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

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the persons as Ioh. 4.24 God is a spirit where God is taken for the whole essence of the Deitie as is also the name Iehouah Or else 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 personally when there is ioyned vnto the name of God the name of the person as God the Father God the Sonne God the holy Ghost Or when the Father is opposed to the Sonne who is very God and the second Person in the Trinitie as Rom. 7.25 I thanke God by Iesus Christ So Rom. 8.3 the Father is called God the word Father being vsed personally because the Person sending is opposed to the Person sen● Improperly when it is attributed to Angels or men and truly either in regard of their office e Exod. 22.28 Psal 82.6 or else in respect of the reuealing of the wil of God and of their reuerence f Exod. 7.2 falsly either by error or else by vsurpation and custome as 1. Cor. 8.5 or else by worshipping them 2. Cor. 4.4 Phil. 3.19 Be there any parts or kinds of God None at all because he is a most simple essence which doth admit no composition or diuision and simply and in euery respect of vnitie one and in act most infinite Are there any causes of God Not any for he is the cause of all causes Is there any accident in God No in regard of God himselfe for whatsoeuer is in God is his essence Seeing the essence of God is most simple in what respect do power goodnesse iustice wisedome mercie differ in God Not in essence for all these attributes in essence are but one very thing indeed but in our weake capacitie and manner of knowing in regard of vs and by the effects in respect of the creatures How many sorts are there of Gods attributes Two the first whereof is incommunicable so that there appeareth not the least impression therof in any of his creatures This kind we may call Absolute such is his simplicitie and which depend vpon it his immutabilitie eternitie and immensitie The second sort is some way communicable which you may call fitly a relatiue propertie in that it hath relation to the creatures such are his power wisedome will goodnesse iustice and mercie Be there any effects of God There be infinite effects of his grace iustice power and mercie How are the Gentiles said to be without God Ephes 2.12 seeing they adored so many gods Because none of their gods was the true God But yet they acknowledged God the Creator of heauen and earth I answer out of Hilarie in his third booke of the Trinitie Not the name of God but euen God himselfe was altogether vnknowne vnto them because no man knoweth God but such as confesse the Father and the Sonne But do you not by this make both Iewes and Turks Atheists There are many kinds of Atheists First such as acknowledge no diuinitie secondly such as worship fained gods in stead of the true God thirdly such as do indeed acknowledge the true God yet not as he is but as they fancie him to be Such are the present Iewes and Turkes who denie both the Father and the Sonne as also all Antitrinitarian Hereticks who denie the Trinitie of Persons in one essence and they also who say the Sonne is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is of the same essence with the Father And surely they who challenge to themselues the name of the Catholike Church may be ranked in this order who professing in name one onely God the Father the Sonne and holy Ghost and Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and man yet set downe such grounds which being granted the true God is transformed into such an Idoll as neuer was is or shall be found and withal the humanitie of Christ must needs vanish into a ghost What vse make you of the knowledge of God Surely this that he alone may be rightly worshipped to which purpose man was created and that we being guided by this knowledge may pray for to him and acknowledge that from him we haue euery good thing What things are repugnant to the doctrine concerning God Atheisme Epicurisme the mad worshipping of Idols the Gentiles making of many gods the heresie of Maniche making two beginnings one good another euill blasphemies against God false opinions concerning God as that of the Anthropomorphites who make God like vnto a man all doubting of God c. Of the Trinitie How many Persons be there in that one Essence of God THree and those both in number and in very deed distinguished the Father Sonne and the holy Ghost which haue their subsisting in one diuine essence whereupon it comes to passe that there be not many Gods but one God and the same eternall infinit and omnipotent who is named Iehouah in the Scriptures and is said to be most simple by reason of essence and three by reason of Persons By what testimonies of Scripture do you proue the Trinitie Genes 1.1 God or Elohim created the heauen and the earth In which place the verbe being of the singular number doth signifie the most simple essence of God and the substantiue Elohim being the plurall number doth note out the three Persons Also in the creation of man God as it were taking counsell with his eternall wisdome that is the Sonne and the holy Ghost saith thus vers 26. Let vs make man after our image Where he saith Let vs make because of the number of the persons and after our image because of the vnitie of the essence Gen. 19.24 The Lord rained from the Lord brimstone and fire vpon Sodome and Gomorrha in which place the person sending the raine and the person from whome it was sent that is the Sonne is distinguished from the Father Haue you any more pregnant proofes out of the new Testament 1. In the baptisme of Christ Math. 3.16 and Ioh. 1.32 the voice of the Father is heard from heauen This is my beloued Sonne in the same place there stands the Sonne by the riuer Iordan the holy Ghost descends in the forme of a Doue and sits on Christ 2. Againe in the transfiguration there is the Sonne and the voice of God the Father is heard from heauen Mat. 17.5 and Christ is shadowed with a cloud which doth signifie the holy Ghost And further Mat. 28.19 Baptize all nations in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost he saith not in names but in the name to shew the vnitie of the three Persons 1. Ioh. 5.7 Gal. 4.6 2. Cor. 13.13 The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the loue of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Seeing the Scripture doth not vse the name of the Trinitie doth the Church well to reteine the same Yea no doubt for the thing it selfe is found in the Scriptures two manner of wayes 1. According to the letter 2. According to the sense Now sith that the sense of it and the very thing it selfe is found in
comforter from the Father And vnto him is attributed a voice k Act. 13.2 and his good pleasure l Act. 15.28 and free will m 2. Cor. 10.11 and a peculiar appearing in a bodily forme n Cap. 2.3 all which be the properties of a person truly subsisting And Ioh. 5.7 There be three which beare witnesse in heauen the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one What then is the holy Ghost He is the third Person of the Trinitie eternall coessentiall to the Father and proceeding from them both ioyntly and inseperably together with the Father and the Sonne the Creator and Conseruator of all things who is sent into the hearts of the elect to sanctifie them together with the Father and the Sonne equally to be worshipped As for his sending foorth it is in operation not in essence the which being vnmeasurable in that it is true God changeth not place neither is in a place but euery where as God Ga. 4.6 Proue that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father Ioh. 15.26 He that proceedeth from the Father and Mat. 10.20 It is not ye that speake but the spirit of your Father that speaketh in you Proue that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Sonne Ioh. 14.26 and 15.26 he is said not onely to be sent and to be giuen of the Father but also of the Son and Ioh. 16.14 to receiue all things from Christ He shall receiue of me and declare all things vnto you Rom. 8.9 and Gal. 4.6 He is called the Spirit of the Son Moreouer Augustine saith that Christ gaue the holy Ghost by breathing him into them that he might shew that he proceedes euen from him a Joh. 20.22 Ob. 1. Christ saith that he proceedes from the Father therefore not from the Sonne Ans Christ doth not say that he proceedes onely from the Father therefore this proues nothing Ob. 2. If the holy Ghost be one he must haue but one beginning and so proceed from the Father alone Ans It followeth not seeing that breathing of the Father and the Sonne by which the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne is onely one What then be the proprieties whereby the Persons are really distinguished amongst themselues Not to be begotten or the Paternitie or fatherhood is the incommunicable proprietie of the first Person of the Trinitie whereby it comes to passe that the Father is of no other but of himselfe not made not begotten but from all eternitie begetting the Sonne Now ●o be begotten or generation or the sonneship is that whereby the Sonne doth receiue and hath in himselfe all and his whole essence from the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Proceeding flowing or comming from being likewise taken passiuely whereby the holy Ghost from all eternitie doth receiue that self same and whole essence from the Father and the Son and hath it whole in himselfe Therefore the holy Ghost is said to proceed from the Father and the Sonne not when he is sent or powred foorth vpon the house of a Zach. 12.10 Dauid but in respect of his essence which from all eternitie he receiued communicated vnto him of the Father and the Sonne Is there then a difference betweene generation and proceeding There is but I saith August know it not neither am I able nor sufficient to distinguish them because that as generation so proceeding is altogether vnspeakable Yet this difference may be yeelded that as the same Augustine saith whatsoeuer is begotten doth also proceed but not of the contrarie whatsoeuer doth proceed is also begotten These proprieties by what other names are they called They are called the workes of the Trinitie within because they be effected within the very essence without all respect to creatures after an incomprehensible manner They are also called workes diuided or distinct and incommunicable For to be a Father agreeth onely to the Father to be a Sonne onely to the Sonne Proceeding onely to the holy Ghost What call you the workes of the Diuinitie without Which in respect of the creatures are done of the whole Trinitie or which the three persons ioyntly together effect in the works of creation and redemption And they are said to be vndiuided because they be common to the three Persons whence comes this rule The workes of the Trinitie without are vndiuided Gen. 1.26 Let vs make man after our owne image And Ioh. 5.17.19 What things the Father doth the same things in like manner the Sonne doth also but yet so as there is kept the proprietie of the Persons the order of doing and the difference b 1. Cor. 15.57 Rom. 11.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the worke of incarnation being taken actiuely is a worke of the whole Trinitie in regard of the * accomplishing of it if you consider the effect although onely the Sonne be incarnate What names are giuen to the holy Ghost in the Scriptures He is called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Comforter that is the Aduocate c Ioh. 14.16 15.26 16.7 not of Redemption nor of Mediation or of Reconciliation betweene God and men for Christ alone in this respect is Mediator but of comfort namely teaching vs to pray comforting the afflicted teaching the truth begetting those vnutterable gronings of which Paul speaketh Rom. 8.25.26 He is called the Spirit of truth a Joh. 14.26 because he teacheth the truth effectually Also the spirit of adoption b Gal. 4.6 because he sealeth vp the adoption of the sonnes of God in our hearts Also the Spirit of sanctification or the holy Ghost c Rom. 8.15 not so much in regard of his essence as for his effects d Rom. 1.4 What be the effects of the holy Ghost 1. In generall to quicken to sustaine to rule to gouerne in speciall to giue testimonie vnto Christ e Iohn 15.26 2. To leade the elect into all truth to regenerate f Iohn 16.13 the minds of the faithfull Tit. 3.4 He hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and by the renewing of the holy Ghost which he worketh whilest that he illuminateth our minds with the true knowledge of Christ createth in vs faith in Christ by the hearing of the Gospell and by faith bringeth forth in vs newnes of life incorporateth vs into Christ g Eph. 3.5.16 and applieth Christ and the offices and treasures of Christ vnto vs. Also to seale vp vnto vs the promises of God Ephes 1.13 He is called the Seale the earnest of our saluation and the earnest of our inheritance 2. Cor. 1.22 because by his testimonie he doth establish confirme and seale vp in our hearts the assurance of our inheritance to come What ●e the Epithets which are ascribed to the same holy Ghost in the Scriptures 1. He is called the finger of God Luke 11.20 If I by the finger of God cast out diuels by whom do your children cast them out because
in the word and sacraments or faith is the organ instrumēt or meane whereby man being a sinner apprehendeth and applyeth to himselfe Christ wholy with all his benefits and is vnited vnto Christ and liueth in him The Apostle Heb. 11.1 describing faith saith thus Faith is the substance of things which are hoped for the euidence of things that are not seen And Paul Ro. 4.20.21 painting out faith as in a map bringeth in the example of Abraham the father of the faithfull and saith Hee doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeleef but was strengthened in the faith gaue glory to god being fully assured that hee which had promised was also able to doe it Is that discription of faith Heb. 11.1 differing from the rest No forasmuch as therein there is exact mention made both of the forme of faith which is declared in the words Substance and Euidence also of the obiects namely things hoped for and things not seene For by the word Substance hee meaneth not a person as in the article of the Trinitie a Heb. 1.3 but the ground and as it were the prop whereupon a godly minde must stay and relie it selfe to signifie that faith is a certain sure safe possession of those things which are promised vnto vs by God As Psal 39.8 My Hypostasis or substance that is to say My hope is euen in thee And Heb. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we keepe sure vnto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning wherewith wee are vpholden or vnderpropped Some translate the word Hypostasis existence or subsistēce because faith in some respect causeth things to haue a beeing as if they were which in trueth are not that is to say it setteth things before vs as if they were present which onely are in expectation Budaeus translateth it Strength or Courage In which signification it is vsed 2. Corinth 9.4 Least wee should bee ashamed 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. In this constant boasting Cha. 11.17 By a word deriued from the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to sustaine to except not to giue placc to violence Hereupon it is that a souldier is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is bolde and hardie and turneth not his backe to his enemie but goeth to meete him and resists him and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldnes whereby a man standeth stoutly to it and without stirring his foote receiueth his aduersarie that inuadeth him And surely this notable signification doth well agree with faith For in the act of beleeuing wee haue neede of strength and patience we must resist the flesh we must conquer reason we must withstand our owne conscience sinne the wrath of God and all other things whereby the consent of faith is hindered and oppugned Wee had neede to be armed with such a strong shield that wee may receiue and quench all the fyrie darts of the diuell Ephe. 6.16 and ouercome the world 1. Iohn 5.4 As for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Euidence it is not a refutation or a reproofe but an argument demonstration that is an assurance wherby the minde being conuinced by diuine testimonies doth most stedfastly embrace the diuine promises But by the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are hoped for and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are not seene is vnderstood the Gospel those things which are offered in the Gospel namely fellowship with Christ forgiuenesse of sins iustification Resurrection and life eternall For these are the things we hope for and which doe not appeare and of themselues are not conformable vnto our reason and so are they the misteries of saluation in themselues and in their owne nature inuisible But those things which we see with our minde and in hope we do behold them in the word of God and doe accompt them as if they were done accomplished and present before vs. How many sorts of Faith are there Not many sorts but only one faith Ephe. 4.5 One Lord one Faith one Baptisme Now faith is one not in respect of the subiects for after that sort there are as many faiths that is to say giftes of faith as there are beleeuers but faith is and alwaies hath been one in Specie that is in respect of the thing beleeued and of the obiect whereupon it rests And this is the only obiect of faith namely the grace and mercie purposed and ordained for all beleeuers in Christ from the beginning of the world What is the efficient cause of Faith God himsefe working freely and giuing faith to whome hee will euen of his owne free good will Iohn 6.29 This is the worke of God that yee beleeue in him whom he hath sent Act. 16.14 God opened the heart of Lydia so that shee attended vnto the things which Paule spake Rom. 12.3 God hath dealt to euerie man the measure of faith Phil. 1.29 It is freely giuen vnto you for Christs cause not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for his sake The causes together with God the father are the son and the holy Ghost for as it is said in another place The workes of the Trinitie without are diuided Luk. 24.32 Christ opened the minde of his disciples that they might vnderstand the Scriptures And Heb. 12.2 Looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. Cor. 4 13. We haue the spirit of faith that is to say we haue faith by the inspiration and gift of the same holy spirit The workmen together with God are the ministers of the worde 1. Cor. 3.5 Who is Apollo and vvho is Paule but the Ministers by vvhome that is by vvhose preaching ye beleeued The instrumentall cause of faith is the hearing of the word of God by the which word the holy Ghost vttereth his power Ro. 10.17 Faith is by hearing hearing by the word of God Esa 57.19 And Act. 10.44 VVhile Peter spake these vvords the holy Ghost fell on alll them which heard the vvord Furthermore another instrumentall cause is the beholding and vse of the Sacraments And to this end God ordained a ministerie in his Church yet so as no force is to be attributed either to the Ministers that speake or vnto the words themselues or to the Sacraments forasmuch as they haue no other effect but only to represent vnto our minds those things for the declaring whereof they are applyed by the ordinance of God but the force and power of them a Mark 16 20 1 Cor 12 6 commeth onely from God and there is but one and the same installer of man into life eternall who was the Creator of him vnto this life temporall 1. Cor. 3.7 Neither hee that planteth is any thing neither he that watereth but God vvhich giueth the increase And Cha. 15.19 I haue laboured more then they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with mee or which vvas present vvith mee And so the voice of
seuered from the end of that signe or from the vertue and truth of it which he cals spirit as Rom. 2.27 But they that by the letter vnderstand the literall sense and by the name of the Spirit the allegoricall speake to no purpose But when it is attributed to the Creator himselfe how many waies is the word Spirit taken Two manner of wayes one way essentially otherwise personally And essentially either in common of the whole Trinitie Ioh. 4.24 God is a spirit or else specially for the diuine nature of Christ or for the power and efficacie of the truth in the humanitie assumed f Mat. 12.28 Ro. 1.4 Of his Sonne made of the seed of Dauid according to the flesh declared to be the Sonne of God according to the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead 1. Pet. 3.18 Put to death according to the flesh but quickened in the spirit in the which also he preached vnto the spirits that are in prison So Heb. 9.14 Christ by the eternall spirit offered vp himselfe without spot to God and 1. Tim. 3.16 he was iustified in the spirit But when is this word Spirit vsed personally When it is taken for the third person in deitie who together with the Father and the Sonne is the same in essence and deitie as Mat. 28.19 Go baptize all nations in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Spirit But why is the third Person called the Spirit Because he is that essentiall vertue and working being of the same substance together with the Father and the Sonne proceeding equally and as it were breathed from them both or else by a Metonymie of the effect or else because he breatheth where he listeth g Ioh. 3.8 or else because he stirreth vp spirituall motions in the hearts of the beleeuers and doth purifie their hearts and quicken them which also is shewed by this epithet Holy not sanctified but sanctifying or the sanctifier in way of excellencie as the Father is called the Creator the Sonne the Redeemer of his especiall operation in vs which is called Sanctification h 1. Pet. 1.2 Proue now that the holy Ghost is God I proue it 1. By the Phrases of Scripture 2. By the attributing of those properties belonging to God vnto him 3. By the workes or effects which agree to God alone 4. By that worship and honor which is performed vnto him by the faithfull 5. By that punishment which is inflicted vpon such as sinne against the holy Ghost Shew me those sentences of Scripture whereby you can proue that the holy Ghost is God Those words which the Prophets do affirme were spoken by the God of hoasts the Apostles do ascribe to the holy Ghost As that we reade Esa 6.9 Iehouah said vnto the Prophet Go and say to this people Heare and vnderstand not c the Apostle Act. 28.25 attributeth to the holy Ghost Againe Act. 5.3 Peter saith thus to Ananias How is it that he hath filled thine heart that thou shouldest lye vnto the holy Ghost and presently after Thou hast not lyed vnto men but vnto God But the Spirit is in plaine words called God and the temple is assigned vnto him which belongs to God alone c 1. Cor. 3.16.17 6.19 20 2. Cor. 6.16 and he is called Lord and God d 1. Cor. 12.4.5 Shew some testimonies wherein the proprieties which agree to God alone are attributed to the holy Ghost Gen. 1.2 It is said that the Spirit of God moued vpon the waters presently in the beginning of the creation therefore he is eternall a Heb. 9.14 He is said to be present euery where and of infinite greatnesse Psal 139.7 O Lord whither shall I flie from thy spirit Wisd 1.7 The spirit of the Lord filleth the world Whereupon Basill in his book intreating of the holy Ghost against those which denie him frameth this demonstration Euery creature hath a substance circumscribed The holy Ghost hath not a substance circumscribed Therefore he is not a creature and ergo he is a God He is said to be omniscient knowing all things Ioh. 15.13 That spirit shall leade you into all truth 1. Cor. 2.10 The spirit searcheth all things yea euen the deepe things of God And he is called Almightie b Esa 14.13 Proue the diuinitie of the holy Ghost by his workes The works which are onely proper to God alone are ascribed to him as the worke of creation conseruation viuification Iob 33.4 The Spirit of Iehouah hath created me and the Spirit of the Almighty hath quickened me Psal 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the heauens made and all the power of them by the spirit of his mouth He is said in like manner to dwell in the hearts of the faithfull as in a temple c Rom. 8.9 1. Cor. 3.6 Regeneration iustification sanctification d Ioh 3 6.8 1. Cor. 6.11 1. Cor. 3.16 truth grace and whatsoeuer good thing can be imagined 1. Cor. 12.4.5.11 One and the same Spirit diuideth all things How do you proue that he is God by that worship and honor which is giuen vnto him 1. Because faith and inuocation is attributed vnto him for we are baptized into the holy Ghost as well as into the Father and into the Sonne e Mat. 28.19 and as we call vpon the name of the Father and the Sonne euen so also on the holy Ghost 2. We confesse in the Creed that we beleeue in the holy Ghost 3. Because euen the Angels themselues called Seraphims do adore the holy Ghost f Esa 6 3 and the Apostles call vpon him g Act. 13.2.3 2. Cor. 13.13 Reu. 1.4 How do you proue by the punishment which is inflicted vpon them that sinne against the holy Ghost that he is God Because blasphemie against him is not remitted h Mat. 12.31 for Christ saith Mark 3.29 He that shall sinne or speake blasphemie against the holy Ghost shall neuer be forgiuen neither in this world nor in the world to come Now proue that the Spirit of God is a person subsisting in God really distinguished from the Father and the Sonne 1. Out of the Creed for whereas we say in the beginning I beleeue in God and presently adde 1. the Father 2. the Sonne 3. the holy Ghost as we confesse the holy Ghost to be God so also do we acknowledge the same to be the third person in the deitie not by degree but by order 2. In the baptisme of Iesus Christ the Fathers voice is heard from heauen Christ stands by who was baptized of Iohn Baptist and the holy Ghost descended in the forme of a Doue who sitteth vpon Christ i Mat. 3.16.17 But euen Christ himselfe Ioh. 14.16 distinguisheth the holy Ghost from himselfe and the Father when he saith Another comforter shall he giue vnto you he saith another in person not another thing in essence and 15.26 I will send you the Spirit euen the
the Lord doth manifest his power by him h Exo. 18.17 2. Againe he is called water Iohn 3.5 Vnlesse a man be borne a new of water and the spirit he shall not enter into the kingdome of God And 7.18 He that beleeueth in me as saith the Scripture riuers of water of eternall life shall flow out of his belly Now this he spake of the spirit because it cooleth vs it quencheth our spirituall thirst i Ioh. 4.14 it watereth vs being emptie of all the iuice of life and maketh vs fruitfull it washeth away all the filthinesse of our hearts and like water is poured into the beleeuers as it is said I will poure out of my Spirit Ioel 2.28 and Esa 44.3 3. He is called fire as Math. 3.11 He that shall come after me he shall baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire From the effect because he purgeth out all the drosse inflameth vs to the feare of God to loue and kindnesse both of God and our neighbour and hath other effects like vnto fire 4. He is called Seed 1. Iohn 3.9 He which is borne of God hath his seed in himselfe because by his power as it were by seed the faithfull are renewed and are made new men that being dead to sinne they may liue to God 5. He is called the annointing b 1. Ioh. 2.27 Psal 45.8 and the Oile of gladnesse the speech being borrowed from the custome of annointing which was vsed in time of the law to signifie the fragrant smell and spirituall sweetnesse of the gifts of the spirit What doth the holy Ghost dwell in the hearts of the beleeuers onely by his gifts or also by his Essence Yea euen by his Essence yet not extensiuely or as it were a part of the essence of things as the Manichees and others dreamed but intensiuely so farre forth as he is euery where present as he is God and in the efficacie of his presence Rom. 8.11 The Spirit of him that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwelleth in you And Ioh. 14.23 Christ saith We shall come vnto him and make our abode with him For we may not thinke that he bestowes his gifts so vpon vs that he himselfe should be in another place but he is present with his gifts both to the whole Church and euery particular elect gouerning and quickning them both within and without 1. C●●int 6.19 Your body is the temple of the holy Ghost which is in you And ● Cor. 13.13 The communion of the holy Ghost be with you all What doctrines are contrary to this 1. The heresie of the Pneumatomachoi who denie the holy Ghost who do of set purpose oppose themselues and impugne the holy Ghost of which stamp was Samosatenus who called the holy Ghost the power of God hauing no person and the simple action of God in the hearts of men 2. Macedonius who affirmed the holy Ghost to be not a Lord but a seruant and a Minister and that he was not the Creator but a creature and by the name of Spirit was onely signified those new motions which God stirreth vp in the regenerate abusing that place Psal 51.12 Create a new heart in me O God and renue a right spirit in my bowels Where the name of Spirit is vsed for the created gifts of the Spirit 3. Seruetus who imagined that the holy Ghost was nothing else but the power of God infused into euery creature whereby they moue and liue which Philosophers call Nature 4. The errour of the latter Grecians who denied that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Sonne 5. The blasphemie of Campanus and certaine other Anabaptists who cried out that the holy Ghost tooke his beginning as soone as Christ was glorified abusing that testimonie Iohn 7.39 As yet the holy Ghost was not giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified Where it is manifest that the Euangelist speaketh not of the person but of those admirable gifts which were powred out vpon the Apostles in the day of Pentecost as also in that saying of the Disciples of Iohn Act. 19.2 Yea we haue not so much as heard whether there be any holy Ghost or not 6. The errour of those who denied him to be adored with one and the same faith and inuocation with the Father and the Sonne The fourth common Place of the holy Scripture What is the holy Scripture called THe Scripture putting one name for another is vsed for the writings of the Prophets and Apostles which the companie of the faithfull doth religiously vse for the instruction in godlinesse And it is called holy because being deliuered of God it containeth holy things necessary vnto eternall life And in the same sense it is called the written word of God and the vnappealable Iudge of all controuersies in religion a Esa 8.20 Luk. 16.29.31 Who is the Author of it God himselfe who did commit his will vnto writing by men called immediatly of himselfe and inspired by the holy Ghost as * As his penmen and publike notaries his seruants at hand 2. Pet. 1.21 For the Prophesie was not at any time brought by the will of man but the holy men of God spake as they were moued by the holy Ghost Hereupon all the Prophets do with one accord repeate this The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it Esa 58.14 These things saith the Lord Ezec. 12.25.28 2. Tim. 3.16 The whole scripture was giuen of God by inspiration 1. Cor. 2.13 Which things we speake not in the words which mans wisedome teacheth but which the holy Ghost teacheth Wherupon depend the adiuncts of the Scripture as the authority the excellency the truth and fulfilling of them which is as necessary as it must needs be that God is true Whence also it comes to passe that the Scripture alone is to be beleeued for it selfe of it selfe is worthy to be beleeued neither is it subiect to the censure addition diminution or alteration of Angels or men a Deut. 12.32 Reu. 22.18 It alone is without all error b Mar. 16.24 and we are bound to beleeue it alone vpon the bare affirmation thereof by it alone all opinions which all men shall reade c Deu. 17.9.10 Esa 8.20 Mal 2.7 Act. 17.2 are to be confirmed and to be decided d Iosu 1.8 Iob. 5.39 Act. 17.11 This alone is perfect and containeth all things necessary vnto life eternall e Psal 19.8 Luke 16.29 Ioh. 15.15 Act. 20.20.27 2. Tim. 3.16 17 Lastly it is firme and constant f 2. Pet. 1.19 How manifold is it Two-fold for it is deuided into the old and new Testament or into the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles which is contained in the Canonicall bookes Which bookes be called Canonicall All those which being indited by the holy Ghost were either written or allowed by the Prophets and Apostles that these alone might be the rule and direction of faith and good workes by which all other doctrines are to be weighed
of the Iewes and Gentiles or the whole company of them who are receiued into the couenant for the Old couenant properly belonged to Abraham and the Israelites his posteritie Deut. 32.8 VVhen the most high God diuided to the nations their inheritance when he separated the sons of Adam he appointed the borders of the people according to the number of the children of Israell d Gen. 15.18 17.7 for the Lords portion is his people Iacob is the lot of his inheritance But the new couenant belongeth to all nations to whome God hath vouchsafed the light of the Gospell Mark 16.15 Go yee into all the world and preach the Gospell to euerie creature Hee that shall beleeue and be baptized shall be saued c. Act. 10.15.34.35.43 Rom. 1.16 3.29 As in many other places But may not God seeme mutable or vnlike himselfe seeing hee hath changed that which once hee purposed No in no case for neither hath hee changed his purpose nor done any thing disagreeing with it but hee sheweth himselfe most wise because in diuerse ages he knoweth how to vse diuerse meanes to bring his elect to the knowledge of their saluation in Christ according as hee saw the estate of both that is as both old and latter times required Euen as the Physition taketh one course of cure in a childe another in a man of ripe age according to the diuersitie of their constitutions and yet can hee not therefore bee tearmed inconstant or vnlike himselfe Therefore Paule Ephes 3.10 calleth this dispensation of the couenant the manifolde and diuerse wisdom of God because God in his wisdome doth in other maner call the Gentiles then in old time he did the Iewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 VVhat therefore is the Old Testament It is a solemne maner of confirming the Couenant comprehended in the Morall Law the ceremonies and Sacrifices ordained to this end that the promise of grace and eternall life for Christes sake might bee kept with condition of faith obedience through faith on mans part to be performed What is the new Testament It is a full manifestation of Gods grace which hath shined to the world since Christs comming into the world which is effected without the strict and hard exacting of the Law and the administration of the ceremonies VVhen was this ordained In Paradise straight after the fall of our first parents for at that time was vttered the first promise pertaining to the Gospell concerning Christ to come a Gen. 3.15 and afterwards it was made to a certaine familie namely of Abraham b Gen. 12.3 17 4 5 19. 22 18 It was performed at the time when Christ was exhibited and confirmed by his bloud and death But why is one and the same Testament called Old and New c Luk 22 20 It is Old in regard of the promise New in regard of Christ alreadie exhibited Also it is Old in respect of the adiunct For the publishing of the Lawe did in time goe before the sending of Christ and that ample declaration of the Gospell or new as it were renewed as Iohn 13.34 The Lord there calleth the commaundement of Loue a new commaundemen wholy renewed or which must be euer new Besides because it was confirmed by Christs death For a Testament is confirmed and in force when the testator is dead otherwise it is not of force whilst he liueth who made it Heb. 9.17 Who made this will or Testament The sonne of God VVho are the hearers All that beleeue VVhat is the inheritance All the benefits which the death of Christ hath procured vs. VVhat are the tables of the Testament The holy Bible or holy Scripture VVhat seales are there to this Testament The Sacraments which in the Old testament were circumcision and the Passeouer but in the new Baptisme the Lords Supper What is the vse of this Doctrine It sheweth that there was alwaies one way to attaine saluation namely by faith in the free promise of Christ and that there was one and the same Church in the old and new Testament What opinions are against this Doctrine 1. The errour of Sernetus and certaine Anabaptists who faine that the people of Israell was fatted pampered in this life without any hope of heauenly immortalitie euen as swine or beasts are for the slaughter 2 The madnes of them who falsely imagined a threefold way of saluation namely the Law of Nature the Law of Moses and the Law of Christ as if there had beene three seuerall couenants of God differing in substance The three and twentieth common place Of the passion and death of Chist What vnderstand you by this terme of the passion of Christ 1 I vnderstand by a Synecdoche a part for the whole whatsoeuer Christ suffered from the first moment of his conception as for example his lying in the maunger when hee was newely borne when there was no roome for his mother in the Inne Luk. 2.7 And afterwards when vpon the eight day after his natiuitie hee shed his bloud in the circumcision the same Chap. vers 22. and from thence vntil the time wherein hee was offered a sacrifice for vs vpon the Altar of the crosse but especially all kinde of iniuries and that horrible punishment which was executed vpon him vnder Pilate 2. The passions of Christ are called the crosses or calamities of Christes mysticall bodie which is the Church or of his members which must bee heere accomplished vntill all the members in their certaine manner and measure become conformable to Christ by the crosse Whereupon the Apost Colos 1.24 saith thus I fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church that is for the comfort of the Church a for as Leo the first saith The iust hau● receiued not giuen crownes and from the fortitude of the faithfull are sprung examples of patience not gifts of righteousnesse 3. Metonimically the adiunct for the subiect by passion is vnderstoode the Historie describing Christ passion VVhat is the Lords passion or suffering It is a part of Christs obedience whereby he himselfe beeing innocēt became a sacrifice for the guilty or thus It is a propitiatory sacrifice wherby the son of God being made man offered himselfe to the father that hee might merit for all that beleeue in him eternall iustification sanctification deliuerance from sinne and eternall death and in the end eternall life as Christ himselfe doth expound the matter Ioh. 17.19 I sanctifie my selfe that is I offer my selfe to the Father for them to be an holy and pacifying sacrifice that they also may be sanctified for euer VVhat are the efficient causes of Christs passion There are three efficient causes thereof God Sathan and men and all these in diuerse respects 1. The Counsel and determination of God the most absolute and high will of God that is his ordinance whereby from eternitie he hath so disposed of this businesse that therein he
compassed me and the griefes of the graue caught mee when I found trouble and sorrow 4 According to some mens interpretation it signifieth the generall state and condition of the dead whether the good estate of the aged or the euill of the wicked 5 In others iudgement it signifieth the extreemest degree of humiliation What signifieth the word Descending 1 It properly signifieth a motion from a high place to a lower 2 By a tropicall speech it signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the descending of Christ or the last degree of his humiliation ●s Ephes 4.10 He that descended that is he that made himselfe base and of no reputation and taking vpon himselfe the forme of a seruant subiected himselfe to the miserable condition of this earthly life he is euen the same that ascended aboue all heauens What therfore is the meaning of this article He descended into hell It is diuers accordingly as the simple words are taken in diuers significations What is the first The first interpretation is of them that thinke these words are added for better explanation sake against the heresie of the Valentinians and that no other thing is heereby meant then that Christ was truly dead and laid in his graue as other men who haue beene dead and buried VVhat thinke you of this exposition That it is too sleight and trifling because it is not likely that the buriall of Christ being declared in plaine words should be deliuered in a more obscure forme of speech neither doth such a rep●tition of the same thing befit such a briefe and compendious rehearsall of the chiefe heads of our faith What is the second It is Hieromes and the Papists who thinke that Christs soule being separated from the bodie came to a certaine place which they call Limbus patrum to wit the vpper part or an vpper roome as it were of hell in which there are no punishments but onely a depriuation of a better and more perfect good In which place they say the Spirits of the faithfull fathers did remaine before Christs incarnation from whence afterwards the soule of Christ comming thither in deed did bring them with himselfe into heauen Which thing they go about to confirme out of Mathew 27.52 Many besides of the Saints rose againe either with Christ or after him and 1. Pet. 3.19 By which also he went and preached vnto the spirits which are in prison and 4.6 for vnto this purpose also was the Gospell preached vnto the dead Doe you like this opinion No 1 for such a place cannot be proued by any testimonie of Scripture 2 Because we read that not all the Saints bodies but some only rose againe with Christ to testifie the power of Christs resurrection whereby life is restored to vs. 3 The place 1. Pet. 3.16 Is manifestly to be vnderstood concerning Christs spirit which preached repētance by the mouth of Noah to the disobedient and wicked and the place in the fourth Chapter is to be vnderstood of the Gospell which was preached to them which were dead in former times that is which were indeed aliue when they were preached vnto but were dead at what time this was spoken of them Also because this opinion doth not a little detract from the power of Christs sacrifice the price whereof is infinite and extendeth it selfe vnto all times according to that which was said Apoc. 13.8 The Lambe was slaine from the beginning of the world Therefore Abraham was deliuered from hell by the merit of Christs sacrifice no lesse then Paule or any one of the godly that died after Christ was giuen for our redemption What is the third opinion The third is of them who thinke that Christ did indeed descend into the place of hell But this opinion is diuided three waies For some there are who say that the soule of Christ did go downe thither whilest his bodie lay in the graue that there it might suffer for the soules of men Which opinion is by three reasons confuted 1 Because the bloud of Christ is a most perfect expiation for all the world a Iohn 1.7 2 It is confuted by Christs saying vpon the crosse It is finished Ioh. 19.30 Therefore he had no more to suffer when as death made an end of his torments 3 Because Christ endured horrible torments in his soule whilest it was yet in his bodie as is manifest by that terrible crying My God my God c. Mat. 27.46 which shooke both heauen earth 2 Others say that the soule of Christ descended into hell not that it might suffer any thing there but that as in his bodie he had preached vpon earth the Gospell to them who were liuing so being dead he might in his spirit preach the Gospell to them in hell which opinion commeth neere to the second of those formerly repeated by vs. But to what purpose had this beene seeing after death there is no place left for preaching and repentance Moreouer he commended his spirit into the hands of his father and said vnto the theefe This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise where vndoubtedly there is no hell Luke 23.43.46 3 The fathers for the most part of them do labour to shew that in the very earthquake momët of his resurrectiō Christ did prese●t himself aliue to thē in hell shewed himselfe not so much in wordes as in deede conquerour of death and of the Prince of darknesse and that Sathan had no more power ouer the elect and that hee had a name giuen him aboue all names that at the name of Iesus euerie knee should bow both of things in heauen and things in the earth and things vnder the earth Phil. 2.10 For this cause Augustine saith thus The whole Sonne was with the Father the whole Sonne in the wombe of the virgin the whole in heauen the whole in the earth the whole on the Crosse and the whole in Hell VVhat thinke you of this iudgement of the Fathers I dare not condemne it seeing it is not against the holy Scriptures and hath in it no absurditie And the consent of Fathers when as it manifestly doth not disagree with the Scriptures is not lightly to be accounted of Yea more this opinion may seeme probable to be gathered out of the Apostles words Ephes 4.9 Now that he ascended aboue all heauens what is it else but that hee had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth For here there is a manifest opposition betwixt aboue all heauens and the lowest part of the earth But the first is taken according to the letter therefore also the second as it seemeth must be vnderstood according to the letter but there is no part of the earth lower then hell which is the place of the damned Although others by the lowest parts vnderstand simply the whole earth which is the lowest part of the world into which Christ descended and liued in it for many yeares What is the fourth opinion Of them who saie that
word of God 3. The multitude and pompe of humane rites hath ouerthrowen the ceremonies ordeined by God 4. In those ceremonies spirituall efficacie and operation not bare signification is vsed without the word of God as may appeare by the consecrations of oyntments salt wax c. 5. They haue degenerated into superstition and abuse 6. They are falsly supposed and held to perteine to the integritie and trueth of Baptisme VVhat is the word in Baptisme The word of the Gospell the summe whereof Christs institution conteineth beeing conioyned with the promise of eternall life being in these words Baptize yee in the name of the Father the sonne and the holie Ghost whosoeuer beleeueth is baptized shall be saued Mat. 28.19 And the pronunciation of this forme plainely and clearely in our natiue speach that all may vnderstand it I Baptize thee in the name or into the name of the father and of the sonne and of the Holie Ghost which words in the Schooles are called the forme of baptisme But wee had rather call them the forme of words therefore Dydimus saith that Baptisme is vnperfect if any of th● three persons bee omitted For whereas in the Act. cap. 2.38 wee read that the Apostles baptized in the name or into the name of the Lord of Christ it is either spoken by Synecdoche as Ambrose thinketh and is of the same sence with the aforesaid forme because the father is in Christ the holy Ghost also whosoeuer beleeueth in the Son beleeueth likewise in the father in the holy Ghost a Io. 12.44 14.9.10.12 or in the name of Christ that is through the name commaundement of Christ that is as he had appointed and ordained as name is often taken for commaundement or the terme to which that is the end and scope and effect of baptisme is signified but not the forme of Baptizing so that the meaning is that he had baptized them into the name and profession or euen into the death of Christ and to haue incorporated them into Christ by baptisme and to haue consecrated and sealed them Christians vnto him as their Mediator but with the accustomed forme of baptisme What is it to be baptized in the name of the father the Son and the holy Ghost By this phrase is signified that by calling on the fathet the sonne and the holy Ghost he who is baptized his sins being forgiuen is receiued into the fauour of that God which is the Father sonne and holy Ghost and is adopted sealed ingrafted installed receiued and consecrated into the sheepefold familie inheritance power worship league fauour religion faith and communion of the father the sonne and the holy Ghost that is the true God in nature and essence one but in propertie of persons three which is the Author of saluation that wee might liue after his pleasure Therefore he saith not In the names but in the name least from hence occasion might be giuen of making three Gods In which sence this phrase is to bee taken as it is plaine by the words of Paul 1. Cor. 1.13 where he denyeth that he baptised any in his owne name So then by Baptisme wee are consecrated to GOD the Father because in him our Adoption and regeneration which followeth after it is established by the Holy Ghost VVhat is the internall matter of Baptisme The thing signified which is both the bloude and spirit of Iesus Christ which are correspondent to the water and also the Ingrafting and incorporating into Christ by the holy Ghost and consequently the imputation of the righteousnesse of Christ the remission or washing away of sins the Regeneration or spirituall second birth the renewing and sanctification of that man which is baptized The putting on of Christ as it were of a garment wirh which wee are couered a Gal. 3.8 Ephe. 5.26 Tit. 3.5 Likewise the fruite fellowship and participation of the death buriall resurrection of Christ b Rom. 6.4.5 Col. 2.1.3 Lastly our Adoption and entrance into the Church of God as it were an admittance into the societie of the Saints which thing signified may be also called the essentiall part and internall forme of Baptisme What is then the forme of Baptisme Of outward Baptisme that holy externall symbolical action which the Minister of the word of God vseth which consisteth first in the reciting declaring of the institution of the diuine promises anexed to baptisme or in signifying the lawful wholsome vse of baptisme Secondly in the confession of that faith into the which baptisme leadeth or in Catechisticall questions answers or in stipulation by which those that were to be baptized in times past did testify their Inward baptisme being then to be cōfirmed with the outward as Act. 8.31 c 1 Pet 3.21 But first especially in the sprinkling of water in the name of the Father the sonne and the Holy Ghost And last of all in prayers blessings giuing of thanks in a language knowne vnto the people that the congregation may be able to say Amen 1. Co. 14.16 for all these things are commaunded by Scripture and example as Preach the Gospell hee that beleeueth c. Mat. 24.19 Act. 22.16 and Bee thou baptized and wash away thy sinnes by calling on of the name of Iesus Now the Scripture hath not prescribed a set forme in certain words concerning those admonitions and prayers touching the institution and Doctrine of baptisme which the word of God deliuereth but hath left that free as circumstances may require for the better edifying of the Church so that the foundation be kept But the forme of inward baptisme is that inward action which is proper vnto Iesus Christ himselfe working by the Holy Ghost VVhat Analogie and agreement is there of the Signe with the thing signified in Baptisme Verie great for euen as the water doth wash the body and the filth thereof so the bloud of Christ by his merit doth wash away our sins and spirituall spots for his spirit doth sanctifie vs d Rom. 3 25 Tit. 3 5 1 Iohn 1 7. And like as euery generation cōsisteth of moyst watery matter Wherevpon some Philosophers as Thales haue said that water was the beginning of all things so our regeneration is by the holy Ghost in Baptisme who is often signified by the name of water for euen as water prepareth the earth to bring forth fruit and quencheth thirst So the holy Ghost that same which sate vpon the waters a Gen. 1.2 maketh vs fit for good workes and quencheth in vs the thirsting after terrene things and hereof good workes are called the fruites of the spirit b Gal. 5.22 and Christ saith who so thirsteth let him come to mee and drinke for hee that drinketh shall neuer thirst but this hee spake of the spirit which they that beleeue should receiue c Esa 51.1 Secondly the sprinkling with water doth plainly note the sprinkling of the bloud of Christ
diuinity in questions answers which order of instruction is ancient in the Church as may appeare by the practise of Augustine Iunilius many worthy writers since before them The matter of this booke is very profitable being the sūme substance or a body of Theology For what point of piety may not be learned out of this booke do you desire to know the Doctrine of one God the trinity of persons Christ crucified the holy Ghost and the Scriptures of God Here you haue that doctrine set downe would you be acquainted with the creation of the world the natures either of Angels or mankind or mariage or diuorce Behold in this booke you may see them all Is it the gouernment of the world the doctrine of sin the power of freewil the law the gospel the agreement or disagreement of the old and new Testament which you are willing to learne here is a teacher fit to instruct you Here you haue a Synopsis of Faith repentance iustification sanctification of a Christians works christian liberty of prayer predestination of the Resurrection last iudgement of eternall life eternal death Here you may read of the true Church of the nature of Vowes of the Sacrametns of the old new Testament and the office both of Magistrates subiectes And concerning these questions whatsoeuer is material in Luther Melancton Caluin Peter Martyr Zanchius Hipperius Hemingius Vrsinus and the rest it is here set before you in one viewe How necessary it is for young men especially young noble men to read such bookes the seasoning of their tender years with piety the future good which may come by this to posterity doth easily proue If young Alexander will bee studious of philosophy why shal not young Theodosius be studious in diuinity if he said to his master mallem singulari disciplina quam potentia praestare why should not you say mallemus Christiana disciplina quam potentia praestare But as Alexander was offended with his tutor Aristotle in making cōmon those acroamatical books in which he alone desired to excell so many I feare me will be offended with mee in making this booke familiar to all which many would haue to be reserued for Diuines If any be scandalized at this labour of mine it is an offence taken not giuen I desire with Moses that all people might prophecie and since the Iesuites by their late inuented Catechismes haue made thousandes skilfull in errours why should not we who are Christians labour by institutions to make ten thousands skilfull in the trueth We commend them who bring vs either commodities or drugs or delites or fashions or fruites or trees from forraine countries and shall we discommend them who to the building of our Church do bring from other countries euen the gold of Ophir Now right Honorable hauing finished this booke I am bold to present it to your most Honorable patronage and as that most Reuerend father the late Archbishoppe of Canterburie commended to vs students of our Vniuersitie Caluins Institutions so do I commend vnto you Bucanus Institutions You haue both of you bin two worthy members of our two Vniuersities and the one The Lord of Cranborne is now in and of that famous Colledge of Saint Iohn the Euangelist where I haue bin fellow now neere eighteene yeares If it please your Honors to pardon my boldnesse to peruse diligently mine Epistle and to be as willing to read this excellent booke as Alphonsus did Tully Erasmus did Terence Bishop Iewell did Horace the Lady Iane did Plato and Antoninus the Emperour did read all good bookes I haue all that I desire or expect The God of Heauen so blesse you that whether you trauaile abroad or stay in this Kingdome you may so by your Christian Tutors bee seasoned with pietie in your youth that learning with those young children to sing an Hosanna a Math. 21 9. to Christ in your life you may after this life ended with the blessed Saints sing Halleluiah b Reuel 19.10 to him in the Highest Heauens London Saint Martins in the fieldes March 3. 1606. Your Honours to commaund Robert Hill To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader as the writings of God doe testifie that Antichrist shall be consumed by a breath so the writings of men do also testifie that the same Antichrist shall be weakned by rags The breath which shall consume him is the preaching of the Gospell the rags which shall weaken him are printed papers If he be burned by the one blesse God for good preachers if decaied by the other thanke painfull writers That these two are the meanes which must ruinate Antichrist we may see by the practise of our Antichristian aduersaries For though they haue many who declame against vs yet will they suffer none to preach Iesus Christ and though they haue many to write against vs Read the inhibition of preaching and Printing by Queene Mary in the booke of martyrs yet few will they suffer to read their owne controuersies That they want Christ preached behold their miserie that we haue him preached see our felicitie that their people dare not reade bookes marke the tyrannie of the pope that we haue libertie to read so manie worthie bookes note the goodnes of God and care of our gouernors To this end authoritie permits manie excellent bookes daily to be published and though much reading be a wearinesse to the flesh and manie bookes bring confusion to students yet as the stomacke must be preserued by varietie of meates so the minde must bee cherished with varietie of writers That thou mayest be moued to read old diuinitie in a new fashion I haue published in English this excellent discourse which because it is the quintessence of the best writers of our age I doubt not but it wil be welcom vnto thee If thou lookest for order few bookes more methodicall if for matter few more Iudiciall if for breuitie few more compendious if for plainnes few more perspicuous if for vse few more pretious And if either emulation amongst Stationers hinder not the sale as it doth the sale of many excellent bookes or the delite of vaine bookes do not hinder thee from reading it as it doth many from the best things I doubt not but thou shalt haue cause to say of this worthie man as Salomon saith of a worthie woman many Doctors haue done learnedly but thou surmountest them all Buy this truth but sell it not read this booke but forget it not Thou shall buy much for little cost and read much to thy great gaine Thus I commend thee to the grace of God and my selfe to the grace of thy prayers Thine and the Churches in the Lord. Robert Hill A Table of all the Common Places and their seuerall heads handled in this excellent Booke in which are answered one thousand fiue hundred and seauenty Questions The 1. Place OF God and page 1. The blessed Trinitie page 7.
Place 2. Of Christ page 13 Of his person page 14 Of Phrases page 20 Of his office page 24 Place 3. Of the Holy Ghost page 28 Of personall properties page 33 Place 4. Of the Scriptures page 37 Place 5. Of the worlds creation page 48 And the parts thereof page 54 Place 6. Of Angels in Generall page 64 Of good Angels page 67 Place 7. Of euill Angels or Deuils page 77 Place 8. Of Man page 88 Of the soule of man page 90 Place 9. Of Gods Image in man page 99 Place 10. Of Originall Righteousnesse page 104 Place 11. Of mans free will before the fall page 106 Of mans state before his fall page 110 Place 12. Of Mariage ordained by God before the fall and after confirmed againe by God page 112 Of the degrees of consanguinitie and affinitie page 120 Place 13. Of Diuorce page 129 Place 14. Of the Gouernment of the world or of Gods prouidence page 139 Place 15. Of sinne in Generall especially of Originall sinne page 154 Place 16. Of Actuall sinne page 170 Place 17. Of sinne against the holy Ghost page 175 Place 18. Of freewill after the fall page 181 of the causes of conuersion page 185 Place 19. Of the Lawe page 189 Place 20. Of the Gospell page 202 Place 21. Of the agreement disagreemēt of the Lawe and the Gospell page 209 Place 22. Of the agreement and discrepancie of the Old and New Testament page 213 Place 23. Of the Passion and death of Christ. page 224 Place 24. Of the Buriall of Christ page 238 Place 25. Of Christs descending into Hel. page 245 Of Limbus page 247 Place 26. Of the Resurrection of Christ page 253 Place 27. Of the ascension of Christ page 265 Of Heauen page 270 Place 28. Of Christs sitting at the right hand of his father page 276 Place 29. Of Faith page 287 Place 30. Of Repentance page 309 Of confession page 322 Of satisfaction page 323 Place 31. Of mans Iustification before God page 328 How Iustification and Regeneration differ page 344 Place 32. Of Good workes page 359 Of merits page 367 Place 33. Of Christian libertie page 379 Of things indifferent page 386 Of Traditions page 388 Place 34. Of Offences page 392 Place 35. Of prayers page 401 Of Inuocation of Saints page 407 Place 36. Of Predestination page 421 Of Election page 430 Of Reprobation page 439 Place 37. Of the last Resurrection page 451 Place 38. Of the last Iudgement page 466 Place 39. Of eternal life page 482 Place 40. Of eternal death page 494 Of Hell page 498 Place 41. Of the Church page 501 Place 42. Of the Ministerie and Ministers of the Church page 530 Of their calling page 548 Of imposition of hands page 553 Place 43. Of the power and authoritie of the Church page 570 Of Synods page 581 Place 44. Of the gouernmēt of the church page 586 Of Excommunication page 593 Of Anathematizing page 597 Of Fasting page 600 Place 45. Of Vowes page 609 615 Place 46. Of the Sacramēts in general page 615 Of circumcision page 631 Of the Passeouer page 640 Of the sacrifices of the old and New Testament page 648. and 675. Place 47. Of Baptisme page 695 Of Iohns Baptisme page 699 Of Baptizing of Infants page 715 Of Exorcisme page 729 Of imposition of names page 731 Place 48. Of the Lords Supper page 741 Of the Masse page 743 Of taking away the Cuppe page 750 Of the Sacrifice in the Supper page 764 Of miracles page 789 Of Gods Omnipotencie page 793 Of the circumscription of Christs bodie page 798 Of our Communion with Christ page 908 Place 49. Of Magistrates page 854 Of reuenge page 865 Of Iudgements page 875 Of warre page 881 Of Equitie page 891 Of Lawes page 892 Of Subiects page 893 That papists make it lawfull to murther princes page 902 Page 611. Line 16. for consent read constraint Page 860. lin 26 mens minds for mans minde The rest pardon as also that one or two short questions are omitted WHAT IS THE MAINE AND MOST principall point in sacred Diuinitie COncerning God For this is life eternall saith Christ Ioh. 17.3 that they acknowledge thee the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ How do you proue that there is a God 1. Out of the booke of Nature or the workes of God 2. Out of the booke of the Scripture or the word of God The booke of Nature is this vniuersall world which is so called because of the beautie furniture order and vse thereof All which do proclaime the chief-builder thereof to be most wise most mightie and most bountifull but of all the rest man being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a litle world whether you respect his soule and the faculties therof or the frame of his bodie and the manifold and worthie vse of the parts of this frame doth proue and commend the work-man as Psal 19.1 The heauens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth the worke of his hands Day vnto day vttereth the same and night vnto night sheweth knowledge a Psal 104.2 Rom. 1.19.20 2.15 Act. 14.15.16.17 17.23.27 Yea euery herbe declares that there is a God b Mat. 6.26.26.28 Gal. 4.8 Yet this knowledge is verie imperfect and verie weake and no wayes auailable to saluation c 1. Cor. 1.21 which notwithstanding makes men without excuse d Rom. 1.20 Whereupon Tertullian said First God sent Nature to be our schoole-dame purposing afterward to send the word that so hauing learned in the schoole of Nature we might the more easily beleeue the word of God So then as when I see an house I say there hath bin a Carpenter though I see him not so when I looke vpon the frame of this world I must say it had a builder though I behold him not Shew me the principall reasons to proue that there is a God First because there is motion in the world Now nothing can be moued but by some being which actually is 2. Because there must be a primarie cause on which all the rest depēd 3. Because all things are directed to an end Whence it must needs be that there is some one supreme Spirit which doth order all things not onely to their speciall ends but also to some one soueraigne end Prou. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himselfe 4. Because it necessarily followeth that there must be some Summum Bonum and first Being which may be the cause of goodnesse existence and perfection in the rest 5. Because no cause is worse then his effect now there are creatures which vse reason and a wise order therefore the cause of these creatures must needs be most wise 6. Because mans conscience after sin committed doth naturally stand in feare of a supreme Iudge 7. Because vpon grieuous sinnes euen in this life there are inflicted grieuous punishments Psa 37.36.38.11.8 Because al nations be they neuer so barbarous are perswaded that there is
the Scriptures the Church hath libertie to vse such words as may familiarly expresse the thing it selfe Moreouer we call the three Persons in God the Trinitie not because the Scripture cals them so but because the Scripture saith nothing against it Yet this word three whereof this word Trinitie is deriued is expresly set downe 1. Ioh. 5.7 There be three that beare witnes c. Whence we argue that as from one comes Vnitie so from three comes Trinitie How doth this word Essence differ from this word Person in God Essence is the nature which is not more belonging to one and lesse to another of the three Persons but common to them all yea one and the same and cannot be diuided and is all in each one of them not without them subsisting by it selfe to wit the very Deitie it selfe And therefore the essentiall properties which be in them are one in number and of one nature Now a Person is the subsisting in the diuine nature or the nature of God which hauing relation to others is distinguished by some incommunicable proprietie for indeed the Persons are onely distinguished and not seuered as three men are indeed sundred though they be but one in kind The reason is because the essence of God is infinite and impartible and therefore it is all in euery Person which are not seuered each from other but only distinguished amongst themselues But as for the essence of Angels and men it is finite and partible so that it is not all in euery singular person but part in one and part in another How manifold is the difference of Persons Twofold inward and outward The inward difference is that which is caused by the internall proprieties or the workes from within concerning which we say Opera Trinitatis ad intra sunt diuisa The workes of the Trinitie from within are diuided that is the workes which God doth within himself without any creature are not common to the three Persons but are proper to one person alone Now the proprietie of the Father is this that from eternity he was not made nor begotten but hath begotten his eternall Sonne of the same substance with himselfe a Psal 2.7 Heb. 1.3.5 Pro. 88.24 The proprietie of the Son is this that he being neither made nor created but was from all eternitie begotten of his Father without any mother b Heb. 7.3 Col. 1.15 who is of himselfe as he is God but of his Father as he is the Sonne For as light commeth from the Sunne euen so the Sonne proceedeth from the Father one distinct from the Father and therfore the second in order so farrefoorth as he is begotten c Psal 110.3 Mich. 5.2 one and the selfe same with the Father as he is God And here let vs cal to mind the saying of Nazianzene The begetting of God let it be honoured with silence it is no smal matter for thee to learne that he was begotten The proprietie of the holy Ghost is this that he was neither made nor begotten but from all eternitie proceedeth from them both inseparably d Ioh. 14.26 15.26 16.13.14 Ro. 8.9 But did the Sonne take his Deitie from the Father When we speake simply of the Sonne without the Father we auouch truly and properly that he is of himselfe and call him God because of himselfe he hath his being and all that he hath and therfore we call him one alone beginning But when we point at that relation which he hath with his Father we iustly make the Father the beginning of the Sonne and say that the Son receiued all from the Father Ioh. 3.33 For the Essence is one thing and the * Modus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manner of subsisting another Hence it is that the schoolemen say that the Son is by himselfe not of himselfe So the essence of the Sonne is without beginning but the Father is the beginning of his Person This made Hilarie to say The gifts of the Father do not infirme but affirme the Diuinitie of the Sonne And Augustine Christ in regard of himselfe is called God and of the Father is called the Sonne Ob. The Son and holy Ghost are not without beginning therefore they are not eternall Answ This is not a beginning of time or continuance but only of order and ofspring but the Sabellians here cauill viz. Christ saith He that seeth me seeth the Father and beleeuest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me Ioh. 14.9.10 therefore the Father and the Sonne are one person Ans Indeed he that seeth the Sonne seeth the Father because the Sonne hath the same essence with the Father and being manifested in the flesh hath deliuered to vs the whole will of God Ioh. 1.18 Ob. 2. That which is one in number cannot without contradiction be said to be th●ee in persons but God is one in number Deut. 6.4 ergo Ans That vnitie doth signifie Gods simple essence not the maner by which that simple essence subsisteth Therefore God absolutely according to his essence is one because he is indiuisible and onely in respect of inward relation I meane the reason of subsisting is three Ob. 3. If there be one being of the Father another of the Son and another of the holy Ghost it followeth that in God there are three diuers beings and consequently three diuers persons Ans The being of the Father doth not signifie that essence by which he is absolutely God but by which he is Father that is in that he otherwise subsisteth then doth the Sonne therefore the being of the Father is one thing and the being of the Son is another and yet both of them haue the same essence Ob. 4. If there be three Persons truly distinguished and one only essence then is there a quaternitie in God Ans Not so for the essence differeth from Person onely in reason but the Persons differ each from other both in reason and in being Ob. 5. The Father begot his Sonne either existing or not existing to say either of these is absurd Ans We may well say that the Father begat his Sonne alreadie existing because the Father was neuer without the Sonne euen as the sunne was neuer without his light Againe it may be as well said that he begat him not existing in that his generation although it be eternall yet in order goeth before existence as the sunne is before his light Is this difference rationall essentiall or reall It is not essentiall as in the creatures where euery one hath his proper essence or being defined and circumscribed for the essence of the Father is not one and the essence of the sonne another and of the holy Ghost another but one and the same which the Father doth wholly communicate to the Sonne the Father and the Sonne to the holy Ghost Not onely in reason because not in notion or mind or onely in word is he called Father Sonne and holy Ghost neither
and a better life What be the benefites or the effects of this kingdome of grace Righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost h Rom. 14.17 that is peace ioy happinesse light the knowledge of God begunne indeede here but made perfect in heauen or in the kingdome of glorie whereby it is manifest that this kingdome is not earthly but spirituall and heauenly i Ioh. 18.6.36 Which be the parts of the kingly office of Christ Two Vocation and Iudgement Vocation or calling by the word of truth and that double 1. whereby in generall Christ inuiteth all men indifferently to the embracing of his Gospell hauing appointed the ministery of the word to that end and purpose k Mat. 22.14 2. Speciall whereby by the labour of his Ministers he doth effectually illuminate and call vnto the knowledge of himselfe the elect by the inward operation of his spirit in his time appointed l Rom. 8.30 The other part of his kingly office is Iudgement m Ioh. 5.17 which he exerciseth after two maner of wayes 1. In this life both toward the elect partly in iustifying them or absoluing them from their sins which is the office of a Iudge partly by defending them against all kind of enemies as also toward the reprobate afflicting them with temporall punishments or else killing them with the word and moreouer by casting forth superstitions and brideling the furie of Satan and vngodly men n Psal 110.12 2. In the world to come by summoning both of them before his Tribunall seate and giuing sentence according to his word 3. By glorifying his elect and adiudging the wicked to eternall punishment Seeing the kingdome of Christ is eternall Psal 45.7 o Mat. 16.27 25.31.32 c. Why is it said that in the last day 1. Cor. 15.24 he shal render vp the kingdome to God euen the Father Not because he shall vtterly depriue himselfe of his kingdome but because that the manner of administration which Christ vseth for the gathering and preseruing of his Church in this world shall then cease What things are contrary to the doctrine of the office of Christ 1. The error of Stancarus who referred those things which belong to the whole person as to be Mediator to the humane nature apart and of Osiander who ascribed the office of a Mediator to the Diuinitie alone 2. The error of the Papists concerning the authoritie of the Pope of the Church of Councels in deuising new articles of our faith and expounding of scriptures and bringing in mens traditions into the Church The same mens error concerning the merites of workes satisfactions and the sacrifice of the Masse substituted into the roome of Christ and of the priesthood and sacrifice wherein most blasphemously they say they offer vp Christ for the quicke and the dead and of inuocation and intercession of Saints 3. The errour of the Popes supremacie of Christ his Vicarship whereof he hath no need 4. The error of the Iewes who dreame of Christ his earthly kingdome The third common Place concerning the holy Ghost To what things in the Scriptures is this name Spirit attributed SOmetime to things created sometimes to the Creator whence we may make a double spirit one created another vncreated but yet by proportion because the word Spirit doth principally agree to the Creator and to the things created lesse principally When it is attributed to the creatures it is vsed two wayes sometimes it signifies the substance sometimes the qualitie The substance either bodily but by a metaphor as Iohn 3.8 The Spirit that is the wind bloweth where it listeth or else spiritually and that either the soule as Psal 33.6 Into thine hands O Lord I commend my spirit that is my soule Act. 7.59 Lord Iesu receiue my spirit or else the Angels and those either good Heb. 1.14 the Angels are called ministring spirits or else as Luke 11.26 The vncleane spirit taketh to himselfe seuen other spirits worse then himselfe When it signifieth a qualitie it is vsed sometime for the opinion and affection as Math. 5.3 Blessed are the poore in spirit or else for the breathing and motion of the mind whether it be good which proceedeth from the good spirit of God or euill which is stirred vp by the euill and vncleane spirit as also from our owne euil will And hence it is that the gifts of God are called the spirit but by a metonymie as when Elizeus saith Let thy spirit be double vpon me 2. King 2.9 And when God saith vnto Moses Num. 11.17 I will take of thy spirit and giue it to the Elders And that either in speciall as Esa 11.2 The Spirit of wisedome for the gift of wisedome infused by the holy Ghost c. Ephes 1.17 The Spirit of meeknesse for meeknesse which the holy Ghost infuseth into the hearts of the faithfull so the Spirit of faith 2. Corint 4.17 and the Spirit of loue 2. Tim. 1.7 So on the contrary the spirit of couetousnesse the spirit of giddinesse the spirit of drunkennesse Esa 10.14 the spirit of slumber of fornication b Esa 29.10 Hos 4.12 are vsed for those vices Or else in generall all the gifts of the holy Ghost but those especially which in times past in the beginning of the preaching of the Gospell were bestowed vpon the beleeuers for the confirmation of the heauenly doctrine c 2. Cor. 11.4 Besides this word Spirit signifieth a qualitie when it is opposed against the flesh and againe it signifies another qualitie when it is opposed to the letter What doth the Spirit signifie then when it is opposed to the flesh It signifieth the grace of regeneration that is whatsoeuer in man either the mind or the will or in the affections is regenerate and renewed by the holy Ghost as Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Now the flesh being opposed against the spirit signifieth whatsoeuer is not as yet regenerate in vs to wit the pronenesse of the affection and carnall qualitie of the flesh and sinne d Joh. 3.6 which striueth against the spirit so that one and the selfe same faithfull man so long as he liueth here may be said to be both flesh and spirit as Paule sheweth by his owne example e Rom. 7. But what doth the word Spirit signifie when it is opposed to the letter It signifieth the power and efficacie of the holy Ghost ingrauing in our hearts the righteousnesse of Christ and by that meanes the law of God it selfe and bowing our hearts to the obedience thereof as it is 2. Cor. 3.6 The letter killeth but the spirit giueth life that is the bare law considered without Christ without the operation and efficacie of the holy Ghost killeth by the corruption of our nature but the Gospell by the Spirit of Christ which it hath ioyned with it giueth life Sometimes also Paule calleth the externall signe in the ceremonies the letter being
should come to passe foure hundred yeares after c Gen. 15.13.14.15 Act. 7.6.7 The promise made of the erecting of the Empire and kingdome in the tribe of Iudah d Gen. 49.8 The foretelling that the Gentiles should a long while after be called to the gracious couenant of God e Esa 45.22 of the destruction of Ierusalem f Esa 22.1 Ezec. 15.6 2. King 24.14 Dan. 9.26 Mat. 24.2 of the returne of the people out of the captiuitie of Babylon g Ier. 12.15 25.11.12 of the acts of Cyrus for the good of the Iewes which are set downe Esa 45.1.2 The foretelling that Iosias king of Iudah should slay the Priests and should burne mens bones vpon the altar of Bethel which was foretold 333. yeares before Iosias was borne and 359. yeares before it was performed h 1. King 13.2 2. King 23.15 Those famous Prophecies of Daniel concerning the foure Monarchies and the succession of them of Antichrist and his doctrine of the end of the world i Dan. 7.17 12.2 and such like of the comming and death of Christ k Dan. 9.24.25.26.27 All which could neuer be forseene by the wit of man nor be gathered by naturall causes and yet they were all proued most true by the certaine euent of them 3. That maiestie of the Spirit to be adored which euery where shineth clearely in the Scriptures vnder that rude and plaine simplicitie and humilitie of words l 1. Cor. 2.4 4. The power of the Scripture that it hath in the minds of men 1. in the conuersion of a man when as the Scripture sendeth foorth a certaine secret force wherby a man is affected and inwardly moued and so transformed into a new man m Heb. 4.12 Psal 119.111 Act. 13.12 2. In time of affliction when it doth enkindle in our hearts a liuely and firme consolation that at length men should preferre the holy Scripture before all they do enioy neither will they suffer themselues by any kind of affliction no not by death it selfe to be withdrawne from the same as we haue plaine example in the Martyrs by whose bloud it was sealed 5. That deadly and irreconciliable hatred wherewith the diuell and the world do persecute the doctrine of the Scripture wheras they can brooke other doctrines though neuer so absurd and impious 6. The inuincible certaintie thereof that against so many stratagemes of the diuell and so many outrages of the world it abideth firme and by a wonderfull successe gets the victorie To which purpose is that we reade 1. Machab. 1.59 That when Antiochus had giuen in charge that all the holy Scriptures should be burned yet continually after that they peeped foorth of their dennes and not long after being translated into the Greeke tongue were spread ouer the whole world 7. That most sweet harmonie and wonderfull consent betweene all the parts of doctrine taught by Moses the Prophets Christ the Euangelists and the Apostles 8. The wonderfull calling of Moses n Exo 2.7.10 3.2 Act. 7.20 of the Prophets o Amos 7.14 of the Apostles of whom the most were vnlearned and simple men which had not bene brought vp in the schooles of men and learned that there which they taught to others who did so skilfully dispute of heauenly mysteries vpon the sodaine c Act. 2 11. 4.13 The wonderfull conuersion of Paule being before a professed cruell and bloudie enemie to a new man d Act. 9.3 c and that all these had no regard of their owne honor and profit but onely the glorie of God and of Christ and of the saluation of men 9. The perpetuall consent of the whole Church and of all the godly the space of so many ages ouer the face of the whole world farre and neare in imbracing and keeping the Scripture 10. So many and so famous miracles as well of the old Testament which Satan was neuer able to imitate no not in anie resemblance as the raising vp of the dead e 1. Kin. 17.22 2. King 14.33 13.21 the deuiding of the sea and of the riuers f Exod. 14.21 Ios 3.15.16 the staying and going backe of the Sunne g Ios 10.13 2. King 20.11 as of the new Testament which the Iewes themselues cannot denie as Iosephus beareth witnesse li. 18. cap. 4. although the Iewes at this day affirme that the miracles of Christ were done by I know not what superstition of the word Schem hamphoras least they should be constrained to confesse the truth and to acknowledge Iesus the sonne of Marie to be the Christ 11. The matter of the Scriptures which containeth doctrine euery where heauenly and fauoring of no earthly thing In it alone is propounded the pure and perfect law of God h Deu. 4.6 7.8 Psal 19.9 that alone shewes that meanes of saluation which doth not resist the glorie and most perfect iustice of God and satisfieth the consciences of men 12. The forme because there doth appeare manifestly the dispensation of the wisedome of God ordered and disposed 13. The most lamentable ruine of the persecutors and haters thereof What is the true vnfallible note wherby all men of sound iudgemēt do acknowledge that doctrine to be the doctrine of the true God Because that doctrine which doth teach vs to seeke the glorie of one God and of him alone in whole and euery where and to cleaue vnto him out of all doubt that doctrine is the doctrine of the true God i Prou. 16.14 1. Cor. 10.31 Jerem. 9.31 1. Timot. 1.17 Ioh. 7.18 8.49.50 5.43 44. 12.43 Gal. 1.10 Phil. 1.9.11 But onely the regenerate do rest in it as that that bringeth saluation and the doctrine of God with full assurance of their heart But how shall we answer them who aske how we know that Moses the Prophets and the Apostles were the authors of those writings which are published vnder their names and whether there was euer any such Moses or no That such a question is not to be vouchsafed an answer but rather to be punished for it is as much as if any man should aske whether there were euer any Plato Tullie Aristotle whose writings are daily conuersant in the hands of all men Seeing that before Moses his time we reade not that there was any word of God written how did God all that time reueale his will vnto men Either by oracles pronounced by the mouth and voice of God himselfe to his seruants a Num. 12.8 or else by Vrim and Thummim that is light and perfection which God gaue to Moses to put it into the breast-plate of the high priest b Exod. 28.20 but what they were and of what fashion no man knoweth Or else by visions and resemblances which the Lord offred to the eyes or mind of them that were waking c Ier. 1.10.11 or else in dreames sent of God to them that were asleepe
d Num. 12.6 at the last God stirred vp Moses that he should be the first pen-man of holy Scripture Yea and God himselfe writing the ten Commaundements with his owne finger did as it were consecrate the Scripture e Exod. 31.28 and gaue Moses in charge to write the bookes of the Law f Exod. 24 4. Afterwards he deliuered his word by the Prophets g Luk. 1.70 by Christ God and man h Heb. 1.1 Last of all by the Apostles of Christ both by word and writing i Mat. 28.19 Act. 1.18 Rom. 16.25 Reu. 1.11 but there was nothing deliuered by word of mouth but that which is now extant in writing For although there were moe things spoken and done then are written yet nothing contrarie and these things which are written are sufficient k Joh. 20.31 But wherefore was the word of God committed to writing 1. By reason of the forgetfulnesse of mans mind 2. Because men are so prone to fall into all kinde of impietie whereby the works of God are corrupted 3. Because of mans boldnesse to coyne new kinds of religions 4. Because of the subtiltie of Satan who transformeth himselfe into an Angell of light and deceiueth the minds of men with counterfet reuelations In what tongue was either of the Testaments written The old Testament was written by Moses and the Prophets in the Hebrew tongue because that was the language of the people of God to whom especially it did belong But the new Testament was written by the Euangelists and Apostles in the Greek tongue because that language by reason of the Greeke Empire which went before the Romaine was almost in vse among all nations and was more fit for the spreading of the kingdome of Christ through the whole world And therefore the Hebrew text in the old Testament and not the Greeke and the Greeke text in the new is authenticall and not the Latine or anie other Ought the Scripture to be propounded to all Christians in their owne natiue tongues Questionlesse because Christ him selfe taught in their natiue tongue a Luk. 4.17 and the Apostles taught the Grecians and other nations not in the Hebrew but the Greeke tongue and they taught euery nation in their owne natiue language b Act. 2.11 Is the Scripture manifest or is it obscure It is manifest if you regard the foundation of the doctrine of saluation as the Articles of faith the precepts of the Decalogue hence it is called a Lanterne c Psa 119.105 2. Pet. 1.19 to those whose mind God doth open d Luk. 24.45 but it is obscure to those which be blind and to all that perish whose minds the god of this world hath blinded e Cor. 4.3.4 But it is not alwayes obscure to the elect f Ioh. 16.13 and only in part 1. that they shold not too much relie vpon their owne wit but shold seeke the vnderstanding of it at the hands of God by prayer 2. That they might be stirred vp to a more carefull studie of the same 3. That they might make more account of the ministerie of the word whereby they are taught and therefore stand in need to haue it expounded g Prou. 29.18 by the example of Christ h Luk. 4.17 and of Philip i Act. 8.31.35 What is the Interpretation of holy Scripture It is the vnfolding of the true and naturall sense of the Scripture the application of it vnto the manifest vse of the Church k 1. Cor. 14.4 5.31 which Paule calleth prophecie l Rom. 12.6 Peter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the resolution of it m 2. Pet. 1.20 For the word of God fondly vnderstood is not the word of God saith Theodoret Whence must we fetch the interpretation of Scriptures Not out of euery priuate mans braine and forestalled opinions n 2. Pet. 1.20 but it is to be taught out of the Text it selfe that is by obseruing those things that go before and follow after and comparing that place with other places of Scripture What must be the rule of interpreting Onely one namely the Analogie of faith o Rom. 12.6 which is nothing else but the constant and perpetuall sense of Scripture expounded in the manifest places of Scripture and agreeable to the Apostles Creed tenne Commandements the Lords prayer and generall sentences and axiomes of euery maine point of Diuinitie What is the vse of holy Scripture 2. Tim. 3.16 The whole Scripture is giuen of God by inspiration and is profitable for doctrine for reprehension for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and for exhortation p Rom. 15.4 o● consolation q 1. Cor. 14.3 that is for doctrine or confirmation of true opinions for reprehension of errors for correction of manners instruction of life in righteousnesse for comfort in affliction that the man of God may be perfect and furnished for euery good worke What shall we answer to that saying of Augustine I would not beleeue the Gospell vnlesse the authoritie of the Church moued me That Augustine speaketh of himselfe as yet not conuerted vnto the faith Neither is it any maruell that those which are not as yet conuerted are moued with the consent of the Church and the authoritie of men Therefore his meaning is that the Church is as it were an * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 introduction whereby we are prepared to giue credite to the Scripture What things are contrarie to the Scripture 1. The error of the Sadduces which onely receiued the fiue bookes of Moses which caused Christ to confute their deniall of the resurrection out of Moses Mat. 22.31 2. Of certaine Anabaptists who reiected the booke of Iob as a fained tragicall Comedie yea the Song of songs and Ecclesiastes as if the one taught Epicurisme the other were a wantō loue Ballad Yet for Iob we haue his countrie and condition set downe in the beginning and end of his booke which argueth no fiction and besides he is mentioned by Ezechiel cap. 14.14 and Iam. cap. 5.11 and Paul 1. Cor. 3.19 And for Ecclesiastes it rather deterreth from pleasure in that it argues all pleasures of vanitie and iudgeth them fooles who rest vpon them as on the contrarie it maketh felicitie to consist in the feare of God and keeping his commandements cap. 1.2 7.3.8.12.11.9 and the whole twelfth Chapter As for that of the soules immortalitie cap. 3.19 it is meant not that Salomon so thought but that corrupt reason so iudgeth As for the Song of songs if it were meant of Pharaohs daughter or some Sunamite damosell the comparisons cited cap. 4.1.7.2 were monstrous And albeit the name of God is not mentioned in that booke yet find we equiualent and more fit names for that purpose as Brother Friend Spouse Beloued that it might appeare that the mysticall Spouse of Salomon was here described I meane the Church of Christ 3. The heresie of Manicheus Valentinus Marcion and others
denying the holy Scriptures to be indited by the holy Ghost and of others reiecting certaine writings of holy Scripture 4 The errour of the Papists which is manifold for they holde that the authoritie and certaintie of Scripture dependeth vpon the determination of the Church that the Scripture is not authenticall but by the authoritie of the Church and that it is not manifest that the Scriptures proceede from God but by the testimonie of the Church which error is most absurd For if truth be subiect to the pleasure and iudgement of men the consciences are made doubtful of their saluation and the same errour is confuted by the testimonie of the Apostle Ephes 2.20 where the Apostle affirmeth that the Church leaneth vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets which foundation he cals not the very persons of the Apostles but their doctrine For although the Church should by her iudgement approue the scripture yet doth she not make of that which is vncertaine and doubtfull certaine and authentical but doth by her iudgment subscribe to the truth of God and doth embrace it as proceeding from God Moreouer they account the Apocrypha bookes for Canonicall They prattle that the Scripture is imperfect and obscure that the reading of the Scriptures is hurtful to the Church that it is the matter of contention that matters of controuersie cannot be decided by Scripture alone that it hath a nose of waxe They affirme that power to interprete and giue the sense of Scriptures belongs to the Bishop of Rome They match the writings of Fathers Bishops and Counsels with the Scripture They take away from the common people the writings of their fathers last will and testament and post them ouer to dumbe idols as to lay-mens bookes cleane contrary to the commaundement of Christ Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures Lastly they account the old Latine translation as authenticall The fifth common Place of Creation What is the signification of this word to Create in the Scriptures IT is peculiar because the reason of man knoweth not how any thing should be created of nothing For Dauid Kimchi affirmeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that this word to create most properly is affirmed for euery thing which is brought from no being to a being as Gen. 1.1 But secundarily and yet properly it signifieth to bring a forme created of nothing to a matter preexisting without alteration a Gen. 1.21.27 Whereupon Damascene saith lib. 2. cap. 5. that God made all things of nothing some things indeed immedidiatly but other some by meanes which is a part of diuine omnipotence Therefore the word to create is attributed to God alone in the Scriptures either in the workes of creation or else by a borrowed speech in things that be of no lesse vertue and power then the very worke of creation b Esa 41.20 Ier. 31.22 Psal 51.12 For this cause these words differ to beget to create to make For to beget is to bring forth something of his owne substance like vnto it selfe according to the essence but to create is to make something of nothing diuerse from the substance of the Creator And this word to make is applied to those things which be made of some matter but yet it is restrained by the circumstance of the text to the propertie of creation c Gen. 1.25.31 Rom. 1.20 What is Creation It is an external and indiuisible worke of Iehouah Elohim alone that is of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost whereby by his word power and commandement alone he hath created all things out of himselfe that is the substance of all things being seuered from his owne Essence to the end that his infinite wisedome goodnesse and power might be made manifest d Act. 17.24 Rom. 1.20 Proue it by some testimonies 1 The very historie of the creation as it is set downe by Moses Gen. 1. is a most ample witnesse of it 2. Psal 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the heauens created and by the spirit of his mouth all the power and hoast of them And in the same Psalme vers 9. He spake and they were made he commanded and they were all created Againe Psal 19.1 The heauens declare the glorie of God and the firmament soundeth foorth or celebrateth the work of his hands Mal. 2.10 Hath not one God created vs Iob. 9.8 Who alone doth stretch out the heauens 1. Cor. 8.6 We haue but one God the Father of whom are all things Why is the creation ascribed in the Creed to the Father alone Not that the Sonne and the holy Ghost shold be excluded from the effect and praise of that worke who in that same worke manifestly not as instruments but as efficients equally and inseparably wrought together a Iob 1 3. Col. 1.16 Gen. 1.1.2 but by way of excellencie that the decree of this worke and first beginning of it might be giuen to the Father because the Father is the fountaine and beginning not temporall but originall of the whole Deitie by whom all things were made Further that there might appeare in the Church some externall difference whereby the Father might be distinguished from the Sonne and the holy Ghost for as Basill saith in his booke intreating of the holy Ghost cap. 16. The Father is the first principall cause of those things that be made the Sonne the instrumentall cause the holy Ghost the perfecting cause What was the mouing or impellent cause of the creation of all things The infinite goodnesse of God ioyned with infinite wisedome which it pleased him to communicate and by communicating to reueale it because a good thing is apt to communicate it selfe And when did God begin to create In the very beginning of all things and in the vety beginning of time that is then when the things which now be began to be For though all things in the world were made in the Sonne b Col. 1.16 yet in this place this word beginning signifieth not the Sonne but some certaine beginning of time as also Ioh. 1.1 But whereof and whence were all things made and produced Of Nothing this word being vnderstood negatiuely that is of no other matter that was before For this word Of in this place signifieth not the materiall cause whereof any thing is made but the order As if a man should say When as there was nothing before after that there was any thing it was made or else it signifieth the habitude or disposition of the materiall cause which is simply denyed How proue you that 1. Because there was nothing from eternitie excepting and besides God himselfe and whatsoeuer there is it is either the Creator or else the creature but things were not created out of the substance of God for then they should be God or gods wh●ch is very absurd therefore they were made of nothing 2. God is almightie and therefore doth not stand in need of some matter going before For this cause Psal 33.9
all his posteritie Christ onely excepted 3. Because euery like begets his like in nature and kind which notwithstanding should not haue bene by force of propagatiō but by the appointment of God as it is said afore of originall sinne Whether should the grace of Christ haue ensued that originall righteousnesse Yes certainely for if God in the law doth promise his grace to the children of the godly a Exod 20.6 how much more would he haue pursued Adam his posteritie with that grace if they had stood in godlines What then should they haue bene so confirmed in grace as that they could sinne no more Surely the condition of the children and of the posteritie should not haue bene more perfect and better then the condition of our first parents who were created by the hand of God himselfe but mutably good and this is reserued for the life to come that a man should be without all danger of sinning What is the vse of this doctrine That we should bewaile the losse of our excellent estate in Adam and that we should so much the more eagerly and earnestly by faith imbrace Christ the restorer of the image of God which in time to come shall be immutable What makes against this doctrine of originall iustice 1. The dottage of Flaccus Illyricus who taught that originall iustice and original sin was a substance in Adam not an accident 2. The error of the Papists who maintaine that originall iustice wherewith as they say the first man was made was not his natural condition but a supernaturall gift and that man lost neither free-will nor other gifts of nature but onely supernaturall The eleuenth common Place of mans free will before his fall Is the word Free-will found in the Scriptures NO as neither that Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of it owne power yet neuerthelesse the thing expressed by those words is found in the holy Scriptures wherein in stead of these words they vse the word will What are we to vnderstand by this word Free-will There be some which vnderstand it to be a free facultie to do any thing as well good as euill because in good authors it signifieth a power as in that of Ouid You haue power both of our life and death Te penes arbitrium nostrae vitaeque necisque The Schoole doctors vnderstand by will the iudgement of the minde by free the will it selfe as though free-will should signifie iudgement which being made of the minde the will either chuseth or refuseth But the word free is an adiectiue and not a substantiue and it is an epithite or attribute added to the word will Therefore to speake properly freewill doth not signifie a facultie of doing good or euill or else the libertie of the iudgement but rather facultie of willing or nilling any thing or else the free pleasure of the will which followeth the deliberation of the reason or of the mind and the consultation or a freewil whereby the wil doth either will or not will chuse or refuse those things which be obiected of the mind or vnderstanding and it is not onely of the ends but also of the meanes So Latine authors vse the word will as Cicero in the oration for Sextus Roscius All things are done by the becke and will of God that is Omnia nutu arbitrioque Dei aguntur they be ruled by the will of God Aristotle called it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 free election of the mind The Greeke fathers more boldly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hauing power of it selfe for it signifieth a thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 masterlesse which is subiect to the power of no other can be let or hindered by none which agreeth to no creature To what things is free-will attributed in the Scriptures It is attributed to God the Creator and to the reasonable creature that is to spirits and man What and of what kind is free-will which is attributed to God spirits and man To God and to the blessed spirits after their confirmation is attributed free-will onely to good which is true libertie as Paul also saith 2. Cor. 3.17 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie Now God himselfe is the spirit and the spirit doth especially raigne in the blessed celestiall spirits 2. To men not regenerate as also to euill spirits is attributed freewill onely to euill and not vnto good too for they are not able to do no not to thinke any good of themselues a Gen. 8.21 2. Corinth 3.5 Ephes ● 1 Which free-will ought rather to be called slauish wil because Christ saith Ioh. 8.34 He that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne b Rom. 6.17 2. Pet. 2.19 yet it is called freewill vnto euill because euery sinne is voluntary c Iob. 15.16 And the will vnlesse it worke freely were no will but nilling 3. To man regenerate is attributed freewill to good d Phil. 2.13 Heb. 13.21 but onely in part because it consisteth as yet partly of the spirit partly of sinful flesh and it hath not as yet ful perfect and free wil to good which it haue one day in the glorie to come e Rom. 7.15 c. Gal. 5.17 4. To Adam before the fall is attributed freewill which was flexible or mutable as well to good as to euill which difference is especially to be obserued How do you proue this latter Because there was nothing in man inwardly or outwardly wherby he shold be compelled to wil to do either euil or good therefore Ecclesiastes cap. 7.30 God created man right but they to wit Adā and Eue followed many deuises And Syracides or Iesus the son of Syrach God created man frō the beginning and left him to the choice of his owne counsell cap. 15.10.14 Now let vs speake of the powers of freewill How farre forth did the powers of freewill extend themselues in Adam before the fall To performe al those things which did agree vnto his nature For he was able to performe the workes of nature as to eate to drinke to rest to sleepe to walk and political works as to maintaine peace to gouerne a family and religious workes or workes of piety either inward as to loue God to beleeue in God to cal vpon God or outward as the exercises of religion in teaching offring sacrifice c. Did Adam besides these sound faculties stand in need of Gods grace He did whereby namely he might be preserued in that his integritie of nature and might be furthered to those actions Euen a● a true and liuing vine indued with her natural vertues for the bringing forth of wine hath yet need of the outward help of the raine also of the sun preseruing and mouing her natural powers and furdering her for the effecting of the worke of nature For the proposition of Christ is euerlasting Ioh. 15.5 Without me ye can do nothing And Col. 1.17 Christ is before all things
The other is by words de praesenti for the present as I do betroth thee to be my wife which present and actual promise is called simple absolute consent although the mariage be not yet celebrated Thus she is accounted betrothed named a wife VVho so defileth anothers mans betrothed wife or spouse let him be stoned to death for he hath hūbled his neighbours wife b Deut. 22.23 And Iacob speaking of Rachel who was only betrothed vnto him Giue me my wife c Gen. 29.21 The Angel saith vnto Ioseph Fear not to take Mary thy wife d Mat. 1.20 when she was but betrothed vnto him but she that was betrothed was now by determination accounted a wife vnlesse some thing fell out which might frustrate the contract Is the bond alike in both contracts No for in the contracts de futuro indeed touching the promise and to free the faith plighted they may be admonished but they can not be cōpelled especially if they bring probable reasons why they wil change But the cōtracts de praesenti induce an effectual obligation which ought not to be dissolued by mutuall consēt for it is a truly ratified mariage e Math. 19.6 although not wholy consūmated without adding the duties of mariage Also contracts de futuro if they be confirmed with copulation following ought to be ratified VVhy are contracts instituted and why is there a certaine time obserued betweene it and the celebration of mariage There are diuers causes first that the bridegroome and bride may first consent in minde before they cōioyne in body or as Austine saith lest the husband easily obtaining make light account of that which he longed for being deferred Secōdly that in the mean time the cōtracts may be published in the Church to the end that if any iust cause ly hid for which the mariage begū may not be cōsummated it may be manifested in due time Thirdly naturall honestie that mē might not presently after the contract be caried violently like beasts with the sway of their sensuall desires Which three causes appeare in the contract of Ioseph and Marie a Mat. 1.18 Deut. 21.12 Which is the other degree of mariage The consummation which is done by consecrating or blessing and by celebration of the mariage What is consecration of mariage It is a holy actiō wherein the bride groome bride being brought into the church before the congregation are taught by the minister touching the institutiō ends of mariage there expresly witnes their consēt either by signes if they be dūb or deaf or by words if they can speake For the Canons say that mariage is of no force except consent be declared by words so i● their mariage publikly confirmed and they themselues consecrated vnto God by prayer From whence is this custome taken From the example of God himselfe who as soone as he had giuē Adam a wise blessed them like a Minister in these words Increase and multiplyb Also from a general rule which commandeth That all things be done in the Church decently and in good order c 1. Cor. 14 40. Further it maketh for the dignitie of mariage and freeth the new maried of all ill suspition least they should be thought to liue together like harlots Lastly it cannot but be approued by God who will both be called vpon and is alwayes at hand to them that call vpon his name What is the celebration of mariage All the other whole politicke action by which the couenants of mariage are confirmed and the bride is honestly and modestly brought into the bridegromes house Ought a Christian to obserue this festiuitie and celebration Yea and that according to the custome of the country where he dwelleth and that rule which Paul commandeth Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust holy of good report c. do them d Philip. 4.8.9 Thinke you the mariage feast lawfull Yea it is vsed almost amongst all nations and also confirmed by many examples of Scripture as we reade that Laban made a great feast at the mariage of Iacob and Rachel e Gen. 29.22 and Christ both with his presence and present of 6. galons of excellent good wine confirmed this custom f Ioh. 2.1.2.7.8 But yet in such bankets we must remember that which is recorded concerning Tobias his mariage that they feasted in the feare of the Lord g Tob. 7.17 8.20 As also that at King Ashuerus his great and solemne feast such modestie and honest●e was obserued as that no man was compelled to drink more then himself pleased h Hest 1.8 Wherfore mariages celebrated with riot pride gluttonie drunkennes vnchast playes al kind of wantonnes are solemnized to the diuel and not vnto God these are not the least cause of euils which make mariage troblesome vnpleasant vnto many withall rob many parents of their children What is the forme of mariage A iust coniunction of one man and of one woman into one flesh for they which were two before mariage are after marrying made one flesh that is one man by the coniunction and vnion both of soule and bodie What positions do you gather out of this formall cause of mariage First that the bond of mariage is most straight far exceeding that which is betweene the parents and the children as God saith a man shall leaue his father and his mother and shall cleaue vnto his wife i Gen. 2.24 2. That it is not only most strait but indissoluble because that two are made one flesh therefore Christ saith Whom God hath ioyned together let no man separate a Math. 19.6 Thirdly that it is mutuall and reciprocall in one ouer anothers bodie for the Apostle gathereth hereout in that they are one flesh that neither of both hath power ouer their owne bodie b 1. Corin. 4.7 Fourthly an argument of mutuall loue betweene them The husband must loue his wife as his own flesh and as Christ loueth h●s Church c Ephes 5.28 Fiftly that there ought to be a communion of all things both spirituall and corporall betweene maried couples What and how many are the ends of mariage Three if thou respect the persons themselues first that they mutually helpe one another both in heauenly and humane things This God expressed Let vs make Adam a helper like vnto himselfe d Genes 2.20 that humane societie may be familiar and friendly yet so as that the husband may appeare to be the wiues head e 1. Corin. 11.3 The second is procreation of children which may succeed their parents both in name and goods which end the Lord hath likewise expressed Increase and multiply f Gen. 1.28 Thirdly that it may be a remedie against all wandring lusts as Paul noteth For auoiding fornication let euery one haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband g 1. Cor. 7.2.3 But if you respect either the church or common wealth
appointment of God whence commeth such confusion and disorder in the world that for the most part it goeth well with the wicked and ill with the good I denie that is Disorder But it is the most wise ordinance of God whereby he suffereth the wicked to florish thereby to make them inexcusable but the godly to be scourged that their saluation may so much the better be furthered thereby a Pro. 3i 12. Heb. 12.10 And so the Doctrine of the iudgement which is to come is more confirmed Also this life is short neyther are the punishments in this life of great continuance nor the pleasures of this life but eternall good and euill things are no vading shadowes Moreouer hainous sinnes for the most part are punished with grieuous plagues in this life eyther in the bodie of the sinner himselfe or in his posteritie There is no doubt but all the actions of the godly are directed by God but doth God also worke in the hearts of the wicked as Augustine speaketh in the booke of Grace and Freewill and doth he decree and gouerne their works He that receiueth and alloweth the holy Scripture can in no sort denie it namely that nothing can be done but which he decreeth For Exod. 4.21 7.3.9.12 10.1 God speaketh thus I will harden the heart of Pharaoh that he shall not let my people go Deut. 2.30 The Lord hardened the spirit of Sehon King of Hesbon and made his heart obstinate And Paule saith thus Rom. 9.18 God hardeneth whom he will An example hereof is in Semei 2. Sam. 16.10 To whom God spoke that he should reuile Dauid In the booke of grace and free will chap. 20. not by commaunding that he should obey saith Augustine but in his iust iudgement enclining and disposing his will in it selfe wicked and his euill minde by such punishment to exercise Dauid So the Medes and Persians are termed to be sanctified of God and instrumentes of Gods wrath The King of the Assyrians is said to be in the hand of God as a rod a staffe a hatchet and a saw Isa 13.3 5.3.5 10.5.15 Yet doth he also set limits to their malyce that they extende not their crueltie further then him pleaseth yea he turneth euen the wicked things which the vngodly doe to verie good endes seruing for his glorie and the saluation of the elect But doe we not make God the Author of euill by this meanes Farre be it from vs for the wicked are so set on worke by God that they also play their owne parts to wit by their depraued counsell purpose and will for the euill which they will they will it voluntarily freely and without compulsion or violent constraint as also doe the euill Angels Againe God doth not infuse malice into the willes of the wicked as he infuseth goodnesse into the hearts of the godly neyther doth he compell or allure their willes to sinne but he onely mooueth euill or sinning willes such as hee findeth them become by the corruption which hath ensued the falling away of diuels and men from God such I say he mooueth enclyneth turneth and directeth wisely iustly mightily where when how and as farre as he pleaseth either mediately or immediatly to follow or auoide obiects that they who purpose no such thing may fulfill that which the hand and Counsell of God hath decreed a Act. 4.28 Moreouer good writers haue vsed thus to speake that God indeede worketh in the Godly and by the godly but say they he worketh by the wicked but not simply in the wicked But are not they which commit euill deedes excused hereby No. 1. First because they are reprooued by their owne conscience And the actions of God and of wicked men differ in that which is willed that is in that end which he and they properly aime at neither do they that they do to obey God but to satisfie their owne lusts a Isa 10.5.6.7 and they are the instruments of God not meerely passiue as the hatchet in the hand of the artificer but actiue neither vnreasonable as a horse and a dog but reasonable that is endoued with reason and such as haue in themselues the inward voluntarie and electiue beginning of their actions So that the whole euill remaineth in themselues alone and in God there is no more to be found but the lawfull vse of their malice who executeth iustly by the euill wils of the wicked those things which he willeth well as it is to be seene in the selling of Ioseph b Gen. 5.20 Likewise in the reuolting of the ten tribes from the familie and house of Dauid c 1. King 11.31.35 c. 12.15.16 and in the betraying of the Sonne of God d Act. 4.27 13.27 2 In one and the same worke of the wicked the good and iust action which is the proper action of God is to be discerned from the defectiue and faulty action of the wicked For in tha the wicked sinne it is in themselues but their doing of this or that in sinning is from the power of God who diuideth darknesse as he thinketh good as Augustine hath well written And so saith the same author in the same worke God is found to be iust but man guiltie because that in one and the same thing done by both the cause wherefore either of them did it is not the same Which thing the Learned declare by these similitudes 1 Of an Executioner who putteth to death the offender though by the iust commaundement of the Magistrate yet in his owne wicked desire of doing it he sinneth 2 Also by that of one who rideth vpon a lame horse who neyther himselfe halteth with the horse nor is cause of the horses halting Likewise by example of the soule which moueth the bodie in a diseased and lame bodie 4. Of the thiefe who killeth a man whom God in his iust iudgement wil haue slaine Where note this rule When there are many causes of the same effect and some of them good some bad that effect in respect of the good causes is good in respect of the euill euill VVere it not better to referre these things to Prescience whereby God foreknoweth all things indeed before they come to passe but doth not decree them No because when the Scripture saith that God blindeth a Isa 6 9.10 Ioh 12 40 hardeneth b Deut 8 2 13 3 tempteth c Rom. 1 28 giueth ouer vnto a reprobate sense it noteth somewhat more then a foreknowledge or a bare and idle permission to wit an effectuall operation which God performeth not by working that obstinacie as a most iust Iudge two waies c Rom. 1 28 1 Whereas they are alreadie corrupt by forsaking them more more by depriuing them of his grace or deniing them his spirit or also by taking it from men and leauing them to their owne malice 2 By deliuering the wicked to Sathan the minister of his wrath and in
or lesse from the ordinances of God and as the obiects varie as it is a more grieuous sinne whereby a man offendeth against God immediately then against man and it is a greater sinne whereby we sinne against our parents then that whereby we sinne against others On the contrarie he sinneth lesse that stealeth being compelled by hunger then he who prouoked by lust committeth adulterie with his neighbours wife a Prouerb 6.20 Also sinnes differ in degrees as to be angrie or to couet an other mans wife is a sinne but it is a greater sinne to kill or to commit adulterie b Mat. 5.21.22 27 28. Also they differ according to the varietie of circumstances and causes c Mat. 11.22 24. Moreouer the law it selfe distiguisheth the workes of the first and second table d Exod. 34.1 And Christ saith to Pilate Iohn 19.11 He that deliuered me vnto thee hath the greater sinne therefore also are they not to be punished with equall punishments How farre therefore may that diuision be admitted Not in respect of the qualitie of the sinne but in respect of the persons which sinne insomuch as they eyther beleeue or not beleeue For that is mortall sinne which maketh all who beleeue not guiltie of eternall death And such are the sinnes of all men vntill they beleeue that is vntill by faith they receiue remission of sinnes But veniall sinne is not that which doth deserue pardon but that which freely is forgiuen pardoned for Christs sake to them which beleeue such is the sin of all who truly beleeue For that which of it selfe and in it owne nature is mortall becommeth veniall in the beleeuers by the grace and mercie of God whilest it is pardoned and forgiuen them according to that Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus for they come not into iudgement but haue passed from death to life Iohn 5.24 In a word to the elect all their sinnes euen the greatest are veniall and pardonable through Christ e Ioh 5.16 but to the reprobate no sin there is which is not mortall f Rom. 6 23 What is the third diuision Some sinne is said to be Pardonable some Vnpardonable What sinne is Pardonable Euerie sinne which is committed against the Father and the Sonne g Mat. 12.31 that is euerie transgression of Gods law which is repented of which is remitted of God if the transgressor cease to sinne and flie to Christ the Mediator otherwise not therefore it is called Pardonable from the euent not because of the nature thereof How doth remissible or pardonable sin differ from veniall sin Remissible or Pardonable is that which may be forgiuen to al that beleeue Veniall is that which is actually remitted to the beleeuer What things do oppose this doctrine 1 That distinction of the Papists of sinne into mortall and veniall which is vnproper except in the diuers respects of the elect and reprobate 2 That Paradoxe of the Stoicks who did therefore make all sinnes to be equall because sinne is that thing whatsoeuer is not lawfull We grant indeed the vnlawfulnesse to be alike in all kindes of sinne ❧ The seuenteenth Place of sinne against the holy Ghost VVhat is the sinne which cannot be pardoned IT is a kind of sinne so deadly that eternall death ensueth it without any hope of pardon or forgiuenesse or it is the sinne which is not repented of How is it called It is called the Sinne against the holy Ghost blasphemy of the holy Ghost that is against the holy Ghost a Mat 12 13 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sinne which is vnto death b 1 Iohn 5 18 But what is this sinne That we may the better vnderstand it testimonies of Scripture are to be gathered by which we may vnderstand both what it is and what it is not First therefore commeth to our hands that saying 1. Ioh. 5.17 All vnrighteousnesse is sinne but not vnto death VVho so knoweth that his brother sinneth a sinne which is not vnto death let him aske and life shall be giuen him which sinneth not vnto death there is a sinne vnto death I say not that thou shouldest pray for it Heere sinne vnto death is distinguished from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnrighteousnesse which is the transgression of the whole law Hence therefore I gather that the sinne against the holy Ghost is not any transgression of the morall law neyther vniuersall nor particular eyther of ignorance or infirmitie or of malice committed against the law 2. That place of Mathew is to be remembred Mat. 12.31 Whosoeuer speaketh against the son of man it shal be forgiuen him and of Paule 1. Tim. 13. He confesseth that he was a blasphemer of Christ a persecutor a violent man but yet notwithstanding that hee obtained mercie because he did it of ignorance through vnbeleefe From whence I gather that blasphemie persecuting of Christ of his gospell which proceedeth of ignorāce is not a sin against the holy Ghost 3 Hence commeth to our consideration Peters deniall of his master who denied Christ and that when his owne conscience cried against it and with an execration a Mat. 26.69 but this was done through the horrour of the danger at hand neither did his iudgement consent with his tongue and that faith for which the Lord prayed it might not faile b Luc. 22.32 was not extinct but laboured and boyled within him otherwise he would haue ioyned himselfe to the persecutors of Christ when on the contrarie weeping bitterly he flung out of doores From whence I conclude that the deniall of Christ proceeding from infirmitie and not from a purpose to forsake Christ but so that a man may finde out some way for his own safegard is not the sinne against the holy Ghost although nothing commeth neerer it then this deniall c Marc. 3.28 Luk. 12.10 4 Let vs consider that saying of our Lord Mat 12.31 and in the verses following where he obiecteth to the Pharisees blasphemie against the holy Ghost who not onely despised Christ and his Gospell but also said that Christ cast out diuels by Beelzabub the prince of the diuels when as notwithhāding they knew Christ by the Prophets his owne doctrine and miracles and were not ignorant that those works of Christ were done by the power of the holy Ghost Hence therefore I gather by the place a concreto that the matter or generall difference of sinne against the holy Ghost is To denie Christ being knowne and his holy Gospell and against a mans owne knowledge and conscience to ascribe to Sathan that worke which is proper to the holy Ghost And this is one manner and one kinde of sinne against the holy Ghost which was the Pharisees sinne Such is theirs who haue knowne the truth haue neuerthelesse not submitted themselues to the truth but reuile and slaunder the truth calling it hereticall erroneous and diabolicall Lastly consider we of
respect Iohn was greater then the Prophets a Luc. 7.26 notwithstanding because he had not yet manifested the power and glory which appeared in the resurrection of Christ therefore Christ denieth that he was equall to the Apostles b Matt. 11.11 but he closely sheweth that he had a middle place betwixt the Prophets the Apostles 3 By Christ himselfe being manifested in the flesh to whom it is properly attributed that he preached the Gospell of the kingdome of God but onely in Iudea At the length by the Apostles by the commaundement of Christ d Mar● 16.15 which thing they performed by their preaching and writing Did not the Patriarchs also and Prophets preach the Gospell and mention it in their writings Although euen from the beginning of the world the ministery of the Gospell was signified to the fathers and the Prophets spoke and wrote of this as Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman shall breake the head of the Serpent And Gen. 12.3 e Gen. 18 18 22.17 26.3.4 28.14 15 In thy seede shall all nations be blessed Gen. 49.10 Silo that is Christ the seed of the woman borne of her womhe without the operation of man shall come when the scepter and kingly dignitie is taken from Iudah Deut. 18.15 God there repeateth and illustrateth the promise of the Gospell f Psal 2.6.8 8.6 45.8 110.1 4. c Isa 7.14 Behold a virgine shall beare a sonne and shall call his name Immanuell that is God with vs because the word was made flesh Iohn 1.24 And the whole 35 Chapter containeth an Euangelical Sermon concerning the death of Christ and the fruits thereof Notwithstanding that which they preached was rather the promises of the Gospell then the Gospell it selfe seeing they prophecied of a thing to come but did not declare and publish the thing alreadie exhibited and performed Gal. 3.16 To Abraham and his seed were the promises made Therefore the Apostle speaketh thus Rom. 1.1 Set a part to the Gospell of God namely to preach it which he had promised before by his prophets in the holy scriptures If it were promised therefore it was not alreadie then exhibited And 1. Pet. 1.10 Of which saluation the Prophets haue enquired and searched forth who haue prophecied of the grace which was to come vpon vs. But at length the Apostles did publish it being exhibited whereupon sometimes they call it their owne Gospell Rom. 2 16. God shall iudge the secrets of men by Christ Iesus according to my Gospell and 2. Cor. 4.3 But if our Gospell be hidden c. By these speaches they shew themselues the preachers not the authors of it Was there therefore one and the same Gospell from the beginning of the world or one and the same way to obtaine saluation common to all men in all times It was alwaies one for Heb. 11.4 Abell by faith receiued that testimonie that he was iust before God Rom. 4.3 Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Gen. 15.16 and Acts. 10.43 To Christ doe all the prophets beare witnesse that whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall receiue remission of sinnes by his name Hebr. 13.8 Iesus is the same yester day and to day and for euer Therefore Reuel 13.8 he is called the Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world which is to be vnderstood not in deede and actually but in efficacie Is there then no difference betwixt our doctrine and theirs who liued vnder the law None in regard of the substāce but much in regard of the maner of dispensation For to them it was reuealed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 1.1 Many waies and in diuers manners and therefore more obscurely and by parts and as it were by diuers degrees and in diuers mannes and when the day drew nearer the doctrine of free reconciliation in the Messiah was more cleerely reuealed Againe where as the auncients did touch it sparingly we haue receiued a more full enioying thereof Therefore Christ extolling the measure of grace whereby we excell the Iewes saith to his disciples Mat. 13.16.17 Blessed are the eyes which see that which you see blessed are the eares which heare those things which you heare for many Kings and Prophets haue wished for this thing and haue not obtained it In a word they beleeued in a Messiah to come we in him that is come alreadie What is the matter of the Gospell or the subiect where about it is employed Christ who died for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification Rom. 4.25 For concerning him is the Gospell and him onely it doth preach Rom. 1.3 The Gospell which he promised concerning his sonne For which cause it is called the Gospell of Iesus Christ a Marc. 1.6 the testimonie of Christ b 1 Cor. 1.6 also the word of the crosse c v. 18 because it is a preaching of Christ crucified And in the 22 verse The Iewes aske a signe and the Grecians wisedome but we preach Christ the power of God and the wisedome of God What is the subiect to whom the Gospell belongeth Christ teacheth vs Marke 16.15 Goe ye into all the world and preach the Gospell to euerie creature that is not to euerie particular man but to all nations at Mathew expoundeth it chap. 26.13 and 28.19 and Luke 24.47 by whith it is signified that in the Gospell is neither Iew nor Grecian bound nor free male nor female but all are one in Christ Iesus Hereupon it is called the Gospell of the vncircumcision Gal. 2.7 metonymically and the Gospell of the Circumcision which was to be preached by Paule amongest the Gentiles and by Peter amongst the Iewes But the vertue and efficacie of the Gospell or of the promises of the Gospell belong onely to them who beleeue and are elected according to the testimony of Christ Iohn 17.9 I pray not for the world saith he but for those which thou hast giuen me because they are thine Neither doth Christ therefore mocke any man seeing all the fault is in the reprobate whose owne conscience doth conuict them of voluntarie contumacie What is the end of the Gospell To propound and apply vnto vs who are found guiltie by the law the grace and mercie of God promised by faith in Christ or to promise vnto vs the forgiuenes of our sins and our iustification before God in Christ alone and by the meere mercie of God d Rom. 3.23 24. 1 Pet. 1.9 VVhat are the effects of the Gospell 1 To create faith wherupō it is called the word of faith b 2 Cor. 5.19 1. Tim 4.6 2 To minister vnto vs the spirit therefore it is called the Ministery of the spirit because it hath the power of the spirit ioined with it c 2 Cor. 3.8 4 To regenerate for which cause it is termed the good seed d Mat 13.37 5 By preaching of the remission of sinnes and all good things in Christ to comfort
termes of faith and hope are taken one for the other b 1. Pet. 1.5 Rom. 8.24 And as Luther saith faith beholdeth the word of the matter hope looketh vnto the matter of the word Moreouer faith receiueth Charitie giueth and bestoweth Charitie is begotten of faith and not on the contrarie faith maketh vs the sonnes of God c Gal. 3.26 charitie trieth vs d 1. Ioh. 4.7 Iohn 13.35 whether we be the sonnes of God The obiect of faith is Christ offered in the Gospell with all his benefits the obiect of Charitie is God and our neighbour a Mat. 22 37 39 Furthermore faith endureth in this world and shall passe into a perfect knowledge in the other world but Charitie shall flourish most of all in the world to come 1. Cor. 13 13. The chiefe of those three vertues is Loue In respect of the vse namely toward our neighbour whereas the other two go no farther then the person of the beleeuer and hoper VVhat are the contraries of faith 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infidelitie the vnbeleefe of all infidels who say in their heart There is no God Psal 14.1 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that difficultie to beleeue of the Christians which heare the word and doe not beleeue it and which conceiue a faith of God not according to the Scriptures but according to the imaginations of their owne hearts 3 Security of the flesh and contempt of Gods Iustice wherby sinnes are punished 4 The Iewes confidence in the flesh b Phil. 3.3 5 Presumption and confidence of our owne strength workes merits righteousnesse and worthines such as was in the pharisies Luke 18.11.12 6 Confidence and trust in the helpe of man c Esa 30.2 7 That Academicall distrust and doubting of God of the certaintie of Gods word of the grace of God or the forgiuenesse of sinnes that so that selling of workes of supererogation and suffrages for the dead may the more easily be retained 8 Desperation 9 The errrour of the Papists which say that faith is not onely of those things that are reuealed in the Scripture but likewise also of those that are deliuered by hand without writing Also that there is a beginning or bringing cause of all other vertues for the which we are iustified That there is a habite formed by Charitie vnto righteousnesse Moreouer that faith and doubting are not opposites and that wee can no otherwise determine of the fauour of God towards vs then by morall coniecture Besides what the Church beleeues that is the Catholicke truth That faith may remaine in the wicked and that therefore it doth not iustifie then which nothing can be said more slaunderous against sauing faith of which Christ saith Hee that beleeueth in him shall not perish but shall haue eternall life Iohn 6.40 Furthermore that faith is occupied onely in generall propositions as Hee that keepeth the commaundements shall enter into life And Hee that beleeueth and shall bee baptised shall be saued But not in these Particulars I shall enter into life I shall be saued or My sinnes are forgiuen mee For it were a vaine confidence for hope to applie those generall sentences vnto particulars and seueralles which yet may bee deceiued whereas Paule saith directly contrarie Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed Lastly they account it impudencie or presumption to hope any thing without desert 10 The madnesse of certaine fanaticke persons who doe seuer the internall word as they call it from the ministration of the outward word And finally the madnesse of the Anabaptistes who dreame of the perfection of faith ❧ The thirtieth common place Of Repentance where of Regeneration From whence is Repentance deriued THE Latine word poenitentia is deriued from poena punishment because there is a kinde of punishment in those things which are shamefull or loathsome vnto vs. And therefore if we looke vnto the propertie of the Latine word it rather agreeth with contrition or sorrowes which are in our soules through the acknowledgement of our sinnes then it doth with conuersion vnto God In Hebrew it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Teshuba conuersion or reuersion turning backe according to that Ier. 4.1 If thou wilt returne vnto me returne saith the Lord. By a metaphore borrowed from them that haue strayed out of their way and after long wandering doe returne vnto their first high way In Greeke it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly afterwit of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth after the deed done to be wise to change our mind and purpose for the better to returne vnto a sound mind and so to grieue for the error by past as to amend it Whereupon some will haue it deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 madnesse and folly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 afterwards as if it should be the correcting and amending of madnes and folly for alwaies with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ioyned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 soundnesse of mind And the matter it selfe well agreeth with both these interpretations the summe whereof is this That forsaking our selues we should turne vnto God and laying aside the foolishnesse of sinning we should put on a new minde and become wiser By another Greeke word it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latine poenitentia of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after a thing done to be sorie grieued for which the Latines properly say poenitere So 2. Cor. 7.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signfyeth to take griefe for any thing that is done Although I made you sorie by a letter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I doe not repent though I did repent And Rom. 11.29 The giftes of God are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Such as can neuer displease him seeing once they did please him Also it is taken in ill part as it is written of Iudas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 grieuing not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repenting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he brought againe Math. 27.3 signifying sorrow and griefe wherewithall hee was swallowed vp For euerie man doth not repent that is sorrowfull and grieued but oftentimes falleth into a worse case then hee was before whereas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the holy Scriptures is alwaies taken in good part and signifieth sauing amendment Notwithstanding the Latine interpreter hath translated both the Greeke words by the word Poenitentia How many waies is the terme of Repentance vsed Foure waies 1 Synecdochially 2 Generally for the whole turning and conuersion of man to God 3 Specially for Regeneration 4 For the outward profession of Repentance VVhat is repentance taken Synecdochically It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sting of sinne or the prick of conscience and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a displeasing which the Greeke Diuines call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it wounds the soule commonly we call it Contrition And they make it double or of two sorts Legall by the preaching of the Law whereby the sinner being wounded with the searing
eternall as Christ saith Iohn 3.3 vnlesse a man be borne againe c. 3 Because faith without which it is impossible for any man to be saued cannot be without good workes and faith hath charitie euer ioyned with her though not in action yet in possibility a Gal. 5.6 4 Because Bernard saith good workes are the way to the kingdome not the cause of raigning Neither can any man attaine to life eternall but by the way of good workes which God hath prepared that wee should walke in them Ephes 1.4 2.10 What is to be obserued in the sayings of the Scriptures vvherein iustification saluation and life eternall is ascribed to workes 1 Legal sentences are to be vnderstoode of perfect good workes such as none can be found in no creature But euangelicall sentences doe alwaies include faith in our workes And we must vnderstand that by faith in the first place iustification is receiued and acceptation to life eternall afterwarde in the second place and by consequence workes are accepted as the fruites of fairh and life eternall is promised to these for Christes sake 2 In such sayings there are not brought forth arguments from the cause why the person is made partaker of eternall life but it is shewed from the effects or the adiuncts what person is partaker of remission of sinnes life eternall So Luk. 7.47 Christ plainely proueth in way of resolution by this argument that the womans sinnes were pardoned because shee loued much But twoe diuerse questions are at no hand to be confounded The one to whom life eternall is giuen the other for what cause it is giuen To them that doe well and meditate in the law of God is happines and life eternall promised a Psal 1.13 119.1.2 Math. 25.3 but yet it is giuen freely for Christes sake b psal 32 1 3 In this question we must remember to obserue a rule of the Rabbines concerning the holy Scriptures In euery place wherein thou lightest on an obiection for an hereticks thou findest a medicine in the side thereof So the scripture wheresoeuer it ascribeth eternall life to workes as a reward calleth it an inheritance c math 25 35. Colloss 3.24 4 When as diuers effects doe depend alike of one and the selfe same cause the consequence from one effect auaileth to another because of their common dependance as Luk. 7.47 the consequence from loue auailes to proue the remission of sinnes because ech of them dependeth on faith 5 Where there is a subiect there is his proprietie and on the contrarie where there is a propriety there is his subiect So where there is faith there be workes and where there be good works there is faith 6 Seeing good workes doe spring from faith whatsoeuer is attributed to them must needs be ascribed to the roote i. faith whence they spring VVhat is the end and vse of good workes It is three fold 1. The glory of God namely that by them wee should glorifie God before men a Mat. 5.16 2 The testification of our true faith that we may make our calling and election sure to our selues in our owne consciences 2. Pet. 1.10 And also that we may liue sutable to the gospell our calling Ephes 4.1 I beseech you walk worthy of the calling wherwith you are called 3 The edification of our neighbour 2 Cor 9 which is done whilest that we further him by our workes or prouoke him to doe the like b 11. 12. 13 Act. 3.14 VVhat is contrarie to this doctrine 1 Euill workes 2 The error of the papists who teach that good workes may be done without faith as also of them that thinke they are perfect which boast of the perfection and purity of workes and securely rest in them Also their error who bragge of their merits of congruity and condignity and boast of the workes of supererogation which teach that their wilworships Numb 15.39 Ezek 20.18 19 Mat. 15.19 that is worships of there owne deuising are acceptable to god Which accompt these for good workes which are done with good intent and leane only on the will and tradition of men which imagine that the violating of these is more hainous then of the commandements of God As for that which is saide that we must heare the guides euen as Christ himselfe d. Luk. 10.16 Heb. 13.17 it must be vnderstood only of the true pastours of the Church which watch for the saluation of the soules committed to their charge And the error of them who affirme that man is iustified before God by workes as causes sclander vs that we contemne good workes as though this were in controuersy betweene vs and them whether good works are to be done wheras we doe more carefully vrge this then they doe 3 Of the Epicures or libertines which neglect good workes as vnprofitable The three and thirtieth common place Of Christian libertie What doe you vnderstand by this name Christian libertie NOT loosenesse or in generall simply euery libertie but in some respect restrained to some certaine kinde and certaine degrees For this Epithite or title Christian or spirituall puts a difference wherby this speciall kind of libertie is discerned from ciuill and bodily libertie and from the counterfeit liberty of other sects Neyther yet is it contrarie to bodily and ciuil libertie a Eph 6.5 1 Cor. 7 22 or to that seruice that we owe to God and to iustice b 1 pet 2.16 Rom. 6.18 1. Cor. 7.22 Hee that is called being free is the seruant of Christ that is he ought to serue Christ Againe whereas we speake of Christian libertie we must put difference betweene the libertie of the will whereof we haue spoken in the common place of freewill and the libertie of the person wherof here we are to intreat In Greeke it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Cor. 3.17 for where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie .. In Latine it is called libertas libertie or setting free not that it it is done by force as in old time when the Lord deliuered the people from Pharaoh vnlesse it be in respect of Sathan whose power and kingdome Christ hath destroyed neither is it obtained with the leaue of our enemies as when the people returned out of Babilon but by the full price paid not to Sathan but to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle calleth the price of our redemption whereby vve are made free How manifold is personall libertie Paul sets it downe to be twofold not in the kinds but in respect of the degrees one whereby Christ hauing paide that endlesse price namely his bloud wee are redeemed that wee might be set free from the slauerie of sinne death and the Law c Ephe. 1.7 Rom. 7.6 which for instruction sake we may call the Redemption of libertie Whereof the Apostle maketh mention Rom. 6.22 Now are wee made free from sinne but are the
compulsion nor by this necessity proceeding from God but from the voluntary corruption of man for no man is an offence to another against his will or through inconsideration but of purpose with deliberation Therefore though it be necessary that offēces come yet woe vnto the world because of offences VVhat are the ioint causes or by how manie meanes is an offence giuen Foure First By false doctrine and false worship such be heresies errors worshipping of idoles superstitions the traditions of men whereby the weake are withdrawne from the simplicity of the word 2 By word or speach and that either filthy cursed or blasphemous 3 By life and behauiours repugnant to the law of god such are filthy gestures hainous offences and euill examples in the abuse of Christian libertie whereby the weake are discouraged from christianity but for the most part the offences giuen by doctrine do more harme then the offences by manners because they worke more closely presently assault the faith but these other doe sooner appeare and doe lesse hinder our faith as in the beginning the deuill gaue Eue a deadly wound putting into her a false perswatiō a Gen. 3.2 And Solomons idolatrie brought forth the worshipping of idols for a long time after VVhat punishment is appointed for the authors of this scandall Christ Math. 18.17 doth threaten that lamentable sentence or horrible woe against them woe be vnto the world because of offences and. verse 6. he pronounceth that it is better for that man by whome the offence is giuen that a milstone being hanged about his necke hee should be cast into the bottom of the sea VVhat is an offence taken That which men take vnto themselues from the doeings or sayings of other men either from true doctrine and the outward forme of the Church or else in generall from any other things whatsoeuer But in speciall some speach of ours purpose or deede which is godly iust and of it selfe honest or at least not done wickedly and vnseasonably By meanes whereof notwithstanding some mā doth iudge ill of vs but without cause either of some frowardnesse ill will or a certaine sinister spitefulnesse of the minde or else vpon error and taketh it as an occasion of offence How manifold is an offence taken Double either from man or from the deuill from man which also by deuision of Accidents into the subiects is double of the wicked and of the godly The scandall of the wicked is of worldlie men as of the wise men of this world and of hypocrites who are offended 1. at the poore estate humility and crosse of Christ in our flesh assumed 2 At the absurdity imprudently conceiued of the nouelty simplicity of the doctrine of the gospell and preaching of grace whereby we are taught that all men being by nature sinners subiect to the wrath of god are iustified and saued thorow grace or by faith alone in Iesus Christ and by the article of election predestination and the mortifying of the old man 3 By the life and actions of the godly whereby they imagine themselues to be controlled in the free vse of the thinges of the worlde 4 Lastly by the crosses and persecutions which goe hand in hand with the profession of the gospel which offence because it springeth from the malice of them that are offended and from their spite it is called the offence of the Pharises of which Math. 15.12 The discples said to Christ dost thou not know that the pharises are offended hearing this speach of thine So Christ and the gospell were to the Iewes an offence taken and to the Grecians foolishnesse 1. Cor. 1.23 And the stone of offence And the rocke of offence to the twoe houses of Israel a. Esa 8.19 Luk. 2.34 1 Pet. 2.7.8 to witt by accident and priuatiuely as Christ being despised and reiected is the author of iust condemnation whereas in truth and by himselfe but to the elect he is the way the truth and the life and the fountaine of all good Concerning this we must obserue the warning of Christ Blessed is he that is not offended in me Math. 11.5 So the sermon of Christ concerning the eating of his flesh was a scandall to the Capernaites b Ioh 6.41 57 60 So the Iewes were offended with Peters going in to the Gentiles c gal 2.12 So the righteous actions of the godly are an offence to the wicked d Psal 56.6 7 So the disciples of Christ pulling the eares of corne are an offence to the Pharises e Math. 12.2 So many are offended by reason of the iarres which follow the preaching of the Gospell to condemne it VVhat are the causes of this offence taken The principall efficient cause is the iust prouidence of God which doth decree and execute this although men stumble through their owne malice as it is written Behold I put in Sion a stumbling stone and a rocke of offence The second cause is Satan who prouoketh the wicked to take all things in the worst parte The instrumental cause are the men themselues who are offended at the godlinesse of others The causes assisting are the blindnes of mans reason the corrupt iudgment of the world the affections of the flesh enuy malice rash curiosity the neglect of the holy scripture bad opinions conceiued the perswasion of a mans owne righteousnesse the desire of gaine and keeping credite hating to be instructed occasions are the confessing and preaching of sound doctrine the behauiours life deeds and crosses of the godly the condition of the truth As for the forme or manner it is expressed in diuers examples Is this kinde of Scandall to be auoided No but not to be regarded according to the comaundement of god Deut. 33.9 He that shall say to his father or to his mother I know you not he that shall not acknowledge his brethren and his sonnes these do keepe thy law o Lord. And according to the rule of Christ concerning the Pharises which were offended at his word Math 15.14 Let them alone they are blinde and the leaders of the blinde that is neglect them neither take care for offending them and of the Apostles Acts. 5 29. we must obey god rather then men And of Bernard It is better an offence should come then that the truth should be forsaken Besides we must preferre the first and second commaundement before all the duties to men according to the example of Elias against Achab a. 1. King 18 18 and of Paule against Peter those which plaid the Iewes b Gal. 2 3.4 5 11.14 What is the offence of the Godly taken Which is taken only of such as be yet weake in the Church or not wicked but is greedily taken of them that be more malicious that they may make the doctrine of the gospell doubtfull and vncertaine to the simple sort either by the calamities of the church the punishments of the innocents the heresies dissentions which
thirtieth common place Of the last Iudgement VVhat is signified in the Scriptures by the word Iudgement 1 COmmonly to iudge is to deeme to thinke and iudgement is taken for the opinion or meaning of the minde 2 It may be knowne what it is by the contrarie thereof for to iudge and to saue are contrary as therefore to saue is to free one from destruction and to giue life so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to iudge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to condemne to destroy to giue cause of condēnation In which sense it is vsed Ioh. 3.17 God sent not his sonne into the vvorld that he should iudge the vvorld that is that he should cōdemne or rather be the cause of condemnation but that the vvorld might bee saued through him Whereupon iudgement is vsed for the cause of condemnation vers 19. This is the condemnation that that light came into the world and men loued darknesse rather then that light And for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemnation Ioh. 5 24. He that beleeueth in me hath life eternall and shall not come into condemnation 3 To iudge is to rule and gouerne as Iud. 3.10 and in other chapters where iudgement is taken for Rule and for the minde of the iudge and for equitie or for that which is iust and right a luk 11.42 And the iudge for the Magistrate b Exod. 2 14 all through And first surely when iudgement is attribured to God it is taken for the ful Rule vniuersal gouernment and administration wherewith the whole world standeth sure is preserued and gouerned c Ioh. 5 22 27 30 Gen. 18.25 2. For the gouernment and well ordered state of the Church whereby the father manifesteth the Gospell through the sonne maintaineth the ministerie bestoweth the holy Ghost quickeneth the deade by the word euen from the beginning to this day prepareth a kingdome for the sonne that is the Church Mat. 12 18 Behold my seruant whome I haue chosen I will put my spirit on him and he shall shew iudgement to the Gentiles 3. For Gods vengeance and punishment on sin sinners d 1 Pet 4 17 4. For Gods preceps or commandements e Psal 19.9 119 13 30 throughout 5 To iudge doth signifie to reprehend others faultes by the example of ones owne vertue f Math 12 27 41 42. c 19.28 Luk. 22 30. The Apostles shall iudge the twelue tribes of Israell that is the Apostles faith and Doctrine shal take all excuse away from the Israelites So Ro. 2.27 6. To iudge doth properly belong to the Iudge when he giueth sentence whereby either he condemneth or iustifieth one that is he doth indeede condemne by pronouncing him guiltie of the fault and by adiudging him to punishment but he doth iustifie when he freeth any one from the crime and punishments due to the crime And in this sense iudgement is the Lords cēsure freeing the elect and pronouncing them heires of eternall life but cōdemning the reprobate How manifold is the Lords iudgement Twofold Particular or Antecedent temporall and hidden which is either of many or of euery one in the time of euery ones life or death for that the Lord either in this life doth defend those that are his according to his promise The gates of hel shal not ouercome it Mat. 16.18 or chastiseth them when they erre with warr famine pestilence or with some other kinde of punishments that they may not be condemned with this world g 1. Cor 11 32 Whereupon 1. Pet. 4.10 Iudgement beginneth at the house of God or finally receiueth their soules into heauen and on the contrarie keepeth downe the wicked and punisheth their sinnes diuerse waies and at length deliuereth their soules to Sathan to be tormented h Luk. 16 22 29 2 Vniuersall extreame manifest finall absolute eternall is that which shall be in the last day when the bodies are raised vp of which we must principally heere entreat By what arguments is it declared that the iudgement shall be vniuersall and extreame 1. Because iudgment and Resurrection are so necessarily ioyned the one to the other and it cannot bee that God can iudge of all men which are deade vnlesse hee raise them from the deade nor can resurrection be assigned to any other end then that God might iudge all men might separate the sheepe from the goats the corne from the chaffe the godly from the vngodly a Mat. 25 13 2. It is declared by a remarkable principle in nature which teaeth that God i● iust and therefore it must needes be well with the good and euill with the wicked for euer which because in this life it cannot be for that there are so many wicked men and Atheists who commit all kinde of wickednesse whom neuerthelesse God doth not take vengeance on in this life againe for that there are godly men and some that worshippe God sincerly who liue a most troublesome life so farre is God from rewarding them in this life b necessarie is it that there should bee a certaine and vnfallible iudgement remaining afterward wherein the wicked might be punished and the good may receiue the reward of piety Cor 15 19 3. Bur farre more certainly is it shewed by testimonies of holie Scripture Psal 9.8 The Lord hath prepared his throne for iudgement and shall iudge the world in righteousnesse and 50.1 The God of Gods hath spoken and called the earth from the rising of vp the sun vnto the going downe thereof our God shall come and shall not keepe silence that he may iudge all men Isa 66.15 Behold the Lord shall come in fire Mat. 25.31 and so following all the whole act of iudgement is described Luk. 8.17 There is not any thing hid that shall not be euident Ioh. 12 48. The word that I haue spoken shall iudge him in the last day Rom. 2 16. God shall iudge the secrets 1 Cor. 3 13. Euery mans worke shall bee made manifest Heb. 9 27. It is appointed vnto men that they shal once dy after that commeth the Iudgemēt Iud. 14 15 ver Enoch the seauenth from Adam prophecyed of such saying Behold the Lord commeth with thowsands of his Saints to giue iudgement against all men to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes Therefore must their needes bee a Iudgement 4. We confesse in the Apostles Creede that Christ shall come to iudge the quick and the dead What is the last iudgement It is the act of Iudgement whereby Christ in the last day shall presently after the resurrection of the deade pronounce sentence vpon all men with great maiestie and glorie separating the elect from the reprobate and adiudging them to eternall life but the reprobate to vnquenchable fire What are the efficient causes of the iudgement to come 1. The eternall God Father Sonne and holy Ghost inseparably for as much as there belongeth to the iudiciall power dominion
himselfe that is without mannes ministerie but by the Apostles delected as associates to performe their office in watering their plantings building vpon their foundations perfecting their worke and were in preaching the gospell sometimes in one sometimes in another place as it were subsidiarie and certaine secundarie apostles not in one onely but in many churches and who should haue power and authority to set pastors and orders in particular churches to which they were sent and that till such time as they were recalled by the Apostles a Tit. 1.4 such were Timothy b Act. 16.3 Luke Mark Tichicus c 2. Tim. 4.11 12 Titus d 2. Cor. 8 23. Philip e Act. 21.8 and others whether they were called out of those 70 disciples whome Christ apointed besides the 12. f Luk. 20 12 or from among others 2 In a more strict signification those foure penmen of the holy Ghost whose labour the Lord vsed to publish the Euangelicall historie of Christ and to describe the beginnings of the christian church are called Euangelists of these two Marke Luke were companions of the apostles and Euangelists The other two Mathew and Iohn were Apostles and Euangelists May not other pastors and doctors of the church be called Apostles Prophets and Euangelists No but abusiuely for concerning the appellation of an Apostle Andronicus and Innias are said to be famous among the Apostles that is of note with those ancient Apostles but yet they are not called Apostles g Rō 16 17 besides the name of an Apostle is giuen to Titus his two companions h 2 Cor. 8.23 yet not simply but with addition as they were sent by certaine Churches to collect almes And Epaphroditus is not simplie called an Apostle of Christ but of the Philippians sent by them to relieue Paule i Phil. ● 25 thus that great name was so peculiar simply to those chosen Apostles that Paule saith not without aduise All are not Apostles 2. Cor. 12.29 As for Euangelists to preach is proper indeed to all k 1 Cor. 12. but the appellation of the Euangelists belongeth to none but them whom the Apostles ioyned vnto them as occasion serued in watering those Churches which they had planted and whom they appointed not ouer one Church but ouer Prouinces and that onely for a time But the name of a Prophet is sometime generally giuen to all the interpreters of Gods word as Rom. 12.6 1. Corinth 14.29 sometime it doth distinguish them peculiarly from Doctors as when difference is made betwixt doctrine and Reuelation 1. Corinth 14.16 and also when Doctors are distinguished from Pastors by Doctrine and Exhortation as Rom. 12.7.8 Who are are called Pastors Surely they who may be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. Rom. 12.8 exhorters that is who being lawfully called doe preach Gods word and in preaching doe not simplie explaine it but by teaching admonishing reproouing correcting informing exhorting and comforting doe publikely o 1. Pet 5 2 and priuately apply it to the vse of the Church m Act. 14 13 1. Cor 11 18 1. Tim. 3.16 Tit 1 5.9 and besides doe labour in the administration of the Sacraments conceiuing publicke prayers and are watchfull to take away offences and to gouerne the Church n Rom. 12.7 These by a generall name are called Elders and Deacons p 1 Cor 13 5 Col 1 7 such as are ouer vs. q 1 Thes 5 And Hebr. 13. Guides to conclude the chiefest of them were called Episcopi Bishoppes of a Greeke word which signifies to looke into that nothing be wanting to the people of their Diocesse because it is the dutie of Pastors as it were spies to looke narrowly into the doctrine and manners of the flocke committed vnto them What were Doctors Who onely applied themselues to the faithfull and plaine interpretation of the scriptures and to rule ecclesiasticall scooles to the ende that sincere doctrine might be keept in the Church or they who onely explained the word of God to deliuer true doctrine and confute false Such were Catechizers as Origen in the Church of Alexandria and Clemens and the like Are not Doctors and pastors all one as Augustine thought No because Paule giues them diuers names Ephes 4.11 And Rom. 12.7 he distinguisheth teachers from Exhorters and speech from knowledge it selfe of holy things or he thus distinguisheth Pastors from doctors What degres were substituted vnto these Rather for exercise then for office sake 1. Porters who kept the gates of the Church that they might let in penitentiaries and keepe out wicked men from the Church and such as were excommunicated from the Sacraments 2 Acoluthoi followers attendants and as it were pages of Bishops being witnesses and imitators of all their speaches and withall most readie seruants vnto them 3 Lectores or Readers Ministers of Pastors and Doctors reading so the Scriptures out of some high place that within one yeare all the books of the Bible for the more familier knowledge of the Scripture might be read ouer 4 We read also in very ancient writers of Exorcists who vsing the name of God and hauing the gift of miracles by calling vpon Christ and imposition of hands cast out diuels Act. 19.23 But this office is ceased with the gift of miracles In 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5 In the Scriptures they are called the Cleargie who are the congregation of the faithfull and flockes of sheepe or the members of the Church a 1 Cor 14.39 because they are the portion and inheritance of the Lord 1. Pet. 5.3 but afterward the antient fathers did translate the name of Cleargie to the Colledge of Ecclesiasticall ministers so as all students were called Cleargie men who are maintained of their parents or the Churches cost to become ministers How do Pastors and doctors differ from Apostles Prophets and Euangelists Nothing at all in respect of the Essentiall parts of the Ministerie which are the sincere preaching of the word the administration of the Sacraments and correction of manners but in respect of thinges peculier to the calling of Apostles they differ much for 1. Cor. 12. the Apostle Paule hauing deuided the ministerie of the word into the word of wisdome and the word of knowledge to Apostles Prophets and Euangelists he doth attribute wisedom to wit that more excellent and without al controuersie greater knowledge of the mysteries of God Act. 11.27.6 21.10 that hath with it the greatest authority and is giuen by the peculier inspiration of the holy Ghost namely by Reuelation and as a for knowledge which is the vnderstanding of the Gospell that is gotten by hearing and reading of the holy Scriptures that is to say by studying and learning that he referres to ordinarie Pastors and Doctors But the personall gifts of the Apostles that is c 1. Cor. 12.9 10. Act 5.5.10 8.20 13.10.11 2. Cor. 10.6 such as were giuen properly to the Apostles alone as 1
dependeth this power Not vpon the person or worthines of the ministers for indeed they cannot properly eyther bind or loose any man or open or shut the kingdome of heauen vnto any man at their pleasure but it dependeth vpon their lawfull ministerie or rather vpon God himselfe who by the holy ghost is powerfull in the ministerie of the word as often as the minister doth duely execute his office a heb 4.12 In which sense those sayings Marke 2.7 Who can forgiue sinnes but God alone namely in his owne right and by his owne authoritie and that Iohn 20 23. Whose sinnes ye remit namely instrumētally or by preaching in the name of Christ they are remitted must be reconciled To whom are these keyes giuen Not to Peter alone but equally to all the Apostles and to the faithfull Pastors of all ages to whom Christ saith Receiue the holy Ghost if you remit the sinnes of anie they are remitted vnto them if you retaine the sinnes of any they are retayned Iohn 20.23 Which is the other part of Ecclesiasticall power It is called the power of Order because it hath a certaine and set rule namely the word of God which it must alwaies follow And it is rhar power of the Church whereby it is occupied both about doctrine and the principles of faith and is callled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctrinall and also about the making of lawes in the Church for the outward gouernment thereof and is specially called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is ordained or appointed VVhat is the power of the Church concerning Doctrine It is of two sorts Common and Speciall Common is the common right belonging to the whole Church not to the Pastors onely but to euerie member thereof 1 To keepe and preserue the scriptures with verie great faithfulnesse like a Notarie or Register diligently to read them and not by way of authority to iudge of the scriptures for the Church it selfe is subiect to the scriptures but to iudge according to the scriptures and to distinguish and discerne like a Moderator the true naturall and right scriptures from the false imaginarie and counterfeit the spirit of God being their guide for the sheepe know the voyce of the shepheard Iohn 10.4 2. To know admit and approoue true Doctrine out of the scriptures Iohn 5.39 Search the Scriptures And to reproue false doctrine Mat 7.15 Beware of false Prophets And Luke 12.1 Take heede of the leauen of the Pharises And Galat. 1.8 If any man teach another doctrine let him be accursed Whereupon Augustine lib. 11. Contra Faustum cap. 5. The scripture is set in a seat on high whereunto euerie faithfull and godly vnderstanding must stoope And in another place lib. de Religione cap. 31. It is lawfull with pure hearts to know the eternall Law but to iudge it is altogether vnlawfull and wicked Speciall power the Church hath none to frame new Articles of faith or to teach any thing beside the word of God written but like a Cryer to publish and preach the scriptures to propound onely the word of the Prophets and Apostles to omit nothing 〈◊〉 alter nothing to adde or inuent nothing of their owne a Deut. 4.2 12 32 Reue. 22.18 19 and to referre all things according to the word to Gods glorie and the edification of the Church Furthermore so to expound and prooue the Principles out of the Canonicall scriptures and to interptete the same Scriptures not out of any preiudicate opinion or the priuate sense of any one man but out of the fountaines and originals by examination of euerie seuerall word by obseruation of the style and phrase of the scripture by consideration of the state of the question and matter in hand and of the things going before and comming after and by conference of one scripture with another that they may agree with the Analogie rule and square of faith briefly comprehended in the Apostles Creed a Mat. 23.8 28.20 Rom. 12.6 1 Pet. 4.11 Lastly to take away all ordinances or rather phantasies of all men of what degree soeuer they bee that the decrees of God alone may remaine firme and established 2. Cor. 4.7 These are those spirituall weapons mightie b 2 Cor. 10 4.5 through God to cast downe strong holds whereby the faithfull souldiers of God may cast downe the imaginations and euerie high thing which is exalted against the knowledge of God wherby they may build the house of Christ ouerthrow Sathan feed the sheep driue away the Wolues instruct them that are apt to learne to proue them that are stubborne and froward lastly whereby they may lighten and if neede be thunder and resting themselues vpon the power of Christ may rule and gouerne all from the highest to the lowest but all things according to the word of God and so as no man must take vnto himselfe any authoritie to teach in the Church eyther by writing or word without a lawfull calling where indeede Order preuaileth which no man with a good conscience can despise for this were to open a window to the Anabaptistical furie and that The Spirits of the Prophets may be subiect to the Prophets 1. Cor. 14.30.31 Albeit that all Christians ought mutually to teach exhort reprehend and comfort one another in the Lord and that all housholds should so be gouerned of the maisters and mistresses of the family that they should beare a representation of so many priuate Churches no man will denie Are we simply to heare the voyce of the Church to receiue whatsoeuer it teacheth No but whatsoeuer it is taught of God and commaunded to teach and is able to approoue by the authoritie of the word of God Is it in the Churches power to consigne the Canon of Scripture The Church cannot make Bookes not Canonicall to be Canonicall but onely is a meanes that such Bookes be receiued as Canonicall which in truth and of themselues are such The Church I say doth not make Scripture to be Authenticall but declareth it to be so For that onely is called Authenticall which is of it selfe sufficient which commendeth supporteth and prooueth it selfe and from it selfe hath credit and authoritie May not yet the Church be a meanes to beleeue that there is a word written and other thinges which pertaine to saluation It is indeede a meanes not a principall meanes but onely an externall and ministeriall meanes but the principall cause of beleeuing is the spirit of God and the Church is a lesse principall instrument that is by which not for which we beleeue Paule doth plant and Apollo doth water but God giueth the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 The church hath no efficacie to reueale without the spirit neither can the Church make that true thinges in themselues be beleeued of vs for true but by the testimonie of the holy Ghost shee doth commend the Scripture which is her chiefe office Truely the Church sometimes may compell men by her authoritie and perpetuall testimonie that they
may be perswaded and that they may know the Scriptures to be Canonicall neither should we haue beleeued the Scriptures except the Church had proposed them and recommended them vnto vs but that in priuate and internally men may be perswaded in their heartes of their veritie none can effect that but the spirit of God For neither faith is the gift of the Church neither is our faith resolued into the voyce and iudgment of the Church but in the word of God comprised in the canonicall Scriptures Whether hath the Church authoritie and full power to interprete the scriptures No but it hath his power from the holy Ghost speaking publikely and manifestly in the scriptures and also secretly testifying the same in our heartes also in the authoritie of the Scripture so that the sense of the scripture is to be takē onely out of the scripture and the holy Ghost and the scripture is to be interpreted by scripture because faith alone doth proceede from the scripture 2 Because they are to be expounded and vnderstood by the same spirit wherewith they are written according to that of Ioh. 2 10. The annointing teacheth you of all things a Isa 50 16. 3 Because the Church hath not equall authoritie with the scripture b Gal. 1.18 4 Because those of Berea are commended for that they did examine Paules doctrine by the scriptures a Act. 17.11 5 Because the Church may erre 6 Because he alone hath the greatest authoritie in expounding the law which made the law so we read Nehem. 8 8. he read plainly the law vnto the people and expounding the meaning he made it plaine by the scripture it selfe yet notwithstanding we denie not but that the Church hath power to interpret the scripture and that onely in the Church this gift of interpretation doth remaine but we denie that the interpretation of the scripture is tyed to any certaine seat and succession of men and that the Pope ought to chalenge to himselfe such power ouer the scripture For Moses verily did sit as chiefe Iudge in matters controuersall b Ep. 18.13 26 but he was a Prophet indued with singular wisedome adorned with extraordinarie gifts of God commended by diuine testimonies from God and sent immediatly from God himselfe but the Pope hath no such power And Deut. 17.8 and in the verses following all are commaunded to obey the decree of the chiefe Iudge but with this condition If that be iudge according to the law of God and Mal. 1.7 It is commaunded that the priests lips shall keepe knowledge and that they shall require the law out of his mouth but they haue no promise that they shall al●aies doe so for it followeth but you haue declined out of the way haue caused many so to do Neyther doe the keyes of the kingdome of heauen committed to Peter c Mat. 16.19 signify authority of interpreting the scriptures but of preaching the Gospell which was not soly giuen to Peter but also to the rest of the Apostles d Mat. 20.18 Ioh. 20.21 and Mat. 18.17 Christ commandeth the Chuch to be heard but that is the true Church and then onely when she doth commaund those things which Christ doth approoue and commaund so the Scribes and Pharises were to bee heard e Mat. 23 2 so long as sitting in Moses chayre they did follow Moses in his teaching otherwise Christ gaue his disciples a caueat to take heed of the leauen of the Pharises f Mat. 16.6 7 In councils many great things haue beene defined yet notwithstanding wee see it hath beene determined not according to the councill but by the authority of the scriptures Act. 15.6.15 VVhat power hath the Church in traditions or making lawes It is Constitutiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not for that it hath any power to impose lawes vpon the conscience or that they should prescribe what is iust or what is vniust which is not lawful for the Angels to doe a for our onely Master and Lawgiuer is the sonne of God b our spouse c Eph. 5.30 Lord d 1. Cor. 8.6 the interpreter of his fathers will e Ioh 1.18 the head of the Church f Eph. 5.15 and alone Doctor of whom alone absolutely was spoken Gal. 1.8 Iam. 4.11 heare him g Mat. 17.7 who alone hath power and authoritie ouer our consciences who also most fully in his word hath comprised and plainly declared all the counsell of our saluation and the whole summe of true righteousnes and all the parts of the worship of his name vnto which eyther to add or detract were abhominable but because it is lawfull for the Pastors gouernous of the Church in externall and indifferent things to establish or abrogate certaine rules Canons or lawes for the gouernment order decency as also certaine rites for the maintenance of honesty for the better maintaining of a consent in all the members of the Church in this outward worship so farre forth as eyther the necessitie or profit of the Church shall thinke requisite neither are such Canons for the most part vniuersall or perpetuall Col. 2.5 For all things in the Church ought to be done decently and orderly which is the house of God h 1 Cor. 14.40 1 Tim. 3.15 by the example of the Apostles in the first Synode holden at Ierusalem and of Paule k 1 Cor. 11.4.7.34 of these rules the Apostle 2. Thess 2.15 saith Hold the traditions which you haue learned eyther by word or by our Epistle Except we will vnderstand by doctrine deliuered not an other which partly by word and partlie by Epistle was deliuered but the same which both by word as also by Pauls Epistle they were taught l 2 Thess 3.6 But the spirit the teacher of all truth i Act. 15.24 being especially promised to the Apostles m Ioh. 14. 16. taught them no new thing but declared and brought to their memories that which before they had heard and although all the words are not written word for word but onely in substance yet notwithstanding all things necessarie are written Iohn 20.31 Shew some examples of those lawes which were appointed or those traditions which were to be made by the Church or these Ecclesiasticall constitutions deliuered by word of mouth Such as these that the Supper of the Lord must be receiued of those which are fasting that we must pray kneeling and bare-headed that the Sacraments must be administred not basely but with some reuerence and dignitie that in burying the dead and in matrimonie some decorum shall be obserued to appoint daies houres certaine places concent of songs solemne order in praiers and sermons in Prouiding Catechismes and destine them all to misticall actions and other such like which according to their genus or kind that is such a decencie commaunded to vs all are diuine but according to their speciall forme chey are humane and changeable What Cautions
it bee to the euening or from Supper to the dinner of the next day following or of both as also from all other delights and sports of the bodie so farre forth as mans nature is able to abstaine either for one day or many And if we must fast many daies and so some refreshing is to bee taken yet it must be a very sparing and slender diet without any dainties onely for necessitie not for pleasure with a lowlines of the minde simply seeking for the mercifull clemencie of God The Grecians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a primatiue particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is not to eate at all or a fasting from meat as Suidas doth expound it e Leuit. 16.29 3 32 2 Sam. 1 12 3.35 Act. 10.30 I sat fasting vntill the euening at my house Dan 10 2 3 I did mourne for the space of three weekes I did eat no dayntie bread neither did I taste any wine or eate any meat How manifold is fasting Twofold publick which is commaunded by authoritie of them who are gouernours of the Church and by reason of vrgent necessitie is celebrated by that Church in some publicke place of which sort were those fasts in the old Testament somtimes from one sometimes from more meales vntill the euening so that sometimes the verie creatures were denyed foode a Ier. 37 All which were celebrated either in the Tabernacle or Temple or Eclesiasticall conuocation b Iud. 20.26 Ier. 3.6.9 Ioel. 1.14 2.17 or before the temple or in any other publick place as in Mitspa that is in the watchtower which place was in the confines of the Beniamites being situate c Iud. 4.10 as it were in the middest of the countrie appointed for places of meetings d Iud. 20.1 1 Sam. 7.5.6 and in the New Testament Act. 13.2 and 14 27. Priuate fasting is that which is performed by any priuate person at his owne discretion whether hee doe it vpon priuate or publick necessitie as when hee doth acknowledge his sinnes or feeleth Satans temptations or when hee will obtaine any thing of God 2. Sam. 12.16.17 Psalm 35.13 I put on sackloth when they were sick and I did humble my minde in fasting and my prayer returned into mine owne bosome e Dan. 9.3 Neh. 1.4 Luk. 2.37 Act. 10.30 Mar. 2.18 In obseruation of this fast the antient did confesse their sinnes did weepe and cloathed themselues in sackcloaths they went crooked f Psa 35.14 they did rend their garmentes they wallowed in the dust g Isa 58.5 and put ashes vpon their heads h Da● 9.3 Hest 4.1 but these were but a partie of the paedagicall institution of the Olde Testament i Mat. 5.27 because Christ hath so abrogated those rites that hee hath now left them free What cautions are to bee obserued in fasting for the auoiding of superstition First of all there is required a spirituall or as some say an allegoricall fast which is the purifying of the heart by faith in Christ abstinencie from all the meate and leuen of maliciousnesse from vnlawfull desires luxury enuying fraude anger malice couetousnesse c. and from all offences idolatry theft rapine adultery lying strife c. as it is recorded Ier 14. When they fast I will not heare their prayers because they cease not from sinne we must rent our hearts and not our garments Ioel. 2.3 neither doth God greatly esteeme fasting yea it is rather hypocrisie and Pharisaicall fasting vnlesse the inward affection of the heart be present a true sorrow for sinne and a displeasure with a mans owne selfe true humiliation true griefe in the feare of God and a true endeauour to practise righteousnesse and charitie k Isa 58.5.6 7 2. Wee must take heede that we doe not thinke it a meritorious worke pacificall satisfactorie for sins a satisfaction of our vowe or kinde of Diuine worshippe or a meanes to honour Saints l Is 58.3 Zech. 7.5 Luk. 18.12 3. That there bee no superstition put in obseruation of times daies or meats as of flesh of white meates and fishes a Col. 2.2 For the ancient in former times did eate nothing m Isa 58.5 when they fasted but spent the time wholy in mourning in humility of minde confession of their sinnes and the lawe of a set fast to wit the tenth day of the seauenth moneth to be celebrated b Leu. 16.29 23.27.5 doth not binde in the new Testament Zech. 7.5 Este 9.21 much lesse the fastings of the Iewes instituted by humane tradition And Christ saith that when the crosse and calamities and persecutions doe come they doe demonstrate the time of fasting to the Disciples of the new Testament For when the bride-groome shall be taken away then saith hee shall they mourne and fast in mourning Math. 9.15 but the godly now that the worldly discipline of the Old Testament is abrogated may vse any meats by Gods leaue without offence to him or scandal of conscience 1 Tim. 4.4 Euerie creature of God is good and nothing is to be refused if it be receiued with thanksgiuing d Mat. 15 11 Rom. 14.14 1 Cor. 10.25 Act. 10.15 and Christ himselfe did eat rosted meat with his disciples to wit the flesh of the pascal lambe What is the end and vse of lawfull fasting 1 It doth macerate aflict bring vnder and correct the flesh that it runn not to riot or els causeth the flesh to be subiect to the spirit least the body being as the beast of the soule as the fathers speake by ouermuch delicacie being ouermuch fatted doe ouerwhelme the minde and spurne against the spirit Deut. 31.15 1. Esd 8.21 I haue published a fast that we might aflict our selues before the Lord. And as Paul speaketh 1. Cor 9.27 I beat downe my bodie bring it into subiection both of the minde and spirit Psa 109.24 But this must man so doe as he take heed that the body by ouermuch fasting abstinence or bad vsage be not so weakned that it being ill at ease the soule cannot execute her functions such a kinde of abstinēce Paul doth condemne Col. 2.23 and commaundeth Timothie that he drinke water no more but vse a little wine Ioel. 1.14 Neh. 4 for his stomacke sake often infirmities 1. Tim. 5.23 2 That we may be better and more feruently fitted for prayers and holy meditations and exercises of repentance because a full bellie causeth security whereupon these two fasting praier are ioyned togither in the scriptures Luk. 2.37 Anna did not departe out of the Temple but did labour in fasting and prayers Math 17.21 1. Cor. 7.5 that you may be giuen to fasting and prayer 3 That it may be a testimonie of our mourning for sinnes a 1 Sam. 7.6 of our submission and humiliation before God whilst we will confesse our guilt before God Psalm 35.13 I did humble my soule in fasting Hetherto of
Gospel wherby are signified those things are done which went before in Christ Neither is therefore any change in God as there is none in the father of a family who commandeth not the same things in sommer and in winter How do the Sacraments of the old new Testament agree In the Author the end the generall parts in the thing signified in manner of Phrase For God is one and the same Author of the Sacraments of each Couenant a Heb. 1 ● There is the same end that they should bee signes of the fauour of God toward the Church There be the same parts for the Sacraments both of the newe as also of the Old Testament do consist of a signe and a thing signified and in them both the signe is one thing the thing signified another The thing signifyed or the substance is alone and the same Christ and the selfe same benefits of his namely remission of sins iustification regeneration and spirituall nourishment Rom. 4.11 Abraham receiued the signe of the righteousnesse which he had receiued in his foreskin 1. Cor. 10.2 3.4 All were baptized vnder Moses in the cloud and did all eate the meate to wit that wee doe and did all drinke of the same spirituall drinke And cap. 12.13 For by one spirit we haue all beene baptized into one bodie both Iewes and Gentiles both bond and free and wee haue all drunk into one spirit For the same thing which Circumcision did signify doth our baptisme now signifie that which the lamb did doth the Supper And therefore the fathers vnder the Law were partakers by faith of the same Christ and of the same gifts of his that we bee now vnder the Gospell they beleeued in the selfe same Christ and had the verie same promises b Heb. 11 2 c. And Iesus Christ the same yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 And the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Re. 13.8 And Augustine saith Whosoeuer did conceiue Christ in the Manna did eate the same spirituall meate that we doe Lastly the manner of speach in them both is the same to wit Sacramentall that is fytting and well agreeing to that argument Of what sort be the Sacramentall speeches Sometime they be proper to wit when that which belongeth to the signe is attributed to the signe or that which belongeth to the thing signifyed is ascribed to the thing distinctly or else when the vse and office is plainely expressed As Circumcision is the signe of the Couenant betweene mee and you Gen. 17 11. The bloud of the Lambe shall bee a signe to you of the Passeouer Exod. 12.13 Abraham receiued the signe of Circumcision and the seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4 11. Baptisme is that whereby the filth of the flesh is washed away 1. Pet. 3.21 But for the most part they are figuratiue when the names and effectes of the things signifyed are attributed to the signes And on the contrary when the names of the signes and their effectes are attributed to the thing signified by a Mutonimie or changing of the names And such phrases are in indeede vsuall in the holy Scripture and so be placed in the common vse of the Church and yet figuratiue which may be vnderstood by the nature conference of the words and things whereof the words speake or by the coherence of the parts Yet cleare because eloquent and manifest types do not obscure but illustrate an oration Now they are such because the nature and essence of a Sacracrament doth require the same which commonly is defined to bee a visible signe of sacred things And therefore if the words in the Sacraments be vnderstood nakedly without a trope simply they shall be no longer Sacraments because they shall bee no longer signes but the things themselues Now they are of the number of those which haue relation to another thing Therfore the trope is not in the things but in the words 1. Because of the analogie proportion and relation of the signe vnto the thing signified 2. Because of the similitude and comparison of the effects Whereupon Augustine saith that Sacraments from the likenesse of those things whereof they are Sacraments doe for the most part borow the names of the things themselues Quest vpon Leuit. 17 Whereupon also that Rule is to be kept the vse whereof is vsuall and much in the Scriptures The names and properties of things which be most diuerse because of some proportion similitude and likenesse of the effects are oftentimes changed and affirmed mutually one of another for instruction and admonition sake So Christ and a vine bee the names of diuerse things yet Christ doth tearme himselfe a Vine a Ioh. 15.1 for the likenesse of the effects Againe because of the pawne and certainty of the promise of God added to the signes as the Rainebowe or the bowe in the clouds is the Couenant of God b Gen. 9.9 Circumcision is the Couenant c Gen. 17 10 The Lambe is the passouer or the passing ouer of the Lord d Exod 12 11.27 So Baptisme is the lauer of Regeneration e Tit. 3 5 and the stipulation of a good conscience f 1 Pet. 3.21 The like speaches are vsed in the types and shadowes as Gal. 4.24 those two mothers Agar and Sara are two Testaments In the holy Supper the breade broken is the bodie of Christ the wine the bloud of Christ The cup is the New Testament in the blood of Christ Not because of the chāging of the signe into another thing as our Transubstantiaries would haue it Or the including of another thing in the signe as the Consubstantiaries say Not properly and of themselues but because by a Metonimie or changing of the name they are signes and testimonies pawnes yea euen meanes or instruments of the Holy Ghost in the lawfull vse whereof there is wrought through the free operation of the holy Ghost a true and not an imaginarie communication of the things which are promised in the word beeing added to the Sacraments no lesse certainly then the Minister of the Church doth certainely exhibite the sacred signes which are called Sacraments This Rule is also perpetuall in the nature of things that in the affirmation of things that bee diuerse one from another and affirming of one of them of another the speach must needes be euer tropicall or figuratiue in any kinde of things and neuer proper For as oft as in any proposition the verbe Substantiue est doth ioyne together things that bee diuerse which differ in their speciall formes then the affirmation is not proper but figuratiue As so often as the first substance or this singular Indiuiduum existing truely and actually without the minde is affirmed of another first substance such an affirmation is figuratiue But yet these figuratiue speaches must bee reduced to proper and bee explained by them as Circumcision is the Couenant that is to say it is the signe
of the Couenant whereby God doth testifie that he doth truely receiue the beleeuers into his Couenant How doe the Sacraments of the old and new Testament differ 1. By outward adiuncts and the circumstance of time For those continued vntill the time of Restitution for those things are said to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right which passe not with a certaine crooked turning course but are directed straight vnto their marke but these must endure vntill the end of the world or vntill the state of glorie in which all trueth shall clearely and perfectly bee made manifest and therefore there shall bee no neede of Sacraments a Heb. 9.19 2. In the manner or condition of their signifying for the Sacraments of the old Testament foretold Christ as it were to come but the Newe declare him as it were exhibited And ●●erefore they cannot possibly both stand together seeing the time to come can neuer bee the time past and the time past can neuer make the time to come to bee more ancient b Heb. 8.13 3. In the diuersitie or qualitie of the signes or in the signes and ceremonies which differ much for there bee some signes of the Olde and other of the Newe Testament 4. In the number measure of signifying vertue and easinesse 1 For ours saith Augustine are fewer in number whereas in the Old Testament the signes were more in number because the people of Israell were as yet vnder the gouernment of the Law and therefore as children vse to bee were kept vnder more figures and rites 2. Ours were better in regard of the profit 3. More excellent or manifest not in outward shew or worldly pompe but in the vnderstanding and signification of heauenly and diuine things 4. Ours are greater in force that is of greater efficacie to confirm our faith 5. More easie to bee done for there is nothing in Baptisme or the Supper of the Lord which is hard troublesome or bloudy But Circumcision and the Sacrifices were more troublesome bloudie and required greater paines Yet all this maketh not that our Sacraments and the sacraments of the ancient fathers should not be the same in substance What Doe not the Sacraments of the old Testament differ from ours in the effect because those did only shadowe forth and signifie grace which these offer present vnto vs No because in either testament there is the same grace of Christ yea the same Christ propounded And the Apostle testifieth that the old Fathers did eate the same spirituall meat with vs and drinke the same spirituall drink 1. Cor. 10.3 I say the same with vs not as some expound it only amongst themselues which is vnderstood by the purpose of the Apostle the tenour of the text the name of Christ and the word baptizing there vsed and receiued the seale of the righteousnesse which is of faith and therfore that they were made pa●takers of Christ which is righteousnesse to all that beleeue in all ages Rom. 4.11 And yet I grant that the sacraments of the fathers were figures pictures and shadowes of ours not in regard of the things themselues but in as much as they shadowed things more darkly and obscurely signified by them a 1 Cor. 10.6 In which respect they may be called types of ours but types not without trueth Why then doth Paul say Gal. 4.9 that the Sacraments of the Fathers were weake and beggerly and carnall Elements which were not able to sanctifie the conscience because of their weaknesse and vnprofitablenesse Heb. 7.19 9.10 1. Because he speaketh of them not simply as that they were naked elements which could offer or seale no grace but in some respect as now abrogated by Christ 2. Hee speaketh of them as he saw them receiued of the Iewes seuered from Christ and his promise that is as they are considered in themselues and by themselues seuered from the things signified in cogitation and as bare signes because the sanctification dependeth not of the signes either old or new but wholie and only of the vertue of the holy Ghost Did the Fathers eate the flesh of Christ seeing that as yet it had no beeing actually and corporally in the nature of things Yes because although it was not extant simply or actually in regard of his bodily substance yet in some respect namely as it was to bee giuen for the life of the world it was that spirituall meat which might no lesse bee eaten of them then that Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world is eaten now of vs by faith b Reu. 13.8 2. Because Iesus Christ is the same to day yesterday for euer Heb. 13.8 one and the same Sauiour of both Testaments In whome alone it pleased the Father to gather together all things Ephe. 1.10 3. Because those Fathers were indued with faith which maketh those things to be which are hoped for and doth demonstrate those things which are not seene Heb. 11.1 And therefore although in those ancient times the humane nature was not assumed of the word yet it was presēt to the faith of the godly in former times which did conioyne them then with Christ that should be borne So that that which had no beeing as yet in the order of nature yet neuerthelesse had euer a being by the force and efficacie of faith Therefore Christ saith Abraham sawe my day and reioyced Ioh. 8 56. But they did eate the flesh of Christ which should be giuen for them wee eate it being alreadie giuen for vs. The times are changed saith Augustine but faith is not shall bee giuen and is giuen shall come and is come in Ioh tract 4 these words differ saith hee but yet Christ is one and the same Doe the Sacraments giue remission of sins and doe they conferre or containe grace and are they ordained to iustifie and to regenerate or whether is grace tyed to the Sacraments No. 1. Because they are the signes not the causes of grace 2. That which is proper to God ought not to be bestowed on the creature 3. The subiect of grace is not the body but the spirit 4. No bodilie thing doth worke vpon spirituall things Againe not by the work done or as an efficient cause by them selues or their owne vertue working any thing or flowing from their essence as they speake in the schooles but ministerially or Instrumentally yet effectually so farre forth as they support nourish our faith Not by any inward power or vertue of their owne but by vertue of the principall agent or worker in that sence that Paul affirmeth the Gospel to be the vertue and power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 1.16 1. Tim. 4.16 he saith that the remedie of the holy Scripture doth saue a man not that there is any magicall vertue in the letters syllables or sound of the words for the Apostle saith Heb. 4.2 The word profited not them beeing not mingled with faith but because
in the baptisme of Iohn the holy Ghost came down vpon Christ in the likenes of a Doue but that he might put a differēce betwteen his own person the office of all Ministers the person office spirituall efficacy vertue and strength of Christ himself for Iohn the Apostles and the rest of the Ministers themselues did not worke the forgiuenes of sinnes the holy Ghost righteousnes and life euerlasting but Christ onely forgiueth the sinnes of the beleeuers and giueth the holy Ghost by the order appointed by himselfe 2 He spake of Baptisme and the gift of the holy Ghost which began on the day of Pentecost in the likenes of fire a Ac. 2.1 c 3 Iohn Baptist meaneth none other thing but euen the same which Paul speketh of his Ministery I haue planted Apollo hath watered but God giueth the increase neyther is he that planteth any thing nor he that watereth but God that giueth the increase 1. Cor. 3.6.7 VVhether was it necessary to them who were baptised with Iohns baptisme that they should afterward receiue the baptisme of Christ which was administred by his Disciples Augustine thought so because hee held that the baptisme of Iohn was not the same that Christs baptisme was but Ambrose is against him and that iustly For Act. 18.25 Apollos only knew the baptisme of Iohn he is taken to the Apostles and more diligently instructed in the way of the Lord but we read not that he was baptised againe with water Neither do we read that those first Apostles baptised by Iohn were afterward baptised againe And we ought to determine nothing without the word of God Moreouer if that opinion were true we should not haue our baptisme common with Christ wheras notwithstanding himself hallowed aswel the circumcision of the fathers by the circumcision of his owne flesh as our baptisme by being himselfe baptised If the Baptisme of Iohn of the Apostles and of the ensuing ministers be all one why doth Paul Act. 19.3.4.5 baptise the 12. Disciples which before had beene baptised by Iohn who being demanded whether they had receiued the holy Ghost after they had beleeued answered that they neuer heard If there were a holy Ghost and being again asked Into what they were baptised then they said In the baptisme of Iohn 1 There are some that say that those 12. were entred initiated into the baptisme that is the doctrine and Ministerie of Iohn But were not partakers of his baptisme that is of the washing of water and so baptised but afterward once onely to haue beene baptised in the name of Iesus 2 Others thinke that they were baptised with the baptisme of Iohn and not afterward dipped in water by Paule but baptised in the name of Iesus that is adorned with the wonderfull gifts of the spirit when Paule had laid his hands vpon them 3 Ambrose is of opinion that by a counterfait baptisme vnder the name of the baptisme of Iohn they were rather defiled than washed or at lest wise not rightly duly baptised In 3. ad Gal. seeing by their own confessiō they knew not the holy ghost to be a distinct person frō the father the son without which there can be no right faith in christ But being first wel instructed by Paul they wer afterward baptised in the name of christ with the true form of baptisme but this is not to be baptised againe or make a repetition of baptisme 4 Augustine holdeth that those 12. were baptised 1. with the baptisme of Iohn yet afterward also baptised by Paul for he doth hold the baptisme of Iohn one of Christ another yet he defendeth that his opinion from Rebaptisation for that the iterating of one and the same baptisme is Anabaptisme 5 Others iudge that those baptismes were to be vsed for the diuers maner of the significatiō that is for the seueral articles namely of Christ to come and of Christ already come yet it was not rebaptising but the error being amended a confirmation of the former 6 But we must looke into the Text for first it saith not that Paule baptised them who had been baptised by Iohn as the Anabaptists do vrge but the words of Paul there are rightly to be distinguished from the words of the Euangelist setting downe that history for these are the words of Paul vers 4.5 Iohn indeed baptised with the baptisme of repentance saying vnto the people that they should beleeue in him which should come after him that is in Christ Iesus and whē they heard to wit Iohn they were baptised in the name of the Lord Iesus Thus farre Paul where he saith those which heard that is those which heard the ministery of Iohn were baptised in the name of our Lord Iesus namely by Iohn and afterward vers 6. the Euangelist in his owne words addeth this When Paul had laid hands vpon them the holy Ghost came vpon them Againe wheras those 12. deny that they euer heard if there were an holy ghost it is to be vnderstood not of the existence and hypostasis of the holy ghost for then they had not bin disciples that is Christians for Iohn had plainly preached of the holy Ghost saying that Christ should baptise with the holy Ghost but by a Metonymie of the visible maner of powring forth the giftes of the holy ghost which in the begining of the growth of the Church florished very much As Iohn 7.39 it is said The holy ghost was not yet because Christ was not as yet glorified And therfore those 12. may be said to haue been baptised in the name of Iesus that is to haue receiued not the ceremonie of baptisme but those visible graces of the holy Ghost by the laying on of Pauls hands which are also by a translation signifyed by the name of baptisme Act. 1.5 11.16 and Act. 8 12.14.15 16.17 The Samaritans when they had beleeued Philip teaching of Christ are set downe in scripture to be baptised of him Afterwards when Peter and Iohn came into Samaria they prayed for them that they might receiue the holy Ghost for as yet saith the Euangelist it had not fallen vpon any of them but they had been only baptised in the name of Iesus receiuing forgiuenes of their sinnes But when the Apostles laid their hands vpon them they receiued the holy Ghost namely in a visible manner not the gift of regeneration which is offred to all in baptisme but those excellent peculiar gifts as the gift of tongues the gift of working miracles and the like Is there any allowance of womans baptising in the Church In Panar No doubtlesse For you shal not find in all the story of baptisme one title therof but that vse was brought in by the heretick Marcion as Epiphanius witnesseth Againe wheras it is the same mens dutie to preach the Gospell who are to baptise a Mat. 28.19 Diuers diui●nes are of an other iudgment Tryal things kepe that which is
birth of baptisme some are admitted who discharge the office of Midwife and instructor in things belonging vnto faith and a Christian life but yet such witnesses are to be chosen as both know sufficiently and can probably performe that which they promise for the childs holy education if neede require VVhy haue children names giuen them in baptisme Because it was also the manner in Circumcision a secondly that we may know that we then obtaine name and fame at Gods hands when we are borne againe and are become new men namely the sonnes of God renouncing our former name wherby we were named the children of wrath Thirdly that as often as we remember our name we should likewise call to minde Gods couenant and promise our Baptisme and what it meaneth and further our dutie who being baptised into the death of Christ we may likewise die with him vnto sinne and rise againe to newnesse of life and lastly that being entertained into Christs seruice we may fight valiantly vnder his Banner against his enemies VVhat manner off names ought we to giue They were first giuē either vpō the euent of things as Isaack Iacob or of the Prophetical instinct to note some secret work of God or in remēbrance of some thing past as Adam Israell or somthing to come as Eua Abrahā Iohn Now although it be in so great plenty of names a thing of it selfe indifferent what name a man haue giuen him seeing the name furthereth not a mans saluation at all yet no man will denie but that the faithfull may make a profitable choyce in this case in omitting such as belong nothing to their profession and dutie prophane and vnknowne names and calling them by proper vsuall knowne and holy names such as may bring with them some instruction and admonition as namely such whose godlinesse is published it the Scriptures and so stirre vp in vs an Imitation of them or else of our ancestors or others whose names haue not beene polluted through Idolatrie but may put vs in minde of godlinesse of innocencie and vprightnesse of life or of Gods benefits and may not recall into our mindes the remenbrance of any euill example or such as are taken from wicked and bloudy men which ought rather to be forgotten amongest all godly men a Luk. 1.54 Psal 16.4 then thus reuiued Is the Office of preaching the Gospell greater then his that baptiseth Yea For Christ whose office was to teach neuer baptised b Ioh. 4.2 and Paule baptised verie fewe For the Lord sent mee not saith hee to baptise to wit peculiarly and fully but to preach the Gospell 1. Cor. 1.10 And Peter baptised not Cornelius his family whilest hee was there present but gaue order to haue it done afterward A●ct 10.48 Though therefore the Sacraments bee most holy yet it is no wisedome to attribute too much vnto them Wherein doe baptisme and the Lords Supper agree and wherein doe they differ First they differ both in the signes in the action and in their neerest ends For in Baptisme water is vsed and the spinckling thereof outwardly and the inward sprinckling of the bloud of Christ inwardly Also the neerest principall end therof is the washing from sin ct adoption to be the sons of God or the ingrafting into Christ into his Church but in the Supper is vsed bread which we break eat inwardly there is a pertaking of the body of Christ likewise there is a cup vsed out of which wee drinke and also a communion of the bloud of Christ lastly the end of the Lords supper is the spirituall foode of the inner man this is a manifest differēce between Baptisme the Lords Svpper Secondly they differ in vse for Baptisme is not to bee iterated whereas the often and religious vse of the Lords Supper ought to serue for a Commemoration of the Lords death Thirdly they differ in subiect for Baptisme properly belōgeth to children though the vse thereof pertaine properly to those of age whereas the Lords supper doth only belong to them that are of yeares But in these things they both agree they haue both one genus both one Author both consist of two parts the one earthly the other heauenly both one generall end both one signification for both doe signifie the Communion of Christ both are seales of the Couenant and of the promise of grace the dignitie of both is equall and alike for of baptisme Paule testifieth that we are ingrafted into Christ and doe put on Christ a Rom. 6.75 Gal. 3.27 but the one propoundeth Christ our lauer vnder the signe of water the other our foode vnder the signes of bread and wine Is not one of these Sacraments better and more worthy than the other No not in being that is not because in baptisme we receiue only the gifts or graces of Christ but not Christ himselfe but in the Supper the body and bloud of Christ although al doe not receiue his graces as our aduersaries wil haue it because they haue both one end to wit our consociation and coniunction with Christ which as the forme also of both is sealed both in Baptisme the Lords Supper But they differ onely in some respect both of our originall beginning in Christ and also of our encrease and conseruation in the same For by how much it is somewhat more to be begotten then to be nourished by so much the Sacrament of regeneration is to be preferred before the Sacrament of our norishmēt which is the Lords Supper but by how much it is a more excellent thing to bee nourished and cherished to eternall life that so thou maiest neuer faile to bee a man regenerate in this respect the Supper is to be preferred before baptisme But seeing that the dignitie of both of them dependeth vpon the thing signified namely vpon our Communion with Christ although Baptisme doth commend the same vnder the forme of a Lauer and the Supper vnder the forme of food yet it is better to moderate this comparison and so shall nothing bee derogated from either of them For the water of Baptisme in the Sacramentall vse is the bloud of Christ no lesse than the wine in the Super a 1 Pet. 1 2 nor is it any thing lesse in Baptisme to bee ingrafted into Christ to be crucified dead buried and rise againe with him and to put on Christ than to eate his flesh and drinke his bloud in the Supper And to conclude Christ is propounded vnto vs in Baptisme as a bath as an entrance into the house of the Lord and as a garment And in the Supper as meat and drinke to be entertained more and more by faith What are the ends of Baptisme There are two 1. That it may stand our faith in steede before God the latter that it may manifest our confession before men and that first because it setteth forth Christs death buriall and resurrection teaching the remission of sins and confirming the
they be men of courage that is stout mightie or strong that is indued with authoritie fortitude and constancie of minde least they bee caried with perturbations yea they must be louers of all vertues especially of sobrietie chastitie and honest conuersation to this wee may referre that which is spoken of the election of Deacons Act. 6.3 Appoint yee brethren seauen men from amongst you men of good report full of the holy Ghost and wisdome whom wee may appoint to this buisinesse What titles are giuen to Magistrates in the Scriptures 1. They are called Elohim or Gods and sons of the most high a Exod. 22.28 Ps 82.1.6 not by nature but by office and dignitie that is as it were the Vicegerents and Images of God himselfe 2. Nourcing Fathers and nourcing mothers 3. Ministers of God 4. Sheepheards as Homer cals his Agamemnon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sheepheard of the people 5. Fathers as the same Homer cals the king 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gentle meeke and benigne father and the Senators among the Romanes were called patres conscripti neither was there in the common wealth any greater or more ancient honour then to bee called pater patria a father of the country Whence Zenophon saith that a good Gouernour differeth nothing from a good father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 8. wherefore Princes owe to their subiectes the loue and naturall affection of a father and as the sheepheard excels the sheepe so magistrates ought in goodnesse to excell the people else they are not worthy to rule ouer them in other writers they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guids which word also the Scripture vseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaders because they must in vertue goe before others 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adorners or orderers because they prescribe order to the multitude then which nothing is more beautifull 3. Episcopi watchmen and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 obseruers because they must diligently looke what each citizen doth they are called also in generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 keepers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helpers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sauiours with which title they are also stiled in the old Testament and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gouernours which word is taken from shippes for as a shippe tossed in a tempestuous sea cannot come safe to the hauen without the skill of a pilote so the commonwealth must needes bee ouerthrowne vnlesse it haue a skilfull Gouernor they are called also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratious Lords as Christ witnesseth Luk. 22.28 whence Pindarus saith that a milde and a good king is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratious to mortall men and a great friende and amongst the Egyptian kings two by name are termed Euergetae bountifull as Ptolomeus Euergêtes And Antiochus Euergêtes What is the office of the Magistrate 1. In generall that hee keepe and obserue both the tables of the Lawe a Sent. 17 17 and so first and principally kisse the sonne and doe him homage with due seruice and true reuerence 2. That hee erect according to the word of God and also defende and maintaine gods true worshippe and prohibit all false worship b Deut. 13 5 6 d 2. K. 23 2 4. and take away and remoue whatsoeuer may seeme to bee any hinderance to true Religion after the example of Ezechias e Dan. 3.29 Iosias and Nebuchadnetzar c 2 K. 18 4 3. Hee must bee helpefull to the Church with his counsell and substance and promote the ministerie of the word Psal 122.9 For the house sake of my God I will procure thy good and Isa 49.23 Thy Kings shall bee nursing fathers and thy Queenes nursing mothers Furthermore in humane matters he must execute iudgement and iustice that is to say hee must punishe the wicked defend and rewarde the good deliuer the afflicted out of the hands of the wicked helpe the orphane giue righteous iudgement to the poore fatherlesse and needie that haue none to helpe them f Gen. 9 6 Psal 82 3.4 72 2.12 he must bee a preseruer of peace But if neede so require he must defend his subiectes with armes and the Dominions that are committed to his trust by warre hee must bridle them that infring the peace defend his prouinces from Rapines and other annoyances and recouer those things that are iniuriously taken away So Alphonsus King of Naples his Symbole was the pellicane pecking bloud out of her breast with her bill to refresh her young ones with this inscription pro lege pro grege for the Lawe and for the Land hee must bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say hee must with a fatherly affection prouide foode for his subiectes as Ioseph did g Gen. 45 48 Lastly hee must gouerne the common wealth and guide his iudgements by lawes honest and agreeable to reason Doth the care of Religion belong to the Magistrates Yea Epist. 50. ad Bonif. for as Augustine saith Herein Kings serue the Lord as they are Kings when they doe those things which they could not doe except they were Kings that is when they publish and set forth Edicts and decrees for true Religion And if the care of Religion doe appertaine to euerie housholder as the father of the familie h Eph. 64 much more then to a Magistrate who is the father of all his subiects But the care of setting vp or restoring of Religion according to the prescript of Gods word and of maintaining the same doth then especially belong to the Magistrate when the Bishops are negligent or aduersaries to the Gospell but the administration of Religion belongeth to the Ministers of the word Wee see what the Scripture requireth of the Magistrate Psal 2.12 Kisse the sonne and serue the Lord in feare and Psalm 24.7 Lift vp your heads O yee gates and bee yee lift vp yee euerlasting doores that is Open your gates O yee Princes that the King of glorie may enter in Hee calleth the Empires themselues and so also Kings Princes and Magistrates Gates because in olde time Iudgemēt was giuen in the gates And therfore when Ioas was installed into his Kingdom he had the book of the Lawe of God giuen into his hands i 2 K 11.21 according to the commaundement Deut. 17.18 And for this cause especially the Magistrate is by the Apostle called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the minister and seruant of God k Rom 13.2 4.6 To this purpose tend the examples of Moses Dauid Iosias Ezekias Theodosius and others And these precepts belong to the whole Church and euery member thereof Mat. 7.15 Take heede of false Prophets or false teachers 1. Cor. 5.13 Take away the euill or wicked person from amongst you Gal. 1.8 If any man teach any other Gospell let him be accursed Further he is to see that all thing be done decently orderly in the
the preacher outwardly serueth Christ speaketh vnto vs inwardly by his holy spirite Hence it is that the Gospell is called the power of God Rom. 1.16 And Esa 53.1 The arme of God that is to say the instrument of God truely mightie and powerfull to sauation Cannot God by inward inspiration beget faith in his seruants vvithout preaching of the vvord or the ministery of the Church Hee can doe it as he did in times past in Paule but that is extraordinarie and very seldome neither must we wish for that or rashly admit it But the perpetuall rule to discerne faith whether it be truely from god or no is that it must alwaies agree with the words of the Prophets and the writings of the Apostles Doth God create in our hearts full and perfect faith in one instant No but by certaine degrees and increasings in what measure and when it pleaseth him and by these meanes whereby hee doth plant the same in our hearts as the Philosophers say that we are and are nourished of the selfe same things as an infant is nourished and brought vp by the same bloud whereof it is formed the same being turned into milke by the same meanes doth God cherish and strengthen our faith namely by the continuall hearing of the worde of GOD. 1. Pet. 2.2 As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the vvord that yee may grovv thereby For saith Chrysostome Our faith is like a burning Lampe vvhich is easily put out vnlesse oyle bee still povvred into it Now the oyle is the word of God 2. Our faith is increased by the often vse of the sacrament of the Supper according to Christs commaundement Eate yee and drinke yee 3. By daily and continuall prayers saying with Dauid Psal 68.29 Stablish O God that vvhich thou hast vvrought in vs. And with the Apostles Luk. 17.5 Lord increase our faith 4. By the practise of holy life and charitie towards our neighbour 1. Tim. 1.19 Keepe faith and a good conscience And 2. Pet. 1.10 By good vvorkes vve shall make our calling sure Is Faith giuen in one and the same measure to all beleeuers No but to some more to some lesse a Rom 12 3 6 Ephes. 1 16 yet no man hath lesse giuen him then may suffice vnto saluation God so ordaining the matter that they that haue more cōbats to vndergo in whom he doth set forth vnto the world more tokens of his glorie and power to them he giueth a more abundant measure of faith not that thereby they might attaine the greater saluation but that they might serue for the more excellent illustrating of his glorie and might bee presidents and examples vnto those that are weaker then they Is not that the Obiect of faith whatsoeuer the Church doth commaunde So doe the Papists affirme and yet in the meane while they do not set downe which be the lawfull markes of that Church but onely delude men vnder this glorious name whereas there is no other Church but that which b Ioh. 10.3 5.57 heareth the voice of the bridegroome Of the same opinion are those that doe commend an implicite faith or the Colliers faith which without inquirie or knowledge generally beleeues that which the Church beleeues and neuer cares for the vnderstanding of the particulers which it doth beleeue But wee deny it because faith rightly so called is the acknowledgement of the truth c 1 Tim. 2.4 Tit. 1.1 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a demonstratiue and d Heb. 11.1 conuincing euidence And therefore it is not an ignorance in reuerence to the Church but an explicite and manifest knowledge of God and of his fauourable goodwill towards vs of Christ giuen vnto vs of his father for righteousnesse sanctification redemption which knowledge is no where taught but in the word of God Whereupon Paule Rom. 1.17 describeth faith to be that which is reuealed in the Gospell Seing implicite faith is no faith is it necessarie that euery man haue that faith that is in all respectes explicite and vnfolded If that be true faith which is explicite not of all the parts of the Scripture in generall but yet of the cheefe heads and those that are needefull to be knowne to saluation then it followeth that that is true faith wherein there is a knowledge of the chiefe principles of Religion and a desire to profit from day to day But are there not still many things hidden and folded vp in the Scriptures which notwithstanding we must beleeue Surely there be so because we being still compassed about with many cloudes of ignorance doe not reach vnto euery thing wherof we may obserue many examples in the Disciples of Christ not hauing yet obtained a full illumination and so also in them who being onely stirred vp with Christs miracles went no farther then onely the acknowledging of Christ to be the promised Messias Io. 2.23 and 6.26 And likewise in them who are onely instructed in the first principles of religion whose faith may yet be called implicite faith But to commend grosse ignorance of diuine matters and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 senselesnesse whereby a man doth assent vnto the iudgement of the Church for matters altogether vnknowne to commend this I say as an implicite faith is a verie absurd thing For as it is said Rom. 1.17 The iust man shall liue by faith And Rom. 16.19 I would haue you wise in that which is good that is in the knowledge of the truth and instructed also in wisedome that you may embrace that which is good auoide that which is euill and escape the sleights and traps of the false Prophets yea and openly withstand them but contrarily that ye be simple in that that is euill And 1. Cor. 11.28 Let euerie man trie himselfe and 2. Cor. 13.5 Proue your selues whether you be in the faith and 2. Pet. 1.5 VVith all manner of diligence ioyne vnto your faith vertue to your vertue knowledge and vnderstanding By which places it appeareth that the conceit of implicite faith is but a base and vnsauory fiction Seeing it is said of Abraham Rom. 4.20 That he did not doubt ought not wee therfore without all iudgement and inquirie simply to beleeue all things which are deliuered vnto vs to be spoken by God 1 It is certaine that Abraham did very well vnderstand the promise which he did beleeue 2 There is one iudgement which is merely humane and proper to the vnderstanding of the flesh which iudgement appeareth in a naturall man and this surely in the matter of faith is not to be admitted but there is another iudgement of a spirituall man who discerneth all things that is he vnderstandeth perceiueth them by the power and inspiration of the holy spirit but he himselfe is iudged of no man 1. Cor. 2.14.15 I say of no man for euen then when the Prophets doe iudge of the Prophets 1. Cor. 2.14.29 It is not the iudgement of man but of the holy
Ghost such is the excellency of the Gospell 3 Of those things which are reported as spoken by God some are so indeed but some other are fained like vnto them by those that doe foolishly vnderstand the Scripture When therefore God doth directly affirme a thing we must simply beleeue him but when men speake we must not without all iudgement and enquirie beleeue euery thing bur rather trie all things and examin them according to the analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 and keepe that which is good now good and true are all one 1. Thes 5.21 What is the subiect of faith wherein it is The soule of a man and that both in the minde a knowledge or vnderstanding a luk 24.45 Ephes 4.23 and a iudgement and consent resting in the word and promise of God and likewise also in the will and heart an apprehension or embracing of the same Act. 16.14 The Lord opened the heart of Lydia that she should attend the things which Paule spake and Rom. 10.10 VVith the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse VVhat is the subiect of faith to whom faith is giuen Not all for all men doe not heare the Gospell b act 17.30 neither doe all that heare it receiue it with a pure heart as it is in the parable of the sower Math. 13.3 Neither doe all obey the Gospell c Rom. 10.17 for the Prophet Esay 53.1 saith who hath beleeued our report Faith therfore belongeth not to all but onely to the elect d 2. Thes 3 2 Iohn 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods word you therefore heare not because you are not of God and Act. 13.48 As manie as vvere ordained to eternall life beleeued 2. Tim. 1.1 Paule an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the faith of the elect of God From whence wee gather that faith is vnto vs an vndoubted argument of our election And therefore the reprobate although they doe sometimes seeme and are said to beleeue in Christ as those Temporizers Luc. 8.13 Simon Magus Act. 8.13 yea are endued with a temporarie taste of hauenly gifts e Heb. 6.4 yet they haue not a liuely and sauing faith in as much as they haue not the spirit of adoptiō bestowed vpon them that so they might with open mouth and a full confidence crie Abba Father Gal. 4.6 But they haue onely an hypocriticall and temporarie faith Haue infants actuall faith No indeed not that fayth which commeth by hearing seeing to them the Gospell is not preached For it is playne that those little ones which beleeue Math. 18.6 Are so described by Christ not in respect of their age but of their small vnderstanding forasmuch as hee disputeth of them who may be offended in word or in deed which thing cannot befall vnto infants being as yet of no vnderstanding Although it must not be denied that they are gouerned by a certaine peculier prouidence of God and that there is a certaine seede of faith infused into the infants elected Is there one faith without forme and another formed So certaine schoolemen will haue it who call faith without forme such an assent whereby euerie man euen he that despiseth God doth receiue that which is deliuered out of the Scripture without any godly affection of the heart And they call faith formed when to that assent there is added a godly affection of the heart namely Charitie but this is but foolish For faith rather belongeth to the heart then to the braine Rom. 10.10 With the hart a man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse 2 Seeing faith proceedeth from the spirit of adoption it embraceth Christ not onely vnto righteousnesse but to sanctification also and a fountaine of liuing waters a Iohn 4 14 3 Charitie or the affection of Godlinesse doth no lesse accompanie faith then the light doth accompanie the Sunne And as Gregorie saith Looke how much wee beleeue so much we loue And therefore faith is not without forme neyther can be any way seuered from Godly affection vnlesse it be hypocriticall which is not to be called faith vnlesse it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by aequiuocation and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by abusion but rather a shadow and likenesse of faith But seeing it is said Gal. 5.6 Faith working by Charitie is not Charitie the forms of faith No more then the bodie is the forme of the soule in that the soule worketh by the bodie And this is but fondly spoken inasmuch as one qualitie is not the forme of another qualitie And if it were yet Charitie doth not forme faith but on the contrarie fayth formeth Charitie for that Charitie is an effect of fayth For Charitie fetcheth his ofspring from faith and not on the contrarie faith from charitie 1. Tim. 1 5. Charitie out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith vnfained Now the cause is not said to be formed by the effect And therfore by that speech true liuely faith is distinguished from a dead counterfeit and barren faith by the marke and effect thereof namely that it is an effectuall working and fruitfull faith which bringeth forth good workes And faith Iames. 2.22 is not called perfect whereunto nothing is wanting for as long as Abraham liued he caried about him flesh and therfore stood in need of that prayer Lord increase my faith but it is said to be perfected by works as the first act is said by the Philosophers to be perfected by the second act namely because by working it doth shew and manifest it selfe which before it began to worke lay hid as if the goodnesse of a tree should be said to be perfected when it bringeth forth some excellent fruit For inasmuch as by the effectes we iudge of the cause therefore by the proportion of the effects the force of the cause doth seeme after a sort to be increased or diminished VVhat is the forme of iustifying faith Trust in the mercie of God through Christ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a firme confidence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a full perswasion of the grace of God the father towards vs whereby any man doth as it were with a full course striue toward the marke VVhich be the adiuncts or properties of faith 1 That it be certaine and without doubting 2 That it be continuall and neuer faile 3 That it be liuely effectuall and working How prooue you that certainty belongeth vnto faith 1 Iohn 3.2 The faithfull know themselues to be the sonnes of God but being rather confirmed in the perswasion of the truth of God by the holy Ghost then taught by any demonstration of reason 2 By the consideration of the truth of the promises and power of God For Psal 18.31 The word of the Lord is a tried shield to all that trust in him And Rom. 4.20 Abraham did not doubt of the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strengthned in the faith and gaue glorie to God being fully assured that he which had promised was also able to doe it 3