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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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verse Quest 1 Cannot a man obey God aright except hee acknowledge this obligation unto the Morall Law Answ No because if we be free from God wee are the servants of sinne and slaves unto our owne lusts and therefore so long as wee have not taken Christs yoake upon us and yielded up our selves to the service and obedience of God as bound in conscience to serve him and him alone and that with all our hearts wee have not performed any true faithfull or acceptable service unto him Quest 2 Have the children of God then under the Gospell no liberty Answ There is a two-fold liberty or freedome namly First Externall Secondly Internall First there is an Internall liberty when a man will not be taught or directed or reproved or compelled to performe any service unto God This is not granted unto any yea all must know that what they doe is not gratefull unto God except they pay it as a debt and do confesse that it is their duety to doe it There are three sorts of men that obey God First some acknowledge the obligation but are backeward to performe covenants they confesse it is their duety to obey God but they doe it unwillingly these must remember that God loves a cheerfull and ready service Secondly some freely and willingly doe that which God requires but will not acknowledge it as an obligation they are content to performe holy dueties but yet will not confesse that they are so obliged to the performance thereof that they had sinned if they had omitted them or that they have deserved nothing for the performance of them These must remember that God requires service of us and not will-worship Thirdly some confesse that it is their duety to serve the Lord and labour to obey him willingly and cheerfully readily and with a willing mind and the obedience onely of these is acceptable unto God It is too ordinary with many because the word is preached by poore and meane men to disdaine to obey it yea hence to doe whatsoever they will and to come to Church when they will but they must distinguish betweene the Messengers and Message Embassadour and Embassage for although the Ministers be poore or contemptible yet the word they bring is not to be despised because that comes from God q 2 Cor. 5.19 Secondly there is an Internall liberty when the conscience dares not resist the Law of God and this is twofold First Servile O derunt peccare mali formidine poenae When a man out of a slavish feare of punishment dare not transgresse the Law of God this is not praise-worthy in it selfe but yet these are much better then those who will not at all obey the Lord. Secondly Filiall when the love and reverence of God are so conjoyned together that we neither dare commit any evill or omit any thing that is good but of this elswhere § 2. One of these least commandements c. Sect. 2 Is any sinne small Quest is not every transgression against an infinite Law and an infinite God Sinne is esteemed small in a threefold regard Answ First in respect of the degree thereof because all sinnes are not equall as for example Incest is a greater sinne than a lascivious word or wanton thought Secondly in respect of Difficulty therof because it is more easie to abstaine from some sinne than from other as for example a man doth easilier forbeare murder and theft than lesse sinnes And hence the Pharisees tithed Mints but left undone the greater workes of the Law r Mat. 23.23 that is they performed easie duties but those which were hard to bee obeyed they omitted Thus some sinnes may bee called lesse than other because wee can more willingly forbeare more easily abstain from some sins than from other some being more pleasing unto our nature and sutable to our dispositions than others Thirdly sinne is said to bee small or little in regard of our Estimation and thus the Scribes and Pharisees thought it a lesse sinne to violate the commandements of God then their owne traditions ſ Mat. 15.9 And this is that which our Saviour meets with and condemnes in this verse proving that there is no sinne little or small because 1. every sinne is against an infinite law which is both the rule of true good honest and profitable things 2. because every sinne is against the Majesty of God the true Lawgiver and 3. because the least sinne workes death and condemnation for sinne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the prevarication of the Law and the breach of the Law is death Hence some sinnes which seeme small unto man have beene severly punished by God as Adams eating of an Apple was punished by expulsion out of Paradise Acheus preserving the gold and garment out of the fire was punished with the death of himself his family Sauls sparing of the best of the Cattle was the cause of his rejection from the Growne and for gathering a few stickes upon the Sabbath day the poore man was stoned to death Numb 15.32.33 § 3. He shall be called the least in the Kingdome of heaven Sect. 3 What is the meaning of these words Quest First they are diversely interpreted and Answ 1 therefore that wee may attaine unto the true sense of them observe that there are three words or voices in them First Vocabitur hee shall bee called that is he shall bee esteemed or he shall be indeede the least c. as before verse 9. he shall be called the Sonne of God that is not falsely but he shall be made Gods sonne Now in this word all the Interpreters agree Secondly Minimus the least First some understand this for Nullus so Calvin and Stapleton Minimus vocabitur that is minimè vocabitur Castalio he shall be called the least that is hee shall not bee called at all one of the kingdome of God Secondly some understand by Minimus Infimus he shal be called the least c. that is he shall be the lowest and most inferiour in the kingdome of heaven as if our Saviour would say he shall bee admitted into the Kingdome but he shall not be honoured therein thus the Papists expound generally the words as followes by and by Thirdly in regno caelorum in the kingdome of heaven this I. some expounds of the kingdome of the Church and of Grace as Calvin and Beza because thus Iohn Baptist was called the least in the kingdome of heaven Luke 7.28 II. some expound this of life eternall and so Aretius and Stapleton Answ 2 Secondly we may perceive here a difference Object 1 then in this word Minimus the least For from hence the Papists collect and hereupon establish their Evangelicall Counsels unto perfection He say they that breakes the least Counsell not Precept shall bee called least that is of least esteeme as the Laicks or Plebeians But he that keepes the least that is the Monkes and Friers and Nunnes shall be highly esteemed and greatly
respect of the greatnesse or smallnesse of the sinne is not to bee admitted and that for these reasons 1 In respect of the nature of sinne which of it selfe deserveth death Rom. 6.23 The wages of ●●ne is death Yea sinne is the transgression of the Law 1 John 3.4 And every transgression of the Law is under the curse Gal. 3.10 2 In respect of the infinite Majesty of God which to violate can be no veniall sin of it selfe 3 In respect of the perfect and absolute righteousnesse of God which cannot abide the least blemish or imperfection And therefore in these regards no sinne committed against God can in it selfe be veniall t White s Exod. 20. Confut. 5 ●rac 6. f. 330. Fifthly this motion and passion of anger even when it is sudden and unadvised though there be no further purpose nor intendment to Answ 5 hurt is guilty of judgement as is plaine in this verse Whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be guilty of judgement that is shall be guilty of damnation for so judgement is taken in Scripture David prayes that the Lord would not enter into judgement with him u Psa 143.2 And Paul saith Thou that judgest another condemnest thy selfe v Rom. 2.1 where to judge and condemne are taken for all one to be culpable then of judgment is to be guilty of condemnation Thirdly we admit this distinction of veniall Answ 3 and mortall sinnes if it be understood not in respect of the nature of sinne but of the quality of the persons for unto those that beleeve and repent all sinnes are veniall and pardonable through the mercy of God Rom. 8.1 But to the wicked and impenitent all their sinnes are mortall Sixthly the Fathers side with us in our opinions Answ 6 holding that all these three sinnes here mentioned are mortall yea the Papists generally make anger whereof the principall question here is one of the seven deadly and mortall sinnes as Canisius Pupilla oculi Manipul Curatorum and the rest Chrysostome upon this verse saith Christus dat ultionem homicidio irae supplicium aeteruum adulterio concupiscentiae Christ doth not punish murder and spare anger or condemne adultery and acquit concupiscence but condemnes and punishes both the one and the other St. Augustine s saith that all these three are to be arraigned before Gods judgement-Seate where Hell shall be the reward of all If any object why then are the two former degrees Iudgement and Councell named Hee answers because there are severall degrees of punishment in hell according to the degrees of sinne on earth Saint Hierome condemnes the first degree of anger to be worse than idle words but these we must give account for at the day of Judgement when and where no sinnes that we must answer for are in their owne nature pardonable w Mat. 12.36 Saint Hilarie Non minus ira rea Evangelie quam homicidium lege Anger under the Gospel is no more a veniall sinne than murder was under the Law And therefore I shut up this question with this assertion That to be angry with our brother unadvisedly to call him Racha or foole in our anger are all mortall sinnes and deserve in their owne nature eternall fire Bellarmine tom 3. fol. 113. objects Object to bee angry with our Brother or to call him Racha doth not exclude us from the Kingdome of heaven and therefore they are not mortall sinnes The Antecedent he proves thus That which is not properly a precept but onely a degree of a precept cannot exclude us from the Kingdome of Heaven but to be angry with our Brother or to call him Racha is not properly a precept but onely a degree of that Commandement Thou shalt not kill Therefore this will not exclude us from the Kingdome of Heaven First here is Petitio principii a begging Answ 1 of the question hee taking it for granted without proofe that these two to call our Brother Racha or to be angry with him are no precepts which is the thing questioned Secondly if this were granted that these two were onely degrees of that Commandement Thou shalt not kill yet it would not hence follow that they are veniall sinnes which will not exclude us out of Heaven For to call our Brother Foole is but onely a degree of that Commandement and yet the Jesuite himselfe doth confesse that to be mortall and to deserve condemnation Bellarm. de Purgat lib. 1. cap. 4. tom 1. 1809. Answ 3 Thirdly because they are degrees of the precept as is confessed by the Cardinall therefore it cannot be denied but they must belong unto the violation and transgression of the Commandement and consequently deserve death because cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Booke of the Law y Galath 3.10 There being no transgression so small but it shall be punished except it be repented of and washed away by the Blood of Christ Answ 4 Fourthly the Jesuite doth diametrally oppose Christ even in the very scope of the place Bellarmine saith the violation of the Commandement it selfe according to the letter excludes us from the Kingdome of Heaven but not the transgression of the degrees of the Commandement Christ here saith plainely that the Pharisees and Scribes did observe the Letter of the Law but that was not sufficient to bring them unto Heaven or to preserve them from Hell And therefore if we desire to be saved we must carefully observe the very degrees of the Commandements and therein our righteousnesse may exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees because otherwise wee cannot enter into the kingdome of God Sect. 4 § 4. Whosoever is angry with his Brother Quest 1 Why are all Christians forbidden to bee angry Answ 1 First because Anger comes from the Divell as the authour thereof Give no place to wrath give no place to the Devill Ephes 4.27 Answ 2 Secondly because anger comes from our inbred corruption and pride of heart Non ab illius injurià sed a tuà superbia Basil hom de ira Anger proceeds not from the injury of others but from the pride of our selves that being the moving cause thereof Many are wronged and yet but some are provoked and some are not Why because some are patient and others are proud Now we should labour not onely to withstand the assaults of Satan but also to subdue our owne corruptions and pride and impatiencie in the suffering of injuries because these are the causes of Anger Answ 3 Thirdly Anger is forbidden us in regard of a three-fold pernicious effect thereof namely First it pleaseth not God Iam. 1.20 Those which are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8.8 But Anger is a worke of the flesh Gal. 6.20 And therefore cannot please God Secondly Anger is dangerous and pernicious to him that is angry for it hurts the heart it wounds the conscience it expels the holy Spirit and deserves to be
cap. 7. and Reuchlin in lib. 1. Cabalae pag. 456. and Otho Gualtper syllog pag. 81. 82. 83. This place is strongly urged by Peltanus Object and Bellarmine lib. 1. cap. 1. and lib. 2. cap. 6. de Purgatorio and divers others for the proofe of Purgatorie Some of them briefly arguing thus If in the world to come the first and second degrees of anger here expressed shall not be punished with hell fire and yet shall bee punished with some torments then it remaines that they must bee punished in Purgatorie because after this life there is no other place of punishment but either hell or Purgatorie Bellarmine and Peltanus they dispute thus First our Saviour speakes here of punishments which are to be enjoyned unto and inflicted upon sinners by the judgement and sentence of God after this life Secondly that there are here distinguished by Christ three sorts of sinnes and three kindes of punishments and that hell fire and eternall condemnation is attributed onely to the third kinde and to the first and second more light punishments that is temporall And therefore some soules shall be punished after this life with temporall punishments to wit in Purgatory because there is no other place of punishment after death but either hell or Purgatory First wee grant that our Saviour speakes Answ 1 here of punishments which shall bee inflicted upon sinners by the judgement and sentence of God after this life But it followes not from hence that hee speakes of the temporall paines of purgatorie Chamier tom 3. fol. 1160. de Purgat cap. 6. Sect. 3. lib. 26. Scharp curs Theolog. de Purgat pag. 557. resp 2. Secondly wee deny that there are three distinct Answ 2 sorts or kindes of sinnes or punishments but rather three degrees of punishment in hell which although they bee unequall yet are all eternall as evidently appeares by these reasons First every transgression of the Law is sinne and the wages of every sinne is death Rom. 6.23 and 1. Ioh. 3.4 But to be angry rashly and to raile are transgressions and consequently sins as was shewed before And therefore in themselves are worthy of everlasting death Secondly he that loveth not his brother abideth in death that is hath no eternall life i 1 Ioh. 3.14.15 But hee that is angry with his brother unjustly loveth him not therefore he hath no part in eternall life Thirdly no raylers shall inherit Gods kingdome that is without repentance k 1 Cor 6.10 But he that sayth to his brother Racha that is idle-braine or light-head raileth therefore this sinne without repentance excludeth from heaven and consequently in it selfe is worthy of hell Willet Synops 408. Fourthly Christ speaks here of the sinne not of the punishment for to bee angry with our brother and to harme him with some opprobrious words is the fault of the sinne not the punishment thereof but every fault and guilt of sinne not pardoned doth bring upon the sinner eternall condemnation as shall elsewhere be shewed And therefore all these three degrees of sinne are guiltie of hell fire Fiftly Christ concluding this discourse commands every one to be reconciled unto his brother lest he be delivered unto the Judge and by him sent into prison from whence hee shall not come out untill hee have payd the uttermost farthing that is never as shall bee shewed by and by And therefore although there be divers unequall degrees of punishment in hell yet all are equall in regard of the eternitie and perpetuitie thereof Chamier de Purgat fol. 1160. § 5. Answ 3 Thirdly an Argument drawne from a Metataphor similitude or a resemblance is not to be stretched or urged beyond the scope or intent of him that propounds it But Christs scope here was to correct the false interpretations and expositions of the Decalogue the Pharisees restraining the transgressions of the Law onely unto the outward and more weightie commissions and acts and therefore our Saviour teacheth them that those sins which they account light and veniall as to bee angry with their brother or to reproach him by some disgracefull words are indeed great and mortall sinnes deserving hell and damnation it selfe Scharp de Purgat fol. 557. resp 2. Sadeel pag. 258. error 2. Answ 4 Fourthly if our Saviour speake here of Purgatorie where he represents divers judgements or jurisdictions of the Jewes whereof some were superiour some inferiour as the Judgement Councell and great Synedrion then it would follow hence that there are many severall jurisdictions in Purgatorie and appeales from the inferiour Judges to the superiour as was in them But this is so absurd that I never heard nor read Papist maintaine it and therefore I could wish they would thinke Purgatory it selfe as grosse Answ 5 Fifthly neither of these words Iudgement or Councell can in any respect agree or be applyed to Purgatory there not being in them the least mention or insinuation of any purging more than there is in the word Gehenna Amesius tom 2. pag. 201. Answ 6 Sixtly from this place they must either prove two distinct Purgatories or none at all for Bellarmine himselfe observes two kindes of punishments distinct from the eternall torments of hell fire And therefore if this argument bee worth the owning or maintaining he must grant two Purgatories distinct in place and situation For as the Councel is a distinct place and jurisdiction from the place of the fire of Hell as he saith so also is the place of Judgment a distinct place frō the Synedrion or Councell And therefore if the Papists contend for this that the Synedrion or Councell differs from the fire of Hell wee doe no lesse strive for this that in like manner Judgement differs from Councell and so cannot be numerically one Wherefore either they must goe set up a second and new Purgatory from this place or pull down the old one which they have so stoutly heretofore maintained from hence because this Scripture we see must either support two Purgatories or none Seventhly if this conclusion of the Papists be Answ 7 good our Saviour speakes of punishments after this life because mention is made of Hell fire then this will follow also that he speakes of the punishments of civill judgements or Courts in this life because he makes mention of a Judgement and a Councel which belong unto this life and are not in Purgatory and therefore if this be absurd and deformed so is also the former being both cut by one Last Eighthly what Fathers can they finde who Answ 8 interpret this place of Purgatory Theophilact upon these words by councell understands the consent of the Apostles in the great and generall judgement And Saint Augustine de serm Dom. in monte from this place concludes that there are different degrees of punishment in Hell Ninthly to prove Purgatory from this place Answ 9 cannot stand with some other opinions of the Papists and therefore if they could prove Purgatory hence yet they would lose
and the effect the sinne and the punishment the one being blotted out he will remember the other no more How doe we owe the debt of obedience unto Quest 6 God First wee owe it out of duty Because the Answ 1 Lord For this end hath I. Created and made us Ephes 2.10 Rom. 9 21. We were made men for his service II. Redeemed us that we might serve him in righteousnesse and true holinesse Luke 1.74 Tit. 2.14 III. Elected us and predestinated us unto the adoption of sonnes that as children wee might obey him i Ephes 1.4 IV. Called us that wee might obey him in sanctification and honour 1. Thess 4.7 V. Enlightned us that wee might increase in his service 2. Corinth 3 18. VI. Sanctified us in Christ that as members of Christ wee might performe his will Ephes 5.27 Answ 2 Secondly we owe obedience unto the Lord by command God hath given us a Law to obey and Christ hath renewed it Ephes 4.24 Wherefore S. Iames cals it the Law of liberty Iames 1.23 Now this command is that wee should serve him in Righteousnes towards man and Holinesse towards himselfe and that all our dayes Answ 3 Thirdly we owe obedience unto God for his benefits which wee daily receive from him Answ 4 Fourthly we are debters unto God by covenant and contract And that both First in Baptisme wherein wee promised fealtie and new obedience unto the Lord. Secondly in our profession and vocation unto Christianity as we are Christians wee have promised to put on Christ and serve God as the members of Christ all our dayes Thirdly in our daily Prayers wherein we make new promises unto God of new obedience Fourthly in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper wherein wee receive a pledge from God which is as a seale of that covenant which is made betweene us and God Quest 7 Is every man obliged to pay this debt unto God Answ Every man is obliged either to the debt of obedience or to the punishment of sinne whether they be Heathens or Christians or great men or the inferiour and ruder sort or prophane persans or ignorant or servants or children yea every one of what nation ranke or quality soever Sect. 2 § 2. Forgive us Obiect 1 Some object this place against the certaintie of remission thus Wee are here taught to pray for the pardon of our sinnes day by day al which were needlesse if we could be assured of pardon in this life and therefore there can bee no certaine assurance that our sinnes are remitted Answ 1 First this fourth petition must bee understood not so much of our old sins as of our present and new sinnes for as wee goe on from day to day so we adde sinne to sinne and for the pardon of them wee must humble our selves and pray Answ 2 Secondly wee pray for the pardon of our sinnes not because we have no assurance thereof but because our assurance is weake and small wee grow on from grace to grace in Christ as little children doe to mans estate by little and little and therefore we pray daily for more The Papists say Argu. that a man by good workes is justified Against this wee thus argue from this place Our Saviour teacheth every man though never so just to pray forgive us our sinnes And therefore no man is just by his workes To this Bellarmine answers Answ This petition of the Lords Prayer is to bee understood onely of veniall sinnes which are mixed with our good workes Bellar. de Iustif. lib. 6. cap. 20. resp ad loc 5. First the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Debts so that Reply 1 herein wee pray to have all our debts forgiven now wee are more endangered and endebted unto God by great sinnes then by small And therefore veniall sinnes onely are not here meant Reply 2 Secondly S. Luke readeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sinnes and S. Iohn defineth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sinne to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transgression 1 Iohn 3.4 But great sinnes are transgressions of the Law more then veniall Therefore they are not excluded Thirdly if good workes be tempered with Reply 3 veniall sinnes how can they being imperfect make us just and perfect before God But of this more by and by The Papists say good workes are meritorious Object 2 and satisfactory and from this Verse goe about to prove that Prayer satisfieth for sinne wee pray saith Bellarmine for forgivenesse of sinnes and by thus praying we satisfie for our veniall sinnes The Lords Prayer overthroweth their doctrine of satisfaction wee therein concluding Answ for thine is the glory wee take not the glory to our selves but ascribe all unto God Forgivenesse of the debt is of mercy where then remission is of grace there can bee no satisfaction of worthinesse Stand all sinnes in need of remission art not Quest 1 some veniall and pardonable of their owne nature First the Papists say some sinnes are veniall Answ 1 and that either I. Of their owne nature because they are not ontra legem sed praeter legem Dei against the Law of God but besides it as the hatred of our enemie in some degree or not to be silent when an Elder commands and the like Or II. for the littlenesse and smallnesse of the sin because they are not equall to eternall death neither deserve it l Staple● Antid Evang Secondly the Papists agree but jarringly amongst themselves in this particular some saying Answ 2 they are veniall sinnes because they are not against the Law of God some saying that they cannot properly bee called sinnes thus Bellarm. Thirdly that which is not Answ 3 Contra legem Dei against the Law of God is not sinne For the Law is the Rule both of good and evill And every sin is sin in as much as it is a violation the Law Answ 4 Fourthly what is lesse then the eating of an Apple Gen. 3 then an idle word Mat. 12.36 Then a corrupt thought Gen. 6.5 And yet these are threatned with judgement and punishment Answ 5 Fifthly because Stapleton saith these sins are not paria aeternae morti that is there is no resemblance analogy or proportion betweene these small sins and eternall death I adde therefore this one answer more That there is a parity resemblance and equality I. In the affection of the person offending who would for ever have given way to these if he had lived II. In the person offended who is an infinite God And III. In the choise of sin before life eternall And IV. In the guilt and staine of sin because it can never be blotted out by time or torment Object 3 The Fathers speake of veniall sins and the Scripture of mortall And therefore some are veniall Answ Sinne is called veniall or mortall foure manner of wayes namely First comparatively as a sin which is lesse evill Thus there are seven deadly sins as the Schoolmen say which are greater then a sin of ignorance because
that is excusable In tanto non in toto in part but not altogether Secondly in respect of the person sinning which is either I. Elected but not as yet regenerated now such a ones sins are all veniall in the event because they shall bee pardoned 1. Tim. 1.13 II. Regenerated and justified whose sinnes shall not bee imputed Hence David pronounceth such a one blessed Psalme 32.1 And S. Iohn saith such have an Advocate for their sinnes 1. Iohn 1.9 2.1 Hence sinne is sometimes said not to bee theirs Rom 7. Yea not to be sinne 1 Iohn 1.3.9 and 5.18 Thirdly in respect of the infallible danger so S. Iohn saith there is a sinne not unto death 1. Iohn 5.16 Where we may observe that sin is called Mortall for which we must not pray and that a sinne not unto death whose danger is not so great as that is Fourthly in respect of the merit that sin is called veniall which in the severity rigor and strictnesse of justice doth not deserve death And thus no sin is called small in all the Scripture Are all sinnes equall Quest 2 First the Stoicks affirme it and Christians Answ 1 who assent unto them herein thus confirme it I. Because sin doth not consist in the matter of the action but in the mind Sin is a prevarication and straying from the truth and right way The sin is alike to sinke a Ship by over-lading her either with Sand or Gold Thus the Stoicks the following reasons are produced by the Christians II. Because every sinne is a violation of the Law yea of the whole Law for hee who is guilty of the breach of one is guilty of all Iames 2.20 Therefore all are alike III. Because the same punishment is allotted to him who workes wickednesse and to him who consents onely thereunto Romans 1.32 IV. Because the action and cogitation are both alike before God to commit adultery actually and with the heart to kill and to hate as also of other sins Matthew 5. Are alike in the sight of God And therefore all sins are equall Secondly although sin differ not Answ 2 ab extrà differt intrà without yet it differs within to wit that sin which is committed through ignorance negligence and infirmity is lighter and lesser then that which is committed maliciously wittingly and of set purpose Againe many are worse then one Againe hee sins worse who sins against a greater measure of grace And therefore thus all sins are not equall Thirdly one sin differs from another ab extra Answ 3 even in regard of the outward act Thus the murder of a King or of a Father is much more horride then of a stranger enemie or private person Thus blasphemie against God is greater then contumely or reproch against our neighbour Thus it is a greater sin to rob a poore man then one who hath no want Fourthly certainly there is an inequality in the Scripture And that Answ 4 I. Of glory 1. Corinth 15. II. Of punishment Matth. 10.15 11.22 Of both which else-where III. Of sin there beeing a difference betweene anger Racha and foole as was shewed in the former Chapter vers 22. so Iohn 19.11 Fifthly we distinguish betweene the Nature of sin which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the transgression of the Law and is the same in all sins without any difference hence all are mortall even unto idle thoughts Degree of sin which is aggravated principally by these circumstances viz. First from the mind and heart and internall purpose if it bee done with inward boasting or a perverse will Answ 5 Secondly from the neglect of greater power strength and grace Thirdly from the number many sins being heaped together Fourthly from the time when sin is long continued in Fifthly from the person when it is committed against God And thus although all sins have one and the same nature as all Individua partake of the nature of their Species yet in regard of the degree of sin we say that those sins are greater which are committed wittingly and willingly then those which are committed ignorantly and with reluctation against them Those which are committed by a man of more grace strength and knowledge are worse then the infirmities of the weake Those in whom are legions of Divels and sins are worse then those who are given but to one sin as the young man Mat. 19.22 Those who continue in sin are worse then he who fals but once Those who sin immediately against God worse then those who sin immediately against man Quest 3 Are all sins pardonable because wee are taught here to pray for pardon against all Answ 1 First all sins are pardonable except the sin against the Holy Ghost Answ 2 Secondly the Papists seeme to grant this that the sin against the holy Spirit is unpardonable but yet they acknowledge that it is not so irremissible as though it did exceede the mercy of God if they could but repent but because God gives them over unto a reprobate sense and with holds from them the assistance of his Spirit whereby they might bee restored But in this point first Scotus is faulty who will not fully acknowledge the truth of it And Secondly Camara l Camara quaest co●cil et expos quae 175. Pag. 191. è Catharino erres here who saith onely that this sin is very hardly and very seldome pardoned Now the reason of this their error was twofold Namely I. Because they placed this sin in any act simply without those requisite circumstances thereof which follow by and by II. Because they stretched this sin beyond its bounds making six kinds thereof contrary to the six effects of the blessed Spirit which are these First trust and confidence in God Secondly the feare of God Thirdly the knowledge of the truth Fourthly joy for the aide of the Spirit towards our Brethren Fifthly a sorrow for sin Sixthly a purpose to repent Whose opposite is Desperation Presumption A resisting of a known truth Envy for graces blessings endowments which God hath bestowed upon our Brethren Gloriation or boasting in sin An obstinate purpose of continuing in sin Answ 3 Thirdly unto this sin against the Holy Ghost three things are required to wit I. Illumination Read those two places Heb. 6.4 10.26 If they have bene enlightned and have had a tast c. And againe if after wee have had a knowledge of the truth c. Thus there must be a knowledge of our duty and an opening of the eyes of our understanding before this sin can be committed II. A Relapse and falling away yea a returning unto impurity Read Heb. 6.6 2. Peter 2.1.20 21 22. Matthew 12.45 Unto this sin there must be a turning with the Dog to his vomite and with the Swine which was washed to the wallowing in the mire III. Malitious presumption or a hatred of Christ when a man shall deride contemne spurne trample under his feet and blaspheme Christ his Word Law and truth Religion
to the law as the comfortable promises in the old Testament to the Gospell Secondly the places alleadged doe prove onely Answer 2 that the law and the Gospell are joyned in use but it followeth not hence they have the same operation and effect Saint Peter Acts. 2. and 3. And the rest of the Apostles in their sermons tempered the threatnings of the Law and the comforts of the Gospell together by the one drawing the people to repentance by the other ministring hope of remission of sinnes the same course ought the Ministers of the Gospell to take in teaching the people now first in humbling them by the Law and then comforting them by the Gospell but all this sheweth onely a joyning of the Law and the Gospell in use not in nature or propertie Answer 3 Thirdly the Gospell worketh feare and terror per accidens not of it selfe but accidentally and improperly as Saint Paul saith the Gospell is the savour both of life unto life and of death unto death 2 Corinth 2.16 That is properly and of it selfe it worketh unto life but not so unto death for that is not the proper effect of the Gospell but is onely caused by the wilfull contemners and disobedient hearers of the Gospell by whose perverse nature the sweetnesse thereof is turned to bitternesse So then to the faithfull and believers the Gospell bringeth comfort and peace and if it doe not so unto others the fault is in themselves But the law brought terrour to all even to the righteous for Moses trembled and quaked at the delivering of the Law Hebr. 12.21 (e) Willet Synopsis fol. 101 3. P. Secondly this threatning may bee referred unto all that every tree which beareth not good fruit that is every man who doth not bring forth the fruits of righteousnes and religion in his life and conversation shall be cast into hell Wee have here two things to be considered of 1. The Persons Judged 2. The Judgement Section 1 § 1. Every tree Observat In these words Omnis arbor our Saviour teacheth That none of those shall escape judgement whatsoever they are whom God findes guiltie Every man shall bee judged by God at the last who will give to every one according to his workes 2 Cor. 5.10 and cast all that are guilty into hell (f) Psalm 9.17 Many are the examples which wee have to prove this trueth that none shall escape who are but corrupt and fruitlesse trees namely First he spared not Kings as we see in Ahab Saul Balthazar and Herod Neither Secondly Prophets as wee see in Balaam and 850. of Baals priests Neither Thirdly his most deare and beloved people as wee see in Ephraim and Iudah Hos 14.1 Isa 5. Neither Fourthly Apostles as wee see in Iudas For the Lord is no respecter of persons but when all shall stand before him will deale justly with all in judgement neither respecting the person of the poore nor of the rich Sect. 2 § 2. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit Quest 1 How many sort of evill trees are there Answer 1 Three according to the fruits to wit First there are some trees that beare obnoxious hurtfull and poysonous fruit Secondly some that beares onely leaves and no fruit at all Thirdly some trees beare idle vaine and unprofitable fruit Now these seeme to be the best because they endeavour to bring forth fruit but because their fruit is not good and profitable they are therfore destroyed also Our Saviour hereby teaching us That none can be secure from the wrath and vengeance of God Observat but onely those whose fruits are approved by him Reade Matth. 3.10 c. Act. 2.38 and 3.19 and Luke 13.6 and Isa 5.5 and Iohn 15.1.2 and Luke 3.8 Why shall none escape the anger of the Lord but Quest 2 those who bring forth good fruits First because a tree is good for nothing else but Answer 1 bearing of fruit Ezech. 15. This is spoken of the vine Secondly because Gods expectation is for fruit Answer 2 that is all that hee lookes for of the tree And therefore when hee lookes for that and findes it not hee curseth the tree as we see in the figge-tree Matth. 21.19 Thirdly God expects fruit and that good fruit Answer 3 and that onely And therefore hee who answereth not the Lords expectation therein shall bee hewen downe and cast into the fire There are three sort of Trees to wit 1. Some beare evill fruit as the wilde Olive and the wild vine These shall presently bee cut downe and cast into the fire Jsa 5.5 c. Heb. 6.8 2. Some beare no fruit these are spared a time to see if they will beare but if not at length they are cut downe also and throwne to the fire Luke 13.6 3. Some beare good fruit but it is but little and that little in part rotten And these are pruned and digged about and manured that they may bring forth better fruit and more plentifull Iohn 15.2 And therefore wee should examine whether wee be of this number or not How may wee know whether God will approve Quest 3 of our works or not By these foure signes namely Answer First examine thy estate and condition wherein thou art say thus unto thy selfe If God should now call mee to give account of my steward-ship what should I say what should I doe should I show my God my gold that I have heaped up together or my pleasure that I have so greedily followed or my land which I possesse what doe I daily doe I make it my chiefest care to glorify my God doe I thinke that day lost and grieve for the losse thereof wherein I doe not either bring some glory unto my God or some good unto my owne soule or some benefit unto my brethren Thus let us examine what wee doe daily and what our actions are if the Lord should call us to account Secondly examine thy by-past zeale if it have not vanished in leaves and vaine shewes hath not thy zeale been more for things circumstantiall and rituall then for substantiall and reall or more against an indifferent ceremonie then a direct sinne Thirdly examine whether thy obedience and fruits have encreased as thy knowledge did encrease or whether thou wert as carefull to performe thy duetie as to know it Fourthly examine thy present religion whether it leade thee unto constancie and encrease in holinesse and good workes that so thou maist bee ripe unto harvest or whether it make thee remisse or carelesse Certainely if wee bee carefull over our wayes and consider well how wee spend our time If wee bee truely zealous for the glory of God according to knowledge If wee labour daily to encrease in knowledge for this end that we might bee bettered in practise And lastly if wee strive daily to adde one measure and degree of grace unto another casting that behinde us which we have attained and striving hard unto the marke Then we may be comfortably assured that the
how can yee speake good things when yee your selves are evill that is as Lyranus interprets it yee being filled with malice and envie against me cannot speake any good of me The good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and the evill man out of the evill treasure of his heart bringeth forth evill things Anselm upon these words hath this Observation or Exposition Quomodo bonus homo non possit proferre mala nec malus bona sic non possit Christus mala nec diabolus bona opera facere As the good man cannot bring forth evill things nor the evill man good things So Christ can doe no bad workes nor the Devil any good Reade further for the proofe hereof Mat. 7.16 17 18 19. and Luke 6.43 44. From whence plainely this Argument may be drawne No corrupt and evill tree can bring forth good fruit But every man by nature is a corrupt and evill tree being the child of wrath and infected with sinne And therefore no man by nature or by the onely power of his Free-will is able to bring forth good fruits Sect. 3 § 3. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Quest 1 What is a good thing or a good worke Answ Good workes are generally thus described They are actions externall or internall conformable and agreeable to the will and to the Law of God But from this verse they may be thus defined They are workes which flow and proceed from a disposition of vertue For the good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Quest 2 How many things are required unto a good worke Three things are required viz Answ First a good beginning that is the will well disposed and working out of true vertue For goods fruits cannot spring but from a good tree verse 33. Secondly a good matter or object that is something which is commanded by God for otherwise it will bee but will-worship as Matth. 15.6 In vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandements of men Thirdly a good end that is the glory of God and those things which tend to his glory 1 Corinth 10.31 And thus if we desire to approve our selves to bee good men by our good fruits we must labour that I. Our wils may be rectified and rightly disposed And II. That our workes may be moderated according to the word of God in regard of the matter of them And III. That our end in all our good workes may be that God may be glorified in us and by us Verse 36 VERS 36. But I say unto you that every idle word that men shall speake they shall give account thereof in the day of Iudgement Object Bunderius a Papist from this place would prove Purgatory thus Men at the day of Iudgement shall give an account for every idle word which they have spoken Now which is this day of Iudgement certainely that day which comes presently after death according to that of the Apostle It is appointed unto all men once to die and after death comes Iudgement Therefore in that day after death men shall give an account of those things which have beene culpable and worthy of reprehension in them and which must bee expiated by temporall punishments now in what place can this be but only in Purgatory His meaning is this As soone as ever men die they shall give an account for their veniall and lesse sinnes which they have not satisfied nor suffered for on earth and those shall be purged by the paines and penance of Purgatory flames First Sophister-like he concludes that which Answ 1 hee proves not or hath that in the conclusion which is in neither Proposition For to me hee seemes to argue thus We must give an account for all our small sins Answ 2 at the day of Iudgement But this day of Iudgement is the time which followes presently after death Therefore there is a Purgatorie perhaps to punish such a Logician as hee is Secondly wee grant that by and by after death there is a particular judgement of God wherein every one shall give an account of those things which he hath done in the body Thirdly by the day of Iudgement both Franciscus Answ 3 Lucas and Gorranus and divers others understand the last day and generall Iudgement and some leave it doubtfull Sa Iudicij scilicet particularis in morte vel universalis that is by this Iudgement is either meant the particular Iudgement presently after death or the general Iudgement at the last day Now wee need not greatly care which of these say true for if the last day be here understood then Bunderius his Argument or Sophisme rather is absurd for there will bee no Purgatory after the day of Iudgement But if wee leane unto those who hold the place doubtfull then it will prove but an uncertaine Argument and consequently not an Argument of faith nor to build an Article of faith upon as Purgatory is to them A question may hence be demanded Quest whether every sinne be mortall of its owne nature or not Although it be true Answ that all sinnes are not equall but one greater then another and although also it be true that in a good and godly sense some sinne may be termed mortall and some veniall which yet may more fitly be called sins regnant and not regnant yet it is most true that every sinne is mortall of its owne nature and only veniall by way of Gods free acceptation and mercy for his owne names sake and merits of his deare Sonne our Lord Iesus as appeares by these reasons First because our Saviour here saith that wee must give a straight account of every idle word in the generall day of Iudgement and this is certaine because every idle word is flatly against the Law of God and yet these idle words are those sinnes which they call veniall And therefore this is a truth that all sinnes are mortall that is against the Law of God Secondly because the Rhemists Rhem. in 1. Iohn 3.4 confesse in plaine termes that every sinne is a swarving from the Law of God For doubtlesse that which swarveth from the Law is truely said to be against the Law but not agreeable to the Law Thirdly because the famous popish Friar and Romish Bishop Iosephus Angles in 4. sent pag. 215. teacheth the same doctrine in his booke dedicated to the Pope himselfe His words are these Omne peccatum veniale est al cujus legis transgressio Patet quia omne veniale est contra rectam rationem agere contra rectam rationem est agere contra legem naturalem praecipientem non esse a regulà rectae rationis deviandum Every veniall sinne is the transgression of some Law This is cleare because every veniall sinne is against right reason and to doe a thing against right reason is to doe it against the Law of nature which commandeth us not
bestow grace by CHRIST and the benefits that wee reape by him It lets us see how wee are justified before God by Christ and how for his sake God is reconciled unto us promising peace and joy unto us in Soule here and glory and felicity in Heaven hereafter and thus it workes comfort and sweet consolation What is the office and use of the Law that our Quest 2 Saviour sends this young man unto it keepe the Commandements First the Law of God doth admonish all Answ 1 men of that rule of righteousnesse unto which God created them yea which they were able to observe and keepe when they were first created and which God justly yet requires of all Wee know that in civill things the violation of a Law doth not take it away or abolish it but although there be transgressions of the Law daily yet the Law stands firme So Adams breaking of the Law hath not abolished this rule of righteoosnesse which was given unto man at first to walke by but it is immovable and doth still expresse and shew that Righteousnesse and obedience which men owe unto God as unto their Creator And this Law the Lord would have to be made knowne unto all men that every one might understand his obligation thereunto Secondly the Law doth leade us to the acknowledgement Answ 2 of an infinit debt that is it humbles it terrifies it condemnes unto perpetuall Prison all the violaters of the tenne Commandements Matth. 18. The Law accuseth Iohn 5. There is one which accuseth you even Moses it kils men and leaves men deprived of all comfort it affects with shame and blushing Our Saviour being about to leave the Earth Luke 24. gives charge to his Apostles to preach Repentance and therefore the office and use of the Law is to urge and perswade unto contrition and sorrow for sinne and the breach of the Law Yea without the true knowledge of the Law either Epicurisme or Pharisaisme doth raigne amongst men Thirdly the office and use of the Law is to Answ 3 shew to those who are regenerated and justified according to what Rule their obedience should be begun exercised and continued Iohn being asked by divers of his Hearers what they must doe Answers they must be just charitable and faithfull and bring forth fruits worthy of repentance Luke 3.8 11 12. c. Which workes were prescribed unto them in the law and from it And all those precepts which Christ ever and anon gives concerning good workes are agreeable unto the Law and therefore our lives must be framed according to the rule of the Law and the direction thereof Quest 1 Why must the law be observed Answ 1 First because God commands it Now an Argument drawne from the authority of Christ or God should be of great force with Christians CHRIST would not dissolve the Law Christ ever and anon sends us unto the law and God commands us to obey the Law and therefore great reason there is that wee should labour and endeavour to observe and keepe the Law Answ 2 Secondly the observance of the law is the worship of God for the workes commanded in the Law are in themselves good and the Law is a manifestation of God and his will and therefore we ought to labour to obey it Answ 3 Thirdly wee should be carefull to observe the Law because thereby we labour to imitate God Math. 5.48 and 1 Peter 1.13 c. And Answ 4 Fourthly because in so doing we glorifie our God Math. ● 16 Philip. 2.15 And Answ 5 Fifthly because by our obedience we testifie our love unto God Iohn 14.15 And Answ 6 Sixthly because thereby wee confirme our election and vocation 2. Peter 1.10 And Answ 7 Seventhly because by inuring of our selves unto good workes we shall facilitate our obedience Vsus Promptos facit Use makes men perfect and prone both I. Unto a holy labour in that which is good And also II. Unto a godly warring and fighting against sinne and whatsoever is evill And Answ 8 Eightly we ought to strive to obey the Law and to fructifie in the practice of holy workes because the felicity and happinesse of our estate doth encrease by the augmentation of our sanctity and the nearer we approach to the nature of blessed Spirits Answ 9 Lastly by our observation of the Morall law we shall be a meanes to winne and gaine our Brethren Philip. 2.15 and 2. Peter 1.12 And therefore great reason there is that we should labour to obey it Sect. 4 § 4. Iesus saith unto him These c. Quest Why doth our Saviour here in answer to the young mans question omit the Precepts of the first Table and recite onely those of the second Answ 1 First not because the Precepts of the second Table are chiefe in dignity or more excellent then the first for the duties of the first are more excellent then the duties of the second Nor Answ 2 Secondly because the more principall Precepts of the first Table doe not belong unto the present cause namely salvation for they are principally requisite unto salvation But Answ 3 Thirdly our Saviour names onely the duties of the second Table because in these wee are most easily deceived and soonest by Sathan and our owne corrupt nature over-reached And Fourthly because our true obedience to the Answ 4 second Table is but a fruit effect or consequent of our obedience unto the first He that is carefull to performe those duties which God requires of him in the second Table towards his Brother and that because God requires it gives unto the world a good argument and testimony of his obedience unto God in the duties of the first Table Read Galath 5.6 and 1. Iohn 4.20 Fifthly our Saviour to this young man recites Answ 5 onely the precepts of the second Table because the Jewes held these so vulgar easie that there were few but thought that they observed and kept these sufficiently enough as this young man plainly saith All these have I kept from my youth vp And therefore for the suppressing of this presumption and rectifying of this vulgar errour our Saviour by the rehearsall of these precepts would teach them that they observe and keepe none of them as they ought to doe § 5. Honour thy Father and thy Mother Sect. 5 What is the honour that Children owe unto Quest 1 rheir Parents To this the Hebrewes answer Answ They owe unto them maintenance and reverence they should give them meat drinke and cloathing they should lead them in and lead them out And they adde further we reade Honour the Lord with thy substance and Honour thy Father and Mother thou art to honour God with thy substance if thou have any substance but thou art to honour thy Parents whether thou have any substance or not for if thou have not thou art bound to begge for thy Parents So saith R. Salomon in his Glosse vpon Levit. 10.3 Whether ought wee to love our Parents or Quest
Rama is here to be taken for that Answ 5 Ramah which was in Benjamin and neere unto Bethlehem § 2. Rachel weeping 〈◊〉 her children Sect. 2 Who is meant here by Rachel Quest Or what was this Rachel I answer first Rachel was one beloved of God Answ 1 yet shee was afflicted teaching us that the best are subject to affliction Secondly but Rachel was now dead and therfore Answ 2 the Prophet uses a Prosopopeia See D. Mayer upon this verse Teaching us that in the study of divine things Observ there is a great use of figures and humane learning the Scriptures have figures yea fables as shall be else where shewed therefore there is need of humane literature for the true understanding thereof Arts are handmaids unto divinitiy he will scarce ever prove a good Theologue that is deprived of these attendants I. The knowledge of the originall tongues are needfull that so we may draw the water of truth from the very fountaines II. Philosophy expounds III. Logicke confirmes IV. Rhetorick perswades and therfore the best divines doe teach Rhetoricall places as Hyperius Erasmus Melancthon Perkins and divers others but of this more largely else where §. 1. VERS 19. Vers 19 And when Herod was dead behold an Angell of the Lord appeareth unto Ioseph Sect. 1 in Egypt in a dreame It may here be doubted Quest whether Herod died a naturall death or if he went out of the world after so many bloudy cruelties without some remarkeable judgement It should seeme hee did because the Scripture makes no mention of any thing but that onely he died neither expressing when nor how I answer first that he dyed about two yeares Answ 1 after Secondly as his life was short after this unheard Answ 2 of cruelty so it was miserable a Ioseph lib. 2. de Bell. Iud. cap. 22. as may appeare by this description of it Hee first was stricken with an extreame burning heat within which so fast consumed his meat that hee had continually a most greedy desire to feed but could never be satisfied his intrails rotted in his body he was tormented with most cruell pangs in his genitals and his feet were greatly swolne To all this was added a putrifying of his privy parts crauling with wormes and a most horrible stinch proceeded from him in which miserable lothsome case hee continued some weekes and then dyed Sect. 2 § 2. This verse may bee allegorized thus Herod is sin and as long as he lives and raignes Christ doth absent himselfe and will not come unto his people Herod must dye before Christ will returne sinne must bee mortyfied before Christ will come unto the soule whence it may be questioned Quest Why is there no participation of Christ before mortification I answer first because the Holy Spirit will not come into a polluted vessell God and Mammon Answ 1 cannot dwell together b Matth. 6.24 one Temple cannot hold the Arke and Dagon 1 Sam. Non bene conveniunt nec in una sede morantur sin and grace Satan and Christ will never bee immates or cohabitants in one and the same heart at one and the same time and therefore sinne must bee expulsed before Christ wil be entertained Answ 2 Secondly to dye and to live are contraries as the Apostle St Paul saith how can hee that is dead in sin live therein c Rom. 6.2 A man cannot be alive and dead at one instant in one sense and therefore we cannot pertake the spirituall life of grace and Christ untill sinne dye d 1 Cor. 15 Christ will rather continue an exul in Egypt then come into Israel so long as this Herod sin is alive and therfore if we desire the fruition and possession of Christ in the soule wee must labour to fight against e 1 Pet. 2.11 to mortifie f Col. 3.5 all carnal affections in us putting off this old garment of sinne and casting it from us that so wee may bee clothed with that new man Christ Jesus g Rom. 13 12.13.14 Vers 20 §. 1. VERS 20. Saying arise and take the babe Sect. 1 and his mother and goe into the land of Israel for they are dead which sought the babes life Quest It may bee demanded What was the end of Christs flying into Egypt and returning from thence Answ 1 I answer first this was done that in the beginning of Christs nonage he might show that hee was borne to undergoe many temporall miseries Secondly that in regard of that estate of humanity Answ 2 which he had undertaken he might as a man have a care of his life in foreseeing and preventing all dangers that may ensue Thirdly this was done that Christ hereby Answ 3 might shew that it was he alone that was appointed by God to bring us out of spirituall Egypt into the promised land of eternall rest Sect. 2 § 2. And goe into the land of Jsrael Quest It may be asked why must Ioseph returne with Christ into Israel Answ 1 I answer first that he might be educated and brought up amongst his owne people Observa where was the law of God and the true Church of God teaching us that parents should be very carefull of the pious education of their children that they may have both good instruction and discipline and also good example Now there is a three-fold good education the I. Learned this is good for those that are able to allow unto their children some learning that they may be the more capable of religion The II. Is sober to teach them humanity and humilitie towards all and sobriety and temperance in themselves The III. Pious and holy and this is required as well as the former of all parents to endeavour by Catechising instructing and godly example to educate their children in the feare and nurture of the Lord. Secondly this was done also that it might be Answ 2 knowne that Christ was an Israelite least otherwise hee should have beene called an Egyptian Thirdly this was done for Iosephs and Maries Answ 3 sake that they might be no longer afflicted then was necessary God not suffering his to bee afflicted save onely for a moment § 3. Because they are dead who sought the babes life Sect. 3 Here it may bee demanded who were they Quest 1 that sought the childs life and now are dead First Hierome thinkes it was the Pharisees Answ 1 and Sanhedrin a Hiero. 1. and he is moved to this opinion for these reasons I. Because it is spoken in the plurall number mortui not mortuus they are dead not he is dead II. Because they were troubled as well as Herod vers 3. and as Hierome thinkes consulted also with Herod against Christ III. Because they were slaine by Herod as we shewed before vers 3. Some b Gualt ● deny S. Hieromes second reason affirming that the Parisees did neither lye in wait for the life of Christ nor consult to kill him Secondly this is certaine
auricular confession in which sense the word is never used by the Ancient Fathers therefore I may conclude that this penance injoyned by the Church of Rome for the satisfying of the justice of God is meerely erroneous and is built upon no authority of Scripture at all Sect. 3 § 3. Repent Iohns preaching is repentance that is the renovation of the minde which is the one halfe of the Gospel the summe whereof consists in these two Repentance and Faith and therefore I intreate the reader without tediousnesse to suffer both me and himselfe to dwell a little longer then ordinary in this verse Quest 1 The maine question here is concerning the parts of Repentance Answ 1 To which First some Papists answer that the three parts of repentance are the three steps in Iacobs ladder by which we mount unto heaven the first whereof is sorrow the second is shame the third is labour and industry But this is an abuse of repentance these being not the parts of it as else where more largely shall be shewed Answ 2 Secondly I answer the true parts of Repentance are three to wit First Preparation secondly Resolution thirdly Execution Quest 2 What necessitie is there of Preparation Answ I answer because a worke so holy as this is cannot rightly be performed but by a due preparation considering these two things 1. that wee our selves are by nature very unfit to effect it 2 that the worke in it selfe is very hard and difficult Sathan being strong that labours to retaine us in sinne and sinne from which wee should turne being customary unto us and pleasing unto our natures Quest 3 Thirdly it may be demanded wherein doth this preparation consist I answer in two things viz. 1 Dejectione 2 Erectione cordis That is Answ the casting downe and raising up of the heart First this preparation consists Dejectione cordis in the dejecting and humbling of the heart here it may be asked What necessitie is there of Quest 4 this casting downe of the heart I answer Answ Because our hearts are to be softned and humbled before we can truely repent Thus the Prophet exhorts us to rend our hearts and to turne unto the Lord f Ioel. 2.12 because without this rending there is no true repentance our hearts must bee plowed up before the seedes of grace can be sowne g Ierem. 4.4 because the spirit of bondage begets the spirit of adoption h Rom. 8.15 Hence it will be inquired wherein doth this Quest 5 our dejection or humiliation consist I answer Answ for the full cleare resolving of this question two things are to be observed First the beginning of this humiliation which is examination Secondly the end of this examination which is the hatred of sinne First the beginning of this humiliation is a serious examination of our selves our estates and conditions for when wee examine our selves by the rule of the law and finde how many and how mighty our sinnes are which wee have committed and which wee are never able to satisfye for then our peacockes plumes and Pharisaicall conceits are laid aside Hence a question may be propounded What Quest 6 must we examine in our selves Three things Answ First thy estate and condition wherein thou art thou must trye how thou standest whether in grace or nature a 2 Cor. 13.5 whether thou art truely perfectly regenerated or seduced by the spirit of slumber presumption thou must examine ubi fuisti es eris non es b Greg. Mor. 23. what hast thou beene what art thou what shalt thou be after this life happie or miserable what art thou not what is wanting in thee which thou shouldest have Thus we should examine our selves whether wee grow in grace at all or not and how the strength of sinne decreases and the strength of grace and of the spirit of God doth increase in us Secondly examine thy sinnes consider what they are whether oppression or adultery or blasphemy or drunkennesse or prophanesse and deale herein faithfully with thy selfe not deceiving thy owne soule speake truely as thou wouldest doe to thy Lawyer or Physitian hide none of thy sinnes least they bee not pardoned keepe none of them backe with Ananias and his wife least as they did thou perish thereby for this is the true way unto humiliation to labour to finde out and fullie acknowledge al our transgressions whatsoever s●se ignorare caeteris natura est homini autem vitio c Boethius consol l 2. It is naturall for other creatures not to know themselves but for men to be ignorant of their estates or the sinnes they commit is most shamefull and therefore it is very necessary that wee should examine our waies workes words and thoughts that so we may attaine to the knowledge of our selves and sinnes Thirdly examine how thou mayst avoide thy sinnes and be freed from them remember how often thou hast beene displeased with thy selfe how often thou hast condemned thy selfe how often thou hast resolved to leave thy sins and yet how often thou hast returned with the dogge to his vomit hence consider how difficult a thing it is to leave our beloved sinnes that knowing it we may bee more carefull to avoide them and more diligent in the enquiring after the remedies against them And thus much for the beginning of our humiliation which is the examination of our estates and sinnes Secondly the end of this examination is the loathing of sinne and a desire to leave it wee must examine what we are that so what is amisse may be amended we must examine our sinnes that finding them out wee may the better detest and endeavour to leave them the way unto repentance is the hatred of sinne and as long as sinne is loved so long the Lord is neither regarded nor served and therefore that we may the better learne to hate sinne let us remember these foure things First that our nature is wholy corrupted both within and without viz. our cogitations actions words members and all the faculties of the soule the best things in us beeing but a polluted ragge our whol man overspread with the leprosie of sin and no better then painted sepulchers or dead carkasses who stinke in the nostrils of the Lord by reason of our transgressions Secondly remember that thou art so ensnared and envassailed unto sin and corruption by nature that thou art no more able to helpe or free thy selfe then a Leopard is to leave his spots or a black moore to change his hewe thou mayest in some measure know the wickednesse of thy nature but thou art not able to redresse it Thirdly remember the many dangers and evils we are subject unto onely by reason of sin viz. 1. Temporall miseries as poverty sicknesse diseases casualties which wee are not worthy to bee protected from by reason of our iniquities 2. Spirituall evils as obstinacy in sin to be given over to a reprobate sense hardnes of heart and finall
impenitency all which wee have plunged our selves into by giving way unto sin and which we of our selves are not able to redresse 3. Eternall death and destruction both of body and soule for ever and ever b Rom. 2.7 Fourthly these things considered remember whether we have cause to hate our sinnes or not bee they never so deare unto us that thus pollute us that thus provoke the Lord against us that thus captivate and inthrall us yea thus subject us unto evils temporall spirituall and eternall And thus much for the first part of our preparation unto repentance the dejection and humiliation of the heart the second followes The second part of our preparation unto Repentance is the erection or raising up of the heart for except the heart bee comforted and cherished this DEIECTION will prove DESPERATION It may here bee asked whence this comfort Quest 7 flowes unto us or whereupon it is built I answer Answ our consolation is founded upon the hope of pardon by Christ for the truely dejected sinner may argue thus he that is truely humbled and contrite for his sinnes committed and is truely carefull to finde out all his transgressions desiring also and endeavouring to leave and loth every thing that is evill he may hope and expect mercy from God in through Christ because Christ hath called such unto him and God hath promised to receive such But I am such an one I sorow for my sins and desire with the prodigall child to returne unto my father c Luk. 15.18 therfore I know God will receive me as hee did him and pardon mee as hee did Paul d 1 Tim. 1.13 in and through the merits mercies of Christ Thus the heart is to bee cherished by the comfortable promises of the Gospell least otherwise our humiliation drive us to despaire and on the contrary this sweet musicke is unprofitable before the heart be truely dejected and teacheth us to presume and therefore to avoid presumption as well as despaire as the more usuall and dangerous wee must remember that the promises of mercy belong onely unto the truely penitent and therefore untill wee bee such as are spoken of before we have no right nor interest in these promises at all And thus much for the first generall part of Repentance which is Preparation The second part of repentance is RESOLUTION Here a question may be propounded Wherein doth this our Resolution consist Quest 8 I answer in three things first deplorando Answ in bewailing of our sinnes Secondly devovendo in forsaking our sinnes Thirdly implorando in imploring the assistance of God for strength against our sinnes First our Resolution doth consist Deplorando in the deploring and bewailing of our sinnes or in the confession of the filthynesse and errours of our former life and here beginnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the true change and renovation of the minde Hence it may be demanded Why is the confession of our sinnes necessary Quest 9 unto true Repentance I answer first because all promises of pardon Answ 1 are made unto such as confesse their sinnes and depend upon this condition thus Salomon praies If thy people shall returne unto thee and say we have sinned and have done perversly wee have committed wickednesse then hee thou oh Lord gracious unto them e 1 King 8.47 and againe the same Kingly Preacher from God prophecieth that he that covereth his sinnes shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy f Prov. 28.13 Secondly because wee cannot aright determine Answ 2 to leave our sins untill we have found out and confessed the sins that are to be left Thirdly because our repentance is not a bare Answ 3 determination onely to leave our sins but also a promise thereof and that made unto God and therefore it is necessary that confession of sins should be made unto him thus Dauid confesseth his sin I have sinned g 2 Sam. 12.2 and hee promiseth that he will doe thus so often as hee offendeth his God because otherwise he cannot be assured of pardon h Psal 32.5 this was the practise of the Publicane Lord be mercifull unto me a sinner i Luk. 18.13 and of the Prodigall I have sinned against heaven and against thee k Luk. 15. and am not worthy to bee called thy child Quest 10 It may againe be asked Doth every confession of sin argue a true change of the minde or if not then what confession doth I answer that confession of sin which begins this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Answ is thus qualified First it is an ingenuous confession of our sins judging and condemning our selves for our iniquities l 1 Cor 11 32. not denying them as some doe or excusing them as others doe or extenuating mitigating or lessening them as a third sort doe but truely acknowledging both the evill of sinne and the evil of punishment deserved for sinne Secondly it is an humble confession not shaming to confesse sin as some doe but in humilitie of soule and spirit confessing our transgressions unto the Lord. Thirdly it is a contrite and a sorrowfull confession because wee are destitute of all hope in our selves and we have not deserved any favour or mercy from God because we have thus wickedly and wretchedly provoked him by our iniquities thus Ezra and Daniel with wet eyes and blushing cheekes confesse their sinnes and the sins of the people unto God m Ezra 9.6 Dan. 9.3 Confession without Contrition neither pleaseth God nor profiteth man but where they are conjoyned there is a promise of mercy the Lord having assured such that he will dwell with thē for ever n Esa 66.2 Confession is the speech of the tongue Contrition is the speech of the heart now it is the heart that God requires together with the tongue not the lips alone my sonne saith God give me thy heart a Pro. 23.26 for I care not for those who draw neere unto me with their lippes if their hearts be far from me b Mark 7.6 Secondly our Religion doth consist Devovendo in vowing and solemnely promising something unto God and this perfects and finishes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this true change and renovation of the mind Quest 11 Hence it may bee inquired What it is that must bee vowed or solemnly Promised unto God Answ I answer two things First to forsake sin for ever Secondly to obey God in newnesse of life all our dayes First we must promise unto the Lord to abstaine from sinne for tearme of life and if hee will be pleased to pardon our former sinnes that wee will offend him no more This is true repentance praeterita plangere plangenda non iterare so Ambrose or non perpetrare so Gregory to bemoane and lament our by-past sinnes and never to iterate or againe commit those sins that are thus bewailed yea without this forsaking of sin there is no right repentance and hence our
l Daniel 5. this was in Esau he wept sore m Gen. 27.38 yet obtained no mercy n Heb. 12.17 because obedience was wanting II. Neither the confession of the tongue is acceptable unto God without service in the life for Cain could confesse his sinnes to be great o Gen. 4.13 and Saul acknowledge his iniquity unto the Prophet with a peccavi p 1 Sam. 15.24 I have sinned yea Iudas doth confesse his particular transgression for which he is sorry in these words I have sinned in betraying of innocent blood q Matth. 27.4 but yet none of these received either benefit or comfort by this their confession because it was not accompanyed with obedience III. The externall humiliation of the body availes nothing without this neither for Ahab humbled himselfe in dust and ashes r 1 King 21.27 and yet was slaine not long after ſ 1 King 22.35 IV. Affection unto religion without zealous obedience is not gratefull unto God for Agrippa was halfe perswaded to become a Christian t Act. 26. and Herod in practise as well as affection was halfe a Christian for he heares Iohn Baptist gladly and doth many things and abstaines from some sinnes u Mark 6. like the stony ground that sends forth a blade and grasse x Matth. 13. yet all this profits them not so long as true repentance and sincere obedience is wanting in them And thus our repentance must bee true Secondly our repentance must be timely and mature begunne betimes without procrastination or delay while it is said to day while we have life while we have hope in regard of Gods gracious invitations remembring that repentance is not in our power wee cannot turne unto God when we will yea the longer wee delay it the more unfit we are to performe it Nam qui non hodiè cras minus aptus erit he that is not in fit case to repent him to day will be more unfit to morrow and therefore call upon God while thou mayest be heard approach unto him while the doore is open y Matth. Obiect It may here be objected Deliberandum est diu quod statuendum est semel nothing is to bee done rashly and that which is but once to be done had neede be undertaken with a great deale of deliberation festina lentè make not too much hast is a good rule Relapses are dangerous and therfore men had neede beforehand to beware sat citò si sat bene if we repent truely at any time we tepent soone enough a King must not wage warre with a Potent Foe but upon mature deliberation neither is a man to lay the foundation of a building untill seriously in his thought hee have considered how he shall be able to reare up the edifice and therefore Repentance being a weighty worke of great importance it is not so suddenly to be undertaken I answer first there is a great difference betweene Answ 1 Deliberation and Delay the latter feares and neglects the former considers consults and then speedily effects and undertakes Secondly deliberation concerning repentance may be two fold First an poenitendum whether thou must or ought or shalt repent or not now this is not to bee doubted of and therefore there needs no deliberation but rather a quick and speedie determination in the particular because without repentance there is no hope of mercy or remission or eternall salvation Secondly quomodo poenitendum the second deliberation is how we must repent and this is twofold 1. First quibus viribus by whose power thou must repent there is no neede of deliberation heere neither art thou at all to doubt of this because all sinners must acknowledge these two things first that of themselves they have no power to repent and this is necessary to bee confessed least otherwise they presume that they can repent when they will and therefore may procrastinate the worke Secondly that repentance is wrought in them by God alone who is able to convert when and whom he pleases this wee must undoubtedly acknowledge also least otherwise the sight of our sins and the sense of our owne insufficiencies cause us to despaire thus the Prophet praying for the people frames his petition turne thou us oh Lord unto thee and then we shall be turned a Lam. 5.21 as if he should say we are not able of our selves to repent and therefore it thou oh Lord leave us unto our selves we shall never be converted but thou art able to worke true repentance in our hearts and therefore if thou wilt bee pleased to take the worke in hand then wee are certainely assured that we shall be truely turned 2. Secondly quibus laboribus wee must consider what is required unto true repentance and here onely Deliberation is seasonable and needfull for this is indeede seriously to be considered of wee must observe the requisite conditions unto conversion that we may be the more careful stare pollicitis to performe our promises and to keepe the conditions required of us The conditions of this obligation made betweene God us in Repentance are these First to denie our selves and confesse our selves wholy only subject to the wil command of the Lord. Secondly to take up our crosse of what nature or kinde soever that is patiently to endure and undergoe all afflictions that the Lord shall please to exercise us with all whether in body or goods or good name Thirdly not to esteeme our lives deare unto us when God calls for them whether by a naturall or a violent death Fourthly to persevere in the service of the Lord unto our lives end Fiftly to oppose our selves unto Sathan the world and the flesh and to strive against all sin alwaies even unto blood b Heb. 12.4 And thus therefore I conclude this objection the Thesis is to bee granted that we must repent and that by and by without delay the Hypothesis is to be considered and meditated of but ut muniaris non ut cuncteris that is thou must not so deliberate upon the worke that thou delay it but so seriously consider of it that thou mayest the more carefully arme thy selfe both to overcome all impediments that might hinder thee from the perfecting of it and also to accomplish what the Lord expects from thee and what thou hast resolved to put in execution And thus our repentance must be mature and timely as well as true Thirdly our repentance must be constant for it is not true except it endure unto the end and therefore we must be perseverant c Ephes 6 18. Heere a question may bee made why must Quest our repentance bee perpetuall for terme of life I answer First because otherwise it shall not Answ 1 be crowned with a crowne of glory d Matth. 24.13 finis coronat opus the end proves the truth of the work and therfore hee that lookes backe and proves retrograde is not worthy of this reward
exalted and every mountaine and hill bee made low and the crooked paths must bee made straight and the rough places plain g Esa 40 4. That is first we must prepare to meete Christ by the valleys that is by humiliation for the conscience of sinners being wounded are so depressed with a true sense of their sinnes that they dare not lift up their eyes unto heaven as wee see in the Publican h Luk. 18.13 and unto such unworthy ones in their own conceit Christ hath promised to come and to exalt these lowly valleys Secondly wee must prepare to meete Christ by laying low the mountaines and hills these high places that are to be levelled are either those that are 1. proud by nature or 2. that abound in honour and riches and in all affluence in worldly things by which they grow haughty exalting themselves contemning others and trusting in this lofty condition and aboundance or 3. those that are transported with a perswasion of their owne righteousnesse as though they stood in no need of divine mercy these are dangerous hills and therefore they must bee made low that is wee must 1. be humble in our selves and towards all 2. Not trust in any arme of flesh or worldly thing whatsoever 3. Not place any confidence in our owne merits or righteousnesse at all but have our affiance onely in the mercies of God through the merits and righteousnesse of Christ Jesus and this is our second preparation Thirdly wee must prepare to meete Christ by making crocked wayes straight by crooked pathes are meant all transgressions on the right hand as Heresies errours superstitions hypocrysie and the like these must all bee rectified that is reduced unto the rule of God and the Gospell of Christ hee being the way the truth and the life and his word the true way unto life and the most perfect rule of truth Fourthly wee must prepare to meete Christ by making rough places plaine by these rugged places are meant all errours on the left hand as impiety injustice intemperance and all other vices and obliquities of the life which being walked in casts a man headlong into destruction And therefore all these must be left before Christ will come unto us Quest 3 Thirdly it may be doubted by whose labour and ministery is this preparation wrought Answ By the Ministery of the Ministers of the word of God as in this verse it is by the voice of the cryer a Esa 40.3 the word being the meanes of regeneration and the seed of faith and therefore all the Ministers of the word of God should be industrious herein labouring to bring the people of God first to a true sense of their sinnes and sorrow for them Secondly to true humility mortification selfe denyall and a sure confidence in the onely mercyes of God and merits and righteousnesse of Christ Thirdly to reduce them from all hypocrisie superstition heresies and errours Fourthly to reforme and reclaime them from all sinnes vices and enormities whatsoever Sect. 2 § 2. Make his pathes straight Pathes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here it may be demanded how these two 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pathes and wayes are distinguished Quest Answ Observ I answer two manner of wayes first according to the use wayes are greater pathes are lesser to teach us that we must not onely abstaine from great sinnes but also from small and that we must not serve God for the most part but altogether The Lord will either have the whole heart or none at all he will not devide with Sathan and therefore they are much to blame that excuse their sinnes with saying they are but paths not wayes they doe not give themselves wholy to sinne for their transgressions are but small thus the Usurer excuseth his unwarranted trade because he takes not above eight in the hundred and never takes the extremity of a forfeiture the swearer excuseth himselfe because he sweareth nothing but truth the wine-bibber will say it is true he drunke hard but yet he was not drunken for he knew well enough what he said and did these excuses may be alleadged but they will not be admitted for they will not excuse us unto God because he requires that both paths and way should be prepared Secondly these two paths and wayes may be distinguished according to the grammatical sense or derivation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 away comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to go 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a path comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to tread or use or goe often a troden or beaten path much used Observ teaching us that our hearts should not onely be viae but semita not wayes wherein God somtimes walks but paths wherein he may walke continually that is religion must have his continuall residence in the heart and soule without any dispensation at all The occasions of the exercise of religion are alwayes given and therefore if the heart be true they will be alwayes taken and exercises of religion frequently practised and not like some who never thinke of God or religion but upon the Lords day § 3. Make straight his Paths Rectificate Sect. 3 Here it may be asked what is to be rectified Quest Answ I answer Saint Luke shewes that there are foure things to bee made straight b Luk. 3.5 Valleyes Mountaines Crooked and sharpe wayes some thing hath beene spoken of these before § 1. I adde a word or two first Valleyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pracipitium this signifies a vacuite of grace these valleyes are to be filled and this emptinesse to be replenished and enriched with the grace of Gods Spirit c Apoc. 3● 15. Secondly Mountaines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 summitas clivus which signifies humane pride and is to be humbled as aforesaid § 1. Thirdly crooked wayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tortuosa which signifies an obstinacy in sinning and this path must bee made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right and straight that is our steppes must beee reduced into the wayes of God and therein must we walke with all humble submission night and day Fourthly sharpe wayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 salebrosa this is taken either 1. for sinne in generall or 2. for contention which breakes the bond of peace and rends the seamlesse coate of Christ or 3. for the thorns of worldly cares coveteousnes and these are to be made smooth i. e. sin is to be left contention to be laid aside and the love of the world to be mortified in us § 1. VERS 4. Vers 4 And the same Iohn had his raiment of camels haire and a leatherne girdle about his loines and his meate was locusts and wilde honey § 1. His meate was wilde honey The Papists Sect. 1 object this place to prove that Iohn was an Eremite Iohn Baptist lived in the desart fared coursely and was barely apparelled he eat locusts Object 1 a course kind of
diet and wilde honey d Bellar. de Monach lib. 2. cap. 39. and wore a garment of Camels haire and therefore he was a true paterne of a right Eremite I answer first Iohns life was not so austere as Answ 1 they make it for the place where he lived was not so solitary but that there were villages and houses not farre off as it may appeare by the peoples resorting unto him his diet also in eating locusts and wild honey was usuall in that countrey Secondly we denie not but Iohn lived an austere Answ 2 life because hee was a preacher of repentance and had a singular office to prepare men for the comming of Christ therefore his calling being extraordinary he cannot bee an author of an ordinary calling among Christians Answ 3 Thirdly seeing Christ came eating and drinking lived among men and was apparelled as others were why should Christians rather chuse to imitate the Baptist then our Saviour Christ whose life and doctrine is for our imitation Object 2 Secondly they object this place to prove that the sufferings and obedience of the Saints are laid up for Church treasure b Bellar. de Indulg l ● c. 2. prop. 4. Iohn say they was of a most innocent life and was subject scarce to the least sin and therefore hee had no neede of his fasting austere life imprisonment death to satisfie for himselfe and therefore these remaine for the satisfaction of others Answ 1 We answer First that certainely John was an holy man and endued with great grace yet not without his sins and corruptions and therefore he himselfe confesseth that he had neede to be baptized of Christ which was for remission of sins Answ 2 Secondly his afflictions were not laid upon him as punishments for sin we confesse but as Gods loving corrections to exercise his faith and prepare him for his Kingdome as the Prophet David acknowledgeth that his vertues were encreased by Gods gracious correcting admonitions c Psa 119.67 Thirdly wee must needes conclude with the Answ 3 Apostle of Iohn and of all others excepting Christ that did no sinne that God hath shut all under unbeleefe to have mercy on all and therefore none hath either suffered more then their sins deserved or done more good then was their duty to doe Object 3 Thirdly they hence object againe that a difference of meats is necessarily to be made upon some dayes that is that it is not onely lawfull to abstaine from some meats at some times which wee willingly grant but that it is a sinne to eate some sorts of meats and not others at some time which wee deny and they endeavour to prove from this verse thus arguing The life of Iohn Baptist was a continuall fasting he not onely abstaining from dainties in generall but in speciall from all meats and drinkes whatsoever except Locust and wilde hony in this verse Answ 1 I answer first Iohns fasting is not described in these words neither is it true that his whole life was a continuall fasting but onely here is expressed his extraordinary austerity from sundry dainties so long as he preached in the wildernesse for Saint Matthew saith plainely here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alimentum ejus or esca ejus his foode or his meat was Locust and wild honey which phrase signifyes not fasting but rather feeding Answ 2 Secondly the consequence is nought Iohn did thus therefore wee must doe thus is a palpable non sequitur for this was peculiar unto Iohn in regard of his peculiar and extraordinary calling Thirdly Iohn abstaines from divers meats we grant but that hee was forbidden them as Answ 3 unlawfull to use wee deny and leave unto the Papists to prove Fourthly these words his foode was locusts and Answ 4 wild honey doth not signifie that hee never did eat any thing else besides these or that he eat these onely upon Wednesdayes and Frydayes but that this was his ordinary foode for the most part for though some Papists denie that ever hee eat bread yet some others make no great scruple to grant it § 2. His rayment was of Camels haire Was Sect. 2 Iohn clothed with camels skins Quest 1 I answer no Answ but with an usuall course sort of garment made of Camels haire which they were wont to weare that dwelt in mountanous places and did not much frequent cities Why did Iohn who was Christs forerunner Quest 2 goe thus poorely and country-like attyred Because he would shew hereby Answ that although his calling were great gracious and extraordinary yet he did not affect worldly honours externall pompe or outward splendor Whether is there any analogie or resemblance Quest 3 betweene John and the Camell whose haire hee weares I answer there is for first Answ the Camell by nature is ordained unto labour that is to carry men and burthens and is endued with strength to undergoe it so Iohn was called and appointed by God to sustaine great labour and to serve men by preaching unto them and baptizing of them Secondly the Camel is neither armed with Answ 2 sharpe nailes nor teeth wherewith hee might hurt men but is an harmelesse creature so Iohn came not to injure or damage any but onely to prepare them for the receiving of Christ Was there any resemblance betweene Iohn Quest 4 and his garment I answer there was Answ for garments made of Camels haire seemed more unseemely and base in outward shew then other garments but yet were more durable and lasted longer so Iohns doctrine seemed not so splendidious at first view as the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisees but yet it was firme and perpetuall § 3. His foode was Locusts What were these Sect. 3 Locusts Quest First some say they were the tops of certaine Answ 1 hearbs which are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Zaga Zabo an Aethiopike Bishop thinketh that John lived only of hearbs Secondly some say that they were certaine Answ 2 Crab-fishes which the fishermen cast upon the shore out of Iordane as uncleane meat but it is not like that John would eat any meat uncleane by the law Thirdly Epiphanius lib. contra Ebionitas Answ 3 saith that some Jewes would have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifyeth certaine pleasant confections made of hony but this is not the truth neither for Johns foode was a course kind of meate as followeth by and by Some object that the Text in this verse is certainely corrupted because it is not probable that Object 1 John eat those creatures that are called Locusts Answ I answer indeed some thinke it incredible that John should thus feede and therfore suppose the place to have beene corrupted by the writers fault by some slippe setting downe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Locusts in stead of wild choake peares others thinke this to have beene the mistake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Locusts for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 crab-fishes But what neede is there of this
the Father spake from Heaven God the Sonne was in the water and God the Holy Ghost descended in the likenesse of a Dove so plainey else where f Ioh. 1.33 John himselfe saith He that sent me to baptise with water here is the authority of God the Father in Iohns baptisme said unto me upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit come downe hee it is that baptiseth with the Holy Ghost Here is the name and authority of God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost Answ 2 Secondly to wound them with an arrow out of their own quiver the Master of the sentences is quite against Bellarmine g Lib. 4. dist 3. g. Tunc invocato nomine Trinitatis institutus est in Iordaene baptismus c. Then in Iordan the name of the Trinity beeing invocated baptisme was instituted when the mysterie of the Trinity appeared Answ 3 Thirdly Iohn used the same forme in baptising which the Apostles did they baptised in the name of the Lord Jesus h Act. 2.38 and so did Iohn i Acts 19.4 and Saint Ambrose k Li. 1. de spirit ca. 3. affirmeth that Iohn baptised in the name of Christ and therefore it is not unlike but that Iohn baptised in the name of the Trinity as the Apostles did for although the name of Jesus onely be expressed yet thereby is signified the end scope of baptisme for remission of sinnes not an exact and precise forme of baptisme Whether doe the Ministers in baptisme conferre Quest 7 grace upon the parties baptised or whether are they givers of heavenly gifts in baptisme or no. I answer Answ the Sacraments are holy in themselves and have not their holinesse from men and it is not the Minister of baptisme but the blessed Trinity that in and by baptisme doth worke faith and conferre grace upon the children of God That it is God and not man that workes grace and conferres heavenly gifts upon those that are baptised appeares by these arguments First because a divine gift cannot bee given by man neither can any wash away the spots staines and pollutions of the mind but onely he that made the mind Secondly because the Prophets ever and anon prove that it is God that washeth us and not man Wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse thou me from my sinnes a Psa 51.2 and againe purge me with hyssope and I shall be cleane wash me and I shall be whiter then snow Thus David b Psa 51.7 Againe the Prophet Esay desireth that the Lord would wash away the filth of the daughter of Zion and purge away the blood of Ierusalem c Esa 4 4. Thirdly because Christ saith plainely that it is he that is hee alone that gives that water that is spirituall grace and life Whereof who so drinks shall thirst no more for ever d Ioh. 4. As the Dyer by the touching onely of the cloth cannot give a colour unto it so neither the Minister of the baptisme by himselfe without the operation of the Blessed Trinity in that holy ordinance can give any divine grace or heavenly tincture unto the scule Again if the Church of God be a Vineyard then the Ministers are but tillers and it is God that is the Lord and Master of the familie and therefore all spirituall gifts are given by him Lastly because as one saith e Optatus li. 5. cont Parmen Saint Paul shewes that this whole Sacrament of baptisme doth belong unto God while hee saith I have planted and Apollos watered that is I have made one of a pagana 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a meere heathen that had no knowledge of God I have brought him to some understanding of him and of the principles of religion and Apollos he hath baptised him that I have thus taught and instructed but it is the Lord onely that must cause to grow and encrease what I have thus planted and Apollos watered f 1 Cor. 3 6. § 2. Confessing their sinnes The Papists Sect. 2 object this place to prove their auricular confession because say they g Rhemist Obiect Iohn did not induce the people to a generall acknowledgement onely that they were sinners but also to utter every man his particular sinnes To this we answer first of all there is no mention Answ 1 made that this confession was of every one apart of every particular fault they had committed and that secretly in Saint Iohns eare Answ 2 Secondly it is contrary to the nature of the meeting which is publike where comer and secret exercises have no place Answ 3 Thirdly if the Papists will ground their auricular confession upon this place then they must have it but once and that before Baptisme not yeerely and that before the Lords Supper Answ 4 Fourthly it is unpossible not onely for every one of the people to make recitall of their particular sinnes particularly which were both infinite and in part unknowne but also for Iohn alone to heare all those which they could have made confession of especially never having before made confession of their sinnes in the whole course of their life h Sic Ca●twright s Matth. 3.6 where this is amplified Quest 1 It may bee demanded What confession of their sinnes they made Answ 1 First some say that they confessed onely in generall that they were sinners Secondly we may say that they confessed particularly these sinnes unto Iohn wherewith their consciences were most pressed that so they Answ 2 might injoy the greater good by his ministry and be delivered from those their iniquities It is questioned sometimes amongst Protestants Whether wee bee not too remisse in exacting Quest 2 Confession of sinnes as well as the Papists are too strict For answer hereunto it is fit first to agree upon the termes to wit Answ 1 what is meant by confession 2 what is meant by Exacting 3 what is meant by Protestants First consider wee what is meant by confession there are divers sorts thereof Bishop Iewell hath three sorts and Chemnitius hath nine degrees but we may thus plainely distinguish them Confession is either unto God which is frequent in Scripture I confessed my sinnes unto thee said David i Psa 32.5 or Man either Publike either in Generall termes as the people did by the leviticall law Particular acknowledgement of sinne to the Congregation or private to our Brother either Being offended with us thus our Saviour commandeth confession and reconciliation k Matth. 5 24. In private conference thus Saint Iames bids us to confesse our sinnes one to another l Iam. 5.16 or Pastor in cases Extraordinary as when Some sinnes burthen the conscience In some act which we have done we being doubtfull whether we have done Well or ill or Ordinary either More lawfull which must bee Or The requiring the confession of some sinnes only which daily prevaile against us and which we cannot conquer or overcome Uoluntary and free without any
beginning viz. either first ab extra from without or secondly ab intra from within First there is a temptation which hath his beginning ab extra from without when neither the minde nor thought nor delight nor affections nor meditations nor suggestions goe along with the temptations but the soule or the party tempted is meerely passive And thus tempteth Man often as the wife of Potipha● thus tempteth Ioseph many a time e Gen. 39.7 and Iob also is thus tempted by his wife f Iob. 2.9 and the three children were thus tempted by Nebuchadnezzar unto Idolatry g Dan. 3.15 And thus often one man tempts another unto that which he hath not so much as a thought of or any love unto at all Now this temptation is sinne In the party tempting Not In the person tempted Sathan but scarce at any time for when hee tempteth for the most part he exciteth and enflameth our concupiscence which being stirred up becomes an active instrument within us unto evill and consequently is sinne as followes in the next particular Secondly there is a temptation which hath his beginning ab intrà from within when a man is tempted and allured by his owne innate corruption and this is sinne according to Saint Iames every man is tempted when he is drawne aside of his owne lust and entised h Iam. 1.14 and Rom. 7.7 and therefore the Papists are to blame who deny our first concupiscence to be sinne Here they object there is a double concupiscence Obiect 1 viz. First where there is no assent of the Mind and Will at all Secondly where the Will and Mind consents now this second is sinne but not the first I answer the first is a lesse sinne Answ but yet it is sinne neverthelesse because it is a corruption and evill They object againe this first concupiscence Obiect 2 is so farre from being sinne unto us that it is a praise and commendation unto us so to resist it that not so much as our Mindes assent therunto but herein we can say as Paul did It is no more I but sinne that dwells in me i Rom. 17.17.20 I answer Answ certainely it is commendable to resist the first motions of sinne and gratefull unto God but yet because there two things that concurre herein we must distinguish between Suggestion and Reluctation now if Reluctation bee good then must Suggestion needes be evill for that is the nature of concupiscence k Iam. 1.14 And herein is the difference betweene our temptations and Christs First in us wee have naturally these things 1 Suggestion and Concupiscence 2 Meditation or a ruminating of this wicked suggestion 3 Delectation or a delighting in these wicked thoughts c. Secondly in Christ there is 1 no Delectation in any wicked thing 2 there is no meditation or rumination of any wicked thing but by and by hee repels and beates it backe yea 3 in him there is no evill concupiscence at all but all his temptations were ab extrà from without Why would Christ be tempted Quest 4 I answer first Answ the generall cause hereof are Either in respect of Himselfe to shew his Deity and power in conquering Sathan Us and that either To overcome and put our enemies to flight which otherwise would have beene difficult yea impossible for us to have done Or To teach us these 3 things to wit First the nature of temptation that it is not a signe of the anger of God 1 because it may be without sin as was shewed in the former question and 2 because Christ was tempted with whom God was not angry Secondly the nature of the tēpter that is First his Malice hee is our enemie as followeth afterwards Secondly his weakenesse that now being conquered by Christ he may bee overcome of those who are Christs Thirdly the manner of overcomming him and that is by the word of God as followes by and by Thirdly the readinesse of his helpe and assistance for hee was tempted that hee might be able to succour those that are tempted l Heb. 2.18 Secondly the principall and particular causes why Christ was tempted were these two First Answ 2 to shew us the hostility of Sathan Secondly the victory of Christ First the Hostility of Sathan appeares in this that he tempts all Gods children and dares give the onset unto the best of them Quest 5 Here it may bee demanded What shall wee thinke then of those that are not tempted Answ I answer we may safely thinke that neither God cares for them because hee doth not exercise them neither the devill feares them because he meddles not with them As in a Common-wealth it is an argument of a traitor to bee beloved of the enemie so in the Church of God those whom the devill spares may justly bee suspected of disloyalty towards their heavenly Soveraigne Quest 6 How may wee know who are tempted and who are not Answ I answer by these markes First he that sinnes with greedinesse Ephes 4.19 is not tempted he unto whom sinne is pleasant and to wallow in the puddle of iniquitie is delectable is not tempted because he runnes headlong of himselfe unto wickednesse and sinne Secondly those that are puft up with an hypocriticall pride thinking themselves to be Saints because they seeme so unto men are assaulted with a strong temptation which prevailes against them yet they cannot bee called Souldiers because they fight not neither struggle against this temptation but willingly give way unto it Thirdly those that desire to serve God but doe it negligently being neither wary nor circumspect in their lives and actions but are tempted by pride anger the cares of the world and too great a presumption of the mercies of God and yet see none of these things in themselves because they doe not carefully watch over their wayes these fight not lawfully m 2 Tim. 2.5 according to the Apostles opinion who sayth If a man also strive for masteries yet hee is not crowned except hee strive lawfully Fourthly hee that faithfully devotes himselfe unto the Lord but is not able to doe or eschew what hee should complaining continually with Saint Paul that the good which he would doe hee cannot and the evill which hee would not doe hee daily commits n Rom. 7. ●8 because the flesh wrastles and strives and struggles against him o Gal. 5.17 so strongly that in the anguish of his heart hee cries out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee p Rom. 7.24 And with that holy Apostle being pressed with the burden of sinne and the weight of some present and strong temptation prayes thrice that is many times that the buffets of Sathan may bee taken away from him q 2 Cor. 12.8 and strength of grace given unto him whereby hee may be able to quell and subdue all his corruptions Although this man to himselfe seeme a miserable man yet to mee hee seemes a very happy and
holy duties thus the Apostles when they ordaine Pastors and Elders fast i Act. 13.3 14.23 that the duties which are required of them and which they are to administer may bee performed in the evidence of the Spirit And therefore fasting were requisite and very convenient first for Ministers in the preparatiō unto the Lords day that their prayers unto God might bee the more effectuall for assistance in delivering of his word And secondly for people that they might the more earnestly implore the ayd of God in the hearing of his word And thirdly for Fathers and Godfathers the day before the Baptizing of the infant that their prayers may bee the more fervent unto God for the infant that it may be baptized with water and with the holy Spirit And fourthly it is requisite for all the day before the celebration of the Lords Supper because the worke which is to bee performed is great and of much weight being a covenant or contract betweene God and us and because the benefit is great if worthily performed therefore it should not be undertaken without the preparation of fasting and prayer A man that is to come into great bonds is very wary before hee signes and seales them to overlooke carefully all the writings to consider throughly of the purchase to enquire diligently into his owne abilities about the performance of the obligation to consult seriously with others of the title whether that be good and not rashly to doe any thing Thus should every one doe before the receiving of the Lords Supper carefully remembring these foure things First it may be that which thou art about to doe will tend to thy condemnation and destruction for he that eates and drinkes unworthily eates and drinkes his owne damnation k 1 Cor. 11.13 Secondly remember that the condition of this obligation made betwixt God and thee is the delivering up of thy sinnes and therefore how canst thou performe covenants with the Lord if thou knowest not what thy sinnes are nor where they are nor wherein thou offendest which things are very hardly knowne without prayer fasting meditation and examining of out waies workes words and thoughts Thirdly remember it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God a Heb. 10.31 because he is a consuming fire b Heb. 12.29 And therefore what will become of thee if thou hold not touch with him and be very carefull exactly to performe covenant And Fourthly remember that these things considered thou hadst better neglect all things when thou art to come unto the Lords Table then thy preparation thereunto And therefore the day before thou commest thither give thy selfe to examination meditation supplication and fasting For the better taking up and understanding of this observe that there is a threefold fast I. There is lejunium publicum a publike and generall fast this is not altogether so convenient for our examination and preparation unto the Lords Supper but yet were fit enough if authority should enjoyne it II. There is Iejunium privatum a private and particular fast this is requisite for every man before hee comes to partake this holy Sacramēt III. There is private-publicum jejunium private-publike fast and that is when a Father of a Family sets the day of preparation unto the holy Communion apart both for himselfe and all those within his gates who are to communicate that so he may the better examine how they are fitted and not suffer them to runne into the danger of eternall death by unworthy receiving The last question here will bee Why wee Quest 10 must fast To which I answer first because it is profitable Answ 1 and that in a threefold regard first to the Body secondly to the Minde thirdly to the Soule First fasting is profitable unto the Body because it encreaseth and continueth health the Fathers before the flood ate onely hearbs and fruits and roots and were long livers the Essaei were very temperate and lived untill they were very old c Hist Scolast yea experience teacheth us that cattle are more healthfull then men because they will not eat to excesse except it bee a dog but onely for the satisfying of nature Secondly fasting is profitable for the Mind as appeares by these three things I. it inlightens the understanding II. it strengthens the Minde unto prayer III. it availes unto Faith First fasting cleares the eyes of the Mind a man is more apt and better able to understand when he is fasting then when he is full as may be proved by these foure reasons The first is Naturall the mind followes the temperature of the body now fasting begets more pure Spirits feasting more troubled and grosse hence we say Aurora Musis semper amica meis it is the best studying in the forenoone The second is Civill the minde distracted by no employments can discerne of a thing more clearely and quietly now as was said before when we fast we must forbeare our ordinary and painefull callings that wee may the better give our selves to the examination of our selves and sinnes and therefore fasting helpes the Mind to understand The third is Spirituall because our affections are not then inflamed with the fire of concupiscence and lust as in feasting neither is our judgment so corrupt but we can more clearely discerne of the nature of sinne and vertue The fourth is Celestiall because God gives grace to those that fast aright as Daniel when he fasted saw visions And therefore if they bee any thing difficult which we cannot understand we must sharpen the Minde upon the whetstone of Fasting yea if we be weake in grace and desire to be strengthned let us give our selves to those prevalent meanes of fasting and prayer Secondly fasting strengthens the Mind unto prayer wherefore the Apostle conjoynes them d 1 Cor. 7. ● And therefore when upon any extraordinary occasion we desire that our prayers might prevaile with God wee must strengthen them with fasting Thirdly fasting availes unto faith reade Matthew 17.19.20.21 where our blessed Saviour himselfe expressly layeth downe this double conclusion unto his Apostles first that they cannot cast out divels without faith and secondly that this faith cannot be had without fasting and prayer Fourthly fasting is profitable for the Soule in these regards First it obtaines pardon and forgivenesse of sinne at Gods hands as we see in the Ninivites fast e Ionah 3.8.10 for although fasting and humiliation be not a satisfaction for sinne yet it is a testimony of sincerity that we both abhorre our by-past sinnes and desire to leave them Secondly fasting weakens the power and rebellion of the flesh and doth with more ease withstand the assaults of Sathan yea overcome him Thus we see that fasting is profitable Secondly we must fast because it is necessary and that in these two regards first because it Answ 2 is commanded for the proofe hereof reade these Scriptures Levit. 16 2● and 23.27 and Numb 29.7
must needs bee visible Touching the visibilitie of the Church I lay downe this proposition There shall be alwayes a Church truly visible so long as this mortall world shall last Here that I may be the better understood let me adde these explanations to wit First the most visible Church shall not alwayes bee truest for the weeds of errour and chaffe of hypocrisie and superstition shall sometimes over-grow the come of true religion d Aug. brev coll col 3. as Arianisme did the truth in Hilary his dayes e Hyl. cont Auxen teste M. Cano Yea this is confessed Major pars vincit aliquando meliorem the greater part oftentimes overcomes the better Bellarm. de Concil 3.9 Secondly errours over-growing the truth peradventure the Church shall at some time bee visible onely ad intra not ad extra that is knowne among themselves though not observed of the world I say peradventure because many of our worthy Divines hold that it shall be visible alwayes not onely in some scattered persons but in an orderly Ministery and use of the Sacraments f D. Field de Eccles 1.10 Thirdly this Church shall not alwayes be resplendent and glorious in the worlds eye as the Papists sometime perswade the ignorant but after Saint Augustines comparison like the Moone ever being but sometimes in the wane scarce seene shining at all Obscurari potest multitudine scandalorum saith Bellarmine g Bell. de eccles milit 3.16 in answer to Hylary out of Saint Augustine epistol 48. Fourthly this visible Church hath no warrant of not erring in the usuall sense to wit in part this being the greatest imposture that the Papists gull the world withall as shall be shewed in another place Sect. 5 § 5. A City set upon a hill Here wee have two things to consider of first what this Citie is Secondly what this Mountaine is Quest 1 First what this City is which is set upon a Mountaine Answ 1 First some say the Apostles are this Citie but this cannot be except onely by a Metonymie as we take mundus pro mundanis the world for worldlings And therefore our Saviour doth not say Yee are the City set on an hill Secondly others say the Church is this City Answ 2 because it is as a City deare and consecrated unto God yea elsewhere called the City of God Psal 46.4 the joy of the whole earth the Citie of the great King Psal 48 2. and of righteousnesse Esa 1.26 yea it is termed Mount Sion the City of the living God the heavenly Ierusalem the Church of the first borne h Heb. 12.22 How deare and pretious this Citie is in Gods sight may appeare by these things observed by some in the metaphore I. The City is the Church thus David Glorious things are spoken of thee oh Citie of God i Psa 87.3 II. The Mountaine whereupon the City stands is Christ according to that of the Prophet David The stone became a great Mountaine and filled the whole earth k Da. 2.35 III. The Citizens of this Citie are the Saints thus saith Saint Paul Yee are fellow-citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God l Eph. 2.19 IV. The Towers of this City were the Prophets who were most eminent in the Church V. The Gates of this Citie were the Apostles by whose Ministery men were brought into the Church VI. The Walls of this City are the Ministers of the Word and the Apostles successours who are as rampers to defend the Church against the assaults of sin superstition and errour m Chrys inperf op s Thirdly the true City is not in this life for Answ 3 here we have no continuing City but we seeke one to come Hebr. 13.14 to wit that new Jerusalem which is above Revel 21.2 10. Quest 2 If the City expected and longed for by the faithfull be not in this life then how is the Church called a City both in this verse and in other places as was shewed before Answ The Militant Church of Christ may be called a City partly Analogicè because it something resembles the heavenly Hierusalem and triumphant Church partly Synechdochicè because it is a part of that Citie which is above What is to be expected or may be looked for Quest. 3 in this Citie Foure things to wit first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Order Answ God the King of this City not being the author of confusion but of peace 1 Cor. 14.33 and therefore all things are to be done decently and in order vers 40. avoiding contention because it becomes not the Church of Christ n 1 Cor. 11.16 And therefore those who will not be subject to the godly decent and lawfull injunctions and orders of the Church are no true members thereof or at least are to be esteemed as stubborne children whether they be 1. Fanatici the Anabaptists who understand all truths as they list themselves measuring all Doctrines by their owne revelations Or 2. Furiosi the Brownists who will tolerate no rites or customes at all although all who know any thing agree that in all Churches there have beene some Or 3. Pertinaces those that are headstrong perverse obstinate and rebellious whose will is a Law and will make any thing lawfull that they please not subjecting themselves to any government or command though never so lawfull Of all these we may say with the Apostle If any seeme to be thus contentious we have no such custome wee nor the Church of God o 1 Cor. 11.16 Secondly the second thing to be expected in this City is Unitie there is but one governement one King one head and one body and therefore we expect unitie in this City reade Ephes 4.5.16 and Rom. 12.5 and 1 Corinth 10.17 it being necessary that the Citizens should be of one minde and of one judgement having but one rule to walke by and one way which all must walke in who hope to be saved p Phil. 3.16 There is one light whereby we are enlightned one truth whereby we are directed one law of obedience unto all one faith in Christ unto salvation one profession of faith and obedience and whatsoever differs from this is an error We may differ in outward and adiaphorall things and yet be of the same religion and body of Christ as we may see Protestant Churches that although they vary in circumstances yet they hold one and the same substance and fundamentall truths entire Thirdly as we may expect in this City unitie betweene the subjects and Soveraigne the body and the head so wee may also betweene the fellow-members of this body because I. they are concives fellow-Citizens q Ephes 2.19 II. They are brethen Psal 133.1 III. because they are members of one mysticall body Romanes 12.5 and 1 Corinth 10.17 Ephes 4.16 and 5.27 Fourthly in this City there is splendour villages are more vile but Cities are more splendidious and sumptuous this splendour and glory which is in that
together For First in the world my fault shall be hid the better if he be gone to whom the wrong was done Secondly if he were a holy and good man then I know hee would forgive me before he died for he durst not then harbour vengeance or malice in his heart Thirdly if he were a wicked and ungodly man then 1 hee dares not goe unto God to accuse me or 2. if he durst yet God would not heare him for he heares not sinners And therefore these things considered what hurt or danger can it be unto me though he die before our jarres be composed First what will it availe thee that the wrong Answ 1 done by thee unto thy brother should by his death be concealed from the world considering that both God the Devill and thy owne conscience sees knowes and remembers it Secondly if thy brother were a member of Answ 2 Christ then certainely he would forgive thee but it doth not hence follow that thy guilt is washed away or thy sinnes pardoned by God for before him thy sinne remaines unblotted out because thou didst not reconcile thy selfe unto thy brother before hee was taken hence by death Thirdly if thy neighbour against whom thou Answ 3 hast sinned were a wicked man then First hee dares goe unto God more impudently and cry out unto him for vengeance more enviously and with a greater and more perfect malice then a holy man would or durst Secondly and although if he be wicked God will not heare him when hee prayes for some blessing for himselfe yet he will heare him when he complaines upon thee For That were contrary to Gods justice not to heare the cry of him that is wronged This is according to Gods justice to heare the complaints of the oppressed and to revenge them § 2. While thou art in the way What is meant Sect. 2 by these words Quest 1 Some understand them Allegorically Answ Dum in via whilest thou art in the way that is in hàc vita whilest thou livest Thus Chrysostome oper imperf And all the Fathers What doth our Saviour imply in these words Quest 2 thus Allegorically understood First Christ hereby would teach us that this Answ 1 life is the way both of good and evill men of corne and chaffe of wheate and tares which God will not as yet separate Secondly our Saviour would teach us that Answ 2 this life is the way unto Judgement or that so long as we live here on earth we are but travellers unto the tribunall seate of God It is appointed unto all men once to die and after death comes judgement c Hebr. 9.27 where wee see life brings us to death and death unto Judgement Thirdly Christ would hereby teach us that Answ 3 the remembrance of the Judgement of God should detaine us from jarres and discord one with another The remembrance of the Reward will perswade us unto patience in wrongs Punishment will terrifie us from seeking revenge What will it helpe a man to revenge himselfe upon his brother and himselfe therefore to bee judged and condemned by God and therefore we must so meditate of the severitie and terrour of the last day that wee may avoid dissensions and embrace Christian charity Quest 3 From the second answer to the former question it may bee doubted why our judgement shall be no longer deferred then death Answ 1 First there is a double day of Judgement to wit first generall of all flesh this shall not bee untill the end of the world when all the elect shall be gathered together Secondly particular of every individuall and numericall man whether righteous or wicked and this shall bee at their death when the righteous shall goe unto rest and the wicked unto woe poore Lazarus as soone as he dieth is carried into Paradise but rich Dives into the painefull prison of eternall destruction d Luke 16.22.23 Secondly this life is the very last period of Answ 2 Gods long suffering and therefore the night of death being come God will deferre Judgement no longer Answ 3 Thirdly the justice of God cannot bee violated neither shall it ever be made voide Iustice and mercy hath kissed each other but not crossed thwarted or contradicted each other And therefore mercy at death gives way unto judgement For the understanding hereof observe That there are 2 parts of Gods mercy viz. First to pardon the penitent and those who are reconciled And here the suffering of Christ doth satisfie the mercy of God Secondly to expect those who are obstinate rebellious and disobedient that they laying hold upon mercy and turning unto God might be saved e 1 Tim. 2.9 and Pet. 3.9 And this part of Gods mercy shall bee satisfied at the last dreadfull day Rom. 2.4 and 2 Thes 1.8 Quest 4 What must we doe to bee made partakers of everlasting mercies as well after this life as in this life Answ Remember seriously and frequently these three things First that wee are strangers and pilgrimes in this life and altogether uncertaine how neare we approach unto the gates of death And though we see not our Judge yet hee standeth before the dore f Iam. 5.9 Secondly remember our life is lent us not to sinne or to corrupt our waies but that wee might be converted g Rom. 24. because our good and gracious God desireth not the death of a sinner but rather that he would repent and live h Ezech. ●3 1● Thirdly remember that after death there is no mercy to be expected by those who have not laid hold upon mercy while they were in the way as the tree falls so it must lye wherefore let us spend our lives I. in striving wrastling and fighting against sinne and out owne innate corruptions Heb. 12.4 II. In watchfulnesse and circumspection against evill and the occasions thereof Ephes 5.15 III. In growing and encreasing in the waies of grace 1 Pet. 2.2 IV. In redeeming the time by-past of our lives by being zealous of good workes devoting our selves wholy and sincerely unto the service of the Lord. § 3. He shall not come out untill he have paid the Sect. 3 uttermost farthing The Doway men undertake to prove Purgatory from hence by the justice of God Object because when any dieth penitent and yet hath not made any full satisfaction they must suffer for that which remaineth after death and bee purged before they can enter into rest which remnant of debt our Saviour calleth the last farthing and saith here it must be paid and therefore there is a purgatorie wherein this satisfactorie punishment must be inflicted i Doway Bible pag. 33. First if a man die truely penitent all his sinnes are forgiven him in Christ and none of his Answ 1 transgressions shall bee mentioned unto him Thus the thiefe was received unto mercy upon the crosse there being no further satisfaction required of him Secondly the satisfaction to Gods justice is Answ 2 not payed by us but
by Christ who hath sufficiently satisfied for our sinnes and unto the remission of sinnes onely a lively faith in Christ is required of us Therefore to say that a man by his owne satisfaction must pay the utmost farthing of his debt unto God is a blasphemous assertion and derogatorie to the value of Christs death k Willet Synops fol. 410. initio Thirdly this verse will not serve them to build Purgatory upon as followes in the next section Answ 3 § 4. Agree with thine adversary quickly Sect. 4 whiles thou art in the way with him lest the adversary deliver thee to the Iudge and he to the officer by whom thou shalt be cast into prison and from thence thou shalt not come till thou have paid the uttermost farthing Bellarmine strongly urgeth this verse for the proofe of Purgatory Object as doe also divers others of the Papists There is mention say they of a prison from whence the Captives shall in time come forth which cannot bee possibly be meant of hell because ex inferno nulla redemptio from hell there is no redemption Bellarmine more plainely argues thus By the way is meant this life present by the adversary is meant the law of God himselfe by the Judge is meant Christ by the Officers the good Angels or the divels by the Prison hell by the last farthing our lesser sinnes for which wee are to satisfie either in hell or in Purgatorie Bellarm. Tom. 1. fol. 1804 de Purgat li. 1. Cap. 4. First if we should grant the Cardinall all hee Answ 1 desires but onely the last particle wherein hee begs the question or in Purgatorie yet he could conclude nothing against us Amesius T●m 2. pag. 200. Secondly this saying of our Saviour may safely be expounded according to the letter of the affaires of this life as Saint Chrysostome doth expound it that men to prevent their further danger should be ready to compound their controversies betimes And such counsell also the Wiseman giveth That if a man have given his word and is become a surety for another he should not sleepe before he had delivered himselfe l Pro. 6.3 And this exposition is most agreeable to the Text for the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an adversary at the Law And Luke 12.58 where the same sentence of our Saviour is repeated there is mention made of the Magistrate and of the Jaylor which are termes and Offices properly fitting the businesse of this life Willet Synops fol. 407. Answ 3 Thirdly here is in this argumentation a sophisme called Figura dictionis for Bellarmine faines unto himselfe here an allegory where as Christ useth plaine proper and perspicuous words especially in Saint Luke where the Magistrate and Jaylor are named and then from this unnecessary allegoricall sense he frames an argument for the confirmation of an article of his faith which is 1. against his owne rule delivered lib. 3. cap. 3. De verbo Dei 2. Against the rule delivered both by the ancient and moderne Divines Diligenter cavendum esse ne quae dicta sunt allegoricè tanquam propriè dicta intelligamus m Aug. doct Chri. lib. 3. Cap. 10. We must take speciall heede that we expound not those things literally which are onely allegorically meant Yea III. this practise of the Cardinall is contrary to that Axiome of the Schoolemen which Thomas so often repeates viz. Symbolicam Theologiam non esse argumentativam that is certaine and necessary arguments cannot bee drawne from Allegories Answ 4 Fourthly if this Allegoricall exposition of Bellarmines be true and that men ought to satisfie for their sinnes event unto the last farthing then it will follow that Christ hath in no sort satisfied for our transgressions for it is well enough knowne what is meant by this phrase of speech I will keepe him in prison untill hee have paid the last farthing But this consequence is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 false and impious and therefore so also is the Antecedent Sadeel fol. 250. advers human satisfac Answ 5 Fifthly if we draw these words to a spirituall understanding by the prison hell must bee signified a place of everlasting torment and not Purgatorie as appeares thus First because the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a prison is taken 1 Pet. 3.19 for the place of the disobedient which is Hell for they doe not use to send obstinate sinners to purgatorie Secondly he shall not come out till hee have paid the uttermost farthing or as Saint Luke saith the utmost mite that is never unlesse he dare say that a sinner is able by his punishment to satisfie the utmost mite of his debt that is his sinne unto God which is great blasphemy to affirme and contrary to the Scriptures wee not being able to answer God one thing of a thousand n Iob 9.3 Sixthly this place may be expounded by that Answ 6 parable Mat. 18. where the unkind servant is cast into prison till hee should pay all that was due verse 34. that is hee should lye there for ever for the debt was ten thousand talents too much for a Prince much lesse for a servant to pay and verse 25. hee had nothing to pay and therefore his Master forgave him the debt verse 32. Wherefore we see our debt is not payed unto God by us but forgiven and where it is not pardoned it can never be paid Againe it followeth verse 35. So shall my heavenly father doe unto you if you forgive not from your hearts one another your trespasses What is this So shall my father doe unto you sent them to Purgatorie No but unto hell for uncharitable and malicious men which will not forgive others I hope they will not ordaine unto a place of temporall punishment for as Saint Iohn saith he that hateth his brother and so is a manslayer cannot have eternall life o 1 Iohn 3.15 Chemnit de Conc. trid part 3. fol. 135. Seventhly although Bellarmine brag much of Answ 7 the Fathers yet they favour not his opinion here if faithfully dealt withall as is clearely proved by Chem. concil trid part 3. pag. 135. a. Eightly by the word Prison Bellarmine understands Answ 8 both Hell and Purgatorie so that Donec untill must signifie both nunquam aliquando never and sometimes which is grossely absurd Lastly although this place be objected by Bellarm Answ 9 Coster Valent. and others yet it is sufficiently confuted by their owne Iansenius in hanc locum from Bishop Mortons appeale fol. 15. fine VERS 27. Vers 27 Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time thou shalt not commit adultery § 1. Audivistis ye have heard Sect. 1 From whom did they heare this Quest 1 Not from the Vulgar sort Answ or common people but from the Priests that is the Pharisees who taught them that there was nothing to be considered or looked unto in this Commandement Thou shalt not commit adultery but onely the actuall sinne
1 Cor. 7.5 Therefore if the wife will not consent her husband cannot goe from her nay though there be consent yet they must be separated but for a time les● the Divell should tempt them Whether may the guiltlesse partie being lawfully Quest 6 divorced marry againe during the life of the adulterous or not For no other cause in the world Answ but onely for fornication may there be either a finall separation or cleane dissolution of marriage by way of divorce But for that cause our Saviour hath granted liberty both to dissolve matrimonie and to marry againe Because this is questioned or rather plainely denyed by the Papist I will first confirme it and then answer what they can object against it Our proposition is this In the case of fornication it is not unlawfull to marry againe that is those who are lawfully divorced for fornication and adultery may marry againe with others but never one with another The truth hereof appeares thus First the bond is broken they are not now one flesh d Hier. s and therefore may lawfully contract marriage with others Secondly because under the Law divorce was never without liberty of a new choise Deut. 24.1 2. all that were divorced had freedome to marry againe and therefore in a lawfull divorce this is not debarred under the Gospel Thirdly because otherwise the guiltlesse party should be punished and that grievously It is better to marry than to burne saith the Apostle thereby shewing that marriage is left us by God as a remedy against lust now if the guiltlesse party could not containe neither might marry another neither take her unto him who hath beene divorced Deut. 24.4 then he were necessitated to sinne which the Lord never doth unto any by any law Fourthly we might confirme this from the Fathers Ambros Tertul. 2. From the Councels Concil Mogunt Triburiens 3. From the consent of many Bishops in Origens time 4. From the opinion of the Papists Zach. Papa Cajetan Ambros Compsa 5. Of our men Pet. Mart. 2.10 § 37 38 58. But this I omit comming to the last and best proof Fifthly that it is lawfull for the guiltlesse partie to marry for I now meddle not with the guilty appeares plainly from our Saviours words in this verse and Mat. 19.7 8 9. Whosoever putteth away his wife except it be for fornication committeth adultery Therefore for fornication it is lawfull for a man to dismisse his wife Matth. 19.9 Whosoever shall put away his wife except it be for wheredome and marry another committeth adultery Therefore for adultery it is lawfull for the man both to put away and renounce his wife and the wife likewise her husband there being the like reason for both and for them to marry againe The Papists hold that married persons may dismisse one another for adultery but neither party may marry againe for any cause during life And because they are sore pressed with this place they object many things both against the place and point by us propounded Object 2 First Durand answereth that when Christ uttered these words the Law of the Jewes was that the adulterous woman should bee put to death and so the husband might have liberty to marry againe Bellarmine overthroweth this answer by a three-fold reason to wit Answ First because Christ here giveth a rule not onely to the Jewes but to all Christians not being ignorant how that in every Nation the law of putting the adultresse to death should not be in force Secondly Christ might as well have excepted other crimes that were punished by death as murder and the like that in those cases they might marrry againe because by the Law their wives were to die as well as in the case of fornication Thirdly Christ speaketh of dismission but properly the wife is not said to bee dismissed when she is put to death And therefore Christ is not thus here to be understood Secondly Bellarmine would have the exception Object 3 except it be for fornication restrained to the first clause in this sense Hee that putteth away his wife which is not lawfull to doe but for fornication so that the crime of fornication maketh it lawfull to dismisse but not after dismission to marry againe First the Jesuite is here contrary unto himselfe Answ 1 for he elsewhere alloweth a separation of matrimony in other cases as of heresie infidelity and vow of continencie but here he saith that separation and dismission is to be made in the case of fornication onely Secondly Christs answer had not satisfied if Answ 2 he had spoken onely of divorce and not of liberty to marry againe for the Pharisees moved the question concerning the manner of divorce permitted by Moses Law after the which it was lawfull for them to marry againe And therefore it was expected that our Savior should answer to both these points both in what cases they might dismisse their wives and marry aga●ne Thirdly the Apostle saith If a woman depart Object 4 from her husband let her abide unmarried or bee reconciled 1 Cor. 7.10 11. Therefore it is not lawfull after divorce to marry so long as both parties live The Apostle speakes not there of a lawfull departure or separation to wit Answ by reason of fornication and adultery for then he should diametrally have opposed his Master Christ saying here for adultery there may be a divorce and departure Paul there I command no discedat let not the wife depart from her husband but of a separation for Religions sake or for afflictions or for the cares of those times § 7. Causeth her to commit adultery Sect. 7 How Quest or how many wayes is that Divorce which is not for fornication an occasion of adultery First if she which is divorced being deprived Answ 1 of the company of her husband is not able to containe her selfe but falls unto whoredome her divorce is an occasion of adultery unto her for the separation not being lawfull the bond of matrimony is not broken wherefore her whoredome is adultery Secondly if she which is thus unlawfully Answ 2 that is not for fornication separated marry another husband she commits adultery because she is yet the former mans wife and thus also her divorce is an occasion of adultery Thirdly hee who marries a woman that is Answ 3 thus unlawfully separated from her husband commits adultery because he coupleth himselfe with another mans wife and thus this divorce is unto him an occasion of adultery Fourthly he who puts away his wife but not for fornication and joynes himselfe in marriage Answ 4 unto another doth commit adultery because he is yet the former womans husband and causeth her whom he secondly marries to commit adulterie because shee lyeth with another womans husband And thus we see how an unlawful separation is the cause of much mischiefe Sect. 8 and root of many evils and therefore is carefully to be avoided f Chem. Harm fol 569. fine Object § 8. Whosoever shall marry
Church out of our love unto the children of God who are offended by them and with them as was said before Fourthly wee may begge this even out of Answ 4 our love unto themselves who are for the present both Gods enemies and the Churches for I. We desire the Lord to lay some affliction upon them though it be heavie that thereby they may learne to feare God And so by the punishments of their bodies their soules come to bee saved in the day of the Lord. This is good and profitable for them II. If temporall affliction will not humble and bring them home then we desire God to remove them away by death speedily that so their punishment may bee lesse in hell fire For if they should live longer they would sinne more and worse wicked men growing daily worse and worse and consequently their eternall judgement would bee so much the greater and more insupportable And the lesse their punishment is the better it is for them Will God heare these imprecations Certainely hee will hee hath promised to Quest 6 heare his childrē when they pray for vengeance against their owne particular enemies Answ and persecutors Luke 18.7 much more then when they pray against those who are both the enemies of God and adversaries also unto his Church Who are these enemies whom we must pray Quest 7 against First those who by their sinnes dishonour Answ 1 God the Lord is displeased with all sinnes but his name is dishonoured by some sinnes more then others and by the sinnes of some men more then others Now the more that any man dishonours God by his sins the more sure he is of perdition destruction except he repent because he is one of the Lords chiefe enemies Secondly those who by their sinnes glve a Answ 2 publike scandall to the profession of religion are great enemies both to God and his Church Thirdly those who sinne with a high hand Answ 3 and are insolent in their wickednesse against either God or his Church are some of these enemies who shall certaine●y perish Fourthly those who sinne desperately without Answ 4 repentance being obstinate in their transgressions and not mourning for their iniquities are of this number which the Lord will be avenged of when his children cry unto him to declare himselfe unto the world to bee King of Kings by the destruction of his and their enemies And thus much for this exposition of these words Thy kingdome come Secondly Adveniat regnum Thy kingdome come is taken for perficiatur and hath reference to the Kingdome of mercy Now in the words thus understood we begge many things at Gods hands To wit both that we may be Freed from the false Church to wit both of Sathan and His Ministers that is Persecuters And Seducers which are either Atheists Or Superstitious persons Brought into the true Church and this we desire both for All the godly that First the Church may be consummated Secondly that it may bee glorified to wit by the extension of the Limits and bounds thereof And Holy profession thereof And Pure life and good examples of professors Thirdly that they may enjoy the meanes viz. The word and The power of the Spirit with the word Our selves that we may be brought both into the Kingdome of Grace in this life Glory in the life to come Having all these severall particulars to handle in another place I will here onely speake a word or two of the two last wherin we pray that both wee and all the elect may first bee brought into the kingdome of grace and afterwards into the kingdome of glory Quest 8 Can we of our selves or by our owne power come unto the Kingdome of grace Answ To this Gerson answers Signanter dicitur in oratione Dominicà Adveniat regnum tuum id est ad nos veniat quia virtute nostra ad ipsum pervenire non possumus Very significantly doth our Saviour in this verse say Thy Kingdome come that is let it come unto us because wee by our owne power and strength are not able to come unto it Quest 9 If it be thus then how can wee promote or helpe forward this Kingdome of grace and Christ Answ We must strive to advance propagate and enlarge this Kingdom of grace by these meanes namely First by prayer as in this verse Secondly by submitting of our selves unto God by true obedience suffering him wholy to rule beare sway in our hearts by his blessed spirit Thirdly by opposing and resisting as much and as farre as lawfully we may the enemies of Christ and his Church Fourthly by comforting and helping the Church and children of God to our abilities we must doe good unto all but especially unto the houshold of faith that the faithfull who are in any distresse may be comforted and others thereby encouraged to strive to be of that societie and fraternitie who will not see one another lacke Fifthly by a good life and holy conversation for that is a meanes to convert others unto the faith and bring home erring sheepe unto Christs fold Phil. 2.15 and 1 Pet. 2.12 Quest 10 Why must we be thus carefull by all waies and meanes to bee made members of Christs Kingdome upon earth Answ 1 First because we have an expresse Commandement for it Mat. 6.33 Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof Answ 2 Secondly because wee have the constant example of all the faithfull for it whose principall care hath beene still for this Answ 3 Thirdly because wee have bound our selves with an oath both in Baptisme and the Supper of our Lord that we would forsake the kingdome of Sathan and submit our selves to this Spirituall kingdome of Christ Answ 4 Fourthly because the subjects of this Kingdome are interested and made heires of all good things in this life both temporall and spirituall Mat. 6.33 Rom. 8.32 and 1 Cor. 3.21 Answ 5 Fifthly because the Citizens of this spirituall Jerusalem shall be made eternally happie and blessed in that Jerusalem which is above in the Quest 11 life to come Who are carelesse and negligent of helping forward this Kingdome of Christ and grace First those who are altogether negligent in praying fervently for the amplification and extension of this kingdome Answ 1 Secondly those who cannot endure the Answ 2 yoake of Christ but disdainefully and reproachfully cast it off from their necks Psal 2.2 3. Thirdly those who mani●estly and openly Answ 3 or closely and secretly warre and fight for the sworne enemies of Christ sinne sathan and the wicked opposers of the Church truth These are I. Secure sinners who sleepe in their iniquitie and cry tush no evill shall come unto them although they be not the servants of Christ but the slaves of sinne and sathan II. Those who dispute and pleade sinnes and the devils cause that is argue and reason for the upholding bolstering and maintaining of sinne III. Those who speake for side and take part with wicked
man descend hee shall never be satisfied Sect. 3 § 3. Our daily bread Quest 1 Why doe we pray for our bread Answ 1 First negatively not because we challenge it at Gods hands as our right Quest 2 Secondly affirmatively for these causes following I. Because wee doe not desire great things but onely such as may be fit for our selves II. Because they are to bee obtained by our labour and therefore by prayer we desire a blessing from God upon our endeavours and affaires III. Because they are so necessary for us that ordinarily our life could not subsist without them IV. Because by the divine and eternall providence of God our lot and portion in temporall things is appointed Prosperity and promotion come neither from the East not from the West but from the Lord who hath from all eternity decreed what to give in outward things to every person And therefore we desire that the Lord would give that portion unto us which in his blessed will and mercifull decree he hath ordained for us And it is called Our bread because it is ordained for us by God If God have decreed what hee will give to every Quest 2 one of us in temporall things then what need we pray at all for our daily bread will not God fulfill his decrees without our prayers First prayer is the ordinance of God and Answ 1 therefore it is not to be neglected at all yea it is the ordinary meanes for the obtaining of our desires Secondly wee must pray because this shewes Answ 2 our hope and trust and confidence in God Thirdly wee know not whether God have Answ 3 decreed to give us such and such things or not and therefore if we stand in need of them wee must pray for them How or with what mind can we pray in these Quest 3 uncertainties Wee must pray according to these meditations animadversions and resolutions namely Answ First we know not what God will give us in particular though we pray unto him Secondly but in generall we know that the decree is gone out that God hath determined what he will give us Thirdly we acknowledge that all our endeavours can alter and change nothing in Gods decrees f Luk. 1● 26 Fourthly therefore if it please God to leave us in our temporall troubles and not to preserve and deliver us we are contented and intend patiently to indure whatsoever our good God hath decreed concerning us Fifthly yet notwithstanding this resolution wee pray unto him and must continue praying untill his blessed Will bee revealed in and upon us And that for these two reasons I. lest wee should bee wanting unto our selves by our remissenesse II. Lest we should be culpable before God for our neglect or that wee doing our endeavour wee might bee free from blame before our heavenly Father Quest 4 How or by what meanes may wee bee assured that our Prayers should be heard in temporall things Answ 1 First if wee our selves use the meanes diligently which God requires namely Gate or endeavour and Prayer then wee may expect a mercifull successe from God Answ 2 Secondly if we our selves belong unto God then the promises of God belong and are unto us yea and Amen in Iesus Christ Answ 3 Thirdly if wee lay no stumbling blocks in the Lords way thus David constrained God to take the rod of correction in his hands 2. Sam. 12. Thus Christ complaines that hee would have been gracious unto Ierusalem but they would not Matthew 23.37 So the Lord would have bestowed yea showred his blessings upon his people but their sinnes hindred and with-held good things from them Ierem. 5.25 Malach. 3.10 And therefore if wee desire that the Lord may heare and answer graciously our requests wee must leave all sinne and labour in sincerity of heart to serve the Lord. Answ 4 Fourthly if the thing wee beg be for our good comfort and profit then we may expect a mercifull grant of it otherwise not for our all-wise-God will not give us a stone instead of bread Vers 12 VERSE 12. And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters Sect. 1 § 1. And forgive us Quest 1 What method doth our Saviour use or observe in this Prayer First some say Christ handles those things Answ 1 First which belong unto himselfe Secondly which concern our selves In which hee laies down 1. Naturall things 2. Spirituall things Answ 2 Secondly some say Christ handles First Divine things in the three former petitions Secondly Humane things in the fourth petition Thirdly Diabolicall things in the two last petitions Answ 3 Thirdly some say that wee pray For good things first in foure affirmative petitiōs Against evill things in the second place in two negative petitions And unto these I assent What is observable in this petition Answ Two things Quest 2 First the petition wherein are 1 The debt Our debts 2 The remission of the debt Forgive us our debts Secondly the condition as we forgive our debters What is this debt Sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 11.4 And hence ever and anon in the Scripture wee read of the Remission Quest 3 of sinne as also in the Apostles Creed Answ Obiect A debt is that which a man owes unto another and therefore if our sinnes be debts it will follow that we ought to sinne for a man ought to pay his debts There is a three-fold debt First Direct and this debt is obedience A which wee owe indeed unto God For we are debters unto God to live according to the Spirit Ro. 8.12 Secondly Per consequens by consequent thus the Mulct of sin namely punishments temporall spirituall and eternall is called a Debt Thirdly Metonymicum and thus the cause of the debt to wit sinne is called a debt in this place because sinne is the cause of that punishment which is due unto us But the most proper debt is obedience Doe we desire to bee freed from obedience Quest 4 If that be our proper debt which wee owe unto our God and wee desire that our debt may bee remitted it seemes that we implore the Lord to ease our shoulders from the yoake of the Morall Law We doe not in this petition desire a relaxation from our obedience Answ but that our omissions may not bee strictly required or punished Hee who hath committed theft doth not desire that it may be lawfull for him to steale hereafter but that his by-past theft may bee pardoned Or as a Debter when his day is past intreates favour and forbearance for the time by-past and promiseth to pay all shortly And thus we properly desire in these words that the Lord would forgive us the punishment which is due unto us for our sinnes as the King pardons murder and homicide Why doth our Saviour call this a debt Quest 5 First that we might know sinne to be the Answ 1 cause of punishment Secondly that wee might know that all is Answ 2 abolished together namely both the cause
nothing is too much to be done And therfore happy is the condition of the righteous in his prayers Iames 5.16 for that is his cornucopia First wantest thou temporall good things then pray and they shall be given Secondly desirest thou freedome from evils then pray for there is no time too late for God to helpe Iames 5.16 Psal 90.3 Thirdly desirest thou to bee preserved from temptation then pray and the grace of God shall sustaine thee 2 Cor. 12.9 Fourthly desirest thou to be delive red from Satan then watch and pray Fifthly dost thou desire increase of grace peace of conscience then pray for it Sixthly dost thou from thy heart desire that thy heart were made a temple of the Holy Ghost then with thy heart pray unto God first to purge and then to possesse thy soule Prov. 21.1 Rom. 8.22 Sect. 5 § 5. And the glory Our Saviour in these words shewes that Gods Glory is to bee sought before all other things and we must labour to doe all things to his glory but of this wee have spoken before vers 9. § 6. Amen Sect. 6 What is the meaning of this Word Quest Answ It is used three manner of wayes namely First by way of asseveration and thus it is rendred Certè verily Thus Christ often Amen I say unto you that is verily I say unto you Secondly by way of professing and thus it is rendred fiat it shall be done or I beleeve it to be true Thirdly by way of praying and thus it is rendred fiat so be it and this is the meaning of Amen in this place VERSE 14. For Vers 14 if yee forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you For if yee forgive men their trespasses Why is this Petition of all the rest onely repeated Quest 1 First this Petition is repeated for the difficulty Answ 1 of the duty required It is so hard a thing unto flesh and blood to forgive that our Saviour doth second the Prayer with a promise of pardon from God in this verse Secondly this Petition is repeated for the necessity Answ 2 of the duty enjoyned When is this duty of forgiving necessary Quest 2 First it is necessary alwaies so long as we Answ 1 live because God requires it of us and because it is pleasing unto him Secondly it is particularly necessary in the Answ 2 Supper of the Lord and that in a double regard I. Because then we are to bee reconciled unto God and stand in neede that all our sins should bee abolished and blotted out now if we desire that God should bee reconciled unto us wee must be reconciled unto our brethren and if we desire to be forgiven of God we must forgive them II. Because then wee are to bee united into one body and to bee made one Bread And therefore reconciliation is then principally necessary How is this brotherly union and concord to Quest 3 bee wrought and continued First let him who hath done the wrong Answ 1 and injury humble himselfe and make restitution and satsfaction for his wrong done Secondly let those who are injured and Answ 2 wronged bury all injuries and wrongs in the grave of oblivion Thirdly let them imbrace and love their Answ 3 brethren with their whole heart that is I. The Saints and all holy men in the Lord. II. All men whatsoever for the Lord. Fourthly let both and all resolve these Answ 4 things for the time to come namely I. Not to remember what is by-past this belongs principally to the injured party II. Not to provoke any by injuries this belongs unto the injuring party III. Not to bee easily provoked unto revenge by wrong this belongs unto the person injured IV. Not to esteeme of earthly things before heavenly or spirituall that is not so deeply to apprehend a temporall injury that rather then suffer it wee will deprive our selves of a spirituall benefite and mercy like many who will rather forbeare comming to the Sacrament then pardon their brother yea rather let their owne sins alone unblotted out in Gods Booke then obliterate their brothers transgression out of theirs VERSE 15. But if yee forgive not men their trespasses Vers 15 neither will your Father forgive you your trespasses In this verse our Saviour shewes that there is no salvation without remission that is no mercy to bee expected from God without shewing of mercy unto our brother or there is no hope that God will forgive us except wee forgive him Why will not God forgive us except wee Quest 1 forgive others First because not to pardon our brother is Answ 1 an argument of a mind voide of charity Secondly because not to forgive those who Answ 2 injure us is a worke of Satan Thirdly because not to remit a wrong is Answ 3 an inherent sin which is not yet repented of And therefore such a one God will not pardon Will not God forgive us our trespasses except Quest 2 we forgive others perfectly without any reliques of anger dislike or revenge First we must not expect to pardon injuries Answ 1 perfectly we carry a body of sin about us and we have the reliques of sin in us which hinders us from perfection in any duty Rom 7 23. Gal. 5.17.20 Secondly but these two things wee must Answ 2 doe and then confidently hope for pardon from God namely I. Resist even all inward grudges and spleenes and disfavours and desires of revenge giving place to none of them but striving against them and withstanding them even unto blood d Heb. 12.4 II. Endeavour to corroborate and strengthen thy heart against all such corrupt reliques of anger dislike and revenge by fervent Prayer unto God Whether must the injured person pardon the Quest 3 injurie if the injurious seeke not reconciliation at his hands Answ He must for if his brother forget or neglect his duty hee must not therefore neglect his owne Object Our Saviour saith If thy brother trespasse against thee and turne againe unto thee saying I repent thou shalt forgive him e Luk. 17.4 that is if he desire mee to forgive him and to bee reconciled unto him wherefore I need not forgive him without this submission and acknowledgement from him First certainly it is most true that it is his Answ 1 duty to desire remission and reconciliation who hath done the wrong Secondly but if he will not yet thou must Answ 2 be carefull of the salvation of thy owne soule and solution of thy debts which thou canst never procure but by pardoning thy brother and being reconciled unto him VERSE 16. Moreover when yee fast Vers 16 bee not as the hypocrites of a sad countenance for they disfigure their faces that they may appeare unto men to fast verily I say unto you they have their reward When yee fast bee not as the hypocrites What benefit or commoditie doe wee gain by Fasting Quest Bellarmine lib. 2. de jejun cap. 2. Answ Shewes five utilities of fasting namely
Isidor Many ate by weight and drunke by measure Because In nimio pane non de est peccatum g Bern. de pass dom 42. Secondly an abstinence from all naturall delights Esa 22.12 Amos 6.6 Mourning is the way unto repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 and therefore in the time of fasting which should bee a time of humiliation we should rather goe unto the house of mourning then of mirth Thirdly an abstinence from wedlocke comforts Let the Bride goe out of her chamber Ioel 2.16 and 1 Cor. 7.5 Fourthly an abstinence from our labours and workes because imployments distract the mind Numb 29.7 Fifthly some adde that hereunto is required Almes Esa 58.7 Thirdly the last part of a true fast is Interna veritas the internal truth and life thereof this is the marrow of the matter because the heart is to bee established with grace and not with meate Heb. 13.9 Here many things are observable but I reduce them unto these three I. There must be a rending of the heart II. A turning unto God III. A sacrifice to offer up unto God First in the true internall or inward fast there must be a rending of the heart and an humbling of the soule Ioel 2.13 Rend your hearts and not your garments so Lev. 16.29 and 23.28 Here wee should seriously meditate of those things which might wound and breake the soule as the corruption of our whole nature the multitude and magnitude of our by-past sinnes the weight and strength of our present concupiscence the malice of Satan against us the danger of hell fire the many provocations of our God Oh happy is that man who can weepe drops of blood and can sinke himselfe upon the day of fasting unto the bottome of sorrow for such God will comfort and raise up 1 Peter 5.6 Secondly in the true fast there must be a converting and turning of the heart unto God Ioel 2.13 Rend your hearts and turne unto the Lord. In this conversion there are three things required I. A turning from sinne both our old sinnes and all sinnes II. A hungring after a reconciliation with God as the prodigall child did Luke 15. III. A desire to possesse and injoy God by faith in the soule and to be m●de partakers of internall joy by the Holy Spirit Thirdly in the true fast wee must provide some sacrifice to offer up unto God Thus the Lord commands his people upon the day of fasting to afflict their soules and to offer an offring to him Lev. 23.27 and Numb 29.7 Sacrifices are now ceased and therefore what Quest 1 must we offer up unto God First we must offer up unto God a broken Answ 1 and a contrite heart for such a sacrifice pleaseth him well Psal 51.17 but of this something was said before Secondly we must offer up unto God the sacrifice Answ 2 of repentance wee must sacrifice our sinnes and repent us seriously of our iniquities Thirdly wee must offer the sacrifice of mercy Answ 3 unto God in the day of humiliation and fasting wee must pardon those who have offended us and bee reconciled unto those who are at oddes with us and doe good unto those who stand in neede of our helpe reliefe and succour h Esa 58.7 Ezac 7.9 Fourthly wee must offer up the calves of our lips and sacrifice of our prayers unto God for fasting is no fasting without prayer Ose 14.3 Answ 4 Fifthly wee must offer up the sacrifice of Answ 5 praise unto God that is give thankes unto his name Heb. 13.15 both for those many mercies hee bestoweth upon us and those many evills we are preserved from by him Sixthly wee must offer up our selves unto Answ 6 God and that two manner of waies namely I. By adjudging our selves worthy of punishment both temporall and eternall for this vilifying and debasing of our selves doth glorifie our God II. By addicting and devoting our selves wholly up unto the service of the Lord resolving henceforth to serve no other but onely him all the daies wee have to live What time is most fit for fasting Quest 5 We fast either for Answ Temporall things and that either for the Removing of evils whether Publike or Private Here there is need of the acknowledgment of our deserts of our humiliation of the deprecating of the punishment and the taking away of the evill which is feared and deserved Procuring of good things as the Church did Act. 13.3 and 14.23 and our Church now doth at the ordination of Ministers Spirituall things and that either for The quickning of our prayers and that if we be sensible of Some present temptation or lust or concupiscence and desire that it may be mortified and subdued The absence of Christ whom wee desire should returne as the Apostles desired to have him awaked Matth. 8.25 Private meditations that whether they be for things By past as for The sinnes of our youth The losse of our time The love of Christ towards us The bitternesse of his death and passion c. Present as namely the examination of our lives sinnes occasions unto evill repentance faith and the like Holy duties as the hearing of the Word the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and the bringing of our infants to the Sacrament of Baptisme Before all which duties fasting conjoyned with repentance and prayer is very profitable Sect. 3 § 3. Anoint thy head and wash thy face Quest. 1 What is the meaning of these words Answ 1 First some understand them Tropologically namely I. By head some understand Christ and by anointing Almes Anoint thy head that is doe good unto thy Neighbour for love is like unto ointment Psal 133. thus Chrysost hom 9. fer 4. Ciner tom 2. Vnge caput id est Christum c. Anoint thy head that is Christ with the oyle of mercy and charitie as Mary did Mat. 26.7 Chrys imperf s II. Some take the head for the sense reason and understanding because that is the head of the soule and by the anointing they understand joyfulnesse and cheerefulnesse Anoint thy head Vt latitiam spiritus sancti intus habeamus that within in thy soule thou maist have the joy of the Holy Ghost Chrysost imperf and Hilary s and Gualt s III. Some take face for conscience and washing for cleansing wash thy face that is purge and cleanse thy heart August s and Hilarie s IV. Some by the face understand the conversation which must be washed and cleansed from all pollutions whatsoever Philippians 2.15 V. Some by the face understand both these Wash thy face that is both thy body and soule from all filthinesse of sinne Chrysostome imperf Secondly some understand these words literally Answ 2 that is strictly according to the letter to wit of a generall command of anointing the head in fasting this with an unanimous consent is confuted and rejected by Hierome Chrysostom Augustine and Hilary and that for these reasons I. Because this was never used either by any converted
Egypt for his linnen to the earth for his gold to the silke-worme for his silke to the shell-fish for his purple and had nothing of his owne so that if every one of those should have claimed their owne he would have stood like Aesops crow stript of all when every one of the foules craved their owne feathers which they had lent her But the Lillie is beholden to no other for its beauty and therefor doth exceede Salomon in all his glory Answ 3 Thirdly when Salomon was cloathed thus it was but a remembrance to him of his fall and he had as little cause to glory in these ornaments as a man hath to glory in the velvet patch or plaister that covereth his wound but the beauty of the lillie is naturall it covereth not the shame of it Therfore the lillie exceedes Salomon in all his glory Fourthly Salomon in all his glory was but one Answ 4 and much adoe there was to get one Salomon so decked and cloathed But all the lillies of the field are so cloathed Therfore the lillie exceeds Salomon in all his glory Fifthly Salomon was arrayed in all his glory Answ 5 but sometimes but the lillies so spring so continue untill they wither and die Therefore they exceede Salomon in all his glory Sixthly Salomon was thus arrayed by men Answ 6 but the lillies by God therefore their glory is more excellent VERSE 30. Vers 30 Wherefore if God so cloath the grasse of the field which to day is and to morrow is cast into the oven shall hee not much more cloth you O yee of little faith § 1. Shall hee not much more cloth you The scope of our Saviour in this verse is to Sect. 1 shew that we are nearer to the love of God Obser then the other creatures are or to teach us that whatsoever good things God gives to the creatures he will much more give unto us except we provoke him Reade Matth 12.12 Luke 13.15 14.5 Why will God give good things much more Quest 1 to men then to other creatures seeing man is but the workmanship of God as they are First because man is a more durable creature Answ 1 then the herbes or grasse which to day is and to morrow is cast into the oven and a more noble creature then the rest Pronaque cum spectant animalia caetera terram Os homini sublime dedit caelumque videre Iussit c. The eye of man up to Heaven is cast The eye of beasts upon the earth is plac't Secondly because God hath given man rule Answ 2 and dominion over the creatures Psa 8.6 c. Heb. 27. Answ 3 Thirdly because man is created for Gods glory but the other creatures for mans good 1. Cor. 3.21 Answ 4 Fourthly man was prepared unto eternall glory the beasts unto an earthly and temporary subsistence and being Answ 5 Fifthly God loves man more then the rest doth God saith the Apostle take care for oxen Rom. 9.9 that is not in comparison of men And therefore all these considered we may bee certainly assured that if wee doe not ponere obicem provoke the Lord by our sins he will not with-hold from us those good things which he bestowes upon the other creatures or have lesse care of us then he hath of them Is not the love of God perfect and if so Quest 2 then how doth he love man more then the rest of his creatures Answ Although the love of God bee perfect in it selfe yet it is graduated in the creatures according to the decree of God who in this order hath determined to love namely I. Before all things his glory best II. Next unto his glory the elect III. Next unto them mankinde or the rest of men IV. And lastly the creatures How may we obtaine from God those good Quest 3 things which we want We must doe as the children of God were wont to doe of old to wit beg them at his hands Answ as for example Dost thou want or desire First bread to eate Secondly that thy estate may bee encreased and multiplied Thirdly that thou maist bee blessed in thy undertaking of marriage Fourthly Children Fifthly freedome from thy foes Sixthly instruction in any doubts Seventhly the continuance of of life Eightly the pardon of thy sin Ninthly freedom from temptation Then doe as did Iacob Genes 18.20 Isaac for Iacob when he went to Padan Aram a Gen. 28. ● Eliezer Abrahams servant in the behalfe of Isaac when he went to Nahor b Gen. 24.12 Hannah 1. Samuel 1.10 Hezekiah Esai 37.14 David Psalme 73.18 Hezekiah Esa 38.2 David Psalme 32.5 Paul 2. Cor. 12.8 Pray unto the Lord and thou shall bee heard and answered graciously Sect. 2 § 2. Oh yee of little faith Quest 1 What is the meaning of these words First our Saviour doth not here taxe infidels Answ 1 but the debility and weakenesse of beleevers Answ 2 Secondly our Saviour speakes here unto the Apostles who were not without faith as may appeare by the diligent view of these places Matthew 8.26 14.31 16.8 Answ 3 Thirdly the meaning therefore is that weaknesse of faith hinders them from trust confidence and cheerful dependance upon God Obser Wee learne hence that there may be true faith which is weake there is a smoaking flaxe and bruised reed Esa 42.3 Matthew 12.20 Quest 2 How doth this appeare that faith may bee both true and weake Answ 1 First sometimes the Sunne is obscured by the interposition of a cloud and sometimes the Lord hideth his face that wee cannot see him Psalme 22.1 2. Answ 2 Secondly there is sincerity without strength Answ 3 How many-fold is this weaknesse Twofold namly either First in apprehension when the knowledge is weake Secondly in application when a man cannot certainly lay hold upon Christ but is like him in the Gospel who said Lord I beleeve helpe my unbeliefe Mark 9.24 How may a weake faith be knowne to bee Quest 4 true First the weake true faith is but of short time Ans 1 or is but newly and lately infused 1. Peter 2.1 where there is life in an infant there is daily growth insomuch as from a child it comes to be a man except it be a dwarfe or monster in nature And therefore they should suspect the truth of their faith who are alwaies children and both weake in knowledge and application Secondly the weake true faith is humble Ans 2 sorrowing and blushing for sinne and iniquity though by-past and mourning for her present weaknesse in application true faith sorrowes because she is weake Thirdly true faith though weake yet brings Ans 3 forth some good fruits of obedience Galath 5.6 Iam. 2.14 What are the effects of weakenesse of faith Quest 5 As infidelity in toto Answ so debility in tanto causeth much evill as for example First weakenesse of faith sometimes drives unto the use of wicked meanes a feare to want things necessary often hurryes men unto coveteousnesse
brethren for if you do your father will judge you Answer 3 Thirdly I conceive it is to bee understood of both to wit both temporall and eternall Objection Our Saviour thus threatning those who judge others makes the Anabaptists object this place against the office of Iudges and all Iudicatories amongst Christians Answer 1 First there is a double judgement Iudicium libertatis potestatis of freedome and power our Saviour speakes of the former when he saith Iudge not and of the latter when he saith left you be judged Answer 2 Secondly our Saviour here forbids onely private rash proud and unjust judgement not just as appeares by Iohn 7.24 Iudge not according to the appearance but judge righteous Iudgement Verse 2 Verse 2. For with what judgement yee judge yee shall be judged and with what measure yee meet it it shall be measured to you againe Quest Will God judge those unjustly who judge others unjustly will God judge with the same judgement according to that of our Saviour he which killeth with the sword shall perish by the sword Answer 1 1. Calvin answers that God will justly suffer men unjustly to judge him who unjustly judgeth others 2. We must distinguish Answer 2 betweene the Matter of judgmēt which is either Rigour and Severity called summum jus Mercy and pardon Adjuncts of Iudgement namely hatred cruelty iniquity selfe-love and pride Now God doth not here threaten the same adjuncts of judgement that he which judgeth another maliciously c. shall be so judged by other but the same matter of judgement with what judgement yee judge yee shal be judged that is if you judge mercifully yee shall be so judged but if you judge rigorously and severely others shall so judge you Ver. 3. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye Verse 3 but considerest not the beame that is in thine owne eye § 1. Why beholdest thou a mote c. Sect. 1 What is the meaning of this Verse First by the mote is meant our Brothers small Question 1 sinnes and by the beame our own great ones Answer 1 2. The eye is the most tender part of the body Answer 2 and is quickly hindred from seeing by a beam the meaning hereof therefore is yee cannot see and yet yee will Iudge Is it not lawfull to looke upon our brothers sinne Question 2 why beholdest thou the mote It is not forbidden Answer but here a difference is to be observed betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to know and to acknowledge to glance upon a thing and to contemplate upon it it is not prohibited us to see them but to marke and observe them intently Or to excogitate them with our selves Are our brethrens sinnes alwayes motes that is Question 3 small and our owne beames or great First our Saviour speakes not here of all men but Answer 1 onely or at least principally of hypocrites who under a shew of religion palliate and cover great sinnes harbouring more grosse enormities in their hearts then they usually can see in anothers life Secondly our Saviour is pleased to use this phrase Answer 2 for our instruction to teach us two things namely how we Are wont to judge others to wit to trample upon them for small sinnes L. Ought to judge others to wit we must thinke their mountaines mole-hils and their beames-motes M. L. First our Saviour by this phrase would teach Observa 2 us That wee are prone to censure our brethren for the smallest errors and to aggravate their least sinnes This was usuall with the Scribes and Pharisees who made a great matter of it for the Apostles to plucke the eares of corne (l) Matth. 12.2 for the man to carry his bed upon the Sabbath day and for Christ his Apostles to eate with unwashen hands Matth. 15.2 Whence comes this that wee are so readie to amplifie Question 4 our brethrens infirmities First sinne in it selfe and in his owne nature is Answer 1 horrible and grievous Now in our selves selfe love and the love of sinne doth hinder us from seeing sin in his owne colours but in others the visard thereof being taken away wee see it as it is in its owne nature And hence we so greatly aggravate it Secondly this proceeds from our owne pride Answer 2 we are wont to build our own praises upon our brethren● dispraise and our fame upon their discredit thinking that the greater wee make their sins to appeare the lesse will our owne seeme Secondly (m) Obser 2. Christ by this Phrase of a Mote seene in our brothers eye c. would teach us That wee must be ready to excuse our brethrens sinnes and to condemne our owne Why must wee bee ready to excuse other mens Question 5 sinnes First because we doe not see his heart nor know his inward man wee may see our brethrens faults Answer 1 but wee cannot see their strivings struglings and prayers against sinne or teares for it And therefore we must not be rash to accuse them but readie to excuse them Secondly our worke is to judge ourselves 1. Corinth Answer 2 11.32 and not others for they stand or fall to their owne Master Rom. 14.4 And therfore we should sit as Judges upon our selves but not upon them except to acquit them Answer 3 Thirdly there is a double judgement namely First of faith for our selves Secondly of charity for our brethren Wee must not palliate our owne sinnes but lay them open before God and make them as ougly and deformed unto our selves as possibly wee can but if we extenuate and excuse our brethrens failings it is an argument of Christian love in us because love covers a multitude of sinnes 1 Cor. 13. Sect. 2 § 2. But seest not the beame in thy owne eye Our Saviour seemes here to make a twofold comparison betweene these censurers and their brethren First thou art a man not an Angell and he is thy brother 1. Brother a member of the same body 2. Mote Secondly he hath a mote in his eye and is tainted with some lighter sinne thou hast a beame in thy eye and art guilty of greater sinnes And yet thou judgest and cēsurest him Quest 1 Whence c●mes it that although there bee great faults in us yet wee cannot see them but are still blinde at home Answer 1 First Philantia selfe love hinders us from spying faults in our selves love they say is blinde and our love unto our selves makes us that wee can dislike and see nothing amisse in our selves Answer 2 Secondly our affections corrupt our judgement and therefore wee cannot condemne what wee love Answer 3 Thirdly the eye cannot see it selfe Quest 2 What meanes must wee use for the cure of this malady for the casting out of this beame and for the bringing of us unto the fight of our owne sinnes Answer 1 First a ●end carefully unto the word of God looke into the perfect law of libertie
beat back all the darts and assaults of Sathan Answer 3 Thirdly provide the breast plate of righteousnesse for that will blocke up the way against sin Question 4 What meanes must wee use or how must this beame be cast out Answer Hereunto is required a double labour 1. Internall of the heart N. 2. Externall in worke O. First if we desire that the beame of sinne may be cast out we must first take our hearts and inward man to taske and labour earnestly therein after these two things to wit First to hate sinne with a perfect hatred because without this we can doe nothing to any purpose in this worke read Psal 97.10 Rom. 12.9 Psal 45.7 Amos 5.15 Proverb 28.16 Psalm 36.4 the truth hereof evidently appeares thu● 1. A man cannot come unto Christ except hee hate his father and mother (r) Luk. 14 26. and every thing else which would keepe him from Christ and therefore without the hatred of sinne we cannot come unto God neither do any thing pleasing unto him 2. The feare of the Lord is to hate evill (ſ) Prov. 8.13 therefore without the hatred of evill we cannot obey God who is to be served with feare Psal 2.11 3. If wee doe not hate evill we hate good for Contraria non possunt esse in eodem subiecto A man cannot serve two masters Mat. 5.24 And therefore until we have learnt truely to hate sin we have learnt truely nothing in Religion Secondly we must resolve never to be reconciled unto our sinnes any more never to be overcome by the allurements thereof but still to take off the visard of sin that we may see it in its owne colours By what meanes may we attain to this hatred of sinne and resolution against it Quest 5 First consider the original from whence it comes Answer 1 namely from Satan Gen. 3.1 And therfore when we give way to sin we give way unto Satan and yeeld our selves to his subjection dominion and power becomming his children and servants the consideration hereof will be a meanes to make us loathe sin and resolve to leave it Secondly consider thy place and selfe what thou Answer 2 art One that hath beene washed by the blood of Christ 1 Cor. 6.11 And therefore it is a shame to wallow any more in sin remember thou art like a City set upon a hill Mat. 5.14 And therfore should be pure glorifying God by thy unblameable life Eph. 5.27 Phil. 2.15 Mat. 5.16 For what fellowship hath light with darkenesse or God with Satan 2. Cor. 6.14 Thus all Christians should remember what they are for this will bee a meanes to make them the more to hate sin and endeavour against it Thirdly consider the danger of sin both in regard Answer 3 of others of other things and of thy selfe 1 Consider the dangerous effects of sin in others how it wounded Adam slew Cain Cham the old world the ten Tribes Ephraim Judah Gen. 6.5 Hosea 13.1 yea sin was the occasion of Christs death 11. Consider the wofull effect of sin in all things 1. It corrupted our nature and obliterated Gods Image in us yea so contaminated us that from the Crown of the head to the sole of the foot there is nothing but boyles sores putrifi'd corruptions (t) Esa 1.6 Gen. 3.8.10 2 Sin brought shame into the world when Adam had eaten the apple thē he was ashamed not before 3. By sin Adam Gen. 3.8.24 all men naturally in him lost that familiarity with God which formerly he had 4. Sin cast man out of pleasant Paradise into the wide and weedy world (u) Gen. 3.23 5. Sin was the cause of death bringing that into the world also Gen. 2.17 Rom. 5.12 III. Consider the dangerous c●ndition that thou art brought into by reason of sin and that in many regards namely First it hath corrupted the fountaine thy whole man so that nothing but uncleane streames can issue from thee mala mens mal●● animus thy heart is corrupted and therefore all thy actions favour of sinne Reade Matth. 15.19 Gen. 6.5 Iam. 1.14.15 Secondly thy sinnes hath set a separation between thee and thy God and made thee his enemy Jsa 59. 2. James 4.5 Thirdly sinne cries for vengeance Genes 4.10 and 18.20 and Iames 5.4 the many transgressions thou hast committed sends forth loud clamours daily unto God for justice judgment and revenge Fourthly sinne daily rebels against thee Romans 7.17.23 Galath 5.17 And hath gotten such strength and sure footing in thee that thou canst not of thy selfe expell him Fiftly sinne hinders and withholds good things from thee Ierem. 5.25 Sixtly sinne hath disinherited thee of thy heavenly inheritance and deprived thee of eternall glory Roman 3.23 Seventhly sinne obdurates and hardens the heart and takes away the sense of it Consuetudo peccandi tollit sensum peccati And thus if wee desire to cast this beame of sinne out of the eye of the soule wee must begin with the heart and inward man Secondly our next labour is externall wherein are two quaeres Quae facienda Quomodo Quest 6 What must we doe for the expelling of sinne Answer 1 First Reluctandum strive struggle wrastle and resist sinne Galath 5.17 that is endeavour against it subdue thy affections and doe not with thy will consent thereunto Answer 2 Secondly Vincendum labour to overcome it to this is required stroakes wounds blood Hebr. 12.4 for otherwise wee can never conquer it sinne is to bee assaulted and laboured with many blowes and wounded with many deepe and deadly wounds or it cannot bee overcome And therefore wee must bee diligent in hearing reading and meditating of our duety towards God and Gods mercy towards us that the consideration thereof may make us to resist sinne more manfully Answer 3 Thirdly Vinciendum bind and tie it fast when thou hast overcome it by the coardes of resolution circumspection daily watchfulnesse and particular promises and vowes unto God Answer 4 Fourthly ejiciendum having bound it then cast it out and labour to become a new creature entering into a new covenant with God henceforth to serve him only and alwayes with a full purpose of heart and praying unto God to enable thee to performe what thou hast promis●d Quest 7 How must we expell sinne Answer 1 First beginne betimes to assault him give the water course no way at all but while it is said to day strive against sinne and all thy corruptions Answer 2 Secondly fight the battles of the Lord manfully untill thou hast overcome Answer 3 Thirdly persevere unto the end Toties quoties as long thou hast any enemies outwardly to assault thee or corruptions which inwardly strive against thee so long thou must labour carefully and couragiously to resist them And this will bee as long as thou livest Verse 6. Verse 6 Give not that which is holy unto the dogs neither cast yee your pearles before swine lest they trample them under their feet and turne againe
Quest 6 in us as it was By these plaine markes namely Answer 1. Are thy affections as strongly set upon sinne as ever they were dost thou love sin as well as ever thou didst then certainely thou art yet sinnes slave 2. Are thy temptations as frequent as ever they were doth the devill tempt thee as often as ever he did then it is an argument that hee hath too much in thee 3. Art thou as stupid dull and blinde in seeing the craft and subtlety of Sathan as ever thou wert art thou still as ignorant of his devices as ever it is a signe then that sinne hath a commanding power in and over thee 4. Art thou as unable to resist sinne as ever thou wert as weake as ever as naked as ever as feeble and faint-hearted as ever this showes that corruption is too strong in thee On the contrary if wee finde that our love is not so much unto sinne as it was but that the edge of our affections is taken off if temptations be more rare in us and we more quick sighted unto Sathans subtlety and more strong to resist him both by Faith Prayer and the Word then it is a comfortable signe that sinne is growne weaker in us and our feet reduced from this broad way § 3. That leads unto destruction Sect. 3 Our Saviour in these words showes that the broad way of sinne brings at last unto perpetuall paine How doth it appeare that sinners shall perish Question 1 for there are many who thinke otherwise perswadeing themselves that they may walke in this way and yet at last come unto salvation First it appeares evidently from Christs owne Answer 1 words in this place where hee showes that the end of the Broad way is perdition Narrow way is salvation And therfore it matters not what others thinke Secondly it appeares from other plaine and positive Answer 2 places of Scripture reade Psalm 9.17 and 11.6 and 83.10.13 and Jsa 5.24 and 1 Corinth 6.9 Thirdly sinne is the foundation of condemnation Answer 3 or all and onely sinners shall bee damned And therefore it is cleare that the broad path leades to perdition reade Isa 50.1 and 59.2 and Ierem. 5.25 Hose 13.1 Rom. 6.23 Psalm 1.5 and 5.4 and 34.16 Prov. 16.4 Isa 3.10 11. Fourthly the arrowes of the Lord are levelled against Answer 4 such as walke in the broad way And therefore they must needs come to destruction at the last Psal 34.16 Fiftly the reward of sinne is death The locusts Answer 5 having brought forth their young die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist so lust having conceived brings forth sinne and sinne when it is finished brings forth death Iames 1.15 and Rom. 6.28 Sixtly otherwise God should not bee just For Answer 6 1. Hee hath made a law that if we sinne we shall dye Genes 2.17 In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Pope Iulius the third caused this sentence to bee written about his coyne That nation and people shall perish which will not obey me so the Lord hath made a law and threatned to inflict condigne punishment upon all those who disobey it Rom. 3.23 2. Mankinde hath broken this Law in Adam and wicked men daily breake it themselves in their owne persons And therefore the justice of God requires that they should be punished whose sinnes are not done away in Christ Question 2 Shall no wicked men at all escape this destruction None who continue to walke in this way untill they come to the end thereof For Answer First Kings and great men shall suffer if they run with the common sort Isay 41.2 Daniel 5.27 Secondly Wisemen shall bee punished if they thus play the fooles Exod. 1.10 and 15.7 and Rom. 1.22 Thirdly Proud men shall be ruined notwithstanding all their high conceits of themselves Malach. 4.1 Fourthly Hypocrites shall perish who walke in this broad way secretly and unseene Matth. 23. Question 3 Why must wee thus labour by all meanes to renounce sinne Answer 1 First because there can bee no true repentance without the reformation of the life from sinne Answer 2 Secondly because there can bee no true faith without this Faith purgeth and purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 and the heart being purged the life must needs bee pure Wherefore there is no truth of faith where sinne is not forsaken Answer 3 Thirdly wee cannot bee made partakers of the blessed Spirit of God untill wee have left sinne for the Holy Ghost will not come to a polluted soule And therefore it is to bee renounced Answer 4 Fourthly there is no way to escape the wrath of God or eternall destruction without the forsaking of sinne And therefore wee should bee carefull to leave it Question 4 How may wee avoid and leave sinne Answer 1 First shunne and beware of all the occasions of sinne Answer 2 Secondly use all holy meanes to bee good and pure and sincere Answer 3 Thirdly deplore thy infirmities speedily and heartily wash thy soule with teares for thy former transgressions sorrowing with a godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.10 Answer 4 Fourthly promise unto God to fight manfully against thy former sinnes and all sinnes for the time to come and labour to performe thy promise Answer 5 Fiftly Pray fervently unto God to free thee from the commanding power of sin and to preserve thee from sinne and to make thee the free-man of Jesus Christ Question 5 What things hinder us from turning aside out of this broad way of sinne Answer And what are the remedies against these impediments The Impediments are these First insensibility when a man is not sensible of his sin he is not carefull to forsake it Secondly presumption when men either presume that they are not sinners or that their sinnes are small or that though great yet they shall be pardoned it makes them more carelesse and fearelesse of sin and more slack to leave it Thirdly Procrastination and delay when wee promise repentance but put off the performance thereof from day to day Fourthly key-coldnesse in performing perfecting of the worke not striving against sin unto blood Hebr. 12.4 The Remedies are these First a tender circumcised heart which is sensible of the least touch of sinne Secondly a godly feare remembring that wee are sinners yea great sinners and neither able to satisfy for our sins our selves not sure that they shall bee pardoned in Christ except wee strive to forsake and leave them Thirdly not to deferre but while it is said to day to turne from our sins and turne unto the Lord our God Fourthly zeale alacritis and industrie in the resisting of sinne striving against it with manfull wrastlings till wee have prevailed § 4. And many there bee which goe in thereat Sect. 4 What is the meaning of this word Many Question 1 Our Saviour shewes hereby Answer that there are not onely Many simply which walke in the broad way but that there are so many that in comparison of them they who
walke in the narrow way are but a very few so that the meaning of Multi Many is Plurimi the most by much Whereunto is this word Many to be referred Question 2 It is to be referred both unto the Way Gate as if our Saviour would say Many walke in the broad way D. Answer Many enter in at the wide gate E. D. First by Many our Saviour would have us to take notice of the Multitude of sinners as if hee should say the most part of men walke the wayes of sinne reade Psalm 14.3 and 53.2 and 1 Iohn 5.19 and 1 Cor. 1.25 Numb 16.4 How doth this appeare that the most men vvalke Question 3 in the broad vvay First It may be illustrated by a double Embleme Answer 1 to vvit 1. The locust is an Embleme of vvicked men shee is called in Hebrevv Arbeh of the numbers and multitudes of them for Rabah signifieth to multiply And hence the Scripture it selfe expresseth the number of vvicked men by the locusts They came as locusts or Grashopers for multitude Iudg. 6.5 And againe They are more then the grashopers and are innumerable Ierem. 46.23 2. The Mouse is an Embleme of vvicked men because shee encreaseth exceedingly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Arist both in number and speede Answer 2 Secondly this will appeare by the partition of the world In the foure corners of the world there are foure kindes of men namely 1. Prophane persons who are given to grosse and enormous sins 1 Tim. 5.24 2. Hypocri es who have a forme of goodnesse and godlinesse but in their hearts have denied the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 3. Carnall men who are not egregious sinners but only minde the world and outward things not regarding the hidden man of the heart at all 4. Righteous and holy men who being truely regenerated become burning and shining lamps Rom. 12.11 And these are but few in comparison of any of the rest Question 4 Why doe the most part walke the wayes of sin Answer 1 First because sinne is most naturall unto all 1. Cor. 15. First comes that which is naturall and afterwards that which is spirituall wee were all conceived and borne in finne and nature and sin works in all grace but onely in a few Answer 2 Secondly because sinne is pleasant to flesh and blood By reason of that innate and naturall concupiscence which is in us temptation workes upon every part of the soule and sense and body and all follow willingly but perswasion unto good workes onely upon some few And therefore more follow the broad way of sinne then the strait way of grace Answer 3 Thirdly because Sathan is so craftie subtle strong and vigilant that hee is called the prince of this world and the god of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 And therefore hee drawes the most part of the world after him Answer 4 Fourthly because it is easier to fall and to lie still then to rise and flie unto heaven And therefore the most men walke not in this strait and painefull way Answer 5 Fiftly because temptation unto evill is like poyson which infects with a light touch thereof or whereof one drop will doe hurt But perswasion unto good is like a potion or purgation which except it be drunke up and well digested doth not produce his wished effect And hence it is that so many are taken captive by sinne and few wonne by grace Question 5 How can this be that the most part of men walke in the broad way Is not Multitude a true note of the true Church Answer No For the true Church is but small in comparison of the world of wicked men The most part of the world is without the Church overwhelmed with the deluge of ignorance and Atheisme and in the Church there are but a few good And thus wee see how Many here is referred to the broad way E Secondly this word Many may be referred to the wide gate Now by the Gate we showed before was meant Death so that the meaning of these words Many there bee which goe in thereat is that that the most men dye unto condemnation or enter in by death at the gates of hell Wee see there were but onely eight out of the whole world preserved and saved in the Arke amongst which small number was wicked Cham. Wee see that ten righteous men could not bee found in five populous Cities of Sodome Genes 18. Yea wee see that of six hundred thousand of Israelites there were but two onely that came into the holy Land And one Nicodemus only we reade of amongst the Senators How doth it appeare that the most part of men are Question 6 damned It appeares most evidently thus First Answer there are many who know not God and Christ John 17.3 and 2 Thess 1.8 Secondly there are many who contemne and despise the word which is the meanes to bring them unto saving knowledge Thirdly there are many who although they doe not contemne it yet susque deque habent they neglect it and doe not much regard it Fourth there are many who care for no hing but the world and honours and pleasures and riches Fiftly many are ensnared and entangled in sinne and wholy serve either some publike or private lust Sixtly many boast and brag of their owne righteousnesse and feele no want neither stand in any neede of Christ Seventhly there are but very few who feele their sinnes to be a burden unto them and desire to bee eased of that loade by Christ And therefore these things considered we may safely say that it is as cleare as the Sunne that the most of men enter in at the wide gate of destruction Whence comes it that the most perish Question 7 First from the weakenesse of our nature Nature Answer 1 cannot save us by grace only we are saved and hence it is that so few are saved and so many damned Secondly this comes from the nature of sinne and Answer 2 here is to bee observed that even one sinne without repentance sufficeth unto condemnation one such transgression is enough to bring a man to eternall destruction as wee see in Achan in Korah and his company in the man who gathered stickes upon the Sabbath day (g) Num. 15.36 and in him who blasphemed Numb 24. We see how at once for one rebellion there dyed foure and twenty thousand 1 Cor. 10. Thirdly this comes from the nature of our enemies Answer 3 who are many and strong as for example 1. The World 2. Sathan 3. The flesh 4. The custome of evill 5. Men. or friends who often tempt unto evill 6. The scoffes and taunts that are thrown upon the profession of the Gospell 7. Carefulnes for the things of this life All these are enemies unto us and one or other of them daily prevaile against us Fourthly this comes from the nature of the multitude Answer 4 or of the men in the world Here observe that in the world there are foure sorts of people
souls who remains and abides with them to direct instruct strengthen counsell comfort and enlighten them all the dayes of their life Quest 7 Have the Saints no Banquet on earth are they only invited to feast it in heaven Answ The Saints on earth are frequently invited to a heavenly Banquet to wit the Lords Supper and therefore they should prepare themselve as unto a Banquet when they come thither In this feast observe these things namely First that the Table is the Table of God and therefore called the Lords Table Secondly at that Table Christ serves who gives food and dainties to all his welcom guests Thirdly the food he gives and which wee there eate is his body Fourthly the guests are the Patriarkes Prophets and Apostles for they all ate the same spirituall meat and all dranke the same spirituall drinke 1 Cor. 10.1.2 c. and Heb. 12.22 Fifthly the fruit of this feast is most weighty For it is either I. A seale unto life and salvation Or II. A testimony against us unto condemnation 1 Cor. 11.31 And therfore we had need be carefull so to prepare our selves unto this Holy Table that we may receive the pledges of love and seales of life from Christ and not arguments of our condemnation Quest 8 How must wee come unto this heavenly Banquet Answ 1 First in generall come with reverence in regard of the presence of God and Christ there Answ 2 Secondly come with conscience of thy sins and that after serious examination of thy selfe wayes and actions by the word of God Answ 3 Thirdly come with a purpose of heart to leave thy sinnes yea all sins and that for ever And that thou maist be the better enabled hereunto I. Labour to hate all sins with a perfect hatred in regard both of sin it selfe and the punishment therof looking upon it with horrour hatred fear and disdaine II. Pray fervently and heartily unto thy God that he would enable thee to leave and forsake al sinnes and preserve thee from the love of any so long as thou livest Answ 4 Fourthly come with assurance of pardon without faith nothing we do is either pleasing unto God or profitable unto our selves and therfore if wee come reverently unto the Lords Table with a sight and sorrow for our sins and a sincere purpose of heart hereafter to leave and loath them wee may build and rely upon the gracious promises of Christ who hath assured such of mercy and pardon Matt. 11.28 Answ 5 Fifthly come with thanksgiving for that is necessary at a true feast If we should rise from a feast or banquet where wee had abundantly satisfied our appetites and forget or neglect to give thankes unto God wee should be more like beasts then men more like Pagans then Christians How much more needfull and requisite then is it that we should powre forth our soules in thankfulnesse unto God for that unparalelled Sect. 4 mercy in giving Christ unto death for us § 4. With Abraham Isaac and Iacob Whether were the Patriarkes in heaven or in Quest 1 Limbo before Christ came They were not in Limbo Patrum Answ 1 The Papists to prove the contrary hereunto that they were object many things of which briefly The Prophet David prophesying of Christ Object 1 saith that hee shall lead captivity captive that is shall bring the Fathers out of their prison wherin they were detained and lead them unto heaven Psalme 68.18 First this cannot be understood of the Saints Answ 1 or Patriarkes because they were not lead into captivity Secondly the place is plainly meant of Christs Answ 2 Triumph over Sathan It is said plainly of Christ that He brought forth Object 2 the prisoners out of the Pit or Lake Zach. 9.11 Now out of hell there is no redemption and therefore the Fathers were in Limbo untill Christ came This place is urged by the most of the Papists Answ for the proof of Purgatory and cannot be meant of this Limbus which they fain for the Fathers for in Limbo Patrum was nothing but quiet and peace but in this prison mentioned by the Prophet Zachary is sorrow and paine as the Papists confesse and therefore this place as unfitly alleaged for the confirmation of the present controversie according to the opinion of their best Writers I passe by Saint Peter saith Object that Christ preached to the Spirits that were in prison 1 Pet. 3.19 c. Therfore untill Christs comming the Fathers were in Prison Having elsewhere amply to consider of this place I here leave it with this answer Answ that certainly the Apostle speakes of Christs triumph over the damned and of Noahs preaching unto those who were now in hell But the same Apostle saith that the Gospel Object 4 was preached to those who were dead 1 Pet. 4.6 And therefore the Fathers were in Limbo for who else can be meant but they The Apostle there means those who were dead in their sins Answ as is plainly perceived by the place How doth it appear that Limbus patrum is but Quest 2 a Fable By these few and plain Arguments viz. First because the Spirit Answ and soule of a good man when it departs from the body goes unto God who gave it Eccles 12.7 And this was affirmed by Solomon before Christ came Secondly because Christ would have the soules of his children to be where he is Iohn 17. Now he was in heaven not in Limbo yea he is the God of Abraham as hee saith himself elsewhere and the Text calleth the place where Abraham was the kingdome of heaven a title never given to their fained Prison or Cell And therfore the Fathers were not in Limbo Thirdly because the Scriptures speak only of two places heaven and hell Mat. 25. of two sorts of vessels of anger and mercy Rom. 9. For both Abrahams bosome and Paradise signifie Heaven as Augustine most truly affirmes Fourthly because wee and the Fathers are saved both one way and by one and the same faith hence Christ saith Abraham saw me Iohn 7. And the Apostle saith that wee and they were made partakers of the same Sacrament 1 Cor. 10.1 And therfore why should they be debarred so long out of heaven more then we Fifthly because the death of Christ was powerfull and effectuall before he was crucified hee was a Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Revel hee is one and the same to day and to morrow and for ever Heb. 13. And all things are present with God he being immovable And therefore they were saved by faith in Christ to come as well as wee by faith in Christ already come Quest 3 Why doth our Saviour here only name Abraham Isaac and Iacob Answ 1 First because the Scriptures are wont to preferre these before others as it is often said the God of Araham the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob Answ 2 Secondly because thus Christ would avoid the occasion of novelties by only naming those who they all knew and
firm his Decrees being like the Lawes of the Medes and Persians which cannot be revoked Secondly true it is that Christs mercy is infinit Answ 2 but mercy must not evert and overthrow Iustice for this is an Attribute as well as that Thirdly none are threatned here to bee cast Answ 3 out but only those among the children of the Kingdom who did apostatize and fall away But those who are threatned to be cast out are Object 2 the people of God with whom God hath made a Covenant now will Christ neglect his Covevenant made with them First hee will not hee doth not as appears Answ 1 thus I. He confesseth that salvation is of the Jews and belongs unto them Iohn 4.22 Hence II. He denieth the Canaanitish woman her request at first because mercy was proper unto the Israelites Marke 7.27 III. He commands his Apostles to goe unto the Jews not unto the Gentiles Matth. 10.5.6 Yea IV. The Apostles obey first confessing that the tender of mercy belongs primarily unto the Jews Rom. 3.2 and 9.4 And then practising their Masters mandate Act. 3.25 and 10.14 and 11.19.13.46 Secondly the Jewes were rejected for their Answ 2 sins and not for any breach or neglect of Covenant in Christ Reade Esay 1. and Amos 1.3 c. and 2.4 c. and Rom. 2.28 For what sins were these children of the Kingdom Quest 1 the Jews cast out First for their Incredulity because they Answ 1 would not beleeve Rom. 11. Secondly for their contempt of the word of Answ 2 Christ Thirdly for their obstinacie hardnesse of Answ 3 heart and perversenesse Reade Esay 48.4 Mark 3.5 Act. 7.5 and 13.45.50 and 14.19 and 17.5 and 18.6.12 and 21.27 and 25.2 From hence wee may learn That obstinacie against Observ and contempt of the word brings ruine and destruction upon the contemners How doth this appear Quest 2 First plainly by these places Esa 5.24 and Ier. Answ 1 13.10 and 19.15 and Ezech. 7.10 Secondly because God hates those who are Answ 2 obdurate and obstinate Psalme 95.8 Rom. 2.5 Esay 65.2 and 5.24 Ier. 6.10.11 and 28 32. Thirdly God loves those who tremble at his Answ 3 word Esay 66.2 5. and therfore contemners thereof shall find no mercy Fourthly God doth ordinarily convert men Answ 4 by the word 2 King 22.19 Ezech. 11.19 and 2 Cor 3.3 and therfore there is small hope of the conversion but great fear of the confusion of those who despise this ordinary means of salvation Fifthly the word is powerfull and sharp like Answ 5 a two edged sword which is able to divide betwixt the marrow and the bones Heb. 4.12 And therefore when it doth not mollifie and humble it is a signe of a heart come to an exquisite hardnesse Wherfore wee should when the word workes not upon us complain of the hardnesse of our hearts and labour for the redresse therof Quest 3 How many fold is hardnesse of heart Answ Two-fold First obstinate and perverse as Ier. 44.16 The word that thou speakest unto us in the name of the Lord we will not do but wee will do whatsoever proceedeth out of our own lips Secondly blind and ignorant hence it is said that our Saviour was angry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the hardnesse or blindnesse for the word bears both of their heart Marke 3.5 And hence also hee taxeth their dulnesse and slownesse of heart Marke 16.14 Sect. 3 § 3. Into outer darkenesse Quest What is the meaning of these words Answ 1 First They shall be cast into outer darkenesse that is into the corporall and palpable darknesse of the infernall prison presently after their death in regard of the soule and at the day of judgement both in r●gard of soule and body Answ 2 Secondly Darknesse is no other thing then a privation of light now light is two-fold namely I. Spirituall as wisedom grace and truth Now the privation of this light is internall darknesse and ignorance in the spirit and inward man II. There is a sensible and corporall light whose privation is outer darknesse and this is the darknesse spoken of in this place For although there be fire in hell yet it is a darke and smokie fire and not clear except only so as the damned may see one another for the greater increase of their misery d Carthus s Vers 13 VERS 13. And Iesus said unto the Centurion go thy way and as thou hast beleeved so be it done unto thee And his servant was healed in the selfe same houre Sect. 1 § 1. Go thy way Quest 1 What is the sense and meaning of this phrase of speech Answ It signifies a dismissing of one in peace and is an argument of love and mercy Reade 2 Sam. 14.8 Marke 5.34 Luke 17.19 Whence wee learne Observ That the Lord at last doth dismisse and send away in peace all his Petitioners Quest 2 How doth this appear Answ It appears thus vix First from these places Esay 57.19 and Iohn 14.27 and 2 King 5.19 Mat. 15.28 Iohn 4.50 Secondly because he is the God of peace 1 Thessal 5.23 Philip. 4.7 Thirdly because peace is the effect of Iustification Rom. 5.1 Whence the Angels sing peace on earth because they who are justified by him have true peace Luke 2.14 Fourthly because this peace is our armour and weapons against affliction Iohn 16.33 And therfore certainly the Lord will give peace at length to all that sue and seek for it at his hands How must wee wait and expect for this peace Quest 3 untill we obtaine it First patiently I waited patiently saith David Answ 1 for the Lord and hee inclined unto me Psal 40.1 Secondly industriously wee must not expect Answ 2 and await the Lord in our beds Cantic 3.1 but in his wayes and ordinances Thirdly perseverantly knowing that our Answ 3 times are in Gods hands VERS 14. Vers 14 And when Iesus was come into Peters house he saw his wives mother laid and sick of a Fever § 1 He saw his Wives Moth●r Sect. 1 What may wee say or think of the Popish Quest 1 prohibition of Priests marriages First that it is opposit to Scripture which saith Answ 1 It is better to marry th●n to burne 1 Cor. 7.9 Yea and that when marriage is lesse convenient verse 26.32 And therfore even then they may marry verse 2. But now with the Papists fornication is better then marriage for the former violates not the vow but the latter doth as they say g Bellar. de Monach 2.30 f. 1265. A. though Saint Paul say It is honourable and Whoremongers God will judge Heb. 13.4 Secondly it is opposite to Antiquitie to forbid Answ 2 marriage as they now do for the proofe hereof observe these two things namely I. The authority of this Prohibition from whence it was here observe First the Apostles did only approve of single life and commend it unto us by their example Secondly they did not positively herein ordain or establish any thing Pope
Siricius being the first that did directly command it See 82. Dist § plurimos et gloss Litera i. II. Observe the degrees of this Prohibition how far it differs from the Prohibition of those of former times For First the Ancients did enjoyn a separation of the Minister from his wife but this separation was not totall that they should never come together again as appears by Ephes 5.32 and Canon Apost 5. and 28. Dist § Si quis doceat et § Si quis disceruit Secondly the Ancients did prohibite the Minister the knowledge of his wife but this prohibition was not perpetuall that he should never know her as appears 28. Dist § de Syracusan and 31. Dist § Quoniam but that he should not know her Tempore of ficij diebus ministerij when hee was to undertake and discharge his ministeriall function And this the Fathers thought decent 28. Dist § de Syracusan Thirdly the Ancients did prohibite the contracts of the Ministers but this prohibition was not universall 28. Dist de Syracusan § Diaconi as though they might not be contracted at all to any but only that they might not be contracted a second time that is might not marry twise neither to a widow nor to an infamous person But the Papists now adayes do not onely forbid Bigamy or marrying with widows or infamous women but all contracts and marriage yea all carnall knowledge of their wives if perhaps they have been married before they entred into orders yea a totall separation for they cast the wives out of their husbands house and habitation directly contrary to the Canons and all antiquity Answ 3 Thirdly the doctrine of the Papists is opposite to Antiquitie in punishing offenders in this kind For I. Adulterous and unclean Ministers were to be cast out of the Ministerie 28. Dist § Presbyter si But the Papists now adayes observe not this for if all uncleane Priests were cast out they would have but few left in their Cloysters II. Episcopus fornicationem pretio permittens suspendendus 83. Dist § Si Episcopus If any Bishop shall by any licence or for any bribe tolerate or permit fornication or whoredom hee shall be suspended this was the ancient Law But now it is other wise as appears by the hundred grievances of the Germaines Sect. 2 § 2. And sicke of a fever Hilary allegorizeth this verse very acutely Peters house signifies the body his wives mother signifies Infidelity whose daughter Free-will the soule marries but the presence of Christ cures it Hilar. s But me thinks the Mother in law should rather signifie the Will and the Fever signifie Infidelity which are cured by Christ But passing by this I will instance but only upon one thing in generall Before wee showed how sinne and the sicknesse of the soule was like unto Leprosie and the Palsie wee will now shew how sinne in the soule may bee resembled to a Fever in the body Quest 1 How and wherin is sin like unto a Fever Answ 1 First sin may be likened unto a Fever Respectu originis in regard of the originall therof For I. The Fever ariseth within in the bowels and intrals and although the Symptomes be without yet the cause lurks within So the cause of all actuall transgressions which appear in the life is that originall corruption which is within in the heart Rom. 7.23 24. II. The Fever ariseth from a three-fold cause namely either First from some pestilentiall and obnoxious aire without Or Secondly from the society of those who are infected or sick of a Fever Or Thirdly from some internall corruption in the body or humours and this is the cause for the most part Thus sinne either comes I. From the infection of Sathan 1 Iohn 3.8 and the allurements of the world g 1 ●o●● 2.16 Or II. From the society of wicked men 2 Cor. 6.14 Ephes 5 11. Or II. From the internall corruption and concupiscence of the heart Rom. 7.5 Iam. 1.14 Secondly sinne may be resembled to a Fever Answ 2 Respectu naturae in regard of the nature thereof For I The substance of the Fever is a heat besides nature which extinguisheth the naturall heat So the fire of concupiscence and lust of sin doth extinguish the fire and heat of zeale For where sin is hot there zeale is cold II. The Fever ariseth diversly from divers humours to wit sometimes from choller sometimes from melancholy sometimes from blood and yet it is one and the same Fever So sinne sometimes ariseth from the lust of the fl●sh sometimes from the lust of the eyes sometimes from the pride of life 1 Iohn 2.16 And whatsoever the root is the fruit is sin III. There are two kinds of Fever a continual Fever and a Fever with some intermission now this hath his seat in a more ignoble place but that in the vessels themselves and veins and blood This is diversly expounded to wit First some expound it of the divers degrees of sinning Some sin with some intermission of repentance some sin perpetually Secondly some expound it of Adam and us who are now corrupted by Adam H●e at first was pure and therfore sin in him was with some intermission but in us it is continuall because in sinne wee were conceived and brought forth in iniquity Thirdly some expound this of the sins of naturall and regenerate men The unregenerate sin continually the regenerate but sometimes Sin in the naturall man hath his seat in the vessels in the whole nature à capite ad calcem from the head to the heel but in the spirituall and regenerate man sin hath his seat only in the ignoble part the fl●sh In me that is in my flesh dwels no manner of thing that is good Rom. 7. And therfore naturall men must labour to be renewed in the Spirit of their minds Rom. 12.2 Ephes 4.23 Now this intermissive Fever again is two-fold namely First Ephemera which lasts but for one fit or one day and comes no more Thus the best sometimes fall into some one grievous sinne or other once but are never after overtaken therwith as Noah who was once drunk and Lot once incestuous and David once adulterous and as Peter who once denied his Master And Secondly Putrida when the humours being partly corrupted upon every distemper the Fever is ready to return And thus both the regenerate and the unregenerate are often overcome by some one sin or other we carry a body of sin about us and wee have the reliques of sin in us which oftentimes prevaile against us Thirdly sin may be resembled to a Fever Respectu modi procedendi in regard of the manner of Answ 3 the proceeding therof For I. The Fever begins with the heat and warmth of the body that being the first thing that sensibly it ceazeth upon and infrigidates and makes cold the whole body So sin first ceazeth upon zeal making that first luke-warm then by and by stone cold II. At the first the Fever
sinne for therewith all the sons of Adam and children of men are infected And therefore two things are to bee enquired after to wit I. Whether hast thou sought unto Christ the Physician of thy soule or not hast thou made thy case and griefe known unto him and desired him to heale thee II. Whether hath Christ answered thee in thy request or not whether hath hee healed all thy sins and cured all thy infirmities so weakning the reliques of corruption in thee that now it cannot prevaile against thee Fifthly examine whether thou be changed or not from sicknesse to health canst thou say with Paul I was given to such and such sinnes but I found mercy i 1 Tim. 1.13 the Lord plucking me as a brand out of the fire dost thou find a change both in thy affections and actions from evill unto good Sixthly examine whether art thou sound well and healthfull in thy limbs and members canst thou walke in the waies of God cheerfully canst thou run the race that is set before thee swiftly and constantly canst thou worke out the worke of thy salvation thorowly Seventhly art thou not enclining to a Hectick Fever or a Dropsie or deafnesse of eares that is art thou not barren of grace and all goodnesse or at least Lukewarm in the service of God or of deaf and dull eares to hear the word of God Certainly by a serious examination of these things we may know whether with Peters wives Mother before Christ came we are sick of a Fever or by Christ cured and freed from our Fever as she was VERS 16. And when the Even was come Vers 16 they brought unto him many that were possessed with devils and hee cast out the spirits with his word and healed all that were sick We may learn hence Observ That it is Christ onely who frees from Sathan hee only being stronger then him Luke 11.21 By what means are we freed from the Devill Quest 1 or the Devill dispossessed First the Heathens used charmes and enchantments Answ 1 hoping therby to be preserved from him and to dispossesse him their charms were I. Either by magicall words Fernel abd caus Or II. By the Picture of Solomon in a Ring Iosephus Or III. By the herbe Cynocephalia which is very effectuall against poyson Appion Gram. Plin. 30.2 Or IV. By Amulets hung about their necks Plin. ib. Or V. By the art of Nicromancy and conjuring But all these are too weak to produce such an effect as this is to deliver or preserve from the Devill Secondly the Papists perswade themselves Answ 2 that they can dispossesse men and drive away devils by troops and that by Ceremonies as by holy water and the signe of the Crosse and the seven penitentiall Psalms and a lighted Taper and a Censer and a holy Fryers Hood Iacobus de Chusa and Wyerus Thirdly God doth deliver preserve and free Answ 3 us from Sathan miraculously and that sometimes by the ●ame of Christ as in the Acts of the Apostles and sometimes by prayer and fasting How doth Christ cure those who are possessed Quest 2 with devils or those in whole heart sinne and Sathan remains By these means viz. First Answ by overcomming Sathan himselfe for us Secondly by disarming and weakning the power of Sathan Thirdly by casting of sinne and Sathan out of our hearts Fourthly by arming us both with off nsive and defensive weapons against Sathan Ephes 6.12 Enabling us so to resist him that hee is forced to flee or to be foyled Rom. 16.20 VERS 17. Vers 17 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying himselfe tooke our infirmities and bare our sicknesses It may here be objected Object Christ did not heale the sick and dispossesse those who were possessed for this end that the Prophesie might bee fulfilled for then if the Prophet had not foretold it he would not have done it Muscul Gualt s Answ 1 First God doth dispose it unto this end as he did his flight into E ypt Mat. 2.15 and his return into Nazareth Mat. 2 23. and the Souldiers casting lots about his garments Mat. 27.35 and that a bone of him should not bee broken Iohn 19.33 and divers other passages From whence we may learn Observ That our voluntary actions are indeed governed ordered and disposed by the providence of God Reade Act. 2.23 and 3.18 and 4.28 and 13.27 And besi●es remember that it is the will of God not the will of men which is the rule of the world Daniel 4.32 Hence it is said Man purposeth but God disposeth For I. If the purpose and in●ention of man bee according to the will of God then God ●il direct it Thus Assur was Gods rod Esay ●0 But II. If mans purposes and intentions diss●nt from the purpose and will of God then God corrects it Balaam at first had a desire to goe to Balak but God forbids him afterwards he had a desire to curse the Israelites for Balak but God Quest 1 will not permit it Num. 23. It may here bee demanded whether we desire to establish and maintain Stoicall fa●e and a necessary series of causes For this is heathenish and unbeseeming Christians to avouch Absit a fidelium cordibus fatum aliquid dicere Greg. hom 10. Vide Thom. 1. qu. 116. c. Answ Certainly wee goe not about to establish Stoicall Fate but Christian Providence Quest 2 Wherein doth Stoicall Fate and Christian Providence differ Answ 1 First Respectu originis in regard of the originall thereof because Stoicall Fate doth depend upon the influence of the stars And therefore Thom. denies it ibid. Answ 2 Secondly they differ Respectu ascensûs in regard of the ascent because Stoicall Fate doth tie the gods themselves and subject them thereunto Answ 3 Thirdly they differ Respectu descesnûs in regard of the descent because the Stoicall Fate binds all second causes And therfore we should avoid the name of Fate Si quis Dei voluntatem vel potestatem Fati nomine vocet sententam teneat et linguam e●rrigat i August civit Dei 51. If any shall call the will or power of God by the name of Fate let him hold still the opinion but amend the phrase Quest 3 Is nothing casuall contingent or mutable Answ There are two things certain to wit First that there are many things mutable in regard of us and many things casuall which fall out contrary to our expectation as Inachus said of Io Tu non inventa reperta es he could not find her when hee sought for her and when hee thought not of her then hee found her So a man digging a grave may find a treasure Secondly nothing is contingent in regard of God but all things are certainly ordained Quest 4 Must wee not use the means Answ 1 First certainly wee must and that for these causes namely I Because God hath ordained that by the use of the means wee should attain unto the end II.
hunger after him as his Lord and Master whom he desires to serve Thus wee should labour to confesse and contemplate the deformity of our natures and lives and labour to goe out of our selves acknowledging our selves to be wicked and miserable And then hope that Christ in his due time will mercifully raise us up unto joy and comfort Secondly wee may observe hence what manner of persons those were whom our Saviour Observ 2 made choise of to be his Apostles they were not Pharisees nor High-priests nor great Schollers but simple ignorant and unlearned men yea fishe●s and such as were of no esteem in the world 1 Cor. 4.9 c None of all the Apostles were learned except only Paul neither was hee made choise of that hee might boast of his learning but that Christ might bee glorified by the conversion of one who was so learned zealous and obstinate in a false way Quest 3 Why doth Christ make choise of such as these to be his Apostles Answ 1 First certainly this was done for our comfort lest otherwise we should have despaired ever to have beene made partakers of their society and fellowship yea hence the Holy Ghost hath recorded the Saints sins that we might see and hope that God hath mercy in store for us whatsoever our sins bee if wee will but repent If Christ had chosen only wise great and learned men then poore simple and ignorant ones might have feared that he would never have accepted them but when Christ graciously accepts such to be his Apostles then such as they were may hope that hee will accept of them to be his servants Answ 2 Secondly this was done for the greater glory of Christ For certainly the Church of Christ which was built upon the Apostles could never have stood so long upon such weake props a●● foundations except the edification and fabrick had been divine yea supported and upheld by a divine power For I. Men choose those who are strong able and every way fit for the worke they have to doe for them Because they stand in need of their strength and ability But II. Christ chooseth those who are weak and then gives strength unto them making them able Ministers g 2 Cor. 3.6 that so all the glory and honour of the worke may be given unto him unto whom al belongs VERS 10. And it came to passe as Iesus sate at meat in the house behold many Publicans and sinners Vers 10 came and sate down with him and his Disciples Came and sate downe with him Although undoubtedly many came unto Christ who were not truly converted unto Christ yet we see be re●eives all that come without any strict examination of them Teaching us That Christ receives Observ and entertaines all that come unto him Esay 55.1 Iohn 7.37 For the better understanding hereof observe three things namely First there is a double Church to wit externall and visible internall spiritual Now Multi in non de many are of the former which are not of the latter As here was a traitor Devil amongst the Twelve so many were received in outward society by Christ who inwardly were rejected Secondly there is a double reward for those who are in the Church of Christ namely a reward of hypocrites which is given to formall Professors and a reward of children which is given to those who are sincere Thirdly these hypocrites which are not of the spirituall Church neither shall be made partakers of the reward of children are yet notwithstanding suffered and permitted to be in the visible Church because they are profitable unto the faithfull and members of the invisible although the stalke of the corne be hollow yet it is strong and supports the corne and although the chaffe be light yet it keeps the corn warme and nourisheth and preserveth it So there are many in the Church no better then chaffe and straw and yet are profitable and helpfull and beneficiall unto the children of God Who are here to be reproved Quest They who are too rigid and austere that is First the Anabaptists and Brownists Answ who separate t emselves from our Communion and Church for some blemishes as they say which are amongst us and in our Church Secondly the Novations who deny repentance unto those who sin after Baptisme Thirdly those who exclaime against other mens sins and reproach the sinners Indeed Ministers are enjoyned to instruct and that with meeknesse those who oppose themselves h 2 Tim. 2.25 And people have this charge given unto them by the same Apostle To beare one anothers burdens and to restore in the spirit of meeknesse those who are overtaken in a fault considerihg that the best may be so tempted as that they may be overcome i Gal. 6.1.2 Fourthly they are faulty here who exclude from the Sacrament of the Lords Supper all sinners wheras onely notorious sinners that is either those who are hardned in sin or those who often apostatize and relapse into sin are to be kept back and debarred Fifthly they also are too blame who deny all communication conversation association or fellowship with wicked men whereas it is not unlawfull to associate the wicked with this desire and endeavour that we may reclaime them from their wickednesse and be as Physicians unto them Object 1 Here it will be objected Saint Paul hath forbidden us to keep company with wicked m●n 1 Cor. 5.11 Answ Hee forbids brethren to accompany sinners but he forbids not Physicians Object 2 But it may be objected againe a Physician doth teach those who are sick but he doth not eate with those who are sick And this is the very thing which Saint Paul in the place objected prohibits If a man be wicked eat not with him Answ 1 First Saint Paul in that place speaks not of all sinners but of those only who are excommunicated Answ 2 Secondly Saint Paul in that place doth not forbid them to keep company with Heathens but only with Professors who were wicked If any man which is called a brother be a Fornicator or covetous or an Idolater c. keepe him not company eat not with him Answ 3 Thirdly it is certainly prohibited to associate with those who are notorious sinners and who remaine hardned in sin Now all sinners are not such as these I conclude therefore this Question let all these five sorts of persons whom we have here taxed remember that Christ received all that came unto him he are with Publicans and Harlots hee dismissed the woman taken in adultery he reproved the cruell zeale of his Apostles when they would have called for fire from heaven telling them they knew not what spirit they were of and therfore let them not be so rigid and severe against all sinners as they are condemning all and despising all for some faults or failings Vers 11 VERS 11. And when the Pharisees saw it they said unto his Disciples why eateth your Master with Publicans and sinners Why
therefore can we know what religion is according to the doctrine of the Scriptures Answ 1 First all things in the New Testament and Epistles of the Apostles are not hard but some onely 2 Pet. 3.16 Answ 2 Secondly those things which are necessary to be knowne unto faith and salvation may bee knowne viz. I. By a diligent reading of the Word And II. By a frequent and attentive hearing of the Word And III. By a sincere and strict obeying of the Word read and heard And IV. By comparing place with place and judging of every place with humility and not with wilfulnesse or selfe-conceitednesse And V. By fervent prayer unto God to enlighten our understanding and to anoint our eyes with that eye salve that we may perceive what we reade and heare Answ 3 Thirdly in the New Testament two things are principally aimed at to wit I. The exaltation of the name and glory of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ And II. The spirituall worship and service of God and Christ And therefore that doctrine is according to the doctrine of the Apostles which teacheth us rightly to worship to searve God and Christ as is prescribed in the Word namely First by a mortification of the flesh and a dying unto sinne And Secondly by a newnesse of life and a living unto God And Thirdly by a spirituall obedience Quest 7 How must wee so professe Religion that wee may be certainely assured that Christ will confesse us Answ 1 First forsake not Religion for gaine or the pleasures or honours of the world as many doe The Citizens of Heidelberge leaving a little Village called the Holy Mount Tilly from thence battered the Citie So Religion being once forsaken we are easily overcome because without Religion wee are truely miserable And therefore neither a Land nor Citie in generall nor any particular person should forgoe or fall from the profession of Religion Secondly forsake not truth for errour nor religion Answ 2 for superstition nor God for Idols as the Philistines who would forgoe the Arke for Dagon Woe be to that people or person that shall thus reward the Lord to forsake the ever-living waters and digge to themselves Cist●rnes that wil hold no water Thirdly doe not staine the purity of Religion Answ 3 with the blots and blemishes of sinne For God and Mammon and the Arke and Dagon cannot stand together Wherefore wee must labour that we may be purged from all pollutions both of the flesh and spirit 2 Corinthians 7.1 Fourthly direct we all our actions according Answ 4 to the rule of Religion and Law and word of God Psalme 119 9.105 Here two things are worth our observation namely I. The sacred Scriptures teach and instruct all sorts of men how to walke and live as for example the Word teacheth Kings Princes and Iudges Psal 82. and Bishops 1 Tim. 5. Yea both wise men and fooles old and young Eccles 11. and 12. The Word directs Husbands how to carry themselves unto their Wives and Wives unto their Husbands Fathers unto their Children and Children unto their Parents Servants unto their Masters and Masters unto their Servants Colos 3. 4. Ephes 5. and 6. yea in the Word both rich and poore are taught And who not II. The Scripture descends to all the particular actions of our lives Forbidding First all grosse and enormious sinnes as Drunkennesse Adultery Oppression Vsury and the like Rom. 13.13 And Secondly all small and petty things as namely I. The detaining of the poore mans wages Levit. 19. And II. Filthy and impure communication Ephes 5.3 And III. How wee must beare our selves in selling Levit. 25.14 Prov. 20.14 And IV. What wee must doe about Corne-selling Ames 8. Prov. 11.26 And V. To avoid Suretiship Prov. 6.1 and 17.18 And VI. To leave gleanings for the poore Levit 19.9 And VII It teacheth huswifery Proverbes 31. Yea VIII It teacheth us how to eat or what to doe when wee eate i Corinth 10 31. 1 Tim. 4.4 Now to what end is all this but only to teach us that all sorts of men in all the severall actions of their lives are to be regulated by the word of God And therefore Religion doth not require only the worke of the Lords day although many will not give God that but it requires the labour of the whole life and that all our workes should bee directed with conscience rightly informed And if wee doe thus that is preferre Religion before gaine and Idols and sinne and square all the actions of our lives by the Word of God then wee may certainely expect that reward of glory which is here promised § 3. Whosoever denieth me before men Sect. 3 How manifold is denial or how many kinds Quest 1 thereof are there Deniall is manifold to wit there is Negatio First Di nitatis a refusall of dignity or honour Thus Moses denied to be Pharaohs sonne in law or his daughters son Hebrewes 11.24 Secondly Sacerdotis thus the Israelites denied and refused Moses saying who made thee a Ruler and a Iudge Act. 7.35 Thirdly Resurrectionis Thus the Sadduces denied that there was any Resurrection Luke 20.27 Fourthly Mendacitatis when men deny the truth as Sarah did Gen. 18.15 Fiftly Pompositatis of pride when men raised and promoted unto honour will not daigne to acknowledge or take notice of their poore friends and kindred Iob 8.18 Sixtly Timiditatis of fearfulnesse thus Peter denied Christ Marke 14.71 but of this by and by Seventhly Parcitatis vel Cupiditatis of coveteousnesse when men deny to relieve or to give almes unto the poore Iob 31.16 Eightly Egoitatis and thus wee are commanded to deny our selves Matth. 16.24 Ninthly Deitatis or Infidelitatis when men through Infidelity deny God Now this is two-fold viz I. When men deny God the Father who is denied three manner of wayes namely either First Directly Corde ore simul when men deny God both with their hearts and tongues as the Atheists doe Psal 14.1 Or Secondly Indirectly Corde tantum only in heart that is when men deny the providence of God and all his Attributes that is when men blasphemously affirme either I. That God is ignorant of humane things and knowes not what is done on the earth Iob 22.12 Psalme 10.11 and 64.6 Or II. That he cares not for the things of this life but Susque deque habet although hee sees humane things and knowes what is done below yet hee cares not which way they goe Or III. That hee cannot resist the wicked world Iob 22.17 Psalme 10.4 and 12.5 k 2 King 18.32 Or IV. That hee neither is able to punish the wicked and wickednesse of the world nor to reward the righteousnesse of the righteous Iob 21.14 15. Psalme 10.3 Zeph. 1.13 Thirdly God is denied in our workes Titus 1.16 They professe that they know God but in their workes they deny him that is although they know him yet they doe not worship and serve him But of
eye and neither from that watery or glasse or christaline humour that is therein nor yet from the nerves thereof these being but only the conveyers and conduit-pipes of the spirits So the knowledge wisedome and spirituall understanding which wee have comes not from our selves or from any naturall faculty or power within us but from the alone illumination of the blessed Spirit Eightly the diseases of the eye proceed not from the spirits but from the humours or at least from the absence of the spirits In toto vel vel tanto So the depravations corruptions and errours of the mind proceed not from the spirit of God but from the naturall imperfections of the mind or at least from the absence of the blessed Spirit from the soule Ninthly the eye cannot behold the Sunne not because the Sunne is contrary to the eye for nothing is more delectable thereunto or more desired but because the Sunne is too too excellent and bright for the eye to behold And therefore seeing the eye cannot behold it in his full bignesse and beauty or greatnesse and glory it doth therefore behold it in a cloud or in the water or in the Raine-bow or through some cracks or crannie or clift or hole of a wall So the soules chiefest happinesse is to see God Mat. 5.8 But because with Moses wee cannot see him in his glory therefore wee looke upon his Picture and contemplate and behold him in his creatures in his workes in his word in his Christ and in all his Attributes Quest 8 How may we know whether wee are enlightned or not and whether Christ have opened our eyes or not Examine seriously these things viz. Answ First whether can wee discerne betweene those things that differ and judge of those things which are most excellent yea so discerne them that we desire and hunger and long for spirituall graces before all temporall things Psal 4.6 and 51.11 Ephes 3.19 Secondly whether have we a true and watchfull faith or doe wee but sleepe and dreame that is are wee so assured of the presence and good worke of Christ within us that the remembrance and assurance thereof produceth joy and peace Psal 4.8 Thirdly whether is our conversation holy and unblameable or not are wee zealous for the glory of God are we filled with the fulnesse of God is there true life and strength of grace in us 1 Iohn 1. ● Thus we must examine whether we have light in our understanding whether we have light and brightnesse in our faith and whether we are light and bright in our lives and conversations Fourthly whether doe we hunger after that glorious light which is reserved in the heavens or not Phil. 1.23 and 3.20 Revelat 6.10 and 1 King 19.4 Quest 8 How or by what meanes may this spirituall light be obtained Answ 1 First seeke it betimes labour for it maturely while it may be found Esa 55.6 and doe not either I. Preferre other things before it Or II. Procrastinate and delay to enquire after it Act. 22.16 Answ 2 Secondly seeke it fervently and zealously not coldly or luke-warmely Answ 3 Thirdly seeke it truely and aright Here observe diligently these three things I. God enlightens the mind 1 Iohn 1.5 that is God the Father Iames 1.17 God the Sonne Iohn 8.12 and God the Holy Ghost Ephes 3.16.18 And therefore wee must desire God the Father to enlighten our minds and understandings by his holy Spirit for his Christs sake Thus David did Psalme 13.4 and thus Paul would have us to doe Ephes 1.18 II. The Ministers of the word enlighten by the Gospel 2 Cor. 4.4.6 and Eccles 3.5 And therefore wee must bee diligent in hearing the word marking best what doth most concerne our selves and remembring that carefully and practising it sincerely and diligently III. I may adde that the godly doe enlighten by their godly conversation And therefore prophanely perilously and blasphemously is the holy for his holinesse derided and scoffed Psal 119.51 this not being the way unto illumination but a meanes to keepe us still blind and darke Wherefore they who desire that their minds may be enlightned must 1. Pray unto God to anoint the eyes of their understanding with the eye-salve of his Spirit Then 2. They must heare the word of God diligently and desire that the Lord would make it a meanes of illumination unto them And 3. They must delight in the society of the Saints they must contemplate and observe diligently their sanctity and integrity of life and they must labour to imitate their vertues § 2. The Lame walke Sect. 2 What is the meaning of these words Quest 1 First Ambulare to walke is commonly understood Answ 1 of the life and conversation as Mar. 7.5 Luke 1.6 and Act. 14.16 Secondly Via the way signifies the practise of Answ 2 life as it is said of Iohn Hee walked in the way of righteousnesse Matth. 21.32 And therefore most properly these words follow the former and the Lame the Blind because we must Walke whilst wee have light Iohn 12.33 In these words as in the former wee have two things to consider of namely I. What we are by nature and without Christ II. What we are by grace in Christ First by nature wee are lame or so long as Observ 1 wee are naturall wee cannot worke the workes of God nor walke in his wayes Psal 14.1 c. Esa 60.4 Rom. 7.18 How doth this appeare Quest 2 Because the impression of concupiscence within us is Answer First universall and generall that is is seated and placed in all our affections and desires And Secondly it is vehement and strong and of great power Rom. 7.5 and is therefore called Lex membrorum a law of the members Rom. 7.23 Yea Thirdly it is so deepely rooted in us that it cannot be removed by us and therefore by reason thereof wee are made and become truly miserable Rom. 7.24 § The Lepers are cleansed Sect. 3 By Leprosie is meant sinne because this is the pollution of the soule as that is of the body And herein also we have two things to observe viz. I. That by nature wee are defiled with the leprosie of sinne II. That by Christ wee are purged from the pollution of sinne First our naturall estate is here worth observing Observ 1 As wee are blind in our eyes and lame in our feet so we are leprous in our whole man Or All men by nature are polluted and defiled with the leprosie of sin Gen. 6.5 and 8.21 and Rom. 5.12 and Ephes 2.1.3 Psal 39.5 and 116.11 How doth this appeare First it appeares thus Quest because it is the punishment of sinne As Gehezi and Miriam were Answ 1 smitten for their sinnes with leprosie so al mankind were punished with the leprosie of sinne for Adams transgression 1 Cor. 6.10 c. Ephes 4. 17. c. Tit. 3.3 Answ 2 Secondly this pollution of sinne is propagated to posterity sinfull man begets children in his owne likenesse and man that
Reade Esa 40.3 Mat. 3.3 Quest 1 How many things are to be prepared Foure namely Answ First Vallies these must bee filled Now by these Vallies are meant either feare and trembling or vacuity of grace Secondly Mountaines these must be laid low Now by these are meant either humane wisdome or Rebellion or trust and confidence in our owne Righteousnesse Thirdly Crooked waies these are to be made strait Now by these are meant either the waies of errour or selfe love or the love of the world Fourthly sharpe wayes these are to bee made smooth and thereby are signified the waies of sinne See this Question before Chap. 3. 3. § 1. qu. 1. 3. where it is amply explained Quest 2 How many things are to bee renewed in us Foure namely Answ First blindnesse and hardnesse of heart For naturally we are slow of heart and hard to beleeve and unable to take up and understand spirituall things Secondly hatred against God for naturally we love those things which are enmity with him Iames 4.4 and 1 Iohn 2.15.16 Thirdly uncleannesse and impurity because our hearts are to bee made Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.16 Fourthly impediments and Remorae as the employments of the world our owne weakenesse and inability unto good workes and the like Now if we desire that Christ may come unto us wee must labour to bee renewed in all these Quest 3 What workes are wee first to undertake Answ Wee must observe and follow the Methode of God who First gives his word unto his people As hee promised Isa 30 21. and did Ionah 1. Then Secondly he mollifies and softens the heart by a true sight of and sence for sinne Ierem 31.18 c. Then Thirdly hee reconciles such as he hath humbled unto himselfe by infusing his love into their hearts 1 Iohn 4.10 and Iudg. 2.4.5.6 Then Fourthly hee extrudes out of the heart those that trouble it Mat. 9.25 That is he mortifies sinne and crucifies the world and subdueth the affections and lusts Then Fiftly he encreaseth zeale and corroborates grace and augmenteth Religion and love thereunto and to whatsoever is good Colos 1.23 and 2.6.7 And therefore wee must highly prize and heartily professe and practise the word of God as much as in us lyes And then pray unto God to make his word a Sword and Hammer to breake our hard hearts and to be reconciled unto us yea to expell our of our hearts whatsoever may either hinder us from his service or spurre us forward to that which is displeasing unto him And lastly that hee would bee pleased to fill our hearts with the grace of his Holy Spirit and to encrease us in all vertuous and Religious workes For if wee labour thus to prepare our hearts wee may bee certainely assured that Christ will come unto us at the last and remaine and abide with us for ever and ever Revelat. 3.20 VERS 11. Verily I say unto you Vers 11. among them that are borne of women there hath not risen a greater then Iohn the Baptist Notwithstanding he that is least in the Kingdome of Heaven is greater then he Among them that are borne of Women there hath not risen a greater then Iohn the baptist What manner of comparison doth Christ make Quest 1 here between Iohn and the rest Our Saviour doth not meane that Iohn was greater then all others Answ but that none that were before him were greater then he Non major sed illi non majores Chrysost imperf s He did equall Iohn with the rest and not preferre him above them Others following those praises which are given unto Iohn as for example First Iohn was called an Angell Malach. 4. And so also were the Prophets Acts 7. and Heb. 2. yea Princes and Magistrates are called Gods Psalme 82. which is a higher title Secondly Iohn preacheth not of Christs comming in the future but in the present Tense hee doth not proclaime that Christ will come hereafter but that he is come already Now this also do all the Apostles Thirdly Iohn digito demonstrat points at Christ with the finger and saith this is he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So doth also Andrew and Philip. I●hn 1. and the Samaritane woman Iohn 4. and Martha Iohn 11. And therefore I conclude this Question thus I. Iohn was not greater then all others but equall unto them Against this if it bee objected Object that Moses was greater because hee was equall to Christ Deuter. 18.15 Answ I answer Moses was not equall unto Christ but like unto him as is expressed in the place objected The Lord will raise up unto you a Prophet like unto me not equall unto mee But most plainely Heb. 3.3 Christ was worthy of more glory then Moses II. Iohn is not here by our Saviour compared with those that followed him but with those who went before him not with the Apostles of Christ or all beleevers in generall but with the Prophets of the Lord And therefore Pet. Galatinus sights with his owne shadow and builds upon a false ground and sandy foundation when hee would prove from this place the Virgin Mary to be without originall sinne He argues thus Object 2 Among them that are born of women that is amongst those who are conceived in originall sinne there hath not risen a greater then Iohn the Baptist but Christ was greater then Iohn therefore it followes that hee was free from sinne and because the Virgin without doubt was greater then Iohn therefore it followes also that shee was without sinne Pet. Galat. lib. 7. cap. 5. pag. 279. Answ 1 First I grant that the B. Virgin was greater then Iohn But Answ 2 Secondly I deny the consequence shee was greater therefore without sinne followes not Answ 3 Thirdly our Saviour doth not compare Iohn with Mary or the beleevers of that time but onely with the Prophets of the old Testame●t Quest 2 Wherein and how was the Baptist greater then the Prophets of the old Testament Answ 1 First because he was called the Messenger of the Lord. Malach. 4. Answ 2 Secondly because the Prophets prophesied of him Malach. 3. and 4. Esa 40. Answ 3 Thirdly because he prophesied in the wombe Luke 1. as was said before Answ 4 Fourthly Iohn was greater then the Prophets in regard of his office and this I conceive our Saviour here principally meanes for I. Iohn prepares the way of Christ verse 10. And II. Doth proclaime and shew that Christ is already come which none of the Prophets did And III He was nearer unto Christ then any for he was his forerunner like that Noble-man who walkes next before the King in processions or when he goes in state or like Lucifer the day star who comes next before the Sunne And IV. He pointed at Christ with the finger Behold the Lamb of God V. He is almost equalled with Christ in honour For First hee was honoured in the world when Christ was unknowne to the world Secondly he prophesieth that Christ shall
and awakened and yet sleepes againe it is then no longer negligence but contempt So those who relapse after a Revelation of the power and vertue of Christ are guilty I. Of sinne And II. Of infidelity And III. Of the contempt of Christ the Holy Ghost and the word of God And therefore shall be the more greevously tormented How or wherein is the power of Christ manifested Quest 4 or revealed First in judicijs in his judgments Ezech. 25.11 Answer 1 and 30.19 Exod. 7.5 Psalm 105.5 Esa 26.9 Ierem. 5.3 The Lord sometimes corrects afflicts and punisheth us that wee seeing his power might learne to amend sometimes he makes his power knowne upon others that his owne people might observe his judgements and powers forth his wrath and fury upon the disobedient that wee might tremble and learne to obey 1 Cor. 10 as the Dog is beaten before the young Lyon to make the Lyon obedient or the Condisciples of the young Prince to make him feare Secondly in Benedictionibus in blessings and Answer 2 mercy Gods power is revealed in favours and good things as Esa 26.10 And great is the judgement of those who despise these Reade Ezech. 16 Esa 5. Thirdly in praedicatione verbi his power is rather Answer 3 revealed in the Preaching and publishing of the word that beeing the power of God unto salvation Rom. 1 16. and 2.4 and 1 Thessal 1.5 And therefore those who enjoy the preaching of the word and despise it heape up unto themselves wrath against the day of wrath Fourthly the power of Christ is principally Answer 4 shewed there where the Spirit is powerfull in the heart 1 Cor. 12.7 Hebr. 6.6 c. by any generall or particular grace And therefore they who are enlightned by the Spirit must take heed of relapsing for as they have despised and sleighted a great grace who doe thus so they doe incurre a great judgement and condemnation eternally Sect. 3 § 3. Because they repented not Our blessed Saviour doth not upbraid them because they did not admire his Miracles or because they did not entertaine or feast him but because they repented not yea the other they did but not this they wondred at his wonderfull workes and many entertained him but all was nothing without repentance Whence we may note Observ That where repentance is wanting there all other duties are nothing worth It is not sufficient for a man to heare the word with reverence or a shew of love or a forme of obedience for these were in Herod Mark 6.20 except we seriously repent and in sincerity obey these onely being the blessed ones Luke 11.28 Iohn 13.17 Ierem 4.4 Psalm 34.14 Matth. 7.21 It is not enough for a man to make a Profession of Religion but he must indeed strive and study to eschew evill and doe good which is the nature of true Repentance if hee would bee pleasing and acceptable unto God Quest 1 How doth it appeare that all wee doe in Religion is of no esteeme with God without Repentance Answ 1 First it appeares Authoritate by a threefold authority namely I. Of the Baptist who preacheth Repentance Matth. 3.3 And II. Of Christ who preacheth repentance Mat. 4.17 Luke 24.47 And III. Of the Apostles who preach the same doctrine Acts 2.38 and 3.19 and 26.18 Answ 2 Secondly it appeares Scopo by the Scope of Christ Now the scope of Christ in his comming was I. To reduce men from their errours And II. To free them from their sinnes Luke 1.75 and Titus 11.2 c. And therefore hence it appeares that without repentance all is nothing Quest 2 Why doth not our Saviour rather upbraide these Cities because they beleeved not then because they repented not seeing wee are saved by faith and Luther saith Omnes damnari ob infidelitatem that all are damned for infidelity Answ Certes salvation is of faith but repentance is the way unto faith yea Causa size qua non without repentance there can be no faith for those who never repented them of their sinnes never had the least sparke of saving faith Quest 3 Who ought to repent Answ All who either First desire to be redeemed from Sathan and death Or Secondly who are in a miserable estate and condition Now I. Such are all men before repentance Rom. 3.23 and 5.12 And II. All that doe not truly repent Quest 4 Who doe not truely repent Answ 1 First those who abide in their sinnes not repenting them at all of their iniquities Secondly those who by a fained and counterfeit Answ 2 repentance deceive their own soule Thirdly those who repent key-coldly and Answ 3 wash themselues with adulterate teares Fourthly those who seeme both to others and Answ 4 themselues seriously to repent but afterwards relapse with the dog to his vomit and with the Swine that was washed to the wallowing in the mire 2 Peter 2.22 How must we repent Quest 5 There are two parts of Repentance namely Answ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dediscere Discere damnare amare First Resipiscere quasi re-sapere to bee wise againe or to condemne our former wicked life and actions Rom. 12.2 And therefore unto true repentance it is required that wee should seriously lament and bewaile what is by-past and for the time to come labour to be weaned from these things to wit I. From all our former sinnes 2 Peter 1.9 and 2.20 Galath 5.24 II. From the love of the word Psalm 127.2 Iames 4.4 III. From the contempt of the word because it is a dangerous thing to despise the word and so long as we doe so we cannot truely repent Reade 2 Chron. 36.16 Proverb 1.24 Iohn 3.19 Acts 19.9 Ezech. 33.32 IV. From despising of the blessed Spirit that is from greeving him Ephes 4.28 or extinguishing his good motions 1 Thessal 5.19 And therfore that we may avoid and beware this the better let us remember how many calls we have neglected and how many good motions we have smoothered V. From the neglect of salvation wee must remember how formerly we preferred pleasure and profit yea and all things before this learn both to repent deplore and amend it Secondly Converti to be converted and turned unto God or to direct an averse heart unto him and to labour that hereafter our whole life may be directed and guided unto a new marke And in these two To repent of and turn from what is by-past and amisse and to amend our lives and turne unto the Lord our God and whatsoever is good for the time to come doth regeneration consist Now this second part of repentance doth consist in these things namely I. In a desire and endeavour to bee ingrafted into Christ the true and living Olive and this wee are by faith Iohn 15.1 Rom. 11.22 And II. In an earnest endeavour to walke in faith and to approve the truth thereof by our workes of new obedience and true sanctification Gal. 2.19 c. and Iames 2.18 and 1 Tim. 6.18 And III. In a true
was imposed upon and injoyned man as a curse and therefore these Labourers are not simply happy neither as such have any promise of comfort ease or rest from Christ II. Acquired and thus First some labour and take much paines in sinne And Secondly some bestow much care and diligence and labour in the acquiring of riches and the gathering of the thicke clay of this world together Now neither are these Labourers happy except they feele their labour and grieve for it and labour to ease their shoulders of the burden thereof Secondly spirituall in mind and this is two-fold to wit either I. Vnjustly imposed and that either First by Doctors which are either Or Pharisaical loving to lay heavie and unnecessary loads of Ceremonies upon mens shoulders Matth. 15.14 c. h Acts. 13 1● Or. Papisticall teaching men to labour to obtaine salvation by the merits of workes and not by the grace of Christ Rom. 10.3 Philip. 3.9 Or Secondly By the Tempter Sathan who accuseth men and tempteth them and by his accusations temptations troubleth and molesteth them as wee see hee did with Saint Paul 2 Cor. 12.8 Now these Labourers are blessed if they resist Sathans temptations and wrastle manfully against them Iames 4.7 II. Religiously conceived that is when men are poore in spirit Matt. 5.3.4 and broken and contrite in heart Psalme 51.17 And these are they whom our Saviour principally speakes of and to And therefore if we desire to bee made partakers of the rest and comfort promised we must strive thus to labour and groane under the heavie burden of our sinnes Quest 6 What must wee doe to attaine unto this labour which hath a promise of rest and comfort First we must labour to know what our estate and condition is and not deceive our selves by false perswasions or destroy our soules by Answ 1 flattering presumptions Secondly wee must labour to condemne our Answ 2 sinnes and our selves for our sinnes 1 Cor. 11.29 Here I. Wee must be carefull not to extenuate our sinnes And II. Wee must urge the certaintie of destruction unto our selves for our sinnes except wee repent us of them 1 Cor. 6.9 Gal. 6.7 For if wee would but presse our consciences and cast our soules downe unto hell it would be a meanes to make us rise the sooner to comfort and spirituall consolation Answ 3 Thirdly wee must labour to be freed from the chaines of sinne wee must pray and cry incessantly untill the Lord heare and answer us Fourthly we must seeke for Christ and that Answ 4 earnestly for an unfained desire of him and a faithfull enquiry and search for him will make us mourne and lament untill we find him Here two things are implied namely I. Wee must seeke for Christ For First Wee are commanded to doe it Esa 55.6 And in many places Secondly the Lord promiseth that those who seeke him shall find him Ieremie 32.41 Thirdly the Lord and Christ complaine upon those who will not seeke him Reade Ierem. 2.13 and 32 33. Rom. 10.21 And therefore if wee desire either to please our God or to bring comfort unto our owne soules wee must seeke Christ II. Wee must seeke him seriously and earnestly wee must hunger and thirst after him Esay 55.1 Iohn 7.37 Because if with the Church wee seeke him in our beds we cannot find him Cantic 5. How many burdens are there because Christ Quest 7 here promiseth to ease those who doe groane under their burden and are overladen with it First there are temporall burdens namely Answ 1 I. Want which is either absolute when men simply are poore wanting many necessary things or respective when mens desires are not satisfied although they have food and raiment sufficient And II. An uncertainty of possessing keeping and enjoying what we have Many trouble themselves with this thought and care that all they possesse will bee like grasse upon the house top which quickly withers fades and dies and that it may be their land riches friends children and all will be taken away from them And III. The burthen of worldly cares and of labouring and toyling for the world of which Gregory speaketh and that not amisse That it is a rough yoke and a hard burden of servitude to bee under temporall things to seeke after earthly things to seeke to hold these fading things and to feare to lose or leave these transitory things Secondly there are corporall burthens namely of afflictions and hence when Judgements to Answ 2 come upon any country were spoken of by the Prophets they were called burthens as the burthen of Edom and Moab c. Answ 3 Thirdly there are legall burthens to wit the burthen of the ceremoniall Law for this St. Iames calleth a burthen which neither we nor our forefathers were able to beare Acts 15. Answ 4 Fourthly there are spirituall burthens and these are either I. For our separation from God or the absence of God from us Psalm 42.4 and 51.11.12 Or II. For sinne the cause of this separation And that either First for some sinne already committed this was Davids burthen Psalm 51. and 38.4 Or Secondly for the daily practise of sinne this is the burthen of all the faithfull who grieve daily for their daily transgressions whereby their Father is offended Or Thirdly for the remainders of sinne or the strength of internall concupiscence in the heart this was St. Pauls burthen Romans 7.23.24 Or Fourthly for some strong temptation which lyeth upon a man and which hee is not able to remove this likewise was the same Apostles burthen 2 Corinth 12.7 8 9. Where hee saith that there was given unto him a thorne in the flesh the Messenger of Sathan to buffet him for the which hee besought the Lord thrice that is often that it might depart from him And yet hee did not by his prayer remove the burthen but onely obtained the grace of God supporting him under it the Lord onely assuring him that his grace was sufficient for him Or Fiftly for an impotency and inability to resist the assaults of Sathan and this is the burthen of those who are taken captive of the Divell at his will 2 Timoth. 2.26 and who cannot cease to sinne 2 Peter 2.14 and this burthen lieth upon the backes of many and although it bee a very heavy and greevous burthen in it selfe yet they feele it not Quest 8 How must wee beare the burthen of our sinnes Answ Not joyfully or contentedly but with teares and sorrow and griefe of heart Hereunto two things are required to wit First we must know our molestations and causes of griefe and that either I. Temporall which we may see in one kinde or another in our selves or others Or II. Spirituall which are thus to be discerned and knowne viz. First from the Law we may know what displeaseth and offendeth the Lord. And Secondly from our owne consciences wee may know wherein wee are guilty Then Secondly we must humble our selves And that I. That we live in
so wicked a world wherein we are strangers from all true happinesse Corinth 5.1.8 And II. That we are thus prone and subject to sinne and to transgresse the Lords will Some may here Object this mourning Object weeping and griefe for the burthen of our sinnes is perillous hurtfull yea and leads unto desperation It is not so but rather contrary Answ For First it is necessary because we have sinned against an infinite God and for our transgressions have deserved infinite torments which wee shall certainly undergoe except we repent and turne from our sinnes now sinne hath taken such strong and deepe roote in our hearts that it cannot without labour that unto wearinesse be expelled and overcome Secondly it is safe and secure for a man thus to mourne and humble himselfe because God hath promised that hee will not breake a bruised reed Esa 42.3 And Christ hath invited such to come unto him with a promise of mercy Come unto mee all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will refresh you What must wee labour principally for Quest 9 In regard of our selves we must labour for salvation Answer How must we seeke for salvation Quest 10 First we must deny our selves and all merit of Answ 1 ours confessing with the Publicane that wee are unprofitable servants Luke 18.13 Phil. 3.9 yea that we are but unprofitable servants in our best service Luke 17.10 Wee must not finde any comfort in any thing we doe as it is ours but seeke rest and consolation in some other Secondly we must seeke for this comfort Answ 2 in Christ alone as Cornelius did Acts 10.2 Thirdly we must weary our selves in this labour Answ 3 and enquiry and that alwayes Must we not rest and be quiet after wee are Quest 11 come unto Christ or when we are ingrafted into him Indeed if once we were truly made partakers of Christ by faith Answ then our worke should bee changed although not taken away for as hee who buyes a Mannour doth not feare to loose it but yet hath a greater care to adorne build hedge wall plant and beautifie it then hee had before because it is his So those who are brought truely to Christ although they feare not finally to loose him yet they are frequently carefull to live and walke as becomes members of Christ and to adorne that profession which they have undertaken by labouring daily more and more to put off the old man with the deceitfull works thereof and to cloth themselves with that new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Ephes 4.22 23 24. § 5. Ego I. Sect. 5 We may learne hence Observ that Christ gives the onely true comfort Psalm 50.16 Prov. 9.5 And therefore we are commanded only to heare him Deuter. 18. All power was given to him Esa 9.6 7. Iohn 3.35 and 17.2 Colos 2.3 Ephes 1.21 c. yea hee was ordained given and sent for this end viz. to comfort those who mourne in Sion Esa 61.1 c. And therefore all things are to be gathered together in Christ Ephes 1.10 There being salvation in no other but in him alone Acts 4.12 Quest Who may receive and reape comfort from this doctrine Answ 1 First those who are pressed depressed and oppressed in the world for Christs sake Iohn 16.33 Answ 2 Secondly those also who are not onely oppressed in their estates but likewise persecuted in their bodies for Christ Certainly both these shal bee refreshed Psalm 69.7 Rom. 8.37 Heb. 11.35 c. Answ 3 Thirdly those who desire and long to learne the way of salvation Acts 2.37 and 10.33 Crying out Men and bretheren what shall wee doe to be saved Certainly great joy doth belong unto these and doth attend upon them Acts 8.8.39 and 13.48 Answ 4 Fourthly those may reape comfort from hence who are oppressed and burthened with the fight and conscience of their sinnes who see I. Their sinnes to be greevous And II. Gods anger to be great But III. See not the pardon of their sinnes neither how to flee from sinne or the wrath to come For First we sinne boldly yea with greedinesse Ephes 4.19 Like Ahab who sold himselfe to work wickednesse 1 King 21.25 And yet feare nothing But Secondly at length sinne appeares As evill juyce or moysture or sickly humours lurke long in the body and are not perceived untill they come into the ventricle but then being once there there is nothing but sicknesse and vomiting and a desire and a forcing or straining to eject it and expell it out of the body like a Drunkard when he hath overcharged his stomacke never leaves untill hee have discharged it Or as Theeves or Murtherers beeing once apprehended and convicted are dejected and mourne and despaire of mercy So sinne when it appeares in his true lively colours to the conscience workes in the sinner a horrible and fearfull expectation of wrath and punishment Heb. 10.27 As we see in Cain Genes 4.7 And that sinner Luke 7.38 c. Then Thirdly if the conscience being thus fearefully amazed by reason of the sight of sinnes committed a man should teach the sinner a way how to escape wrath and to enjoy mercy would hee not then embrace it If the Prince should promise to a Thiefe Murtherer or Traytor yea sweare unto him that he shall not perish would hee not flee unto him and cleave close unto him least the avengers of blood or the justice and rigour of the Law should attache and apprehend him Certes those Cities of refuge were Types of Christ who brings this comfort unto all his and all those who come unto him that I. There is no condemnation unto such Romans 8.1 And II. That not one of them shall be excluded or debarred out of heaven For of al those who were given unto him not one was lost And III. That Nullum tempus occurrit Deo at what time soever they turne unto him and come unto him let their burthen bee what it will they shall find ease and peace Ezech. 18.21 Acts 17.30 And hence David runnes and confesseth his sinne Psalm 32.5 and Paul 1 Timoth. 1.13 And they finde mercy though their sinnes were great It is a poore satisfaction for a Subject when he hath offended his Soveraigne to say Paenitet I am sorry for it and I repent me of what I have done And yet Christ requires no more but this in truth And therefore great joy awaits those who are truely sorrowfull in soul and oppressed with the sight sence of their sinnes For Christ here promiseth to give them rest and joy Fiftly they in like manner may hence be comforted Answ 5 who are sensible of and sorrowfull for the insultings of lust and heate of internall concupiscence as was Paul 7.5 15 19 23. For I. We beginne ordinarily to correct somethings in our outward life although but slowly and that onely in more grosse sinnes and yet wee thinke it no small matter we have done II. But
morbidum a diseased body a man sicke of a palsie cannot walke or worke but onely lies in bed now it were a great comfort and refreshing for him to be inabled to rise and to walke into the fresh aire Thus when wee are not able to walke in the wayes of God or to worke his work when the good which wee would doe wee cannot Rom. 7.15.19 Then God wil give us power to runne the race of his Commandements and to worke his worke and to obey his will in some measure Esay 58.13 yea them will our Christ refresh us by giving us that anointing which is holy and by which wee may be able to doe all things 1 Iohn 2.20 Thirdly Corpus lassum a weary body principally tired with the troubles and molestations of this life Esa 28.12 Whether it be I. For those things which wee love and enjoy As Bucer s thinkes Or II. For those things which wanting wee seeke for Or III. For the labours which wee undergoe and endure in our particular callings Quest 2 It may here be demanded whether temporall labours shall be refreshed Answ 1 First there is a labour which is disallowed and disliked They labour in the wind Therefore this shall not be crowned or rewarded with the promised Rest Answ 2 Secondly but those who are sensible of their labour and burthen shall be refreshed that is not by supplying and satisfying of their thirst but by taking it away He who thinkes to take away the drought of a man sicke of a Dropsie by giving him as much drinke as hee desires will sooner kill him then cure him and therefore to such drink is not to be given according to the appetite of the sicke party but the desire of drinke is to bee abated and taken away So the Lord will not satisfie the desires of his children in temporall things but moderate their love and desire unto them Certainly Alexander Eccles 2. Craesus Xerxes Caesar and Solomon were never quiet so long as they sought for content in temporall things And therefore those that labour in the love of them or for them are to be refreshed by abating not by satisfying of that love and desire Fourthly Corpus sitiens a thirsty body or a body wanting the peace of Christ Iohn 16.33 Colos 3.15 Philip. 4.17 Now these Christ will refresh by giving unto them that peace of conscience which passeth all understanding Reade Iohn 7.37 and 2 Tim. 1.16 and joy unspeakeable and glorious 1 Peter 1.8 This is like that Iem which to procure and purchase wee should sell all wee have Matth. 13.44 46. Quest 3 Who are they that shall not bee refreshed by Christ Answ 1 First those who being drunke by with a perswasion of their owne righteousnesse and merits dreame that they can satisfie the law of God and that they doe not lye under the burthen of the Law or of sinne Answ 2 Secondly Epicures who neither care for sin nor feare the wrath of God but securely contemne and despise both Ephes 4.19 The Apostle cals these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men who are past feeling Answ 3 Thirdly those who are so buried and overwhelmed with the pleasures delights and allurements of the world that they doe not see nor acknowledge their misery and miserable estate wherein they are by reason of their sinnes committed against God and of Gods judgements which hang over their heads for their sinnes neither once seriously thinke either of spirituall grace or eternall glory Fourthly those who being humbled and Answ 4 brought to the gates of hell through a sight of their sinnes and a sense of the wrath and anger of God for their sinnes will not come unto Christ but despaire of mercy as Cain and Iudas did Now all these are excluded from this promise of rest and therefore all they who desire to bee made partakers thereof must take heed that they be neither proud Pharisees nor prophane Epicures nor blind worldlings nor contemptuous despairers of mercy i Chem. harm pag. 742. cap. 56. VERS 29.30 Take my yoke upon you Vers 29.30 and learne of me for I am meeke and lowly in heart and yee shall find rest unto your soules For my yoke is easie and my burden is light § 1. Take my yoke upon you Christ cals all to come unto him and promiseth Sect. 1 that hee will refresh those who come But lest wee should thinke that hee requires no conditions on our part hee now addes that the yoke is to be taken upon us and that we must be taught of him For as hee shewes himselfe to be unto us a Governour and a Doctor so hee requires that wee should be 1. Subjects 2. Disciples First wee must be subjects and take our Saviours yoke upon us The phrase is borrowed from the wood of oxen or which is worne by them when they plow and it signifies rule and government absolutely binding governing and restraining As if our Saviour would say think not with your selves that you are called unto liberty or unto an Anarchy but unto my obedience and service To teach us That it behoves all those who hope in Christ Observ to submit themselves to his rule and government Deut. 10.12 and 13.4 and Ierem. 5.5 and 28.13 Lament 3.27 and 1 Pet. 2.16 Why must all who hope for rest from Christ Quest 1 submit themselves unto his service First because we were redeemed by him for Answ 1 this end that we might serve him in righteousnesse and true holinesse Luke 1 74 75. Titus 2.14 and 2 Corinth 5.15 and Heb. 9.14 and 1 Peter 2.24 Secondly because this is the scope of our profession Answ 2 to serve Christ 1 Thessal 1.9 Rom 6.18.22 and 8.14 Hence comes obedience to be the fruit of faith Heb. 11.7 c. because faith subjects the heart unto Christ Gal. 2.20 and 2 Cor. 10.5 Thirdly because this is the end of all preaching Answ 3 that people might obey Christ Rom. 1.5 and 16.26 and 1 Pet. 4.6 and 2 Cor. 10.4 c. Fourthly because this was the end of the promises Answ 4 of blessings Many gracious promises are are made in the word and all for this end that people might be more stirred up thereby unto obedience Exod. 23.23 25. Deuter. 11.13 Levit. 26 Deuter. 28. Quest 3 How manifold is the yoke of Christ Answ 1 Two-fold namely First of Discipline and correction for the Lord chastens every sonne whom hee receives Heb. 12.8 Secondly of Doctrine or obedience Now true Religion doth bind us to the obedience of those things which are to bee done and which are to be beleeved For I. It obligeth the consciences of men so that they dare not sinne or disobey God Hence the feare and service of God are sometimes conjoyned together Deut. 10.12 And therefore the phrase of Serving is evilly understood for some sort of worship or for voluntary obedience according as we list and when we list but wee owe unto God the debt of obedience and therefore there
Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this world neither in the world to come Sect. 1 § 1. But the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven Quest 1 Concerning blasphemy against the blessed Spirit divers Questions will be made to wit What is the sinne against the Holy Ghost Answ 1 First some of the Ancients call it finall impenitency some hatred of all Christian and brotherly love and some desperation of mercy But these are improperly called blasphemy Answ 2 Secondly that sinne whereby the essence and person of the Holy Spirit is hurt or blasphemed certainly is not this irremissible sin and blasphemy for many Sabellians Eunomians and Macedonians Heretickes at first spake wickedly of the holy Spirit and denied his Deity but afterwards repenting found mercy and obtained remission of sinnes Answ 3 Thirdly neither is this unpardonable blasphemy a simple Apostacy from a knowne truth because hope of pardon is not denied to these Apostates neither is the gate of mercy eternally shut against them if they wil but repent This appeares from our Saviours prayers Father lay not this sinne to their charge and yet these for whom he prayes had called him Devill had said he had an uncleane spirit although they were convinced of his Doctrine and divine workes I argue hence thus Those who commit unpardonable blasphemy against the Holy Ghost are not to be prayed for But Christ prayed for those who spake evill of him and his Doctrine and workes against their consciences Therefore these had not committed that unpardonable sinne and consequently might have obtained mercy if they had but repented Answ 4 Fourthly Augustine serm 11. de verbis Apost saith it is Impugnatio finalis agnitae veritatis a finall opposing or resisting of a knowne truth Our Divines more largely and clearely define it thus Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is an universall apostacy and totall relapse inseparably conjoyned with an hatred of the truth Or thus it is a deniall and opposition of a knowne truth concerning God and his will and workes of which truth the conscience is convicted and which denying and impugning thereof is done of set purpose and with deliberation We have an example hereof in the Emperor Iulian who was a learned and an eloquent man and a professour of the Religion of Christ but afterwards fell away and turned Apostate and hence is called Iulian the Apostate and wrote a Book against the Religion of Christ which was answered by Cyrill Afterwards being in a battle against the Persians hee was thrust into the bowels with a dart no man then knew how which dart he pulled out with his owne hands and presently blood followed which hee tooke in his hand as it gushed forth and flung up into the Ayre saying Vicisti Gallilae vicisti O Galilean meaning Christ thou hast now conquered me and so ended his dayes in blaspheming of Christ whom he once professed w Theod. lib. 3. hist Ca. 25. Why is this unpardonable blasphemy called Quest 2 the sin against the Holy Ghost First not because the Holy Spirit may bee offended Answ 1 and the sinne not reflect upon the Father and Sonne for he who sinnes against the third person sinnes also against the first and second from whom he proceeds Secondly it is the sinne against the Holy Ghost Answ 2 because the manifestation of spirituall and supernaturall truth is a divine worke which worke is immediately wrought by the Holy Spirit and therefore although they who wittingly and willingly oppose this truth sinne against all the persons of the blessed Trinity yet after a more singular manner they sinne against the Holy Ghost because they blaspheme his proper and immediate worke in their minds and maliciously impugne and resist his proper grace and power Thus I say it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost because it is against the operations of the Spirit which are three namely I. To enlighten the Minds with the light of the Gospell and hence it is called the Spirit of Revelation Ephes 1.17 II. To perswade the Mind to receive and embrace those truths which are revealed by the Gospell Heb. 6. for this is to receive the knowledge of the truth III. To worke in a man a certaine perswasion of the goodnesse of those things which he beleeves and this is to taste the good word of God And therefore the sinne against the Holy Ghost is a contumellous and reproachfull rejecting of the Gospel after that a mans mind by the blessed Spirit is supernaturally perswaded of the truth and goodnesse of this word and will of God laid downe in the Gospel Quest 3 Why is this sinne against the Holy Ghost called unpardonable or a sinne which cannot bee forgiven Answ 1 First not because it exceeds in greatnesse blasphemy against the Father and the Sonne Answ 2 Secondly nor because the Father and the Son are lesse then the Holy Ghost For all the three Persons are coeternall and coequall Answ 3 Thirdly neither because the greatnesse thereof exceeds either Gods mercy or Christs merit For both are infinite the mercy of God is above all his workes and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or price laid downe by our Saviour is of infinite value and Answ 4 worth Neither Fourthly it is called unpardonable because it is more difficultly pardoned then other sinnes are For every sinne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a breach of Gods Law and therefore he can pardon if he pleaseth the greatest as well as the least Nor Answ 5 Fifthly because it is an inexcusable sinne for in many other sinnes men are altogether left without excuse which yet are frequently pardoned upon their repentance Answ 6 Sixthly but it is called a sinne which cannot be forgiven because simply all remission is denied unto it neither did any man ever obtaine pardon that committed it nor ever shall And that for these reasons to wit I. Because such are punished by God with such a finall blindnesse of mind and hardnesse of heart that they can never returne either to themselves or unto God by true and unfained repentance and therefore being excluded and debarred of repentance they must necessarily be denied remission because no penitencie no pardon Hence Saint Iohn forbids us to pray for such an one because it is impossible for such to be renewed by repentance Heb 6.5 II. Because such reject the only meanes of salvation as the sicke man who will not be cured For as that disease is incurable which doth so take away or destroy the power of nature that neither the retentive nor concoctive facultie can doe their duties So there is no cure for him who rejects the balme of Gilead no water to wash away his sin who tramples under his feet the blood of the Covenant and despiseth that all healing Iordan Heb. 6.4 and 10.20 and Act. 4.12 and cleare-purging and white-washing Fountaine no sacrifices to take away his transgressions who crucifieth unto himselfe the Lord of glory
and despiseth that inestimable sacrifice offered up by him yea there is no name for him to bee saved by who blasphemes the name of the onely Mediator and Redeemer Iesus Christ our Lord. III. Because God in his justice will not suffer that his holy Spirit which is the Spirit of truth should be taxed with lying and falshood which is the direct sin of those who commit this unpardonable offence IV. This sinne is called irremissible because it so casts them into the power of Sathan that they can never returne from that captivity and bondage For as the Saints and faithfull have the testimony of the Spirit which assures them that they belong unto God not unto Sathan So these blasphemous Apostates have a certaine testimony of their owne hearts and consciences that the Devill holds them and will hold them unto the end Now that testimony given unto the Saints may bee called the seale of the Spirit and this given unto these blasphemers the signe or Character of Sathan How many things concurre to the making Quest 4 up of this sinne against the Holy Ghost or how many things are required in him who commits it First three things concurre to the making up Answ 1 of this sinne namely I. Abnegatio veritatis a deniall of the truth against knowledge and conscience II. Apostasia universalis an universall apostacy and falling away from Christ and not some particular sinne committed against the first or second table of the Law III. Rebellio a rebellion arising from the hatred of the truth conjoyned with a tyrannicall sophisticall and hypocriticall opposing thereof both in the doctrine and profession thereof Hence it appeares Secondly that in him who commits this sin Answ 2 unto death it is necessary there should be these foure things to wit I. Hee must have a knowledge of that truth● which hee opposeth Hence every sinne though never so great committed of ignorance is excluded yea although it arise from a certaine malice against the Sonne of man himselfe as did that sinne of Pauls in persecuting his members For blasphemy against the Holy Ghost cannot be forgiven but that great sinne arising from an ignorance of the truth committed against the Sonne of man was pardoned 1 Tim. 1.13 II. It is necessary that this knowledge of the truth doe not onely swim in the braine but so sinke into the heart that there be a full and deliberate assent to the truth And hence all sinnes are excluded which are not committed and acted of set purpose and out of deliberation against the knowne and acknowledged truth For blasphemy shall never be forgiven but sinnes suddenly fallen into may be pardoned as wee see by Davids transgressions Psalme 32.5 c. and 51. III. It is requisite that this knowledge which is opposed bee not acquired by study meerely or by strong and undeniable arguments or principles but by a supernaturall perswasion of the Holy Spirit Hence then all sinnes are excluded which may be in a Gentile or any man simply Atheisticall as the obduration of Pharaoh the presumption of Manasses and the finall impenitencie of the wicked For the sinne against the Holy Ghost presupposeth the operation of the Holy Ghost in the heart and therefore cannot be pardoned but there may be obduration presumption gloriation in sinne yea finall impenitencie in those who never were made partakers of any such grace or light or knowledge or operation of the Spirit and therefore if any such would but repent as Manasses did they should be pardoned as he was IV. It is necessary that this perswasion bee not only of the truth of the word but of the goodnesse thereof also when wee perswade our selves that the Gospel is true yea that it is good in it selfe and so good that happy shall we be if wee receive and obey it but miserable if we reject and sleight it Hence the sinnes of hypocrites and all formall Professors who have onely some knowledge of the truth and make only some out-side shew of Religion but are not affected with the goodnesse and sweetnesse thereof are excluded from blasphemy which never can be forgiven for those may repent and find mercy but this blasphemer cannot Quest 5 How many things are included in this sinne against the Holy Spirit Answ 1 First it includes not onely a contempt and neglect of the Gospel but also a rejecting thereof yea Answ 2 Secondly it containes a contumelious and reproachfull rejecting of the Gospel which is called the trampling of the Sonne of man and the blood of the Covenant under feet as an impure thing Now under this particular are comprehended malice hatred blasphemy and persecution and hence these Apostats are called Adversaries Heb. 10.27 From blasphemy then by this particular are excluded all back-sliding and denying of Christ and sinnes of presumption which arise either from infirmity or passion For Peters denying of his Master may be called properly Apostacie but not properly blasphemy because it proceeded from weakness not from malice Answ 3 Thirdly it includes a contumelious rejection of the Gospel against knowledge Hebr. 10.26 whereby are excluded sinnes of malice which spring from ignorance as Pauls did Answ 4 Fourthly it comprehends a contumelious rejection of the Gospel against conscience which Paul cals voluntariè to sinne willingly And hereby are excluded sinnes arising from carelesnesse or presumption or a perswasion of impunity or from a sleepie conscience as the sinnes of Manasses did Answ 5 Fiftly it includes a voluntary contradiction and opposition of the internall and supernaturall worke of the Spirit Heb. 10.23 for this is to reproach the blessed Spirit and the grace of the same Quest 6 How doth the greatnesse of this sinne of blasphemy appeare Answ It appeares by a serious consideration and view of the nature thereof Here then observe First of all other sinnes this harmes nature most because none casts men so farre from pardon as this doth which utterly takes away repentance the only way unto salvation As that is reckoned the greatest sicknesse which doth not only deprive a man of health but also debars and shuts the doore against all meanes unto health Secondly of all other sinnes this is the most grievous by reason of the hurt it doth and of all other the most abominable by reason of the defect of excuse For it takes away all excuse from men and makes them inexcusable They cannot excuse themselves by ignorance because their sinne was against knowledge nor by infirmitie and weaknesse because their consciences will tell them that they sinned out of obstinate and wilfull malice And therefore these mitigations and extenuations of ignorance and weaknesse being taken from them which other great sinners may plead their judgement certainely shall be the more grievous and insupportable Thirdly of all other sinnes this harmes the will and mind most for it makes a man unable to worke the workes of uprightnesse and holinesse That sicknesse is the most dangerous which doth so infect and corrupt
to prove that by the world to come is meant the time betwixt death and the day of judgement but alwaies either for the last day or the eternity which is after that day Luke 20.35 And thus Augustine de Civit. Dei lib. 21. cap. 24. by the world to come in this place understands the day of the Resurrection And Damascene also de orthod fid lib. 2. cap. 1. saith Aeterna vita aeternum supplicium futurum seculum ostendunt And thus This world is taken for the distance of time to the end of the world and The world to come for that eternity which shall begin after Christs second comming And according hereunto there shall be two times in which sins are pronounced remitted to wit this world by the preaching of the Gospel to the repentant and that to come when Christ shall confesse with his own mouth before Gods Angels to whom they are remitted and by which remission they are made truly blessed for that remission to come shall be a confirmation of this present and those which are not remitted here neither shall there be so pronounced Wherfore from this speech of our Saviours this Argument is gathered from the Antithesis If the sin against the holy Ghost be neither remitted in this world nor in the world to come then other sins are remitted both in this and the other or at least either in this or in the other But it is not remitted in the other because it is not remitted in this as hath been said It followeth therefore that other sins are remitted both in this and in the other Now in this sense this place doth not onely not make for Purgatory but also repugneth it For these two remissions in this world and the world to come are conjoyned and one is not separated from the other Chrysostome expounding this place together with this partition of time saith thus Amongst men I. Some shall be punished for their sins both here and there as the Sodomites II. Some onely in this life present as the Corinthian fornicator III. Some onely in the life to come as the rich glutton IV. Some in neither as the Prophets and Apostles And from this partition he infers that the meaning of our Saviour is That the sin against the holy Ghost is so grievous and horrible that they which commit it shall feel the judgement of Gods wrath both here and in the world to come which hapneth not to all who commit other sins Certainly they which with a set purpose deny the known truth against their consciences feel a hell of torments in their consciences in this life at some time or other if not alwaies and in the life to come their pains shall be exquisite and unspeakable in the most rigorous manner And therefore from this place nothing can be gathered for their Plutonicall rather than Platonicall Purgatory Answ 4 Fourthly it follows not the sin against the holy Ghost shall not be remitted in the next world therefore other sins shall no more than this followeth which Christ saith I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine untill I drink it with you in my Fathers kingdom Mat. 26.29 That therefore he did drink of other things because he did not drink of the vine For it is a most foolish absurdity from two Negations to infer an Affirmation as for example Saint Peter neither in this life nor in the life to come shall be made an Angell therfore some Saints in the life to come shall be made Angels Now Bellarmine would justifie this Argument by that example where Christ saith My kingdom is not of this world And Pilate inferreth thereupon Art thou a King then where an Affirmation is concluded out of the Negative To this Doctor Willet Synops f. 405. answers That the reason is not alike except Bellarmine will reason as Pilate did Thy kingdom is not of this world Therfore thou hast a kingdom So Blasphemy shall not be forgiven in the next world Therefore there shall be Blasphemy then Thus he might have concluded truly and thus he should have concluded if he would reason as Pilate doth for in hell there shall be Blasphemy Answ 5 Fiftly it follows not some sins shall be forgiven in the other world therefore in Purgatory For many have thought that sins shall be forgiven after this life and yet not in Purgatory neither Thus Origen imagined that after some long and grievous torments both the sins of the devils and of wicked men should be remitted And the Chiliasts thought that after a thousand years from the day of judgement all should be pardoned yea Augustine lib. 6. contr● Iul. cap. 5. thought that in the day of judgement some sins should be forgiven And therefore Purgatory is not necessarily concluded from the remission of sins after this life Answ 6 Sixtly by this reason of Bellarmines it may be concluded that mortall sins shall be remitted in the world to come because Christ onely excepts the sin against the holy Ghost but this the Papists will not grant and therefore why should we grant the other Seventhly from a particular Negation contrary Answ 7 to all Rules of Logick they infer an universall Affirmation If the sin against the holy Ghost shall neither be remitted in this life nor in the life to come Then say they all the temporall punishments of all sins which are not here fully paid shall be paid and satisfied by the faithfull in the world to come The meaning whereof is temporall punishments are due unto the faithfull for their sins part of which punishment they suffer in this life and the remainder in the life to come The Argument is cast in the same mould with this Socrates or Solomon is no fool therfore all men are wise and he is a fool and not wise who admitteth of such Arguments Sadeel adver hum satisf object pag. 247. Eightly Bellarmine argues A subcontrariis and Answ 8 yet doth not observe the Law of Subcontrarieties from which the force of the conclusion should follow As for example I. Some sinne is not remitted Some sinne is remitted II. Some sinne is not remitted in this life Some sinne is remitted in this life III. Some sinne is neither remitted in this life nor in the life to come Some sinne is remitted both in this life and in the life to come Now these are contraries and concluded according to the Rules of Art But the Papists conclude thus Some sinne is neither remitted in this life nor in the life to come Therefore some sinne is not remitted in this life but in the life to come Where the errour is so plaine that a fresh man can tell that it doth not conclude aright For to a double negation should be opposed a double affirmation wheras they oppose onely one As if a man should argue or conclude thus Some neither love God in this life nor in the life to come Therefore Some shall love God in the life to come which
5 Fifthly they may be pricked and wounded in their consciences with a terrour of rheir sinnes Act. 24.25 Answ 6 Sixt. they may be sorry for them 1 Sa. 24.17 Answ 7 Seventhly they may doe many things that are commanded them as Herod did Marke 6 20. Answ 8 Eighthly they may desire to die the death of the righteous as Balaam did Numb 23.10 And all these onely for feare of judgement Whereas the godly confesse their sinnes and are stricken with remorse and sorrow for them because thereby they have offended a living God and gracious Father 2 Cor. 7.10 yea they endeavour not to doe some things but all which they are commanded Psalme 119.6 desiring the salvation of their soules for this end that thereby they may glorifie God Philip. 1.20 Quest 2 How or by what signes may an hypocriticall hearer be discerned or knowne Answ 1 First he is quicke-sighted abroad but blind at home he will endeavour to pull out another mans mote and yet sees not his owne beame Now on the contrary the sincere hearer thinkes himselfe with Paul to be the greatest of sinners and the least of the Apostles Answ 2 Secondly the hypocrite is full of himselfe and wants nothing and trusteth unto himselfe like Paul who was alive without the Law Now the intire hearer feares himselfe and doubts the deceit of his owne heart Answ 3 Thirdly the hypocrite is an unconstant man Omnium horarum homo Iames 1.8 But the righteous is constant or if by chance he be drawne unwillingly from his right course like the Adamant hee never rests untill hee come unto the North. Answ 4 Fourthly the hypocrite onely purgeth the out-side of the Platter Matth. 23.15 but the righteous man taketh his heart to taske and labours to cleanse that Ierem. 4.14 And therefore if wee desire to know whether we are formall or faithfull hearers let us examine I. Whether wee see more faults in others or in our selves II. Whether wee are full and abounding with all things or whether we be poore naked or miserable III. Whether we bee constant or unconstant in the practise of Religion IV. Whether we are carefull only to keep the outward man unblameable or the inward also Verse 8 VERS 8. But other seed fell into good ground and brought forth fruit some an hundred fold and some sixtie fold and some thirty fold Carthusian s pag. 118. saith that they are virgins who bring forth an hundred fold widdowes who bring forth sixtie fold and married people who bring forth thirty fold But hee confesseth that this is not generally true of persons but rather of the states of virginity widdow-hood and matrimony and therefore I will not meddle with his exposition especially because it is altogether unwarranted by Scripture and onely the fruit of a humane braine yea because if the Scripture doe compare one estate with another it is not in regard of the estate simply but of the times and seasons But principally I passe by the refutation of this exposition because it is fully answered by Masculus s fol. 363. b. initio c. And by Amesius Bellarm. enerv tom 2. pag. 161. Whether shal al the Saints have a like measure Quest and degree of glory in the kingdome of heaven or an unequall according to the measure of their fruits All shall not have an equall measure Answ and degree of glory and that first because God will crowne his owne workes and gifts in his children and that as they are in all but they are unequally in all as appeares by these places Matth. 5.18 and this verse and 25.4 Secondly the Scripture teacheth us that those who instruct others shall excell others in glory Daniel 12.3 And therefore all shall not bee glorious in one and the same measure Thirdly it is said that the Apostles shal have a singular degree of glory Matth. 19.28 And therefore some shall excell others in glory Fourthly in hell there are divers degrees of punishment Matthew 11.22 according to the quality of sinnes And therefore in heaven shall be divers degrees of glory according to the degree and measure of grace Fifthly it is said Revelat. 14.13 Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Now why doe their workes follow them Because they shall be judged and rewarded although not for their workes yet according to their workes Roman 2.2.6 And therefore as there are degrees of grace and divers measures of obedience so shall there be degrees of glory Sixthly in the world to come we shall be like unto the Angels Matth. 22.30 But there are degrees of Angels as shall be else where shewed Therefore also degrees of glory in the Saints Seventhly St. Paul testifieth his assurance of a peculiar Crowne which he knowes is laid up for him in Heaven 1 Thessal 2.18 By which is implyed that one degree of glory doth not abide all Eightly these and the like places teach and confirme this truth that there are degrees of glory in Heaven Matth. 20.27 and 1 Corinth 15.14 and 2 Corinth 9.6 c. Ninthly these degrees of glory shal be given not for our merits or the dignity of our persons or the worthinesse of our workes but of grace according to our duties obedience and sufferings which God will graciously reward Tenthly the glory of all the Saints in heaven shall be perfect in its degree for every vessel shall be filled to the brimme although some containe more then others There shal be no lacke of glory to any of the Saints but the glory of all shall be full according to their capacity yea all shall be perfectly contented with their portion and measure Vers 11 VERS 11. He answered and said unto them Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdome of Heaven but to them it is not given Sect. 1 § 1. To you it is given but not unto them Observ Our Saviour in these words doth teach us that he doth not reveale himselfe equally and alike unto all and the truth hereof appeares First from these places Iohn 14.19 c. Acts 10.41 Matth. 10.5 Luke 2.10 Matth. 17.1 and 26 37. Mark 13.3 Secondly from the divers ends and scopes which Christ hath in revealing of himselfe For I. His most generall scope is that the world might be left without excuse and that God might be justified in all his judgements Rom. 3.4 And hence a command is given to preach to all nations Matth. 28.19 yea to every creature Mark 16.15 And this command is obeyed Rom. 10.18 II. His more particular scope was to call the elect unto grace and salvation Iohn 17.6 Acts 2.47 and 13.48 Ephes 1.18 III. His most speciall scope was to fit and prepare for some private and particular work Thus more especially hee reveales himselfe to his Apostles in regard of that singular worke which hee cals them unto Sect. 2 § 2. To know the mysteries of the Kingdome of Heaven
eternall good things and not to conferre upon Peter and his successors wordly power and pomp Secondly our Saviour in this his commission Answ 2 given to the Apostles and Ministers of the Church speaks not of externall good things but of internall namely of the righteousnesse of the heart of the expiation of the mind and of the remission and pardon of sins which things are not subject to externall power as other corporal things are And therefore it is evident that no political authority or jurisdiction is here promised to Peter or the Pope Thirdly the power of the Keyes doth consist Answ 3 in the remitting and retaining of sins as Iohn 20.22.23 Whose sins ye remit they are remitted c. And therefore no Primacy or externall power is here meant Answ 4 Fourthly the Keyes ought not to be separated from the word and therefore seeing the Preaching of the word is common to all Ministers the Keyes cannot signifie an externall power or Primacie which belongs only unto one particular person Answ 5 Fifthly the Holy Spirit is the Rector and governour of the Keyes for Christ Iohn 20. being about to give them the charge of Preaching and the power of binding loosing doth first breath upon them saying therewith Receive ye the Holy Ghost and therefore no externall and personall Primacie can be here meant Answ 6 Sixthly the use of the Keyes ought not to crosse or contradict the Holy Scriptures but ought to be agreeable and in all things according to the Holy Scr●ptures but these ascribe full and absolute power of all things only unto Christ Matth. 28. All power is given to me c. Therefore by the Keyes Christ did not promise any such power to Peter or his Successours Answ 7 Seventhly the power of the Keyes is not absolute or boundlesse but limited and determined and therefore the use of them depends upon the will of him who delivered them and consequently except they be administred according to the will of Christ they are not effectuall but a heady presumption That is Christ neither gave to the Pope nor Peter nor unto any Apostle or Minister absolute power to excommunicate and bind over to Sathan or to remit and pardon whomsoever they will but they must onely bind impenitent and obstinate persons and loose only penitent and obedient or otherwise they shall be punished for abusing their office and power and transgressing their charge If the studious Reader would see this enlarged by many more Arguments let him reade Aret. probl de Clavibus fol. 25. b. 26. a. Quest 2 How or when do those to whom Christ hath committed the keys abuse their judiciary power which with the Keyes is given unto them Answ 1 First the Prelates and Clergie abuse this judiciary power when they usurpe this judiciary power over persons which are not subject to their jurisdiction as if the Church should endeavour to subject resisting and withstanding Heathens to their power and discipline contrary to the practise of S. Paul 1 Corinth 5.12 Or if one particular Church to wit the Church of Rome or France should excommunicate or assume power to cast another Church as of England out of the Communion of the Catholike Church for some errour as they conceive which it holds Indeed one Church may counsel and advise another but not exercise this judiciary power over any Church though in some things faulty which is not under her jurisdiction Answ 2 Secondly this judiciary power is abused by the Prelates when they judge those unjustly which belong unto their jurisdiction that is when they do not judge them according to equity and the Law of God but out of malice or ignorance pronounce those who are Orthodox to be Heterodox and punish them for Heretikes For it often happens that they which have lawfull power to judge use that power of judging unlawfully Thus the Scribes and Pharisees excommunicate all those who confesse Christ Iohn 9 22. So the Papists punish those who are amongst themselves for Heretikes and bring them into their bloody Inquisition if they be found to read and study the Scriptures and begin to acknowledge the truth of the Gospel Thirdly this judicary power is abused by the Answ 3 Clergy when they judge men truly and that for some errours in Religion but over and above impose those punishments upon those who are so condemned for Heretikes which doe not belong unto an Ecclesiastical Court to inflict as if a man being convicted of heresie and condemned for it they should presently endeavour to spoil him both of his life and goods Now this belongs to the Civil Magistrate to inflict these punishments and not unto the Sacerdotall power and therefore it is an abuse of their authoritie to goe any farther then judgement for the execution of the Lawes is to be left to the Civill Magistrate Bishop Davenant de Iudice controv pag. 90. Some Papists Object this place to prove that Object 1 the Pope may by his dispensation dissolve the Oath of Alleagiance Christ saith whatsoever thou loosest in Earth shall be loosed in Heaven Therfore the Pope hath power to dispense with all kind of vowes and Oathes First this text is not understood of every kind Answ 1 of loosing and binding as of Oathes and vowes but of the binding of sins to the impenitent and of loosing and releasing of sins as their own interlineary Glosse expoundeth and the Scripture warranteth Iohn 20.23 Secondly absolute power is not given of binding or loosing but according to Gods will as Answ 2 Lyra expounds it Supposito debito usu clavis c. The right use of the Key being supposed God approveth it in Heaven Now it is not Gods will that lawfull Oaths should be violated but faithfully kept Psalm 15.4 He that sweareth and changeth not shall dwell in Gods house Thirdly this power of binding and loosing is Answ 3 given to all Apostles and their successors Mat. 18.18 And so Hierome confesseth as hee is cited by the ordinary glosse And therefore if this exposition were true then every Priest might dissolve reverse and dispense with Oathes Fourthly whatsoever is said to St. Peter is not Answ 4 said to the Pope unlesse he would shew himselfe to be the true successor of St. Peter both in doctrine and place in the probation of both which he failes The Papists further produce this place to warrant Object 2 the Popes practise of dispensing of pardons and selling of Indulgences affirming that the power of granting Indulgences doth rest only in the Pope as the successor of Peter to whom Christ said whatsoever you loose in earth shall be loosed in Heaven They argue thus That which was given to Peter was given also to the Pope But from this place it appeares that unto Peter was given a full power of loosing sinners both from the fault and punishment Therefore this power is also given to the Pope Cajetan opuse tract 8. Answ 1 First for a full answer of this
Crosse in baptisme nor the Surplice in the reading of divine service nor the rest because they give offence and therefore in regard of the offence are unlawfull 1 Cor. 10.32 First the Apostle speaks not there of the rites Answ 1 customs or Ceremonies of the Church but of meat sacrificed to Idols And therefore that place is a stranger to the thing in hand Secondly Saint Paul forbids the eating of Answ 2 such meat when it is offensive and that for conscience sake that is not of him who eats but of the other 1 Cor. 10.28 29. Thirdly in these things these foure rules are Answ 3 to be observed whereof I. The first respects Christian liberty for all Rule 1 things are lawfull 1 Cor 6.12 and 10.23 II. The second respects Christian charity Rule 2 and offence for wee must do nothing which may offend our brethren for if the things wee do be offensive they are unlawfull as appears by these places 1 Cor. 8.13 and 10.32 Rom. 14 15. And I conceive that it is the scope of the Apostles doctrine 1 Cor. 8. and Rom. 14. But we must note here what scandall the Apostle speaks of whether First such an one as doth offend the mind of our brother Or Secondly such an one as labours to draw our brother to the participation of sin that is the Apostle did not so much forbid them the doing of that which might off nd the mind of their brother as the perswading of them to communicate partake with them in those things which they held unlawfull And this is the scandall which I rather think the Apostle speaks of in those places III. The third Rule respects Christian obedience Rule 3 towards the Magistrate and here the Law of giving offence is sile●t for if the Magistrate command mee to do a thing which is not evil in it selfe and my brother be offended with me for the doing of it or at the thing which by mee is done it is then Scandalum acceptum non datum an offence taken but not given IV. The fourth Rule respects divine obedience Rule 4 wee must doe nothing contrary to the revealed will of God though the Magistrate should command us Thus wee see First that it is lawfull for us to do those things which are indifferent in their own nature Secondly but if our brethren be offended with the doing of them and there is no necessitie of the doing of them nor command for the doing of them then we must forbeare the doing of them Thirdly but if the Magistrate shall command us to do them then we must do them although our brother be offended by them Fourthly but if the Magistrate shall command us to do that which is forbidden by God then wee must not do it though the Magistrate should be offended with us for our disobedience and refusall Now there is no question of the truth of all these Rules save only of the third and therefore wee will shew that the command of the Magistrate is more to be regarded then the offending of our brother that is if we cannot avoid it but that either wee must disobey the Magistrate or offend our brother we must rather offend our brother then disobey the Magistrate and this wee prove thus I. Because the Magistrate is more to be esteemed and therefore we must rather offend our brethren then them Wee do not inquire here whether offences be to be given or not for it cannot be avoided but that one must be offended and therefore the question is whether must rather be offended our weak brother or the Magistrate and wee conceive our brother II. To offend the Magistrate by disobeying his command is Scandalum datum an offence given to offend our brother by doing that which the Magistrate commands is Scandalum acceptum an offence taken Now as I confesse our brethren are to be regarded and not to bee offended it there were no command or necessitie enforcing thereunto so I imagine that wee must rather choose to fall into an offence taken by the weak brethren then into an offence given to the Magistrate because the one is our sin the other is not ours III. There will alwayes be some weak ones in the Church which will stumble at these adiaphorall things and therefore if these should be respected more then the Magistrate the Magistrate should never bee obeyed in these things at all That is if a man should omit the Ceremonies although the Magistrate enjoyne and command them untill all the people be informed concerning the lawfulnesse and indifferencie of them hee should then never use them at all because there will be still in the Church some who will stumble at them IV. When wee do those things which give offence we do them not for this end that others may be offended but that we may not offend Rom. 14.20 We desire not to disobey the Magistrate nor that others should be offended with our obedience of him V. Thus to offend our brethren namely by doing that which the Magistrate enjoyns is not the Offence which Saint Paul speaks of namely to lay a stumbling stone before them that they may fall Rom. 44 13. and so destroy our brother for whom Christ died verse 15.20 For the Apostle speaketh of eating meat offered unto Idols and hee saith that some eat it as a thing offered unto an Idol and their conscience being weak is defiled 1 Cor. 8 7. And if they see those who are strong eat such things in the Idols Temple their conscience is confirmed and enboldned to eat those things which are offred unto Idols verse 10. And so their consciences are wounded and killed verse 11 12. wherefore we must deny our selvs rather then thus cause the weak to stumble and fall verse 13. And thus wee see the large difference that is between our Ceremonies injoyned by the lawfull Magistrate and voluntary eating of meat offered unto Idols which the Apostle speaks of in the place objected VI. Those things which of themselvs and in their own nature are indifferent being once commanded are not indifferent by vertue of the fift Commandement which enjoyneth obedience to Magistrates in lawfull things Who give offence to their brethren and by Quest 2 giving of offence incur this Woe here denounced First those who do hurt unto their neighbours Answ 1 Matth. 13.41 42. Secondly those who offend the consciences of Answ 2 the weak as Mat. 18.6 Thirdly they are guilty of this woe who Answ 3 leade a wicked life for an evill conversation is scandalous and offensive Rom. 2.24 and 1 Peter 3.2 Why must wee be so carefull not to give offence Quest 3 First because those who are offensive unto the Answ 1 children of God are not to be tolerated in the Church of Christ 1 Cor. 10.32 And Secondly because such shall be punished Mat Answ 2 13.41 42. and in the present Text. And Thirdly because offences and scandals are Answ 3 contrary to thee whole scope of a
And it was the third houre when they crucified him St. Iohn 19.14 saith it was the preparation of the Passeover and about the sixt houre they delivered him to be crucified St. Luke 23.44 saith It was about the sixt houre and there was darknesse over all the Land Now the summe is this that Christ was crucified at the 3. and 6. houre the 3. houre being ended Sect. 5 and gone the sixt houre going but not ended § 5. He saith unto them goe ye also into my Vineyard Observ We see here that the Labourers stand all idle untill they be called to teach us that the beginning of all grace and goodnesse is from Gods call and not from our selves Whence it may be demanded Why doth God then blame any for disobedience and wickednesse Why doth he not call them Quest seeing he knowes that they can doe nothing without his call Answ There is a double call namely First a generall call by the word Proverb 1.24 and 8.1.3 c. and 9.3 c. Now every Christian is thus called therfore the fault is in themselves because they willingly sleight despise this call Secondly there is a particular call and that is when men are inwardly moved by the Spirit Now J perswade my selfe that there are none which live under the generall call of the word but they have also the particular call of the Spirit which moves them unto repentance and obedience Now this particular call is threefold viz. I. Unto the externall society of Christ and thus the Apostles were called to follow Christ Matthew 4.19 c. and 9. And II. Unto internall grace and this is twofold namely First generall from which a man may fall Mat. 20.16 and 22.14 Galath 5.13 And Secondly reall and effectuall Rom. 8.28 c. Cantic 2.10 and 5.2 4. And therefore it is not sufficient for us I. To be called generally by the word of God Or II. To be called generally by the Spirit of God for the stony ground heard with joy But wee must learne and labour First to be changed and to be made new creatures 2. Corinth 5.17 Gal. 6.15 And Secondly to be humbled by a lowly confession and acknowledgement yeelding our selves to be the Liege Seruants of God 1. Corinth 16.20 And Thirdly to deny our selves Mat. 16.24 And Fourthly to labour to bring every rebellious thought in obedience unto the Spirit 2. Corinth 10.4 And III. There is a particular call unto particular callings and functions and thus Bezaleel and Aholiab were called thus Saul and David were called and thus Ministers are called to the worke of the Ministery VERS 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16. And when even was come Vers 8 9 10 c. the M. of the Vineyard said unto his Steward call the Labourers and give them their hire beginning at the last till thou come to the first And they which were hired about the eleventh houre came and received every man a peny Now when the first came they supposed that they should receive more but they likewise received every man a peny And when they had received it they murmured against the master of the house saying these last have wrought but one houre and thou hast made them equall vnto vs which have borne the burden and heate of the day And he answered one of them saying Friend I doe thee no wrong didst thou not agree with me for a peny Take that which is thine owne and goe thy way I will give to this last as much as to thee Is it not lawfull for me to doe as I will with my owne Is thy eye evill because I am good So the last shall be first and the first last for many are called but few chosen Sect. 1 § 1. So when Even was come c. Bellarmine lib. 1. de Sanctorum beatitudine cap. 1. produceth this place to prove that the soules of the Saints doe not enjoy the beatificall vision and sight of God untill the Resurrection and he argues thus Object The Master of the family calls all the servants at night and gives them their hire Now by Night is understood the Resurrection as by the Penny is meant Life everlasting And therefore untill the Resurrection they doe not enjoy the Joyes of heaven or the presence of God Answ 1 First Chrysostome in hunc locum admonisheth us not to straine every particular of a Parable but onely to consider the scope of Christ in the propounding thereof Now the scope of our Saviour seemes to me to be threefold namely I. That all the elect shall be endued with life eternall at what houre soever they be called And II. To shew that the Fathers and Saints in the new Testament labour a shorter time then did they in the old that is the elect obtaine Heaven sooner in fewer yeares now under the Gospell then they did under the Law And III. To teach us that not alwayes they who are first called come first to Heaven for often they who are later called come sooner to their journeyes end Answ 2 Secondly suppose we should admit and grant that our Saviour speakes here of the last publike and generall Judgement yet this would not take away the particular Judgement in which there is given to every man as soone as he departs out of this life a part of his reward Sect. 2 § 2. Give them their hire Object 1 The Papists say That a man may truly satisfie the wrath of God for the punishment due unto sinne by his good workes and Bellarmine de poenit Lib. 4. Cap. 8. produceth this place for the proofe hereof arguing thus Jf good workes may merit or deserve eternall life then much more may they avert and turne away temporall punishments But the first is true from this place where the Kingdome of God is called wages or reward and 2. Timoth. 4.8 it is called the crowne of Iustice which God the just Iudge shall give where the Apostles intimates That t is a reward justly given to mens deserts Therefore good workes may much more redeeme temporall punishments Answ Wee utterly deny that heaven can be merited with good workes For First St. Paul having first said The wages of sinne is death addeth further but the gift of God is eternall life Rom. 6.23 Where he calleth it a gift and not wages Secondly it is called in this parable a reward or wages but not in respect of the workemans labour but of Gods covenant and promise For I. Jf it were by desert then he that laboured twelve houres had deserved more then he that wrought but one As St. Ambrose saith de vocat Gentium Lib. 1. Cap. 3. Hora undecima intromissos in vineam c. They which were sent into the Vineyard at the eleventh houre the divine indulgence made equall to the Labourers of he whole day not paying the wages of their labour but powring out the riches of his goodnesse c. that they which endured much labour and received no
verse Woe shall be to them that give sucke in those dayes which must needs be understood of the destruction of Ierusalem for at the comming of CHRIST there shall be one and the same case of all whether of those that give sucke or of those who give none Answ 2 Secondly it cannot be meant of the last tribulation in the world because the words are That as there was none such since the beginning of the world so there shall be none such after Therefore there shall be tribulation after though none such Sect. 2 § 2. And except those dayes should bee shortned none could be saved c. Object The Jesuites hold that Antichrist is not yet come neither shall come untill towards the end of the world and when he comes hee shall raigne but three yeares and a halfe and then the world must end Bellarm. de Rom. Pontif. lib. 3. cap. 4. Rhemist in Apoc. 11. § 2. 4. and they argue from this place thus The Lord saith here That unlesse those dayes that is of Antichrists persecution should be shortned and consequently the Persecution very short no flesh could bee saved but how can the time of Antichrists persecution be very short if it shall last above or about a thousand yeares Bellar. de Rom. Pontif. lib. 3. cap. 8. Rhemist in hunc locum § 6. First though Antichrist raigne above or about Answ 1 a thousand yeares yet is his raigne short in respect of the eternall Kingdome of CHRIST Secondly the whole time from Christs Ascension untill his comming againe is counted but Answ 2 short Revelat. 22.20 I come quickly and St. Peter saith That a thousand yeeres before God is as one day and a day as a thousand yeeres 2. Pet. 3.8 And therefore it followes not that if Antichrist shall raigne a thousand yeeres his raigne cannot be short Thirdly we are to distinguish betwixt the time of Antichrists continuance and the time of his Answ 3 hottest persecution which Bellarmine confoundeth the latter being much shorter then the former Fourthly our Saviour here saith That except Answ 4 those dayes to wit of tribulation were shortned none could be saved Now by Salvation here is either meant the salvation of the body or of the soule I. If we understand the salvation of the soule then the soules of the Elect and faithfull perish no more by persecution then by dissolution or mutation None could be saved saith CHRIST except those dayes of tribulation should be shortned that is saith the Romanist except God should put an end to that tribulation by putting an end to the world If then by salvation here be meant the salvation of the soule then in their sense which is absurd the meaning is this That except God put an end to the persecution of his children by putting an end to the world their soules could not be saved II. If by salvation here be meant the salvation of the body as is plaine from the phrase No flesh shall be saved then an end must be so put to their tribulation that they may live longer on earth being freed in their bodies from it for how are their bodies properly saved if God put an end to their persecution by putting an end to their lives or to the world and therefore if by salvation here be meant the safety and preservation of their bodies then of necessity the world must not then end when they are freed and delivered from their tribulation Fifthly the tribulation here spoken of is to be Answ understood of the calamity of the Jewes in the siege of Ierusalem which if it had continued any longer the nation of the Iewes had bene utterly destroyed See for the proofe of this the first answer of the former objection VERS 24. For their shall arise false Christs Vers 24 and false Prophets and shall shew great signes and wonders insomuch that if it were possible they shall deceive the very Elect. § 2. They shall shew great signes and wonders Sect. 1 If the Reader would see those many particulars wherein we and the Church of Rome differ concerning Miracles clearely treated upon and fully determined I referre him to that Reverend Prelate Bp. Mort. Appeale lib. 3. Cap. 17.18 19. where Romish Miracles are amply confuted both from this text of Scripture and others Sect. 2 § 2. Insomuch that if it were possible they shall deceive the very Elect. Our Saviour here doth intimate that it cannot be that the Elect should be seduced or perish Object If this be a true doctrine then many will give themselves over to impiety and security If the elect cannot perish or be seduced or mislead into any fundamentall errour then many will growe impious presumptuous and secure Answ Although many abuse this doctrine yet their abuse thereof doth not hurt the truth of it at all The divell abused Scripture but our Saviour would not for that leave the use of it yea we say with the Apostle if any call upon the name of the Lord he must depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2.19 That is if any hope to be saved by CHRIST or to come unto God they must abstaine from sinne and walke in that way which leads unto heaven Quest 1 Why cannot the Elect perish Answ 1 First because there is a seed of God and grace remaining in them 1 Iohn 3.9 And Answ 2 Secondly because the Lord upholdeth him with his hand Psal 37.24 and sustaineth him by his grace 2 Cor. 12.8 9. But those who turne the grace of God into wantonnesse are reserved by him unto judgement Iude 4. Vers 27 VERS 27. For as the lightning commeth out of the East and shineth even unto the West so shall also the comming of the Sonne of man be Object 1 There are divers differences betweene us and the Papists concerning CHRISTS comming to judgement one amongst the rest is about the place where he shall appeare which boldly they appoint to be in the East because our Saviour saith That his comming shall be as the lightning that shineth from East to West Bellarm. de cultu sanctor lib. 3. Cap. 3. Answ 1 First by this similitude CHRIST onely sheweth the suddennesse of his comming therfore it must be pressed no further then to that purpose for the which it serveth Answ 2 Secondly our Saviour saith plainely That the Kingdome of God commeth not with observation Luke 17.20 either of time or place And therefore when men say unto us Behold here or Behold there we ought not to beleeve them verse 23. As though they could point out CHRISTS comming with the finger either in the East or West If the Reader would see these answers confirmed by the expositions both of Fathers and moderne Interpreters I referre him to Dr. Willets synops pag. 1176. of the fifth edition Verse 28 VERS 28. For wheresoever the carkase is there will the Eagles be gathered together Quest What is the meaning of these words Answ 1 First Paracelsus for his weapon-salvessake thus wrests the
inst 4. 17. § 40. Here observe two things viz. First this state of grace in which we should be when we come to the Lords Table is diversely defined For I. The Papists say that it consists in Faith repentance and a confession of sinnes because it is necessary that he which comes to this holy Sacrament should confesse his sinnes to the Priest and be penitent for them and believe with a generall Faith the promises of the Gospell Concil Trid. II. We say that this state of grace in which we should labour to be doth consist in a hatred of all sinne in a resolution to leave all sinne and in a sure hope and confidence of mercy in and through CHRIST Secondly observe that Bellarmine here taxeth Calvin because he saith that men ought to come to the Lords Fable with a conscience of mortall sinne But we answer for Calvin thus That there is a double conscience of sinne I. A conscience accusing of some sinne which yet raignes in the heart without any confidence of remission that is when a mans conscience telleth him that the old leaven of sinne is not yet purged out but remaines and raignes in his mortall body neither hath any hope that the sinnes past are pardoned This is an evill conscience and it is dangerous for a man to come unto the Table of the Lord with such a conscience of sinne II. There is a blushing conscience for sinne which remaines within and presseth downe both in regard of the time present and by-past That is when a man blusheth and is ashamed both for his sinnes already committed and also for the reliques of sinne which remaine within him and strive and wrastle continually against him And this conscience of sinne Calvin requires in every one who approcheth unto the Supper of the Lord. II. Wee must examine our Faith and repentance by those markes and properties which were before shewed Quest 31. III. We must examine our desire of God and his holy Sacrament but of this we speake before in this same question answ 1. And thus much for our Preparation Who are to be held unworthy to partake of this Quest 35 Supper Or to whom is this Sacrament not to be given First it is not to be given to a Heathen or Answ 1 Gentile who is not baptized It is the Childrens bread and therefore must not be given to Dogs which are without the Church Secondly it is not to be given to those who are Answ 2 ignorant that is I. To those who are Infants aetate children in yeares And II. To those who are Jnfants eruditione et moribus children in manners and understanding for there are many babies of threescore yeares old who are as ignorant of the grounds and principles of Religion as children of three Both these sorts ought to be kept backe untill they be thorowly informed of the doctrine and nature of the Sacrament For Children and such ignorant ones as cannot discerne the Lords body are not to be admitted 1 Cor. 11.29 Answ 3 Thirdly this Sacrament is not to be communicated or given to notorious sinners whether I. Such as are justly excommunicated for giving some great and grievous scandall and offence unto the congregation wherein they live 1 Cor. 5.11 Or II. Those who publikely commit some haynous and enormious offences and repent them not of them for there are many such offenders who are not Excommunicated and yet because they are such offenders they are to be debarred from this sacred mystery Here observe that a signe is made enormious divers and sundry wayes viz. First Gravitate facti by the haynousnesse of the offence Thus Adultery drunkennesse murder swearing blasphemy treason and the like are enormious sinnes Secondly by a proud and obstinate defending of it as 1 Corinth 5.2 for the defending and maintaining of what is evill is a great aggravation of sinne and makes a little sinne a great one Thirdly sinne is made enormious by a negligent continuing therein And Fourthly by scandall and offence as 1 Corinthians 5.11 and 2 Samuel 12.14 Matthew 18.6 and 1. Corinthians 8.9 And therefore they who are given to grievous sinnes or who defend and justifie their sinnes or continue in their iniquities or give offence by their transgressions either to those within or without the Church are to be kept backe from the Sacrament untill they have shewed some repentance and amendment of life Fourthly this Sacrament is not to be given to a particular person as in private Masses because it is a Communion of Christians as was shewed before Quest 34 What doe they who are unworthy gaine by comming unto the Lords Supper Answ 1 First sometimes they gaine temporall punishment 1 Corinth 11.30 Answ 2 Secondly sometimes also eternall condemnation 1 Corinth 11.27 29. Quest 35 What is required in the administring or Minister of this Sacrament Answ 1 First he must administer true Elements and pure and good according to the institution 1 Corinthians 11.23 Answ 2 Secondly he must not separate the Elements that is give one and not another but administer to every Communicant both bread and wine Answ 3 Thirdly he must consecrate and blesse the Elements before he administer them and therefore if as it sometimes happens the wine faile which is first provided and a new supply of Wine is made by fetching more that is to be consecrated before it be administred 1 Corinth 10.16 Fourthly he must breake the bread Mark 14.22 Answ 4 Fifthly he must communicate it to a company Answ 5 and not to himselfe onely as in private Masses Is not preaching needfull and required in the Minister Quest 36 at the administration of this Sacrament First some answer here that it is not necessarily to Answ 1 the Sacrament required and they give two reasons for it namely I. Because it is not of the essence of the Sacrament neither is once mentioned in the Evangelists or in 1 Corinth 10. or 11. II. Because there is no commandement given any where to use it Secondly J answer that it is very usefull Answ 2 Ad bene esse and profitable for our preparation and instruction Thirdly there are many weighty causes why Answ 3 this Sacrament should be celebrated with Preaching or why preaching should be adjoyned to the administration thereof And that both I. That we may be instructed in the nature of the Sacrament and learne to discerne the Lords body and to make a difference betweene comming unto the Lords Table and our owne and of taking those Elements and our owne repast at home which too many doe not for want of instruction And II. That we might be admonished to prepare our selves to come unto the Lords Supper with reuerence And III. That by preaching our hearts might be the better excited both First for the expectation of the promises which are made in the Gospell to the worthy receiver And also Secondly for the performing of the Promises Articles and Covenants which we make unto God in the Sacrament And
declared to be the Sonne of God being glorified of his Father with that glory which he had before with him as Iohn 17.2 Answ 3 Thirdly but admit that Christ in these words All power is given unto me speaketh of his humanity what then must it needs follow that his humanity is omnipotent nothing lesse but that it hath as much power given to it as possibly can be given to or received of any creature for the humanity of Christ is the most potent of all creatures but not an omnipotent creature and for this cause our Saviour saith here Omnis that is in omnia potestas all power or a power over all not summa potestas a supreame or omnipotent power Fourthly the humanity of Christ is omnipotent not in it selfe but in the Word as the Word suffered not in it selfe but in the flesh Answ 4 The Papists say as Virgill saith of Caesar Argum. Divisum imperium cum Jove Caesar habet that Christ hath divided his Kingdome and power with the Virgin Mary Now against this we produce hence this short Argument Our blessed Saviour saith here All power is given to me in heaven and earth The power then and Kingdome is not divided with Mary but resteth wholly in Christ Some Romanists enlarge the jurisdiction of the Object 3 Pope so farre as is the wide world objecting this place to prove the Popes authority over the Heathens Christ saith Vnto me is given all power in heaven and earth therefore saith Careus lib. 2. de potestate Rom. pontif Cap. 9. the Pope hath authority over Infidels First all power was given to Christ therefore Answ 1 the Pope hath authority over the Gentiles is a grosse and absurd consequence Secondly all power was given to Christ therefore Answ 2 to the Pope also is a blasphemous and Antichristian consequence Thirdly Bellarmine answers hereunto Bell. Answ 3 lib. 5. de Rom. pontif Cap. 5. that this power belonging unto Christ is so great as that it is not communicable to any mortall man Fourthly Barclaius de potest Papae Cap. 3. such Answ 4 saith there is no Scripture which defendeth any universall jurisdiction of the Pope as this is Yea Fifthly Bellarmine saith lib. 5. de Rom. pontif Answ Cap. 2. initio there is Scripture to confute it for 1 Cor. 5. Chap. the Apostles saith What have wee to doe with them who are without meaning Infidels who saith he are not subject unto the judgement of the Pope nor unto the authority of the Church untill they be baptized VERS 19.20 Vers 19.20 Goe ye therefore and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and loe I am with you alway even unto the end of the world Amen § 1. Goe yee therefore Sect. 1 Jn these two verses the chiefe parts of the Apostles function are thus to be discerned As First their legacy which is immediately given them of God unto all nations and not restrained within any limits And Secondly the publication of that doctrine which they received of the Lord. And Thirdly the administration of those Sacraments which were instituted by God And Fourthly the protestation of that especiall aid which although generally it concerne the whole Church yet particularly it respecteth the Apostles themselves Dr. Saravia of Ministers pag. 11. § 2. And teach Sect. 2 Dr. Carier in his last letter which is answered by our Dr. Hakewell Object and which was written onely to derogate all he could from the Scripture and to cast the authority thereof upon the Church that is as he else where expresseth himselfe the Clergie of the Church of Rome doth lay downe this proposition That our Saviour commanded not his Apostles to write his Religion but to teach it as in this verse Ite praedicate Goe and teach Answ 1 First by this Argument he would inferre that the Apostles sinned in going beyond their commission For if he bid them to teach onely by word of mouth and they both teach by word and writing then they transgresse the Commandement of their Master and consequently sinne Now if Bellarmine and Canus were alive they would blush at the impudency of their Carier for this unheard of assertion Answ 2 Secondly Christ saith Goe and teach therefore they must not write followes not for a man may teach as well by his pen as by his tongue by writing as speaking Yea doctrine delivered by writing as it is conveyed more purely and certainly without mixture arising from humane frailty and corruption so it spreads farther and lasts longer and if it degenerate is more easily reformed That is worthy to be marked which St. Luke hath in the Preface of his Gospell to that noble Theophilus viz. that although he confesseth that he had beene instructed in the Doctrine of Religion yet he thought it meete to write unto him from point to point that hee might have the certainty of those things So that though he had indifferent good knowledge before yet writing the story was the meanes to beget certainty according to that of the Prophet David This shall be written for the generation to come Answ 3 Thirdly this impudent bold assertion will appeare to be such both I. By the Lords owne practise who wrote the Decalogue once and againe in Tables of Stone And II. By the Lords owne Precept he in expresse termes commanding his Servants the Prophets to doe the same Read Exod. 17.14 Esa 8.1 Ierem. 30.2 Ezech. 37.16 Habak 2.2 And III. By the necessity of writing for before the Law was written what universall Apostasies there were from the true worship of God the Floud is a sufficient testimony of and after the Law was lost though the Priest-hood continued what generall swarvings there were both of Prince and people as well in manners as religion appeares 2 Chron. 34. What forbids us then to thinke that our Saviour in commanding his Apostles to teach all Nations should not by vertue of that command as well give them in charge to publish their Doctrine by writing as to deliver it by word of mouth Read besides Revel 1.11.19 and Chap. 2. and 3. and there we shall see that Christ commands Iohn to write what he saw Sect. 3 § 3. All Nations Object 1 Some Papists object this place for the infallibility of their Church CHRIST saith Goe teach all Nations Therefore the Church is free from errour and the Doctrine thereof is in all things infallible Answ 1 First these words were spoken to the Apostles onely and not to that which the Jesuits call the Catholike Church Now we grant that their teaching was infallible and all men were bound to heare it for they taught that which afterwards they writ in the Scripture yet they so taught and with such commission that the people are commended which examined their teaching by the Scriptures Acts 17.11 Secondly we grant that the Pastors of
knowledge of God and the faith of Christ Answ What is Regenerated in those who are regenerated Quest 4 The whole man that is Answ as well the body as the soule but it begins in the mind and therefore the Apostle exhort us to labour to be renewed in the spirit of our minds Ephes 4.23 Rom. 12.2 Who Regenerates Quest 5 CHRIST as God by his Spirit Answ and hence the Apostle saith Yee are taught by Christ Ephes 4.21 and yee are created anew according to God vers 24. Unto whose examplar or according to whose Quest 6 patterne is Regeneration to be wrought According to the exemplar Answ and similitude of Christ For those who are regenerated must labour and endeavour to be like unto Christ 1. Iohn 3.3 Wherein doth Regeneration consist Quest 7 In the putting off the old man Answ and putting on the new Ephes 4.22 What are the parts of this new man which is Quest 8 to be put on True righteousnesse and holinesse Ephes 4.24 Answ Where and when is Regeneration to be Quest 9 wrought Answ In this world and that while wee live but it shall be perfected in Heaven Quest 10 For what ends doth God Regenerate us Answ 1 First that wee might serve him in righteousnesse and true holinesse Luke 1.74 75. And Answ 2 Secondly that wee might be saved at the last day Iohn 3. These eight last Questions I have onely briefely named because if the Reader would see them all enlarged let him read Zanch in Ephes Cap. 4. Page 327. 328. 329. 330. 331. Quest 11 By whom or by what meanes is Regeneration wrought Answ 1 First by the holy Spirit as the immediate cause Iohn 3.5 And therefore wee must not resist the holy Ghost nor greeve him nor quench his motions but waight carefully for his comming and attend diligently unto his cals and cry mightily unto the Lord to give his holy Spirit unto us Answ 2 Secondly Regeneration is wrought by the knowledge of Christ or by the word which is the instrument to beget the knowledge of Christ in us Ephes 4.21 Iames 1.18 And therefore two things are here required of us if we desire to be regenerate namely I. Wee must attend constantly to the preaching of the word because the mouth of the Minister is the conduite pipe by which the seed of the word and the life of grace is derived unto us II. Wee must hide the word in our hearts it is a seed now if the seed be hid in the earth it will spring vp it is a medicine and if it be taken downe it will heale it is a pure Fountaine and therefore if we delight our selves therein it will purge the word is a quickning word and is full of life and therefore if we be carefull to listen to the counsell and direction of the word and to embrace it and walke according thereunto it will be a meanes to animate and enliven us Quest 12 What are the fruits and effects of Regeneration Answ 1 First a striving strugling and wrastling against sinne for those who are regenerated will contend with and warre against sinne as their greatest and deadliest Enemy Now because naturall and unregenerate men often resist sinne it will be convenient to shew the difference betweene the striving of the Regenerate and Unregenerate man I. The first difference shewes it selfe in the very faculty resisting For First the naturall morall and unregenerate man doth not resist sinne with the Will but with the Conscience for the Will consents unto sinne and would sinne but the Conscience reclaimes him with-holds him from sinning and makes him that though he would willingly yet he dares not the Dog desires the meat which hee sees hang or lye by him and would gladly eat it but forbeares for feare because the whip hangs by and he knowes he shall be beaten if he doe Thus the Will of the wicked man runnes after sinne but the terrour and feare of punishment makes the Conscience withstand But Secondly the Regenerate man resists sinne with the Will as well as with the Conscience as he would not be punished so he would not sinne and he forbeares tasting of the forbidden fruit because it is hurtfull unto him and because he loves it not Malum quod volo Romans 7.19 Paul conceived sinne to be an evill and therefore with his will resisted it and those who are Regenerate assoone as they know a thing to be sinne so soone they hate it because it is sinne and not for feare of punishment This difference betweene the good and bad mans abstinence from sinne is so cleere that Horace by the light of nature could see it and thus lively expresse it Oderunt peccare maliformidine paenae Oderunt peccare boni virtutis amore And therefore if wee desire to know whether wee be Regenerated or not we must not so much enquire whether wee hate sinne or not Or whether wee resist it or not As wherefore whether for the feare of punishment or for the love of God and hatred of sinne as sinne though no punishment were allotted thereunto by God at all II. The next difference betweene the striving and strugling of the Regenerate and Unregenerate man against sinne shewes it selfe in the object of the Contention and strife For First the naturall and morall man for the most part at least if not alwayes strives and warrs onely against grosse and enormious sinnes and such as are obvious and odious unto men but for lesser sinnes which the world makes lesser matter of or which are unseene and unknowne unto men they care not to withstand or resist at all Wicked thoughts evill words jeasting which is not convenient and the like they never regard by which they shew plainly that they feare more to offend and displease man then God But Secondly the Regenerate man wrastles and warres against all sinnes whatsoever whether great or small whether externall or internall whether of omission or commission yea hee not onely strives against those evill things which are conspicuous to the eye of the World but also greeves for and strives against his faint endeavours and drousinesse in the performance of good workes yea against all evill workes Lascivious lookes and corrupt thoughts And therefore if wee desire to know whether wee be Regenerated or not let us examine whether wee beare an equall hatred unto all sinnes alike whether wee are equally watchfull against all sinnes alike and whether wee equally warre against all alike because they are sinne and seene and taken notice of by God and displeasing unto him III. The next difference betweene the striving of the Regenerate and Unregenerate man against sinne shewes it selfe in the consideration of those things which move unto this strife or in the thing striving The Apostle Paul saith The Flesh lusts against the Spirit and the Spirit lusts against the flesh Galath 5.17 Whence observe two things viz. First in the Regenerate man the Spirit lusts against the Flesh that is Spirituall
respects and considerations maketh him forbeare to offend He is tempted unto sinne and wrastles against it with manfull wrastlings because hee feares to offend his God yea because he loves his God and Res est solliciti plena timoris amor perfect love is full of feare yea for him to put forth his hand unto wickednesse were to crucifie unto himselfe againe the Lord of Glory and put him to an open shame and therefore hee resists sinne even unto blood In a word the love of CHRIST constraines him to strive against sinne And thus in him the Spirit lusts against the flesh Secondly in the Unregenerate man the flesh lusts against the flesh that is Naturall carnall and mundane respects and considerations cause him to abstaine from Sinne and to strive against it He is tempted often to Drunkennesse revenge Fornication deceiving by false weights and measures and the like and he resists and withstands these temptations and why For feare of the Judgements of GOD or the displeasing of some men or the staining of his reputation estimation and credit and the like carnall respects and thus in him the Flesh lusts against the flesh IV. The last difference betweene the striving of the Regenerate and the Vnregenerate man shewes it selfe in the meanes by which they resist For First the troubled Conscience onely of the Vnregenerate man resists and for the most part by little and little the Conscience growes sencelesse and hard and then hee sinnes without feeling Ephes 4.19 But Secondly the Regenerate resists Sinne by the word and grace of God and as his knowledge in the word increases and the grace of God is increased in him even so his strength and hatred against sinne increases And therefore if we would know whether we be Regenerated or not wee must examine whether we warre against sinne with Spirituall or Carnall weapons 2 Cor. 10.4 5. And thus much for the first answer and the first effect of Regeneration Answ 2 Secondly the next effect of Regeneration is a holy life and conversation For those who are in CHRIST will labour to purge themselves even as hee is Pure 1 Iohn 3. and that by Faith Act. 15.9 Here observe in the Regenerate foure things to wit I. Hee conceits of Sinne and lookes upon whatsoever is evill as a thing not belonging but as a stranger unto him he knowes sinne is not his worke and therefore he imployes not himselfe therein but as an enemy hates it and fights against it But II. Hee lookes upon that which is good as his owne proper worke which he is bound to obey and to performe and therefore according to St. Pauls advice Philip. 4.8 he labours after whatsoever is holy just pure and of good report because the Lords worke is his employment and the Lords wayes are his path and as the Lord by the effectuall vocation of his Spirit hath called him unto holinesse so he labours to walke in the wayes of holinesse and to worke the worke of the Lord. Hence III. When hee is not able to doe that good which he would and should as a Sicke man sometimes is not able to disgest his meat then is he sensible of his weaknesse and sorrowfull for it and apprehensive of the want of grace in his Soule as the body is for want of meat crying out and complaining of his impotencie and inability with St. Paul Rom. 7.15.19.24 And IV. When he finds that he is not able to doe what he would then he strives to doe what hee can and that to the uttermost As it is with an industrious man who being wounded in his legges and forced through lamenesse to keepe house strives to be doing something and employes himselfe in one good and profitable worke or other untill he bee able to goe about his affaires and to follow his owne proper and particular calling So the Regenerate man if he be not able to walke in the wayes of God and to worke his worke as he desires through infirmity and weaknesse then hee labours to employ himselfe as he can and to doe what good workes he is able with an earnest desire of more strength and a faithfull promise and full purpose to runne swiftly the race that is set before him when the Lord shall give his anckle bones strength and to worke cheerefully the worke of the Lord when he shall be pleased to strengthen his hands And therefore if we desire to know whether wee be Regenerated or not let us examine our purposes and promises our desires and endeavours of a new life and holy conversation for they which are borne againe will avoyd all evill impure and scandalous actions and labour to abound in every good worke and grieve when they are not able to doe what they desire and rejoyce when the Lord increaseth their strength and makes them thereby able in some good measure to obey his will Thirdly the next effect of Regeneration is a Answ 3 certainty thereof Here observe these things viz. I. As an Infant knowes not that it lives neither is sensible of life So those who are Infants in grace and newly regenerated and converted are not sensible for a while of the Spirituall life of Grace but when they come to a greater maturity of grace they easily perceive it and know it II. As a melancholy man may thinke himselfe to be sicke yea dead when in the meane time the actions of life and motion convince him to be alive So the Regenerate in the houre of temptation doth often thinke himselfe to be dead in Sinne and deprived of all Spirituall life when in the meane time his feare to offend God his sorrow for his sinnes his warring against sinne and his unblameable conversation shewes and proves that he is a living Soule and alive in the Lord. III. As a man by some deepe wound or extreame blow or the decaying of the Spirits may faint or swound and become insensible of life So may the Regenerate man after the committing of some great and grievous Sinne as wee see in David Psal 22. and 32. and 42. But as those are brought unto themselves who faint with rubbing and other the like meanes so these by the wounds and checks of Conscience and by an earnest endeavour in the exercises of Religion may by little and little returne unto themselves and their former assurance of Grace and Regeneration IV. If the Regenerate man be not an Infant nor under the burden of temptation neither hath committed any great or grievous Sinne then hee may know his estate and condition and that he is alive unto the Lord 1 Iohn 2.13 and 3.14 because the actions of life prove him to live and his life is no longer hid from himselfe An Jmage or Picture may in outward shew bee like to a living man in all things although it have no life in it at all but this concludes not that therefore a living man c●nnot tell certainly whether he lives or not A man asleepe may dreame that he