creature this is called the Justification of infusion But properly it is a Law term and to justifie is to declare one just and righteous Thus we are said to justifie God that thou maist be justified when thou judgest we do not make but pronounce him just Justification is a judicial Act of God the Father upon a beleeving sinner whereby his sins being imputed to Christ and Christs righteousnesse to him he is acquitted from sin and death and accepted righteous to eternal life In which description there are four things 1. The Authour who it is that justifieth God the Father Rom. 3. 29 30. 18. 33. it is God that justifieth and it is done by God as a Judge of the quick and dead 2. The object of it who it is that is justified a believing sinner Rom. 3. 16 17. Iohn 8. 21. 3. The matter of it the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to him the righteousnesse of Immanuel of God made man 1 Cor. 1. 30. He is the Lord our righteousnesse 4. The form it is a sentence pronouncing or declaring us free from sin and death and accepted of God There is an imputation which ariseth from inherent guilt so our sins were not imputed to Christ 2 Cor. 5. 21. 2. Which is founded in a natural Union so Adams sinne is imputed to us but neither the filth nor guilt of Adams sinne were conveyed to Christ he came of Adam in a singular dispensation by vertue of that promise The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head 3. By way of voluntary susception Christ submitted to our punishment he was made sin by Covenant by treating with his Father The debt of a believing sinner is reckoned to Christ and the obedience of Jesus Christ is really reckoned to a believing sinner The result of which exchange is the acquitting of a sinner from sinne and death All the punishments due to us for our sins are reckoned to Christ by vertue of those transactions between God and him Christ became our Surety God layed on him the iniquity of us
in any such exercise of religion for the end and purpose of pleasing God and getting grace from him with respect of conscience to him as esteeming that he must and will have it so or else the service shall not be well-pleasing and acceptable to him this is a part of worship or of divine Service For example a man brought an Ox or a Ramme a Lamb or such like thing and presented it to the Priest he did offer it unto God and that directly with intention of exercising obedience and faith to God Likewise this Offering was to be made by a certain person in a certain place at a certain time with certain Garments and Rites So all those observations became parts of this worship for in these also the intention of the doer was directly carried to God hoping and purposing by them to please God and exercise faith and obedience and other graces as well and as much as by the very offering it self and accounting the service not to be acceptable to God without them The things commanded here are of two sorts 1. For the performance of divine service 2. For the preservation and continuance thereof For the right performance of divine worship some things are to be looked unto for the substance and circumstances of it For the substance of worship also some things are required for the Matter of it Manner of it For the Matter some things are required for 1. The Object of the service 2. The Subject of it that is the kindes and parts of it For the Object two things are required 1. That it be to the true God alone 2. For the parts that they be such as are prescribe and appointed by the true God For the Object it must be only the true God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which is the maker of Heaven and Earth the Sonne of God our blessed Saviour and Mediatour the blessed Spirit our sanctifier which God hath manifested himself to us in the Scriptures to him and him only must we tender our worship which is so essential to worship that it cannot be true unlesse it be appropriated unto him according to the words of the Law repeated by our Saviour saying Thou shalt bown down to the Lord thy God and him alone that exclusive and confining particle our Saviour addeth by way of interpretation Shalt thou serve or worship for so that word which in the original is Thou shalt serve Christ rendereth Thou shalt worship And great cause that he alone should be worshipped who alone is worthy of worship Seeing this worship is a solemn acknowledgement of his Deity we testifie that we esteem him the onely true God upon whom we depend and to whom we give our selves as servants Secondly This true God must be the object of our worship purely and by a clear work of the understanding conceived of in his Attributes and Properties not represented to the eye or any way pictured forth or imagined under any visible or sensible form or representation because there is no possibility of resembling him to the life by any similitude that any man or creature can invent or frame yea all resemblances fall so farre short of his perfection that it will prove an imbasing of our conceits concerning him to attempt any such resemblance and therefore Deut. 4. 2. is expresse telling Israel that they heard a voice alone in the time that God came amongst them to deliver the Law and saw no manner of Image or likenesse and therefore they ought not to corrupt themselves by making any Image or Representation God is not a body but a Spirit and Essence a Spirit whose being is every way above all that all creatures can attain and reach to proportionably to the excellency thereof by the most deep contemplation of their minde And therefore also the Prophets do cry out against the picturing of God or worshipping him under any such form or picture saying Whereunto will ye liken me What similitude will ye make of me Isa. 48. 18. The way to cure this evil 1. Purge your hearts more and more from carnal affections Psalm 17. 15. Matth. 5. 8. 2. Beg the assistance of the holy Ghost to raise your apprehensions of the Divine Essence 2 Cor. 3. 14 15 16. The Spirit gives us light and makes it powerfull to change the heart 3. Be much in the study of the Scriptures they are the image of Christ and he is the image of God 2 Cor. 3. 18. 4. 4. 4. Be obedient to divine institutions God knows what worship is best for himself Col. 2. 23 Obedience to Gods will keeps up the repute of his Essence See 2 Sam. 6. 6. Nihil adeo offendit hominum mentes ac simplicitas Divinorum operum Tertul. 5. Consider your experiences of grace Exod. 15. 11. Mic. 7. 17. Luk. 1. 46. 6. Often view God in his stupendious works Psal. 104 observe the bounding of the Sea the hanging of the earth upon nothing Iob 26. 7. the beauty and motion of the heavens the order of all the creatures Hosea 2. latter end See Psal. 40. 18. 7. When you make use of sensitive things to increase your knowledge of God you must proceed by way of negation and argument and not by representation See Isa. 45. 15. 8. Labour to get a more perfect and clear notion of God follow on to know the Lord Hos. 6. 3. Heaven consists much in the vision of God For the parts of worship it is required that they be all prescribed unto us by the written word of God that he may not have cause to except against us saying Who required these things at your hands For seeing we do them to him we must from him know whether they will be acceptable unto him yea or no. His own will is the right rule of his own worship what is not conformable to the rule cannot be true worship Wherefore the Lord chargeth Israel that they should not adde any thing to the thing by him prescribed but keep themselves strictly to his appointment doing alone that very thing which he required without swerving to the right hand or to the left Deut. 4. 2. Iosh. 1. 7. Prov. 30. 2. If God had left us without a patern in the wayes of his worship we should have wandered in incertainties the Heathens by the light of nature knew that there was a God and that he was to be worshipped yet they did but grope after him because they wanted a rule of worship Humane inventions in matters of worship have been brought in 1. By Satan he knows 1. That they take away the glory of worship that only is excellent which it plenum sui 2. That they take away the Majesty and Authority of it God shews no such Majesty any where as in his Ordinances but in heaven Revel 4. 2. 3. That they take away the power of Ordinances Matth. 15. 6. all the power of Ordinances consists in Gods presence in them
do not admonish complain of or withdraw themselves from scandalous offenders In a word when many of these things are either in whole or in part omitted that are appointed then is this Commandment broken So that according to the number of duties commanded so must the breaches of this Commandment be numbred in case any of them be wholly or in part neglected Now I come to shew the sins of Commission that is the doing of things contrary to the duties commanded even things that are forbidden Sins of Commission are here of two sorts 1. Direct 2. Indirect The former being simply and of themselves sins the other sins by a consequent and in some respect annexed to them Direct breaches of this Commandment are in regard of performing these Ordinances and in regard of preserving and continuing them For performance here are two things forbidden The tendering of a false worship or abasing of the true False worship is a worship not enjoyned by God for the measure of Gods worship is the manifestation of his will wherefore what agrees not with that as being inconformable to the right rule of worship is worship alone in shew and appearance that is feigned and counterfeit like bad coyn not true and right Now worship is false in regard of the Object and Parts of it For the Object it is false First When the true God himself is intended to be worshipped but under some visible or sensible representation when I say God set forth by any Picture or Image is worshipped or when any such Image is used as a means to derive and convey honour unto him by This was the sinne of the Israelites in the wildernesse for they purposed in their intention to serve that God which brought them out of Aegypt but for the better helping of them in this worship and to stir up their devotion they would set up the image of an Ox a most beneficial creature whose labour did yield them through Gods blessing the best means of maintenance and living somewhat to represent God unto them and to bring his benefits unto their mindes So Aaron professeth when he saith To morrow shall be an holy day to the Lord. This was likewise the sinne of Micah the Ephraimite he made a Teraphim and had an house of Images Teraphim was the Image of a man ●e made this to worship God in and by for he saith Now I know Iehovah will blesse me it must needs be that he purposed to worship that God of whom he did expect a blessing for his worship and his mother had vowed the silver to Iehovah to make a graven and molten Image wherefore this Image vowed to Iehovah must needs be intended to serve Iehovah by This was the sinne of Ieroboam who said of the Calves These are thy gods that did bring thee out of the Land as if he had proclaimed that he intended to do service to the God of their Fathers but he thought it convenient to have him represented to them by these figures and under these Images to have service tendred unto him And therefore David chargeth the Israelites to have changed their glory meaning God who was indeed their glory into a similitude of a Calf that is to have set up an image of a Calf to represent him by and Paul saith the same of the wiser Heathen that they did worship God but not as God but changed the glory of that incorruptible God into the similitude of a corruptible man that is they went about to set out and represent to themselves the glorious maker of all things by sueh base and inglorious pictures as if there could be any proportion betwixt God and a dead Image the workmanship of mans hands which is indeed a great embasing of their apprehension of his Majesty causing them at last to think as meanly of God as of a thing that could be so set forth yea this is the sinne the Prophet so findes fault with in Gods Name saying What similitude will you set up to me and whereunto will you liken me And this is the sinne of the Popish Church which they continually commit and maintain and by which they have so corrupted themselves that they even cease to be the true Church of God and are turned into a company of spiritual adulterers for that Church with the wine of her fornications hath made almost all Nations drunken to whom hath she not conveyed the infection of this foul Idolatry God must be worshipped under the picture of an aged man the holy Ghost under the similitude of a Dove the Sonne of God under the similitude of a man hanging on the Crosse all foul Idolatries for seeing that Christ is God as well as man he is no more to have an Image set up to him then the Father or holy Ghost seeing the Divinity is not representable and the humanity without the Deity is not Christ so that it is nothing but a strong fancy makes men take any picture for Christs picture for seeing his natural physiognomy is wholly concealed in Scripture and no approved story hath acquainted us with it and seeing his Deity is wholly irrepresentible why should any picture drawn by man be called a picture of Christ rather then of the thief that hanged by him It must needs be a very dead devotion that a dead picture can provoke This is the first falshood of worship for the Object when the true God is intended as the Object but under some picture or representation for God represented by an Image is now become an Idol seeing the true God hath disavowed all such representing This is the first kinde of Idolatry Another is When a creature hath these kindes of worship performed to him or any like them which God hath appointed to himself and so becomes the object of worship so Paul to the Galatians defines Idolatry to be a serving of the creature or of those things which by nature are not Gods He useth the word serving which utterly overturns that fond distinction of worship and service mentioned by Papists to shift off the blame of this sinne to serve that which by nature is not God is flat Idolatry Now there are divers creatures which have been and are worshipped with the worship due to God or something like it and coined in imitation of it First Angels which thing began in the time of the Apostles and is by Paul writing to the Colossians condemned as a base will-worship Secondly Saints departed which grew into the Church long after by degrees and was rife since four hundred years after Christ amongst many though not allowed by the authority of the Church-Governours as after it was by building Churches dedicating Altars and dayes and offering Incense and the like to these all which are still in use and practice among the Popish Churches yea are by them maintained as very devout and profitable exercises for what more common then Invocation of Saints with
but the faithful which died before Christs ascension Revel 14. 13. Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth presently from the time of death 1. Christs death was efficacious to believers before his coming as well as since Heb. 13. 8. 2. The faithful before Christ expected heaven when this life was ended Heb. 11. 11 14 15 16. 3. The believing thief was with Christ in Paradise that day Luk. 23. 43. which Bellarmine de Beatitud Sanctorum l. 1. c. 3. interprets to be heaven this was before Christs Ascension Luke 16. 23 26. Abrahams bosome is a place of comfort for Abraham was there comforted 2. There is a great Chaos which signifies an infinite distance between Abraham and the rich glutton which utterly overthrows the dream of Limbus which signifies a border or edge and supposeth that place to be hard adjoyning to that of torment CHAP. IV. Of Everlasting Life THe last prerogative of the Church is Life Everlasting which being the summe of all desires is fitly placed in the last place Here are two things 1. Life it self 2. The continuance of life noted in the word Everlasting See Acts 13. 48. Eternal life is three wayes promised 1. As the free gift of God without any respect of any worthinesse in us Rom. 6. ult Iam. 1. 12. 2. As our inheritance purchased by Christ Ephes. 1. 14. 3. As a free reward promised and given to obedience Rom. 6. 22. In the first respect our salvation and all the degrees is wholly to be ascribed to the gracious favour of God in Christ. In the second to the mercy of God and merit of Christ. In the third to the mercies of God redoubled and multiplied upon us and not to any desert of ours B. Down of Justification lib. 2. cap. 4. Life is that whereby any thing acteth liveth and moveth It is either natural or spiritual and that last hath two degrees the life of grace and glory First That there is everlasting life is proved 1. From the love of God to his servants that is everlasting 2. Because God will be eternally glorified 3. It is the aim of the Saints 1 Cor. 1. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 9. It is 1. A transcendent or surpassing life it exceedeth natural and spiritual life 2. A satisfying life Psal. 17. 15. there shall be all good and perfect good and perfectly injoyed God shall be all in all he is a satisfaction to himself much more to us 3. A glorious life there is a glorious God a glorious Christ there are the glorified Saints and Angels 4. A most joyful life Enter thou into thy masters joy we shall delight in God and he in us 5. Eternal life eternity heightens either happinesse or misery It is called eternal life not properly but by a Catachresis it hath a beginning but no end it is not temporary defined by any certain term obnoxious to any change it shall continue for ever without end Some question Whether one may propound eternall life as an end to aim at It is lawful for Christians that most deny themselves to make eternal life the great scope they aim at nay it is needful for them so to do 1. From the glorious precepts of God obliging the soul to propound such an end 1 Tim 6. 12 19. Phil. 2. 12. 2 Pet. 1. 10. 1 Cor. 9. 24. 2. The promises of God encouraging Matthew 5. 11 12. 1 Timothy 4. 8. Matth. 19. 28. 3. We have the presidents of believers that denied themselves in this world Heb. 11. 24 25 26. v. 35 36. Iude v. 21. 4. Eternal life was Gods end Heb. 2. 10. 1 Pet. 3. 8. It was the end of Christs incarnation suffering ascention intercession Iohn 10. 10. 17. 24. we should aim at Gods end 5. It was Gods design from all eternity to bring men to eternal life 1 Cor. 2. 7. 6. The great condition on which God promiseth eternal life is that we might seek and endeavour after it Rom. 2. 7. 7. We are much concerned in it What proportion is there between time and eternity How to know whether we make eternal life the end of this life 1. Then we will have high thoughts of eternity the comforts that are eternal are worth regarding and the miseries that are eternal should chiefly be avoided 2. We will then seriously enquire after the way to heaven Ier. 50. 5. Ps. 16. ult David often begs of God to teach him his waies 3. We will then make it our main work to come to heaven Phil. 3. 11 13 14. one thing is necessary 4. We will be content with no reward on this side eternal life Psal. 17. lat end 41. 4. 5. We will rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 2 Tim. 4. 8. Titus 2. 13. Iude v. 21. 6. It will be our aim then to overcome the fear of death 7. We will often review our evidences for heaven Heb. 2. 11. and desire God to search and try us Psal. 139. ult It is a Question An sancti fruantur beatitudine ante ultimum judicium It was a current opinion among most of the Fathers if not all That the souls of men after their death do not go immediately to heaven but are in a receptacle or mansion-place till the day of Judgement and some of late have followed it especially the Anabaptists The souls immediately departed have not the compleat fulnesse of that happinesse which they shall have yet they are not excluded from the enjoying of God Luk. 23. 43. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Phil. 1. 23. Some say there is a difference of those that are raised again as Lazarus and some others for it is likely say they that their souls went not into heaven but were detained by God who would unite them again to shew forth his glory The accidental joy of the Saints say the Schoolmen shall be greater both extensively because it shall be in soul and body and intensively because the soul shall rejoyce to see the body glorified 2. The essential glory shall increase extensively because it shall redound unto the body The souls of the godly immediately after their departure hence from the body are said to be in rest Heb. 4. 11. in consolation Luke 16. 25. in security Iohn 11. 15 18. therefore they presently go to heaven to God and Christ. Consider the names given to the state of glory it is called Life These shall enter into life Rest finde rest go to rest our home our Fathers house a purchased and glorious inheritance A Kingdom the Kingdom of heaven Ioy our Masters joy everlasting joy Glory weight of glory eternal weight of glory The City of our God The Scripture cals it Paradise a place of all delight and pleasure alluding to that Paradise planted by Gods own hand to make it a delight for the innocent state of man and Abrahams bosom wherein the Saints receive refreshing which is a borrowed speech taken from Fathers carrying and cherishing their little
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.
315 Distinguished l. 4. p. 316 Four things in sin ibid. A raigning sin what and how known l. 4. p. 317 The evil of sin l. 4 318. to 320 The degrees of sin l. 4. 321 322 Sins of omission worse then sins of commission in some respects l. 4. p. 323 What sins make us like the devil ● 3. p. 287 Sins against the Gospel greater then against the Law l. 4. p. 323 324 All sins are mortal l. 4. p. 324 to 327 God not the cause of sin l. 4. p. 326. to 329 How we communicate with other mens sins l. 4 p. 328 329 The punishments of sin l. 4. p. 329. to 331 National sins what l. 4. p. 331 Signs of a Christian in regard of sinne l. 4. p. ● 332 He may have great corruptions ibid. 333 Two Questions about sin resolved l. 4. p. 335 336 The Saints are carefull to preserve themselves from sin and especially their own iniquities l. 4. p. 336. to 339 The sinfulnesse of ●●n should chiefly cause us to forbear it l. 4 p. 338 We must not only avoid but abhorre sin l. 4. p 338 339 We must take heed of little sins and secret sins l. 4. p. 339 How God punisheth the sins of parents in their children l. 9. p. 769 Sitting What Christs Sitting at the right hand of his Father means l. 5. p. 441 442 Of Sitting at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 735 Socinians Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason l. 1. p. 9 Confuted l. 4. p. 330 Sorrow Christs Sorrow godly l. 5. p. 428 429 Sorrow in us what and its sanctification l. 7. p. 565 566 Spectrum unde l. 3. p. 285. m Spirit Spirit what l. 2. p. 136 138 God is a Spirit ibid. 137 Angels are Spirits l. 3. p. 270 Starres how distinguished l. 3. p. 260 Steal Steal What it is l. 9. p. 827 It is forbidden ibid. Stork Stork why so called l. 3 p. 263 Her love to her young ones and theirs likewise to her l. 3. p. 263 265 Subjects Subjects their duty l. 9. p. 832 833 Sufferings Christs great Sufferings l. 5. p. 425. to 438 S●n the making of it a great work l. 3. p. 258 259 Superstition Superstitian whence and what a great sin l. 9. p. 784 Supper The divers names of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 878 879 How described l. 8. p. 879 The ends of it l. 8. p. 688 It is to be taken in both kinds l. 8. p. 687 688 Scandalous persons are to be kept from it l. 8. p. 682 Yet one may receive with the wicked l. 8. p. 683 684 Whether Iudas received the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l 8. p. 684 685 At what time the Lords Supper was instituted and its elements l. 8. p. 685 686 The elements may not be changed l. 8. p. 689 690 The breaking of the bread in the Supper not an indifferent Ceremony l. 8. p. 690 69● It is not material whether the bread be leavened or unleavened l. 8. p. 691 692 Whether it be necessary to mingle water with the eucharistical wine l 8. p. 692 693 694 The consecration of the elements l. 8. 694 695 The elements must not be adored l. 8. p. 696 697 The Sacrament is not to be carried up and down l. 8. p. 700 The necessity of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 705 And why we must receive it l. 8. p. 706 Of preparation for it l. 8. p. 706. to 721 There must be due carriage at it l. 8. p. 731 732 And after l. 8. p. 722 How oft it ought to be received and the gesture at it l. 8. p. 732. to 736 Surety Surety what l. 5. p. 451 452 Christ is our Surety ibid. Sybils were counterfeit pieces l. 1. p. 15 Synods Synods what they are and their kindes l. 6. p. 469 470 What required to them who are to be called to them and whether General Councels may er●e l. 6. p. 470 471 Whether Councels or Synods be above the Pope l. 6. p. 472 Syriack Syriack it was spoken in our Saviours time l. 1. p. 42 The Syriack translation of the New Testament l. 1. p. 62 63 T Tale-hearing TAle-hearing Hearkning to Tale-hearers is ●●in l. 4. p. 381 382 Targum why so called l. 1. p. 60 Tempter Tempter the devil so called and why l. 3. p. 282 His wayes of Tempting ibid. How to know his Temptations l. 3. p. 284 285 Christ was Tempted by him l. 5. p. 426 427 How the devil and world Tempt and how God preserves his people l. 8. p. 650 651 Theology what it is and its several kinds l. 1. p. 2 Thessalonica a chief City in Macedonia l. 1. p. 48 Thessalonians who do best on both ib. Testament The Scripture is distinguished into the Books of the Old and New Testament l. 1 p. 28 29 Why the Scripture is called a Testament l. 1. p. 29 The Books of the Old Testament for the most part were written in Hebrew l. 1. p. 29 And how divided ibid. Of the New in Greek l. 1. p. 41 And why ibid How divided l. 1. p. 40 to 44 Thanksgiving See Feasting Thought A Christian is to make conscience of his Thoughts l. 9. p. 850 The cure of evil Thoughts l. 9. p. 8●0 Thunder what it is and its use l. 3. p. 243 244 Timothy who do best on both Books l. 1. p. 48 Titles Titles of Books not used heretofore l. 1. p. 30 31 Whence the Hebrews take the Titles of their Books l. 1. p. 31 Titus who best expounds him l. 1. p. 48 Torpedo hath a benumming quality l. 3. p. 262 Tostatus commended l. 1. p. 117 Traditions Traditions what they signifie l. 1. p. 92 93 Reasons against the Popish Traditions l. 1. p. 94. to 99 The several kinds of them l. 1. p. 95 96 Translate The Scriptures ought to be Translated into vulgar Tongues l. 1. p. 21 22 The several Translations of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 65 Transubstantiation refuted l. 8. p. 697 to 700 Trees Trees their nature and use l. 3. p. 256 to 259 The Tree of Life and Knowledge of good and evil in Paradise why so called l. 3. p. 294 Whether the Tree of Life was a Sacrament ib. Trinity Trinity the word hath sufficient ground in Scripture l. 2. p. 204 The mystery of the Trinity cannot be known by the light of nature l. 2. p. 204 Yet it is necessary to be known by them that will be saved l. 2. p. 205 A difference between Trinity and Triplicity ibid. The Doctrine of the Trinity explained and applied p. 204. to 216 True The word of God is True and certain l. 1. p. 82 God is True l. 2. p. 183 184 Truth what it is and the several kinds of it l. 2. p. 183 V VAin glory l. 4. p. 382 Vatablus commended l. 1. p. 116 Versions The several Versions of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 64 What authority they have l.
secundarium f Rivet and Dr Preston De sensu horum verborum vide Cameronis myrothecium Collocationem Rainoldi cum Harto c. 8. p. 557. g An allusion saith Bedel to the Bases and pillars that h●ld up the veils or curtains in the Tabernacle That distinction of Authoritative in se but not quoad nos is absurd because the Authority the Scripture hath is for and because of us h Dr White of the Church The Spirit witnesseth the Scripture co-witnesseth and the Church sub-witnesseth i Ut olim Caligula occlusis omnibus horr●is publicam populo inediam famem ita illi obturatis omnibus fo●tibus verbi Dei sitim populo miserabilem induxerant Illi hominibus famem ut ait Amos Propheta sitimque attulerunt non famem panis non si●im aquae sed audiendi verbi Dei Juel in Apol. Eccl. Ang Scio maximam partem Galiorum qui appeliantur Catholici ita abstinere à Bibliorum lectione u● multos viderim audiv●rim qui Deo gratias agerent quod libros illos nunquam contigissent se id diligemer in posterum curaturos ne id fa●●rent etiam juram●nto adhibito protestarentur non al●a ratione permoti quàm Romana prohibitione periculi metu quod eis à suis concionatoribus confessoribus incutiebatur Rivet Apologet. pro vera pace Eccles. pag. 249. k Scripturae obscuriores sunt quam ut possint ● Laicis intelligi Bellarm. Rhemist Praefat. in No● Test. Annot. in Act. 8. 31. in 1 Cor. 14 l Populus non solum non caper●t fructum ex Scripturis sed etiam caperet detrimentum ac●●peret enim facillimè occasionem errandi Bellarm. de verbo Dei l. 2. c. 15. m Si populus rudis audiret lingua sua vulgari legi ex Canticis Canticorum Osculetur me osculo oris sui Et Laeva ejus sub capite m●o dextera illius amplexabitur me Et illud Oseae Vade fac tibi silios fornicationum N●●non adulterium Davidis incestum Thamar mendacia Judith qu●madmodum Joseph fratres suos inebriavit Sara Lea Rachel dederunt ancillas v●ris suis in concubinas multa alia ●orum quae in Scripturis magna cum laude comm●morantur vel provocaretur ad hujusmodi imitanda vel comemneret sanctos Patriarchas ut olim Mani●haei vel putarent mendacia esse in Scripturis Bellarm. de verbo Dei lib. 2. cap. 15. Audivi ab homin● fide digno ●um in Angli● à Ministro Calvinista in templo legeretur lingua vulgari capitulum 25 Ecclesiastici ubi multa dicuntur de malitia mulierum surrexisse foeminam quandam atque dixisse Istudne est verbum Dei immo potius verbum Diaboli ●st Bellarm. ibid. Hujus historiae fides omnis penes sit bonum illum virum à quo Bellarminus eam acc●pit Whitakerus The Scriptures were written to give knowledge to the simple and wisdom to the unlearned Psal. 19. 7. Prov. 1. 4. That is a special promise Isa. 35. 8. for this purpose Origen being but seventeen years old had a fervent desi●e to be mar●y●ed for Christ and writes thus to his father Leonides who suffered in the fifth Persecution Cave tib● ne quid propt●r nos aliud quam Martyrii constanter faciendi propositum cogites His father brought him up from his youth most studiously in all good literature but especially in the reading and exercise of holy Scripture wherein he had such inward and mystical speculation that many times he would move questions to his father of the meaning of this or that place in the Scripture Insomuch that his father divers times would uncover his brest being asleep and kisse it giving thanks to God which had made him such a happy father of so happy a childe Fox●s Acts and Monum vol. 1. pag. 70. Davenant determinat 39. n Vorstius in his answer to Bellarmine joyns these two together the promiscuous reading of the Scripture and the turning of it in linguas vernaculas o Daven deter Quest. 39. in c. 3. Epist. ad Colos. v. 16. Ingratas esse Ecclesiae Romanae editiones vernaculas inde apparet quod in illis locis ubi Pontisicis maxime obtinent placita ut in Hispania non procurant Pontisicii homines tales editiones ab aliis procuratas ferro flammis prosequuntur Ames Bellarm. enerv c. 3. See Col. 4. 16. 1 Thes● 5. 27. 2 Joh. 13. 14. Scripturae scriptae sunt ut inde p●tamus illuminationem mentis quoad credenda directionem vitae quoad agenda p Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus tractari deb●t q Whitaker contr 1. quaest 2. c. 14. makes mention of very ancient English Translations and Turretine of old French Translations Vide Estium ad 2 Tim. 3. 15. r The word of God was written by the Prophets and Apostles Linguis vernaculis viz. to the Hebrews in Hebrew to the Greeks in Greek s Vide Cajetanum in 1 Cor. 14. t Vernaculum teste V●lla ●leg lib. 1. cap. 5. dicitur quod est domi nostrae vel in nostra patria natum ut lingua vernacula quae vulgo dicitur lingua materna dictum à verna qui est servus ex ancilla domi nostrae natus Ebr●is ergo lingua Ebraea fuit vernacula Graecis Graeca Lati●is Latin● Hoc tempore nulli sunt populi quibus vel Hebraea vel Graeca pura vel Latina lingua sunt vernacula Rive● Isag. ad Sac. Script u Prov. 8. 9. By a man of understanding ●● meaneth every one that is ●odly as by the ●●ol the wicked x Consectary 〈◊〉 omnes 〈◊〉 illud quod Scriptum est i Scrutamine ●●ripturas ●ri●●●●● y See Mr Torsh●ls Womans Glory Cha. 11. about womens reading of the Scripture The Churches of Africk had this custom as Augustin sheweth first they read a Lesson out of the Prophets then out of the Epistles and Gospel with a Psalm between Act. 17. 11. Lectio Mosis Sabbathina perantiqua est Tempore Christi Apostolorum usitatam fuisse liquet Act. 15. 21 Buxtorf * A man may be converted by reading as Luther saies he was and Iohn Huss by reading of Wickliffs books There is a blessing that may be looked for by reading Rev. 1. 3. But this is very rare Mr Fenner on Rev. 3. 1. The Scripture doth expressely mention Baruch to have read the word in a Church-assembly without adjoyning any interpretation to it Ier. 36. 6 7. The very reading of the Word it self was an Ordinance in the Church of Israel though no exposition followed Deut. 31. 11 12. 13. Deut. 27. 14. to 26. Mr Cotton Singing of Psalms a Gospel-Ordinance Chap. 11. Christus Scripturas scrutari jubet vel potius Iudaeis hoc testimonii perhibet quod illas scrutentur Joh. 5. 39. Zepperus z Scripturam sacram à legendo Cara●oc●●t ●oc●●t Mic●a quo● in ea legenda cognoscenda operae non parum ac temporis pon●ndum
of Scri●ture commends the knowledge of it was careful to fulfill the Scripture did interpret it and gave ability to understand it * Deut. 4. 2. and 12. ult p Locus est egregius coque nostri omnes utuntur qui contra Papisticas Traditiones aliquid scribunt Whitakerus Longè illustrissimus lacus est Chamierus q Nobis adversus Papistas non de quibusvis traditionibus controversia est sed duntaxat de traditionibus dogmatum quibus continentur fides mores hoc est de ipsa Doctrina Chamierus lib. 9. de Canone cap. 1. r Vir ob ingenium laboremve ob Episcopatus dignitatem inter Papistas non postremi nominis Chamierus Vide Maldonat ad Joan. 16. 12. Estium ad Rom. 16. 17. Received from Christ himself teaching the Apostles Illud erat explicandum quo discrimine istae Traditiones tam multiplices graduque habendae sunt Nullum discrimen faciunt forsan ergò volunt Ecclesiasticas etiam Traditiones parem cum Divinis Scripturis Authoritatem habere Script cap. 3. Quaest. 6. Traditionum janua perniciosa est hac semel aperta nihil est quod non inde erumpat in ecclesiam Chamier 1 Chro. 1. 18. Luk. 3. 36. Eorum mihi videtur sententia samor qui negant vel è Lxx vel à Luca nomen Cainani suisse insertum existimantes potius al●unde irrepsisse post Evangelium à Lucâ conscriptum eujus suae conjecturae rationes habent non leves ut videre est apud Cornelium à Lapide in cap. 11. Genes Rivet Isag. ad Scr. pt Sac. cap. 10. Vide plura ibid. Lib. 4. de verbo Dei cap. 4. Vix ullum videas de Traditionibus agentem qui non hic magno fastu immoretur Chamie●us Distinguenda sunt tempora personae Non erant necessariae Scripturae ante legem ergo ne quidem post legem non erant necessariae Apostolis ergo ne nobis quidem negatur consequenti● Ratio est quia aliter Israelitas doceri voluit post legem Deus aliter ante legem Aliter Christus Evangelium voluit Apostolis revelari aliter nobis praedicari Chamierus John 2. 22. Jansenius affirmat haec multa non suisse diversa ab illis quae hactenus docuerat sed illustriorem illorum explicationem ●uc adducit illud appositè quod habetur 1 Cor. 3. Christus testatur se discipulis suis omnia tradidisse Joan. 15. 15. nihil ergo tac● it Hic locus omnium celeberrimus est Papistisque nostris inter primos in deliciis Chamierus Vide Grotium in loc 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 Luk. 16. 29 31 Act. 17. 3. What the tradition was he preached is expressed 2 Thess. 3. 6. 1 Cor. 2. 2. D. Fulk against Martin in his Preface s Papistae maximi qui unquam fuerint Traditionarii Chamier Syrus interpres habet praecepta sive mandata Cartw. Annota on the Rhem. Test. Hic Achilles est Papistarum magno fastu ostentatus ab omnibus singulis qui versantur in hac controversia Chamier de Canone l. 9. c. 8. t Cicumcifio faeminarum continetur sub illa masculorum Signum in solis masculis crat pro utrisque tamen saci●bat si finem usum ejus spectes Mariae perpetua virginitas non est fidei articulus ideò libenter amplectimur eam sententiam quae jam ab initio ●mer Christia●os videtur invaluisse ut virgo fuerit hoc est pura à coitu viri non tantùm in toto Christi generationis mysterio quod sanè ut credamus necesse est sed etiam toto deinceps vitae tempore Chamierus de canone l. 9. c. 9. u Quam pertinaci●èr ludebat Helvidius in primogenito Mariae fratribus Christi ut negaret perpetuam virginitatem Chamierus Augustinus dicit nihil ad fidem necessarium obscurè in Scripturis doceri quin idem apertioribus locis aliis explicetur Non est traditum Evangelium obscurum difficile ad intelligendum tanquam paucissimis profuturum sed facile dilucidum apertum exp●situm omnibus ut nemo esset quin petere illinc posset tanquam de fonte haurire quae salnti suae expedirent Lod. Viv. de ver Fid. Christ. l 2. c. 9. vide plura ibid. y Verbum Dei collatam cum liue analogia multiplex Lucis est dispelier● tenebras omnia manifestare ●l●is lac●re nō sibi l●renihil purius illustrius gra●ius utilius faecundius caelest is ejus cr●go odio habetur sape à malis est bonum Commune plurium penetrat sordes sine inquinamento Sphanhemius Dub. Evangel parte tertia Dub. 94. Scriptura seclaram prositetur tum formaliter tum effectivè ●umi●osam illuminantem Id. ibid Isa. 59. 21. Jer. 32. 40. and 31. 31. z Difficultas dut à rerum ipsarum natura est qu● percipiuntur aut ab ipfis percipientibus aut ab its quae intercurrant mediis Res quae percipiantur natura sua intellectu diffic●les sunt aut per obscu● it atem ut res futurae aut per majestatem ipsarum ut mysterium S. Trinitatis Sic quid Sole clarius quid difficilius aspectu nam hebescit ac●es oculorum nostrorum vi radiorum illius A percipientibus difficultatem esse quis sanus neget nam res quae sunt Spiritus homo naturalis non potest capere A mediis quae Deus ipse ecclesiae obtulit id est à Scriptura negamus difficultatem esse Junius The fundamentals in Scripture are plain to the Elect who are all taught of God so much as is necessary for their salvation Iohn 6. 45. the least as well as the greatest I believe that toward the evening of the world there shall be more light and knowledge shal be encreased Dan. 12. 4 and many things in scripture better understood when the Jews shal be brought home and the spirit of grace and illumination more abundantly poured forth Mr. Gillesp. miscel c. 10. See Rev. 22. 10. In the first times of the Church there were no commentaries upon the Scriptures the fathers had them without and yet then the Scriptures were understood Origen who lived 200 years after Christ was the first that wrote any Commentary upon Scripture The pure Text of Scripture was ever read to the people and never any Commentaries and yet was understood by them Apoc. 1. 3. * Solet obscuritas lectores absterrer● quo modo ajunt olim quendam dixisse Authorem obscurum à se removentem Tu non vis intelligi neque ego te intellige●e a Especially in Genesis Iob Canticles Ezek. Daniel and the Revelation In regard of the manner of writing there are many abstruse phrases in scriptures as divers Hebraisms which perhaps were familiar to the Jews but are obscure to us All the skill of all the men in the world from the beginning to the end thereof wil not be able to finde out all truths contained in scripture either directly or by
consequence the full opening of the Book of Scripture and of providence will be a great part of the Saints work and happiness in Heaven Dr Drake in his Preface to his Chronol Mr Bolton hath almost the same in his four last things There are many things very difficult and hard to be understood in the Prophecie of Ezekiel and especially in those Chapters which are written of the Temple as Hierome observeth on Chap. 45. and the Jews themselves confess that there are many things here expressed which they conceive not but say That Eliah when he comes shall expound them as R. Kimki notes on Ezek. 40 13. and 42. 5. and 45. 18. Aben Ezra thus writes Urim Thummim quid suerunt ignoramus b The 20 Chapter especially Camierus de Canone l. 15. c. 4. Plato Aristotle Euclind have their nodos and the Scriptures have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 3. 16. in them are dark sayings Psal. 78. 2. Ridles Ezek. 17. 2. Parables Mat. 13. 35. Mysteries Mat. 4. 13. Mr. Greenhil That is a very difficult place 1 Cor. 3. 15. See Laurentius Augustin saith This is one of the places of which Peter speaketh 2 Pet. 3. 16. and that Heb 6. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 19. the last Luther and Beza say is one of the obscurest places in the New Testament Vide Tarnovium in exercitat Bib. Cameronis Myroth Evan. * See Laurentius and D. Featly on the place in the last large Annotations on the Bible Non desunt primarii apud Judaeos Scriptures qui dicant insaniae ●initimum esse sperare cognitionem certam in animalibus immundis in qua tamen observationem ordicus haeret Judaeorum superstitio Bibliander de optimo genere Grammaticorum Hebraeorum Locus sanè obscurus siquis alius explicatu difficilis qui multos torquet vicissim ab illis torquetur Augustinus de Doctrina Christ. lib. 2. cap. 6. Ita Scripturas dicit à Deo temperatas ut locis apertioribus sami occurreretur obscurioribus fastidia detergerentur Idem Augustinus ait Nos apertis Scripturae locis pasci obscuris exerceri Apoc. 5. 1. 4 65 Mr Burroughs on Isa. 66. 10. Bellarm. l. 3. de verbo Dei c. 1. Psal. 19. 9. and 119. 115. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 〈…〉 c Genebrardus testatur aliquos de tota Scriptura locum interpretari nec loquitur de nostris sed aut suis aut autiquis Hieronymus quidem à parte est ejus opinionis Lyranus alii multi Whitak Mr Durant Dr Halls Peace-maker sect 15. He saith not in which Epistles but in which points and heads of Doctrine i. those things which are obscurely set down in Saint Pauls Epistles may be and are elsewhere in holy Scripture more perspicuously delivered Act. ● 31. * There was a time when the Scriptures were read without Cōmentaries and there was a time when they were hardly understood with Commentaries D. Ames Cartwrights Letter to Master Hildersham for the study of Divinity a The interpretation of the Scripture is necessary in the Church of God 1. Because it i● commanded by Christ Iohn 5. 39. 2 Cor. 4. 1 39. 2. It is commended to the faithful by the holy Ghost 1 Thess. 5. 19 20. 3. It conduceth much to the edification of the Church 1 Cor. 14. 3. 4. It was used by Christ and his Apostles Luk. 4. 16. and 24. 26. Mark 4. 34. b Glassiu● Phil. Sac. lib. 2. part 1. Tract 1. c Literalis sensus est is quem Spiritùs Sanctus autor Scriptura intendit Chamier Rainold de lib. Apoc. Est ille literalis sensus qui proximè per ipsa verba sive propria sive figurata sunt significatur vel ut Glassius quem intendit proximè Spiritus Sanctus Amama d Sensus secundarius diversus à literali similis tamen Chamier Not the Letter but the right sense and meaning of the Scripture is Gods word Ioh. 19. Litera gesta docet Quid credas Allegoria Moralis quid agas Quotendas Anagogia e In Manuali Controvers cap. 1. de Script Quaest. 3. f Origenes sic Paradisum terrestrem allegorizat ut historiae auserat veritatem dum pro arboribus Angelos pro fluminibus virtutes Caelestes intelligit tunicas pelliceas Adae Evae corpora humana interpretatur Bellarm. ex Hieronymo Concedit Bellarminus ex solo literali sensu peti posse argumenta efficacia To prove any matter of faith or manners no sense must be taken but the literal sense Aquinas g Chamier Tom. 1. de Scripturae sensu lib. 15. cap. 3. h Confundunt Pontisicij sensum Scripturae cum applicatione sensus accommodatione ejus ad usus Apostolicos 2 Tim. 3. 16. dum vel cum literali mystico sensus alios introducunt vel mysticum subdividunt in Allegoricum Tropologicum A●●gogicum totidem diversos sensus in Scriptura dari contendunt confundendo heterogenea sensum applicationem sensus Spanliem Dub. Evangel par 3. Dub 66. Theologia Symbolica non est argumentativa This is a good reasoning the Oxes mouth must not be muzled ergò The Minister must be maintained because it is part of the sense The Fathers were too much addicted to Allegories Ierom sometimes went out of the way through a liking of Allegories as a great reader and follower of Origen who handled the Scriptures too licentiously Rainolds against Hart. Sess. 4. i Iudicium est triplex 1. Directionis quale habet Minister 2. Iurisdictionis quale habet Ecclesia 3. Discretionis quale habet privatus ut Act. 17. 10. Dr Prid. There is Iudex Supremus and Iudex Ministerialis visibilis but not Supremus and Iudicium practicae discretionis which is left to every one B. Downam Primo non sequitur à lege ad Evangellum Secundò non sequitur à Mose ad Episcopum Romanum qui hic non eundem locum tenet inter Christianos quem Moses inter Iudaeos Chamier k Hieronymus in locum ait Etsi plures verbum Dei do●●ant unus tamen est illius Doctrinae Author nempe Deus ubi Manichaeos refellit qui unum statuerunt Authorem Veter● Testamenti alterum verò Novi Alii Spiritum volunt esse hunc unum Pastorem ut Vatablus Alii Christum ut Mercerus Papam nulli praeterquam insulsi Papistae Whitakerus Interpretes omnes de Deo exposuerunt cum veteres tum recentes etiam Papistae Chamierus Vide Geier Comm. in Coh in loc l Cap. significasti de Elecl Review of the Councel of Trent l. c. 8. p. 45. m Deum atque homines testamur cum plurima nobis in Papismo displiceant tum hoc omnino intolerandum videri quod Scriptur as quili●et apud eas doctorculus it a sibi in manum traditas arbitretur ut eas sursum deorsum versare queat quid libet inde confecturus suo arbitrio suo inquam arbitrio suo marte quidlibet excogitans commentans Ita enim evenit ut qui
in Christo duae substantiae sed una persona In Trinitate alius atque alius non aliud atque aliud in salv●tore aliud atque aliud non alius atque alius Vincent contra Haeres cap. 19. * Mat. 28. 19. John 5. 26 27. The Father is the fountain and original of all the Deity and the cause of the Sonne which the very word Father signifieth therefore he is said to be unbegotten and hence the name God is often peculiarly and by an excellency given to the Father in Scripture He is usually called Fons Divinitatis Operationis Modum istum subsistendi diversum haud alio nomine quam personarū expressit hactenus in hoc ●rticulo consentiens Catholica Ecclesia Dr Prid. Lect. 17. de S. Trinitate Qui personam vocant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est modum subsistendi non existendi illi non intelligunt modum nudum sed substantialem ac entitativum ut Scholastici loquuntur Bisterfeldius contra Crellium lib. 1. Sect. 2. cap. 2. Iudaei nomen personae in Deo plurimum detestantur audire trium namque Personarum audito nomine trium mox concutiuntur errorc Deorum pariter horrore Raym. Pug. advers Iud. par 3. Distinct. 1. cap. 1. Psal. 2. 17. proves that the Father begets and the Son is begotten of the Father Gal. 4 6. See Joh. 15. 26. 14. 26. Quomodo autem Deus Pater genuerit Filium no●o discutias nec curiosius ingeras in profundo arcam ne forte dum i● accessae lucis fulgorem pertinacius perscruteris exiguum ipsum qui mortalibus divino munere concessus est perd●s aspectum Ruffinus de Symbolo Vide plura ibid. Haec est differentia inter essentiam divinam personam divinam Essentia divina est communis pluribus divinitatis Personis Persona autem una alteri non est communicabilis Unde Pater non est Filius nec Filius Pater 2. Essentia divina est una Person● plures Wendelinus * Persona est individuum subsistens vivum intelligens incommunicabile non sustentatum ab alio nec pars alterius Persona igitur non est essentia qua pluribus est communicabilis Personae v●x non his significat officium aut relationem ut Persona principis vel vultum visibilem speciem gestum vel formam alterius representantem ut Personae in drammate sed modum quo Essentia Divina subsistit There are three distinct rational Authors of action three Hees John 8. 16 18. Qui nescis Trinitatem ita ad Iordanem Quando Antitrinitarii adversus sanctissimum illud mysterium inferunt id falsum esse quia v. g. Tria non sunt unum ibi tum pronunciat ratio ex se ipsa de hac connexione dicit eam falsam esse Nam novit lumen rationis id axioma intelligendum esse de iis ad quae per se ratio exsurgere potest Vedel Rational theol lib. 3. c. 6. See Joh. 15. 26. The Hereticks that are Antitrinitarians See Joh. 8. 58. Psal. 2 12. * Vide Placei Disput de argumentis Quibus efficitur Christū prius ●uisse quam in utero beatae Virginis secundum carnē conciperetur Paulus Samosatanus more fitly Semisathanas held Christ was but a meer man Matth. 6. 6. See Act. 4. 24 25 26 27. Joh. 8. 54. Those that deny the Godhead of Christ must deny 1. The satisfaction of Christ 2. The purchase of Christ he that is but a man cannot merit 3. That Christ shall judge the world No creature can redeem us from hell nor satisfie infinite justice God purchased his Church with his bloud Acts 20. 28. Joh. 1. 1 2. Dignum est haereticos non jam Apostolicis viris sed daemonum clamore convinci Clamāt enim saepè clamant Luc. 8. Quid mihi tibi est Jesu Fili Dei altissimi Invitis veritas elicuit confessionem naturae potestatem testatur dolor obediendi virtute vincuntur cum possessa diu corp●ra deserunt honorem reddunt dum naturam confitentur Dei se inter haec filium Christus opere testatur nomine H●●arius de Trin. lib. 6. Joh. 20. 28. Gen. 18. 13 14 Iehovah is Christ whom Abraham cals the Judge of heaven and earth 1 Cor. 8. 6. By the Apostle Christ is expresly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He takes the God-head as his own right Phil 2. 7. Divine works No man can of himself and by his own power do divine works unlesse he be truly God Christ doth works by his own power and the same with his Father Iohn 10. 37 38. He governs his Church Ephes. 4. 11. 1 Pet. 3. 19. Matth. 8. 2. compared with 2 King 7. 9. Christ cured those that were born blinde John 10. 28. See Rev. 2. 23 * Mirum est adversarios hunc locum ubi agitur de Patre aeterno ad filium referre quem constat secundum eos ipsos Patrem non esse So the Polonian Catechism But the Text it self shews this place speaks of Christ who is a Father not in respect of his Person but in relation to his Church He is the author of their spiritual life and being 2. In that he is the Author of everlasting life to his Iohn 6. 39 40 47 51. He is stiled the Everlasting Father in Hebrew The Father of Eternity The Septuagint hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pater futuri saeculi Vide Raymundi Pugionem Fidei adversus Iudaeos part 3. Dist. 1. cap. 9. John 17. 5. Psal. 45. 11. Joh. 5. 22. Filius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicitur quia habet essentiam divinam quae est à seipsa non verò quia eam habet à seipso habet enim à Patre Joh. 5. Zanch. Vide Voet. Theses * Iuvenls aste quamvis in Iesu majus homine uthil agnosceret sperabat tam●●● eo monstrante se perventurum ad possessionem ejus boni quo vita aeterna paratur quasi ad eam rem monstratore tantum eg●r●● caetera per se confecturus At Iesus occurrens huic errori simulque modestiae nobis praebens exemplum ait non esse multos boni fontes sed unicum Deum scilicet hoc ips● indicans non satis esse bonum nobis monstrari nisi Deus mentem illustrans vir●s nobis suggerat Grotius in loc See Rom. 16. 27. 1 Cor. 8. 6 Ephes. 4. 6. Debitus Patri à Filio honor redditur cùm dicit te solum Deum non tamen se Filius à Dei veritato secornit cum adjungit Et quem mi●isti Iesum Christum Non habet intervallum confessio credentium quia in utroque spes vitae est Hilarius lib. 3. de Trinitate The words are to be read as we render them That they may know thee to be the only true God not That they may know thee only to be the true God according to the first reading the predicate is common to the Father and the
cum adjectione Meshiach Jehovah unctus Domini Dan. 2. 2. cui Luc. 2. 26. respondet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est que haec appellatio in N. T. libris tritissima Aaron and his sons were anointed and the high-Priests in succession ever after but the inferiour Priests only at the first time The high-Priest was anointed alwayes with sacred oyl the confection of which the Lord himself appointed in the Law One Prophet may seem to have been anointed but there seems not to be any certain proof of anointing any Prophet Whether the Kings had the holy oyl poured upon them or no it is doubtful yet it seems rather it was by 1 Kings 1. 39. This outward Ceremony or Type expressed two things 1. That God did of his good pleasure assign and depute that person to that Office 2. That God would certainly assist him with gifts fit for his place if he were careful to seek the same at Gods hands Unctio antiquitus in V. T. oleo fiebat quod quia secundum naturalem efficientiam tum fragrantia reddebat corpora tum agilia accomodum erat duabus rebus naturalibus significandi quarum una est personae ad munus aliquod divinum obeundum sanctificatio consecratio alterum adaptatio seu donorum ad illud necessariorum collatio Armin. Thes. Pub. decim● quarta Christ as man first received Gratiam habitualem which did perfect his humane nature in it self These personal excellencies in Christ were Dona virtutes qualifying gifts for his office and sanctifying graces 2. Gratiam capitis as the Churches head John 1. 14. Not as if that of the Papists were true it is therefore perpetual because continued by the Priest still who they say offers up the body of Christ in the Masse as a Sacrifice to God but 1. Because by his once offering he did fully accomplish that which was needful for his Church so that he needs not to be offered again 2. Because the fruit is eternal thy pardon shall be for ever thy grace for ever Christs priestly actions were transient but the benefit endureth for ever 3. He continually exerciseth his intercession 4. He admitteth of no successour and this is one main reason why the Apostle maketh him a Priest for ever because there is no Successour as there was in Aarons order therefore to hold Priests Sacrifices and Altars is to make void the office of Christ and to deny his Priesthood The great relief the Jews had against sin committed was in the priestly Office The high-Priests great work was to make Atonement for the sins of the people for reconciliation Levit 16. 14 21. Heb. 2. 18. when Christ died upon the crosse he then offered up himself a Sacrifice and made atonement to God the Father all our sins were laid upon him But Christ did all in a more transcendent and eminent way then any high-Priest did before the high-Priest though he offered up a Sacrifice to God yet himself was not made a Sacrifice The parts of Christs priestly function are two Satisfaction and Intercession the former whereof giveth contentment to Gods justice the later soliciteth his mercy for the application of this benefit to the children of God in particular B. Usher of Christs Incarnation Some say there were three things in the priestly Office 1. Ostensio a representation of ones person Exod. 28. 12 29. The high-Priest did bear the names of the children of Israel on his shoulders to shew that Christ represents you to his Father every day and on his heart to shew Christs tender affection to you Heb. 9. 24. 1 Ioh. 2. 21. 2. Oblatio an offering of a Sacrifice the Priests offered Sacrifices Christ in a way of obedience voluntarily laid down his body and soul which was equivalent to all the persons in the world Heb. 9. 14. 3. Intercessio Heb. 7. 29. the Priests burned Incense Those things which God hath promised and Christ purchased shall be bestowed by the Intercession of Christ. When the Priest went into the holy place he sprinkled it with bloud Christs Intercession is his most gracious will fervently and unmovably desiring that all his members for the perpetual vertue of his Sacrifice may be accepted of the Father Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. Vide Aquin. part 3. Quaest. 22. Art 1 2 3 4 5 6. Alwayes when the Scripture speaks of the redemption of Christ it cals him God Acts 20. 28. because therein the efficacy of his redemption lay but when that speaks of Christs intercession it cals him Sonne Heb. 4. 14. 7. ult because Christs interest and favour with God was the great ground of his acceptance with him A compleat Priest must have 1. Fulnesse of righteousnesse so had Christ habitual righteousnesse active and passive righteousnesse 2. Fulnesse of interest in God so had Christ Matth. 3. ult therefore he was able to reconcile us unto God 3. Fulnesse of compassion must be a pitiful high-Priest 4. Fulnesse of merit in his Sacrifice The obedience of Christ did in a far higher degree please God the Father then the rebellion of Adam did displease him For there the vassal rebelled here the equal obeyed B. Bils Full Redemption of mankinde by the death of Christ. His death was an act of obedience he died in obedience unto his Fathers will or to the agreement between his Father and him Matth. 26 54. Ioh. 10. 18. 17. 4. Phil. 2. 8. As there is a Covenant of grace between God and us so there was a Covenant of redemption between God and Christ. Non intercedit per humilem deprecationem ut vulgò loquuntur per modum suffragii sed potius per modum jurisdictionis atque per efficacissimam perfectissimi sui meriti repraesentationem Maresii Hydra Socin expugnata lib. 1. cap. 17. Joh. 17. 24. Christ doth not in Heaven kneel upon his knees utter words or put up a supplication unto his Father for us that is not agreeable to the glory to which he is exalted but appearing in the sight of God for us as a publick person he willeth and desireth that the Father would accept his satisfaction in the behalf of all that are given unto him Vedel de Deo Synagog● l. 2. cap. 11. Vide plura ibid. Quid potuit cogitari convenientius quam ut imago Patris increata creatam reparare● imaginem Filius naturalis Patri accerseret Filios adoptivos Rivet Disp. 13. de satisf Christi Vide Grotium de satisfactione Christi c. 4. Mors peccati poena est Rom. 5. 12. 6. 2. quam nemini infligit Deus nisi aut peccatotori aut peccatoris Personam referenti Rivet Disput. 13. de satisfactione Christi Ex 1 Pet. 2. 21. i●eprè Sociniani colligu●t Christum exemplarem saltem servatorem esse qu● doctrinam amm●tiatam mortalibus non actionibus solum sed passionibus sanguinis sui effusione obsignavrrit adcóque in utroque genere exemplo praeiverit Quasi verò alli fines
between the Engl. and Rom. Ch. upon the Reform Sect. 21. Patriarchae in veteri Testamento non dum era●t beati ideo nihil de hac re habetur expressum Salmer Comment in 1 Tim. 2. disp 2. * It can not be proved that any of the Fathers for three hundred years after Christ did make their prayers to any but only to God by Jesus Christ. But in them of later time there is some mention of praying unto them But where is either Commandment example or allowance of such prayers out of the Scriptures Dr Fulk on the Rhem. Test. 2 Pet. 1. 15. Heb. 13. 18. Orate pro nobis Insaniunt haeretici dum clamitant injuriam nos facere Christo Mediatori quoties vicissim Paulum c●●●ros sanctos rogamus dicentes Orate pro nobis Estius ad locum Vide Estium ad Rom. 15. 31. ad 1 Thess. 2. 20. ● 2 Cor. 1. 11. ad Ephes. 3. 12. ad Heb. 7. 25. The Protestants confesse an honouring of the Saints in divers respects as 1. Giving thanks to God for his graces multiplied upon them 2. The honourable commemoration of their faith and vertues 3. A desire and profession of imitating their godly examples 4. That the holy Saints ●ow triumphing in heaven do pray for the state of the militant Church at the least in their general supplications But we deny that Saints departed may be invocated or properly prayed unto B. Mortons Appeal lib. 2. cap. 12. Sect. 1. Si invoceutur vivi à viventibus multo inferunt consultius invocentur Sancti defuncti cum majori flagrent charitate f●licioris sint ad auxiliandum conditionis Atque hoc argumentum addit Bellarminus adversarii nunquam solvere potue●●nt sed Bellarminus ipse illud solvit Praefatur enim Cardinalis nos legere in utroque Testamento viventes à viventibus in●●catos At defunctos esse invocatos aut invocandos à viventibus in neutro Testamento legimus nonne haec sufficiens solutio hoc facimus quia legimus illud non facimus quia non legimus D. Prid Lect. 15 de sanctorum Invocatione Bellarminus ●●riens inter Virginem Matrem Filium divisibilem dimidiat animam Id. ibid. Vide plura ibid. The great end of all our requests should not be our own interest and concernment but Gods glory Psal. 115. 1. Reasons 1. Else they will not be successefull 2. Because otherwise our prayers are not prayers the end shews the quality of the action We must not only serve God but seek him How to know that Gods glory is the great end of our requests 1. By the working of our thoughts the heart worketh upon the end 2. By the manner of praying we must pray absolutely for Gods glory and submit to his will for other things John 12. 27 28. 3. By the dispo sition of our hearts when our prayers are accomplished God hath appointed prayer for other ends also 1. To be a profession of our dependance upon him that we might daily acknowledge Gods right and property in all we possesse we thereby disclaim merit in the highest mercy pardon of sin Jer. 3. 12 13. We professe our dependance for common mercies when we ask our daily bread 2. To nourish communion and familiarity between God and us Job 22. 21. Isa. 26. 16. 3. To keep the heart in a holy frame 1 Pet. 3. 7. 4. To quicken our affections to good things 5. To be a means of comfort and spiritual refreshing Job 16 20. Phil. 4. 6. Si orationem Dominicam nullis aliis cogitationibus incidentibus pronunciare noveris tum eximium magistrum te esse judicabo Luther in Joan. 17. Triplex est attene●o quae orationi vocali potest adhiberi una quidem qua attenditur ad ver ba ne aliquis in eis erret secunda qua attenditur ad sensum verborum tertia qua attenditur ad finem orationis scilicet Deum ad rem qua oratur quae quidem est maximè necessaria Aquin. 2a 2ae Qu. 83. Art 13 Evagatio montis quae fit praeter propofitum orationis fructum non tollit Id. ib. Praier is one of the noblest exercises of Christian Religion or rather that duty in which all graces are concentred D. Taylor on Rom. 8. There is no duty hath more commands and promises to it and threatnings against those that omit it there is no one duty honours God more and is more honoured by him then prayer there is no one duty that a Christian hath more need of no one duty that hath been more practised then this God hath made many promises to praier 1. General that he will hear and answer us Isa. 30. 19. John 16. 23. 2. Particular ● Deliverance from any trouble and affliction Psal. 50. 15. o● strength and patience to bear it Jam. 1 5. 2. Whatsoever spiritual grace we stand in need of Luke 11. 13. 3. Inward joy and peace of conscience Job 33. 26. John 16. 24. Hildersam on Psalme 51. 7. A Saint of God had rather go without the mercy that he begs by praier then have a mercy without praier See Promises 1. To prayer in general 2. To the several parts of praier Clarks Holy Incense p. 1. to 9. Gen. 32. 26 28 Some say that praier commandeth God Isa. 45. 11. Deo sacrificium diabolo flagellum homini subsidium Aug. Prepare for prayer 1. By getting powerful apprehensions of the glory of God before whom you go 2. By getting your hearts sensible of what you pray for as pardon of sin power against it assurance of his love 3. Get your hearts separated from the world and all things here below M. Burr of Gospel-wor Isa. 1. 13. Every morning and evening the Sacrifice Exod. 29. 38. and Incense Exod. 30. 7 8. were to be offered up unto the Lord. These were ceremonial Laws but there is a moral equity of them which is perpetual and these Laws concerned the people as well as the Priests as appeareth Luke 1. 10. Hilders A readinesse to pray earnestly to God for good things and the same improved accordingly is a kinde of pawn from heaven to him that hath it that he shall receive the good things praied for Robins Ess. Obser. 48. Iames the brother of our Lord by oft kneeling his knees were benummed and hardened like the knees of a Camel Fox See D. Gouges Whole Armour part 2. Treat 3. Isa. 62. 6. Ephes. 6. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is attributed to hunting dogs which will not cease following the game till they have got it It was a prophane speech of that atheistical wretch that told God He was no common beggar he never troubled him before with praier and if he would hear him that time he would never trouble him again If we persevere not either God will not give us what we pray for or if he do we shall have it as a curse because it is not the fruit of praier Four things will drive the Saints