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

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in the Covenant Ier. 31. Heb. 8. The holy Ghost seldom names it without some high expression Psal. 51. Ephes. 1. Remission of sins and of which This Remission is both free and full Isa. 1. 43. Ezek. 25. 18 22. Heb. 8. 12. Manasseh Salomon Paul Mary Magdalen were great sinners yet pardoned God doth of his own free grace and mercy forgive us our sins Psal. 51. 1. Rom. 3. 24. Eph. 1. 7. 1 Ioh. 2. 12. The word remitting or forgiving implies that sinne is a debt or offence as Christ cals it in his form of Prayer God is said to forgive when he takes away the guilt and frees us from condemnation Isa. 44. 22. Secondly The inward cause in God which moves him to it is his grace for God might have left all mankinde under the power of their sins as he hath done the Devils Thirdly The outward meritorious cause is the bloud of Christ. Paul in the Epistle to the Hebrews largely shews that it was the bloud of Christ typified by the Sacrifices that purgeth us from our sins by Christs merits Gods grace is obtained Fourthly The instrumental cause is faith Rom. 3. 25. 5. 1. not considered as a work but as an act of the soul receiving and applying Christ to us not going out to him as love doth for then it were a work Fifthly The immediate effect of it is Sanctification and the healing of our nature Rom. 8. 1. to be cleansed or washed from sin implies both the taking away the guilt of it and giving power against our corruptions For these six thousand years God hath been multiplying pardons and yet free grace is not tired and grown weary Our sins are covered Psal. 32. 1. as a loathsom sore cast into the Sea Micah 7. 19. as Pharaoh and the Aegyptians blotted out as a debt in a book Isa. 44. 22. Psal. 55. 1. Object We have forgivenesse of sins upon a price therefore we are not freely forgiven Answ. Forgivenesse of sins and Christs Satisfaction may well consist whatsoever it cost Christ it costs us nothing 1. It was infinite grace that God should ever intend to pardon a wretched sinner Ephes. 1. 6. 2. That he should give his Son for this and that this sinner should be pardoned and not another Object God will not forgive except we repent and beleeve Acts 2. 19. 10. 42. Answ. God promiseth forgivenesse to such only as repent and beleeve but they have forgivenesse meerly from the grace of God not from the worthinesse of their beleeving or repenting Hos. 14. 4 2. These graces are freely given them To you it is given to beleeve and God hath given repentance to the Gentiles To whom it appertains to remit sins The power of remitting sins belongs only to God I even I blot out thy transgressions Isa. 43. 25. that is true in the Gospel though not well applied Who can forgive sins but God only because it is an offence against him that you may know who hath power saith Christ to forgive sins I say unto thee Walk he only by his own power can forgive it who by his own power can remove any judgement the effect of sinne Ministers are said to remit sins Iohn 21. 23. but that is because they have a special Office to apply the promises of pardon to broken hearts See Luk 24 47. Acts 13. 38. The Ministery of Reconciliation is committed to them as to the Embassadours of Christ 2 Cor. 5. 18 19 20. An confessio auricularis sit necessaria ad remissionem peccatorum Whether auricular confession be necessary to the remission of sins The Church of Rome will have it necessary for every one to confesse unto a Priest all his deadly sins And such indeed are all whatsoever without the mercy of God in Christ Rom. 6. ult Gal. 3. 10. which by diligent examination he can finde out together with the severall circumstances whereby they are aggravated Nothing will suffice to procure one that is baptized remission of sins without this Confession either in re or in voto as Bellarmine doth expound it This is no small task which they impose upon the people of Christ Quid molestius quid onerosius saith Bellarmine therefore sure they had need to have good warrant for it especially being so peremptory as to Anathematize all which shall refuse to subscribe unto them No general Councel untill that of Laterane under Innocent the third about twelve hundred years after Christ decreed a necessity of auricular confession Erasmus ad Act. 19. affirmeth that it was not ordained by God nor yet practised in the ancient Church after Christ. The hinge of the Question is not concerning confession of sins in general unto a Minister but of particular sins neither whether we may but whether we ought necessarily purpose a manifestation of every known mortal sin and the grievous circumstances thereof or otherwise stand hopelesse of all remission of our sins B. Mort. Appeal l 13. c. 12. S. 1. There is no ground in Scripture for it but much against it in that the Scripture in many places sheweth it sufficient except in some cases to confesse unto God only Besides such Confession as Papists require viz. a particular enumeration of all mortal sins with their several aggravating circumstances is not possible and therfore not of divine Institution Cardinal Cajetane on Iam. 5. acknowledgeth Non agi de Sacramentali confessione That confession Matth. 3. 6. 1. Was not made of every one apart of every particular fault they had committed and secretly in St Iohns ear 2. The Greek word signifieth confession of known faults and overthroweth the recital of secret sins which ear-confession requireth 3. It is contrary to the nature of the meeting which was publick 4. To the nature of a Sacrament administred which being publick required a publick confession of mans corruption 5. This was but once and before baptism and not as the Papists have it here and before the Lords Supper Cartw. in loc The apprehension of the pardon of sin will sweeten every condition 1. Sicknesse Mat. 9. 2. 2. Reproach 2 Cor. 1. 12. 3. Imprisonment Rom. 8. 34. 4. It will comfort one in the remainders of corruption Rom. 8. 1. 5. Deadly dangers The Angel of God saith Paul stood by me this night whose I am and whom I serve 6. It will support us at the day of Judgement Act. 3. 19. Reasons 1. Because sin in the guilt of it doth imbitter every condition even death it self 1 Cor. 15. 26. then one looks upon every crosse coming from God as an avenger Ierem. 30. 14. and upon mercies as given him to fat him to destruction Secondly This makes a man look upon every affliction as coming from a Fathers hand when he can look on sinne as pardoned Heb. 12. 9. there is an ira paterna Thirdly Remission of sins gives him boldnesse at the throne of grace Ephes. 3. 12. 1 Iohn 3. 21. How to know whether
unto this was first devised by the Septuagint so was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this prayer made by the Evangelists in imitation thereof neither of both being any where to be found but in Scripture only The prayer of Agur Prov. 30. 8 9. Lechem Chukki the bread of my competent allowance is the same with this here which Tremellius well observing in his most elegant Hebrew Catechism renders this Petition in those very words of Agur as though our Saviour had reference to them M. Medes Diat par 4. on Prov. 30. 8 9. Some say that both this place and that Pro. 30. 8 9. are taken from that place Exo. 16. 16 17 18. We pray in General That the outward blessings and comforts which we doe possesse may be given us of Gods free love and favour that they may be gifts of the Covenant Hosea 7. 18. and that we may taste his love in them Particularly 1. We beg contentation 2. Love of Justice and Righteousnesse 3. Sanctification of whatsoever we enjoy Consider ones self as one man so we pray for First Life and the continuance of it life makes us possesse the other comforts and length of dayes is a gift of wisdom Prov. 3. 16. Secondly For food the prop of life without which it cannot stand The utter want of food subjects us to temptations that the minde cannot think of any thing else Matth. 4. 1. Thirdly Raiment clothes to cover our nakednesse they are necessary 1. To keep us from cold 2. To hide our uncomely parts to make us comely Fourthly Fitting sleep which is necessary because 1. It much refresheth the minde 2. Cheereth the body 3. Preserveth health 4. Is the most natural recreation Fifthly Health strength of body and vigour of minde Sixthly Gods blessing on our food apparel sleep physick labours As we are members of a Family we pray for these blessings 1. Peace and quietnesse in the family 2. Good and comely order 3. Blessing on the Governours good servants that are faithful diligent trusty laborious wise 4. Governours are to beg faithful servants Inferiours that they may be lawfully protected rewarded and respected according to their pains As members of a Commonwealth we pray for 1. Protection by the Magistrate from all wrongs 1. That we may possesse our own with quietnesse 2. That we may quietly reap what we have sowed Petition 5th And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespasse against us In the former Petition we are taught to ask temporal blessings for the maintenance of this present life Now in this Petition and in the last our Saviour teacheth us to ask spiritual blessings for the obtaining of a better life Of spirituall blessings in this life there be two chief heads whereunto all the rest may be referred viz. our Justification and Sanctification For in these two the Covenant of grace and the benefits which in this life we receive by Christ do consist Heb. 10. 16 17. See Luke 1. 13. To forgive is so to passe by an offence as neither to exact nor to expect any thing either in way of recompence or punishment for it Both recompence and punishment are counted a kinde of satisfaction which is directly contrary to remission God doth freely and fully discharge us from all our sins Forgivenesse being an act of God it must needs be both free and full For whatsoever God doth he doth freely for himself without any former desert without expectation of any future recompence In this prayer we do not only get further assurance of the pardon of our sins as some conceive but a real forgivenesse of our daily sins that saying Our sins past present and to come are all forgiven at once is true 1. In respect of Gods purpose 2. In respect of the price of our redemption 3. In Christ our Head yet sins to come cannot actually be forgiven to the person before they be committed Pardon supposeth alwaies an offence past Rom. 3. 25. Ier. 33. 8. remembrance is of that which is past 2. Confession and repentance is constantly joyned with pardon of sinne in Scripture Acts 3. 19. 1 Iohn 1. 9. therefore remission of sinne is of sins past one cannot repent of that which is to come 3. To the pardon of sinne the Lord requires faith in a Mediator In the Law they confessed their sins on the Sacrifice put the sins on the scape Goat 4. Remission of sin is a judicial act Justification respects God as a Judge he cannot pardon sin before it is committed 5. This Doctrine that all sins to come are pardoned layes the foundation of two corrupt principles 1. That justified persons need not confesse sins 2. That they may take as much comfort in the grace of God in all their sinful courses as if they walked never so holily In respect of sins past and formerly pardoned we pray for greater assurance of that pardon or rather for the continuance of assurance we have received because this daily Petition is a means appointed by God to work that assurance but for the sins that daily are committed it is the direct pardon of them which we desire of God in this Petition And if these words Forgive us do signifie Make us to know that thou hast long since forgiven us as the Antinomians say then why shall not the next words As we forgive receive the same interpretation and why should it not also hold in the 4th and 6th Petition This Doctrine overthroweth the heresie of the Novatians who do deny the forgivenesse of sins after Baptism The original word which we translate Trespasses properly signifies Debts St Luke setting down this form of prayer thus expresseth this Petition Forgive us our sins for we also forgive every one that is indebted to us that is which hath offended us Sins are called Debts because for them we owe punishment For as in the Law there are two things 1. Praeceptum commanding or forbidding and 2. Sanctio threatning punishment against the transgression of the precept so in every sinne there are two things answerable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fault transgressing the Law and the reatus binding over the transgressour to the punishment In respect of which punishment every offendour of the Law is a Debtour untill either the Debt be remitted him or else he hath born the punishment which is without end When we pray therefore that the Lord would forgive us our debts we do not only desire that the Lord would forget the fault but also that he would remit the punishment unto which the guilt of our fault doth binde us over The Papists hold that the Lord many times forgiveth the fault and retaineth the punishment But sin is called a debt in respect of the punishment which we owe for it and therefore this debt is not remitted if the punishment be retained Again the mercy of the Lord pardoneth no sin for which his justice is not satisfied Sinne is like a debt First
l. 3. p. 237 The Creation of it a special work of God l. 3. p. 237 238. It s circular motion refuted l. 3. p. 237. m. l. 3. p. 241. m Earthquake Earthquake the cause of it l. 3. p. 236. m. It is general or particular ibid. Ecclesiastes Ecclesiastes why so called its Author l. ● p. 36 The summe of it and the best Interpreters of it ibid. Election Election what the word signifies l. 3. p. 219 It is described ibid. And the description explained l. 3. p. 219 220 What the object of it l. 3. p. 220 Neither foreseen faith nor foreseen works the cause of it l. 3. p. 221 All are not Elected l. 3. p. 121 122 123 There is an Election of persons l. 3. p. 222 Element what and the number of the Elements l. 3 p. 237 238 Elephant his magnitude and understanding l. 3. p. 266 Empty no vacuum or meer empty place l. 3. p. 253 l. 4. p. 357 Epicure confuted l. 3. p. 296 300 Epistles Epistles why so called l. 1. p. 43 How they are divided and who best expounds them l. 1. p. 44 46 In what order they were written l. 1. p. 46 47 Ephesians who best expound it l. 1. p. 48 Erasmus commended l. 1. p. 113. m. 116. m Errour l. 4. p. 358 359 Esther Esther why so called and by whom written l. 1. p. 34 Who are the best Expositors of it ibid. Eternity The world not Eternal l. 2. p. 226 227. l. 3. p. 225 God is Eternal l. 2. p. 147 148 149 What Eternity is l. 2. p. 147 Evangelists Evangelists who l. 1. p 44 The harmony and difference between them l. 2 p. 4● Evil. Evil what it is l. 8. p. 651 What deliverance from Evil means l. 8. p. 652 Excommunication what it is and its parts l. 6. p. 467 Exodus Exodus why the second Book of Moses is so called l. 1. p. 31 Contains a history of above a hundred years l. 1. p. 31 The best Expositors of it ibid. Expositors of Scripture who are the best among the Jews Fathers Papists Protestants l. 1. p. 112 113 Ezekiel Ezekiel what it signifies l. 1. p. 38 When he prophesied ibid. The best Expositors of it ibid. Ezra Ezra who the Author of it l. 1. p. 33 The best Expositor of it l. 1. p. 3● F Faculty FAculty what l. 7. p. 540 Three reasonable Faculties in man ibid. Faith Faith what it is l. 7. p. 502 503 How taken in the New Testament l. 7. p. 499 500 Three things in it l. 7. p. 500 Its object and acts ibid. It s subject l. 7. p. 501 502 The degrees of faith l. 7. p. 503 Faith of Adherence and Assurance l. 7. p. 504 505 Its end is everlasting life l. 7. p. 505 How it is wrought ibid. How it differs from hope ibid. It is an excellent grace l. 7. p. 506 Whether Infants have Faith and whether it be in the glorified Saints l. 7. p. 506 507 Whether justifying Faith be commanded in the Decalogue whether it or repentance precede l. 7. p. 507 Christians should endeavour to live by faith and what it is to live by it l. 7. p. 507 508 Motives to get Faith and helps to it l. 7. p. 509 Whether Faith alone doth justifie l. 7. p. 503 528 529 Fruits of Faith l. 8. p. 744 745 746 747 Faithfull God is Faithfull l. 2. p. 184 185 What Faithfulnesse is l. 2. p. 185 186 Ministers must be Faithfull in their calling l. 6. p. 460 Fall of man l. 4. p. 303 304 Familists Familists rest wholly in an immediate private spirit l. 1. p. 16 Confuted l. 7. p. 539 Fasting What religious Fasting is l. 8. p. 735 736 What we must abstain from l. 8. p. 73 The ends and means of a religious Fast l. 8. p. 736 737 The usual time of a Fast and for Fasting l. 8. p. 737 The Popish Fasting condemned l. 8. p. 738 Fathers Fathers what they were l. 1. p. 112 113 Some of them commended l. 1. p. 112. to 116 Fear Fear what it is the kindes of Fear the measure of it l. 7. p. 571 How it is taken its object and effects l. 7. p. 571 572 Christs great Fear l. 5. p. 429 Feasting Holy Feasting the nature of it and helps to it l. 8. p. 739 Fire l. 3. p. 240 Fishe● a great work of God l. 3. p. 261 262 Flattery Flattery l. 4. p. 359 Flight what it is l. 7. p. 561 Forgiveness Forgiveness of sins what l. 7. p. 519 Every one of Christs subjects hath his sins forgiven l. 7. p. 519 The Forgivenesse of sins is free and full l. 7. p. 519 520 God only forgives sins l. 7. p. 520 What is the meaning of the fifth Petition of the Lords Prayer l. 8. p. 647 648 649 650 Auricular confession not necessary to Forgivenesse of sins l. 7. p. 520 521 Fowls their nature and use l. 3. p. 263. 264 Free-will l. 7. p. 495. to 500 Frost what it is l. 3. p. 247 G GAlatians who best expound it l. 1. p. 48 Genesis Why the first Book of Moses is so called l. 1. p. 31 Contains a History of above two thousand years ibid. The best Expositors of it ib. Why the Jews might not reade in the beginning of Genesis the beginning and end of Ezekiel nor in Canticles ibid. The first Chapter of it divided l. 3. p. 231 232 233 Gentiles Gentiles many predictions of their conversion l. 1. p. 10 Some of them give testimony to sundry passages in the Scripture l. 1. p. 15 Ghost The holy Ghost is God l. 2. p. 21● Glory Glory what it is in God and its several acceptions l. 2. p. 194 195 The difference between praise honour and glory l. 2. p. 195 Gloria whence derived ibid. How Gods Glory is manifested l. 2. p. 196 A double Glory in things l. 2. p. 197 Consectaries from Gods Glory l. 2. p. 198 199 Glorious God is Glorious l. 2. p. 194 195 196 197 198 Gluttony l. 4. p. 359 360 God How he is called in several languages l. 2. p. 121 That there is a God l. 2. p. 121. to 128 The knowledge of God is necessary profitable difficult l. 2. p. 121 122 We know God three wayes l. 2. p. 122 There is a three-fold knowledge of God ibid. What God is l. 2. p. 132 133 How the word God is taken in Scripture l. 2. p. 133 The several name of God l. 2. p. 133 His Attributes wh●● they be ibid How they di●●●● from Properties and what rules are to be observed in attributing them to God l. 2. p. 134 How his Attributes are divided l. 2. p. 135 Good God is Good the chiefest good l. 2. p. 172 173 Goodnesse Goodnesso what it is and what in God l. 2. p. 172 The Properties of his Goodnesse and the difference between his Goodness and that in the creature l. 2. p. 173 174 Gospel Gospel was written by many and
vers 14. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Christians should be ready to give an answer to every man which doth ask them a reason of the hope which is in them the foundation is that which is first and surest laid and hath an influence into all the building Men should do all upon trial and solid conviction 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 Ioh. 4. 1. The Papists would have the people take things upon trust they say those places concerne the Doctours of the Church not the people but compare the 20 and 21. vers in the Thessalonians and 1. vers with 6. in Iohn and we shall see the contrary This trial is profitable First Because truth then will have a greater force on the conscience Secondly This is the ground of constancie 2 Pet. 3. 17. Thirdly Hereby we shall be able to maintain the truth Matthew 11. 19. The Scriptures are fundamentum quo the fundamental writings which declare the salvation of Christians Iohn 5. 37. Christ fundamentum quod the fundamental means and cause which hath purchased and doth give it Iohn 4. 42. The person we must build on is Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. He is called the foundation of foundations Isa. 28. The doctrinal foundation is the written Word of God which is not only the object and matter of our faith but the rule and reason of it Hold Christ as your Rock build on him the Scripture as your rule and the reason of your believing this is general there are some particulars First Some things are simply necessary It were a notable work for one to determine this how much knowledge were required of all Secondly Not absolutely necessary Some make the foundation too narrow some again too wide some say that if a man nean well and go on according to the light he hath though he know not Christ he shall be saved Others say that all are bound to know distinstly the Articles of the Creed Fundamental truths are all such points of Doctrine which are so plainly delivered in Scripture that whosoever doth not know or follow them shall be damned but he that doth know and follow these though erring in other things shall be saved All the principles of Religion are plain and easie delivered clearly in 1. Scripture they are to be a rule to judge of other Doctrines 2. They are very few say some reduced to two heads by Iohn Baptist Mark 1. 15. and by Paul 2 Tim. 1. 13. 3. In all principles necessary to salvation there hath been agreement among all the Churches of Christ Ephes. 4. 5. though they may differ in superstructures Quod ubique quod semper quod ab omnibus creditur Catholicam est Vincent Lyrin These Fundamentals said a Reverend Divine now with God are twelve three concerning God three concerning Man three concerning the Redeemer three concerning the means of attaining good by this Redeemer Concerning God 1. There is one God which is an Infinite Perfect and Spirituall Essence 2. This one God is distinguished into three Persons or manners of subsistence after an incomprehensible way which we believe but cannot perfectly understand The Father begetting the Son begotten and the holy Ghost proceeding 3. This one God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is the Maker Preserver and Governour of all things by his Wisdom Power Justice Providence Concerning man 1. That he was made by God of a visible body and an immortal and spiritual soul both so perfect and good in their kindes that he was perfectly able to have attained eternal life for himself which was provided as a reward of his obedience 2. That being thus made he yielded to the temptations of the Devil and did voluntarily sin against God in eating of the Tree forbidden and so became a childe of wrath and heir of cursing an enemy to God and slave to the Devil utterly unable to escape eternal death which was provided as a recompence of his disobedience 3. That he doth propagate this his sinfulnesse and misery to all his posterity Concerning Christ. 1. That he is perfect God and perfect Man the second Person in the Trinity who took the Nature of man from the Virgin Mary and united it to himself in one personal Subsistence by an incomprehensible Union 2. That in mans Nature he did die and suffer in his Life and Death sufficient to satisfie Gods Justice which man had offended and to deserve for mankinde Remission of sins and Life everlasting and that in the same Nature he Rose again from the Dead and shall also Raise up all men to receive Judgement from him at the last Day according to their Deeds 3. That he is the only sufficient and perfect Redeemer and no other merit must be added unto this either in whole or part Lastly Concerning the Means of applying the Redeemer they are three 1. That all men shall not be saved by Christ but onely those that are brought to such a sight and feeling of their own sinfulnesse and misery that with sorrow of heart they do bewail their sins and renouncing all merits of their own or any creature cast themselves upon the mercies of God and the only merits of Jesus Christ which to do is to repent and believe and in this hope live holily all the remainder of their life 2. That no man is able thus to see his sinnes by his own power renounce himself and rest upon Christ but God must work it in whom he pleaseth by the cooperation of his Spirit regenerating and renewing them 3. That for the working of this Faith and Repentance and direction of them in a holy life he hath left in writing by the Prophets and Apostles infallibly guided to all truth by his Spirit all things necessary to be done or believed to salvation and hath continued these writings to his people in all ages Observe those places Act. 15. 11. 1 Tim. 1. 15. Let a man hold this that there was nothing but death in the world till Christ came and that he is come to save sinners Ioh. 17. 3. Secondly There are practical places 1 Cor. 6. 9. Titus 3. 8. Let us 1. See our selves dead without Christ and wholly trust in him 2. Let us be exemplary in our lives and conversations There are other Fundamentals which are only comparatively necessary that is expected from one man which is not expected from another and more from those that live in the Church Have these six Principles of the Apostle not only in your heads but hearts 1. That a man is dead in himself 2. That his remedy lies out of himself 3. Know the Doctrine of the Sacraments 4. The Word of God 5. Have some apprehension of the life to come 1. That there is a passage from death to life 2. That there is a fixed and irrevokable estate after this life 6. Hold the Doctrine of Faith so that Christ may live in you and you be delivered up into that forme of Doctrine lay hold on
whatsoever is amiable and gracious is so from him Gods Graciousnesse is that whereby he is truly amiable in himself and freely bountiful unto his creatures cherishing them tenderly without any defert of theirs Psal. 86. 15. and 111. 5. Gen. 43. 29. Pelagius taught that grace is given to men in respect of their merits Gratia Dei datur secundum merita nostra he said that Gods will had respect to merits foreseen for this Pelagius was condemned for an Heretique in three Synodes S ● Austin refuteth this error and referreth the matter to Gods will and purpose onely B. Carleton against Mountague Ch. 3. Vide Bellarm. de Gratia lib. arbitrio l. 6. c. 4 5 6. Iohn Scotus was the greatest Pelagian that lived in his time for it was he that brought in the doctrine of Meritum ex Congruo he teacheth that Faith Charity Repentance may be had ex puris naturalibus which some of the most learned Papists do confesse to be the true Doctrine of Pelagius Vide Bellarminum de Gratia libero arbitrio l. 6. c. 2. God is gracious to all Psal. 145. 8 9 10. but especially to such whom he doth respect in his well-beloved Son Jesus Christ Exod. 33. 19. Isa. 30. 19. Luke 1. 30. Gen. 6. 8. 1 Cor. 15. 10. Gods free favor is the cause of our salvation and of all the means tending thereunto Rom. 3. 24. and 5. 15 16. Ephes. 1. 5 6. and 2. 4. Rom. 9. 16. Titus 3. 5. Heb. 4. 16. Rom. 6. 23. 1 Cor. 12. 4 9. The gospel sets forth the freenesse fulnesse and the powerfulnesse of Gods grace to his Church therefore it is called The word of his grace Acts 14. 3. and 20. 32. The Gospel of the grace of God Acts 20. 24. Deus expandit gratiae immensum Coelum Luther Gods Graciousnesse is firm and unchangeable so that those which are once beloved can never be rejected or utterly cast off Psal. 77. 10. God bestoweth 1. Good things 2. Freely 3. Plentifully Psal. 111. 4. 4. In a special manner he is gracious toward the godly Love is 1. Grounded often on something which may deserve it the grace of God is that love of his which is altogether free 2. Grace is such a kinde of love as flows from a superiour to an inferior love may be in inferiors toward their superiors We should be also liberal in our services toward God in our prayers and good works We should desire and strive to obtain the grace and favor of God David often calleth on God to cause his face to shine upon him and to lift up the light of his countenance upon him The holy Patriarchs often desired to finde grace in the eyes of the Lord. It is better then life to him that hath it it is the most satisfying content in the world to have the soul firmly setled in the apprehension of Gods goodnesse to him in Christ. It will comfort and stablish the soul in the want of all outward things in the very hour of death 2. It is attainable Those that seek Gods face shall finde him Means of purchasing Gods favor 1. Take notice that your sins have worthily deprived you of his favour and presse these thoughts upon you till you feel your misery meditate on the Law to shew you your cursednesse 2. Consider of the gracious promises of the Gospel and see the grace of God in Christ. His grace was exceeding abundant saith the Apostle 3. Confesse and bewail your sins with a full purpose of amendment and cry to God for grace in Christ. 4. This stayes our hearts when we apprehend our own unworthinesse God is gracious and shews mercy to the undeserving the ill-deserving 2. We should acknowledge that all grace in us doth come from him the fountain of grace and should go boldly to the throne of grace and beg grace of him for our selves and others Heb. 4 16. Paul in all his Epistles saith Grace be unto you The Apostle Ephes. 1. 3. and so on speaks of Redemption Vocation Justification Glorification And all this saith he is to the praise of his glory and 12. 14. verses we should give God the praise of all He is the first cause and last end The Arminians will seem to say That all comes from grace and that faith is the grace of God but they say it is a power given to all and that God hath done alike for all onely some improve the power of reason and will better then others without any special discriminating grace from God then God is not the first cause that I believe it is the free working of God within me We should take heed of encouraging our selves in sin because God is gracious this is to turn Gods grace into wantonnesse We should frequent the Ordinances where God is graciously present and re●dy to bestow all his graces on us The word begets grace prayer increaseth it and the Sacraments seal it It refutes 1. The Papists which boast of their own merits By the grace of God I am that I am 1 Cor. 15. 10. Rom. 11. 6. By grace we are saved Ephes. 2. 8. They distinguish grace into that which is gratis data freely given as the work of miracles the gift of prophesying and that which is gratum faciens making us accepted as faith and love are graces making us accepted but the grace which maketh us accepted is freely given therefore they are not opposite members There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace and the gift of grace they differ as the cause and the effect as Lux in sole and Lumen in aere one is in God subjectivè the other in man objectivè 2. The Arminians the Patrons of mans free will and enemies of Gods free-grace who say that a man may so far improve naturals as to merit grace and that God gives effectually grace to the wicked which shall never be saved to Iudas as well as Paul How is that effectual which moving men unto faith and repentance doth never bring them to one nor other it seems these Remonstrants never learnt this Lesson Arminio praeceptore for he defines effectual grace to be that qu● sortitur effectum which obtains the effect They say that a man without Gods grace may keep all the Commandments whereas Christ saith not as Augustine notes Iohn 15. 5. without me you can do little but Without me you can do nothing Never had the Church of God saith Dr. Featly in his Pelagius Redivivns 2. Parallel since the Apostle St. Paul a more valiant and resolute Champion of Grace then St. Augustine Pelagius would change himself into divers forms as is manifest by the History of him although sometimes he seems to restrain the whole operation of grace to external perswasions yet being pressed by Augustine and others both he and his disciples have often been compelled also to confesse the inward gifts of grace and the Holy
Christ for us 2. His Word 3. Justification 4. Sanctification 5. Giving his Spirit for a Comforter in our griefs and afflictions Iohn 14. 16. 6. The Sacraments Mercy must accord with wisdom justice and truth therefore those that stoop to justice by acknowledging their offence and worthinesse to be punished for it and are sorry they have so offended and resolve to offend so no more and earnestly also implore Gods mercy shall partake of it The Lord is plenteous in mercy to all which call upon him and the Lords delight is in them which fear him and hope in his mercy Judge your selves and you shall not be judged humble your selves under the hand of God and he will exalt you On these terms he will shew mercy universally to all which submit to him thus and seek to him for mercy without any exception of person fault time Quest. Whether mercy and justice be equal in God and how can he be most just and most merciful Answ. Mercy and Justice may be considered ad intra as they are essential properties in God and so he is equally just as well as merciful 2. Ad extra as he puts himself forth into the outward exercise of mercy and punishment In this latter sense we must distinguish between this present time where mercy triumphs against judgement Iames 2. 13. and the day of judgement that is a time of justice and retribution to the wicked and so David speaking of this present time saith All thy ways are mercy and truth Psalm 25. and that of the Schools is true Remunerat ultra condignum punit infra Gods justice and mercy are both infinite and equal in him onely in regard of man there is an inequality For God may be said to be more merciful unto them that are saved then just to them that are damned for the just cause of damnation is in man but of salvation is wholly from God In himself and originally they are both equal and so are all his attributes but in respect of the exercise and expression upon his creatures and abroad in the world there is some difference Mr. Bolton on Prov. 18. 14. Justice seeks a fit object Mercy onely a fit occasion Justice looks on those which deserve Mercy onely on those which need 1. We should believe this point labor to be fully perswaded in our hearts that Gods mercies are great and many he hath preventing mercies how many sins hath he preserved thee from 2. Sparing mercies * Lam. 3. 22 behold Gods severity towards others and mercy toward thee 3. Renewing mercies 4. Pardoning mercies He is willing and ready to help us out of misery therefore we should praise him for this attribute How excellent and desirable a thing is mercy therefore give him the glory of his mercy 2. It is full of comfort to a childe of God he need not be dismayed with any thing not his imperfections since the devil himself cannot hurt him for God is more merciful to help him then the devil can be malicious to hurt him 3. We should be encouraged to seek to him for mercy seeing there is so great store of it in him There is an infinitenesse of mercy in God so that whatever my sins have been if now I will turn he will accept me if I strive to turn he will enable me therefore I will now run to him for mercy I will fall down before the throne of justice and confesse I have deserved wrath and nothing but wrath but will cry to him for mercy The great motive to draw sinners to repentance is Gods mercy Isa. 55. 7. Acts 2. 38 39. This will 1. Keep men from despair Psal. 130. 4 and carnal confidence Isa. 55. 1. 1 Cor 1. 29. 2. It lays the greatest obligation on men Tit. 2. 11. and gives the clearest satisfaction Rom. 4. 16. 3. It is the great aim of the Scripture to draw men by mercy Exod. 34. 6. Neh. 9. 17. Luke 15. 20. Isa 65. 20. Ier. 31. 20. 4. It is the aim of providence and all Gods dispensations Psal. 145 9. 4. Those that have and do seek should give him the glory of his mercy and take comfort themselves in the confident hope of finding mercy Praise him for his mercy to others and he will give thee some comfortable hope of finding it thy self 5. We should be merciful like God to our selves and brethren their souls and bodies imitate his mercy be you merciful to the afflicted and distressed shew mercy freely and constantly and then we shall obstain mercy Mat. 5. 7. 6. We should labor to be qualified for mercy 1. Confesse our sins and forsake them Prov. 28. 13. 2. Fear God his mercy is on them that fear him Luke 1. 50. Psal. 103 11 17 18. 3. Love God he shews mercy to them that love him Exod. 20. 6. 4. Trust in God then mercy shall compasse us Psal. 32. 10. 5. Think on good things then we shall have mercy Prov. 14. 32. 6. Keep close to the rule of Gods word Gal. 6. 6. CHAP. XII Of Gods Iustice Truth Faithfulnesse A Third vertue in God is Iustice by which God in all things wills that which is just or it is the Attribute whereby God is just in and of himself and exerciseth justice toward all creatures and giveth every one his due Isa 45. 21. Psal. 11. 7. Gen. 18. 25. Zeph. 3. 5. Rom. 2. 6 7. 1 Pet. 1. 17. 2 Thess. 1. 6 7. 2 Tim 4. 8. 1 Iohn 1 9. 2. 29. Justice in man is a setled will to do right in every thing to every person so God hath a setled will to do right Shall not the Iudge of all the world do right and Are not my ways equal God stiles himself by this title and gives himself this Attribute Zeph. 3. 5. Gods Justice is twofold 1. Disposing by which as a most free Lord and Supreme Monarch of all he disposeth all things in his actions according to the rule of equity and imposeth most just Laws upon his creatures commanding and forbidding onely that which is fit for them in right reason to do and forbear 2. Distributive which renders to every one according to his work without respect of persons Psal. 62. 12. Iob 34. 11 19. Prov. 24. 12. Ier. 32. 19. Ezek. 7. 27. Mat. 16. 27. Deut. 16. 17. 2 Chron 19. 7. Acts 10. 34. Ephes. 6. 9. Gal. 2. 6. and this distributive justice is also twofold praemii paenae of reward and punishment 1. Of reward when God bountifully rewards the obedience of the creature with a free reward 2 Thess. 1. 5 7. Mat. 10. 41 42. Mark 9. 41. God bestows this reward not onely on the godly both by heaping divers mercies on them in this life and by the fulnesse of glory and felicity in the life to come but also on the wicked whose moral actions he rewards with temporary rewards in this world as the obedience of Iehu
Creatures onely are the object of Predestination 2. In respect of the End Providence directs all things as well to natural as supernatural ends but Predestination onely directs reasonable Creatures to their supernatural ends The Lord hath not onely decreed in general that he will save some which believe and condemn those which continue in infidelity but he hath determined whom and how many he will bring to holinesse and life eternal for the praise of his Grace and how many he will leave to themselves and punish for sin for the praise of his Justice The ancient Fathers call that Verse Rom. 8. 30. the golden chain of our salvation The parts of Predestination are two Election and Reprobation This Doctrine of Election is profitable to be taught in the Church of God for it sets forth the profound depth of the Lords love the glory and riches of his grace and mercy ascribing the whole praise of our Vocation Justification Adoption and Glorification to the Mercy of God it holds forth the wonderful Wisdom of God Rom. 11. 33. It sets out his Power and Soveraignty Rom. 9. 20. The word Election signifieth 1. The chusing or taking of one into some office 1 Sam. 10. 24. Luke 6. 13. and 17. 12. either in the Common-weale Psal. 78. 70. or Church Iohn 6. 70. 2. The making choise of a Nation to be Gods peculiar people upon whom passing by others he will bestow his Laws Ordinances and singular pledges of his love D●ut 4. 37. and 7. 7. and 10. 15. and 32. 8. Rom. 11. 5. 25. 3. It is put for the Elect themselves as Rom. 11. 7. 4. It notes Electionem salutem the eternal Decree of God separating some men to holinesse and glory for the praise of his rich grace Ephes. 1. 4. 11. 2 Tim. 1. 9. 1 Tit. 1. 2. Particularis completa electio neminem spectat nisi morientem say the Arminians 5. It is taken for the execution of Gods eternal Decree or the separation of certain men in time by effectual vocation Luke 18. 7. Col. 2. 12. Apoc. 17. 14. Election is the Decree of Gods good pleasure according to Counsel whereby he hath from eternity chosen and determined with himself to call some men to faith in Christ to justifie adopt sanctifie and give them eternal life for the praise of his incomprehensible grace and rich mercy Or it is an action of God ordaining some men out of his meer good will and pleasure to eternal life which is to be had by faith in Christ for the manifestation of his grace and mercy Or it is an unchangeable Decree of God whereby he hath out of his own Free-will in Christ appointed some Angels and men to holinesse and happinesse for the praise of the glory of his Grace 1. A Decree of God in Christ Ephes. 1. 4. and 3. 11. Christ is first elected as the Head we as the Members 2. Of certain Angels and men they are called elect Angels Iacob have I loved Moses his name was written in the book of Life Rev. 13. 20. and 8. 17. It is unchangeable Zach. 6. 1 2 4. It is to the Means as well as the End Ephes. 1. 4. 1 Pet. 1. 1 2. a Decree founded on Gods free-will Ephes. 1. 11. 1. The general nature of it it is an action of God ordaining 2. The impulsive Cause of his meer good will Ephes. 1. 6. Rom. 9. 16 18. There can be no other reason given when men have wearied themselves out in disputes but onely Gods will Even so Father because it pleaseth thee Matth. 11. God will have mercy on whom he will have mercy Gods meer free will makes us differ in naturals thou art a man and not a Toad how much rather must it make us differ in supernaturals To flie to a scientia media or a congrua motio divina or to the preparation and use of Free-will is to wander and to say any thing in man makes a difference 3. The Object of Election whether man absolutely considered or respectively as good by Creation miserable by sin Some make homo condendus man to be made the object of Election some man made but not fallen some man made and fallen But these opinions may be reconciled for those who hold homo Condendus or massa pura to be the object do extend Election further then the latter do even to comprehend in it a decree to make man and to permit him to fall but as for that actual Election and Separation Austin Calvin Beza Rivet hold it to be from the corrupted Masse and so doth B. Carleton and others of which opinion these reasons may be given 1. We are chosen that we might be holy and unblameable this supposeth that we were considered in Election as sinners Ezek. 16. 6. 9. Election is of God that sheweth mercy and we are called vessels of mercy mercy presupposeth misery 2. We are elected in Christ as our head and he is a Mediator and Saviour which presupposeth sin he came to save sinners Mat. 20. 16. the means of salvation are given to few few are holy the effect of Election Matth. 7. 13. 3. Man simply considered is the object of Predestination in respect of the preordination of the end but man corrupted if we respect the ordination of the means which tend to that end or man absolutely in respect of the supreme or last end not in respect of this or that subordinate end 4. The end of Election is two-fold 1. near and immediate eternal life 2. farther off and ultimate the glory of his Name Ephes. 1. 3 4 5 6. 5. The means to bring about these ends Christs merits apprehended by faith Consider also the adjuncts of this Decree the eternity immutability and certainty of it There is a certain and determinate number of the Elect which cannot be diminished or augmented Christ prayed to his Father that the Faith of his Elect might not faile Iohn 17. 16 20. It is impossible they should be deceived Mat. 24. 24. The Papists think that the certainty of immutable Election begets in a man carnal security and prophannesse but Peter thinks far otherwise 2 Peter 1. 10. God was not moved by any thing outwardly to choose us to eternal life but it was onely the meer will of God Some of the Papists say God did choose man to eternal life upon the foresight of his good works and his perseverance in them The Lutherans say for faith foreseen not because of any dignity in faith but for Christ apprehended by it Object If God should not predestinate for some thing in us he is an accepter of persons for all were alike Iudas was no more opposite then Peter why then should one be elected and not another Ans. 1. This makes the Doctrine of Election such a depth that God loveth Iacob and hateth Esau in the Angels some are elected and some fallen 2. To accept of persons is then when we prefer one
the fall and therefore good 1 Tim. 4. 4. Regeneration restores not the substance of man but the qualities Dr. Ames saith that Grevinchovius denied original sin and Dr. Twisse proves by this argument that the Arminians deny it As many as teach that all the posterity of Adam have as much power to every thing that is good as Adam in innocency they deny original sin But the Arminians teach that all the posterity of Adam have as much power to every thing that is good as Adam had in the state of innocency for they hold that all Adams posterity have such power to every good work that they want no other help but the perswasion and the concourse of God which Adam himself needed to every good work The Semipelagians also the Socinians and Anabaptists deny this original venome or blot to be a sin the Anabaptists that they might wholly take away Pedobaptisme denied original sin that there might not be a cause why infants should be baptized The denying of this fundamentall Article of Original sin is dangerous What need then of the Gospel what need of Christ himself if our nature be not guilty depraved corrupted these are not things in quibus possimus dissentire salva pace ac charitate Aug. about which we may dissent without losse of peace or charity The Papists say 1. Original corruption hath not rationem peccati but is only a privation of original righteousness The Councel of Trent decreeth it not to have the nature of sin Bellarmine saith it is a simple thing to be humbled for original sin Pighus saith it is no sin at all Andraedeus it s the least of sin 2. That the concupiscence and lust which riseth from the corruption of our nature the motions unto evil that we feel in our selves are no sins but are called so abusively or metonymically because they are from and incline to sin till we consent unto them and obey them till they reign in us See the Rhemists in their Annotat. Rom. 7. 7. and Iames 1. 15. Bellarm de statu peccati c. 9. 10. When our Divines urge that concupiscence is called sin several times in the sixth seventh and eighth Chapters to the Romans Bellarmine saith the Apostle doth not say it is peccatum propriè De statu peccati c. 8. 3. That original sin after Baptism is done away Si quis asserit non tolli in baptis●●ate totum id quod veram propriam rationem peccati habet anathema sit Decret 5. Sectionis Concil Trid. 4. That the Virgin Mary was not conceived in sin Piè ac rectè existimatur B. virginem Mariam singulari Deo privilegio ab omni omnino peccato fuisse immunem Bellarm. de Amiss grat statu pecc l. 4. c. 15. The Spirit of God in the holy Scripture expressely calleth the corruption of our nature sin as Psal. 51. 5. and in the sixth seventh and eight Chapters of the Romans fourteen times at the least Heb. 12. 2. 2. The Scripture saith expressely our original corruption is the cause of all our actual sins Iames 1. 14. 2 Peter 1. 4. 3. Infants that are baptized which have no other sin but original and who never consented to it nor obeyed it in the lusts thereof do dye Rom. 5. 14. therefore it must needs be sin and may be truly and properly so called for sin is the only cause of death Rom. 5. 12. Whatever holdeth not conformity with the rule of righteousnesse the law of God is sin it hath the nature of sin in its irregularity and defect of good and the effects of sin 2. The Scripture expressely teacheth us that this concupiscence even in the regenerate these evil motions that rise in us though we consent not unto them though we resist them are yet a swerving from the law of God and a breach of it Luke 10. 27. nay in the regenerate this corruption of our nature doth not only swerve from the law of God but opposeth and resisteth the Spirit of God Rom. 7. 23. Gal. 5. 17. therefore it must needs be sin This argument convinced Pauls conscience Rom. 7. 7. He means those motions unto evil which the heart doth not delight in nor consent unto When the Apostle saith Rom. 6. Let not sin reign in your mortall bodies By sin saith their Cardinal Bellarmine all men understand concupiscence and Ribera on Heb. 12. 1. saith That by sin the Apostle understandeth concupiscence calling it so with an article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the sin a note of singularity Cajetan in Rom. 7. calleth it formally a sin Vide Cassand Consult art 2. Tit. de Concupisc p. 4. The proper definition of sin being this a transgression of Gods law therefore concupiscence is sin see Exod. 20. 17. Object Cant 4. 7. Iohn 13. 10. Ezek. 36. 25. Ephes. 14. Therefore the regenerate have no sin left in them Answer The Church in this present world is said to be all fair as it wholly shines with its Spouses beauty which it puts on Concupiscence in respect of its own nature is a sin but in respect of the person who is a party regenerate in whom the guilt is pardoned it is as no sin When the Fathers say that lust is taken away in the regenerate they understand according to the guilt not the thing 3. Original sin after Baptism is not done away children are perverse death cannot seize where there is no sin How comes it to passe that infants baptized die before they come to actual offending if Baptism have abolished in them their original stain 4. The Virgin Mary was not conceived without original sin in her song she rejoyceth in God her Saviour Luke 1. 47. 2. 22. Christ came to save that which was lost Matth. 18. 11. See Iob 14. 4 1 Cor. 15. 22. Rom. 5. 12 16. 3. 9. Gal. 3. 22. All the ancient Fathers as far as we can learn out of their Writings believed that the blessed Virgin Mary was conceived in original sin Vide Rivet de Patrum autoritate c. 7. Daille Of the right use of the Fathers l. 2. c. 6. The Dominicans generally hold that she was conceived in sin All are infected with Adams sin 1. The Heathens Pagans Infidels Rom. 1. 18 21 24 26 28 to the last 2. The Jews Rom. 2. latter end 3. Christians Rom. 3. from 9. to 19. 4. Infants Rom. 5. 12 13. They are innocent in respect of actual transgression not in respect of original pollution are born blinde lame 5. Children of beleeving parents All men are equally guilty of original sin 1. In reference to Adam Rom. 5. 12 14. 2. They are equally deprived of Gods image Rom. 3. 9 11. Reprobate to every good work 3. Are equally depraved and corrupted Rom. 3. 12 13 14. Reasons 1. All men are equally in Adam one was not more in his loyns then another Rom. 5. 12 19. 2. All men equally partake of
better of Christ then the Turks which esteem Christ a holy Prophet of God who taught us his will Socinianisme is a complication of many ancient heresies condemned by ancient Councels A doctrine that undermines the merit and satisfaction of our Saviours death Arminlanism gratifieth the pride of will Popery the pride of outward sense and Socinianisme the pride of carnal reason Dr Hill on Prov. 23. 23. The Socinians deny the Deity of the Lord Jesus Christ the Deity of the holy Ghost the Trinity of Persons they deny that Jesus Christ hath merited or satisfied for his people The Papists besides some fundamentall errours as justification by the merit of our own works are most abominably Idolatrous in their worship Of all Hereticall and False Teachers this last age hath afforded I know none more pernicious then these two 1. Libertines that teach to neglect obedience as in every respect unnecessary 2. Justitiaries that presse obedience as available to justification Dr. Sclater on Rom. 4. 15. Antinomianism is the most dangerous plausible errour that almost ever invaded the Church insinuating into well-meaning mindes under a false pretence of advancing Christ and free grace Mr Baxt. Inf. Church-Memb part 2. Sect. 8. The original of the Antinomians seems to be from the old Katharoi called Puritans who being justified affirmed they were perfect and free from all sin as the glorified in heaven M. Rutterf Surveigh of the Spirit Antich part 1. c. 1. The Antinomians say repentance grief sorrow for sense or conscience of sin in a Beleever is legal carnal fleshly from unbelief and the old Adam and that it is contrary to faith and Gospel-light to confess sins and was a work of the flesh in David Id. ib. c. 2. Vossius in his Historia Pelagiana saith that Pelagius was humani arbitrii decomptor Divinae gratiae contemptor a trimmer of nature and ●n affronter of grace The Pelagians say that a man may by strength of nature convert himself that Adams sin did hurt himself alone that no hereditary stain came to h●s posterity by it that in infants there is nothing of sin that men die not for the punishment of sin but by the law of nature They were so called from one Pelagius a Welchman his name was Morgan which signifies the sea but he chose rather to be called Pelagius He dwelt by the sea Vide R. Episc. Usser de Britan. Eccles. Primord c 8 9 10. He seemed to some to have excelled in such great eminency of knowledge and learning that some thought that place Rev. 8. 10. was to be interpreted of his fall Against this Heresie Austin and Ierom disputed much Christ doth not say Iohn 5. 5. without me you can do little but without me you can do nothing Aug. in Ioan. Tract 81. Sententias vestras prodidisse refutasse est patet prima fronte blasphemia said Ierom of Pelagius and his opinions Austin gives the reason why Pelagianism did spread so much because there were Pelagiani fibrae in every man naturally Austin termed the Pelagians inimicos gratiae Dei Prosper ingratos ungratefull and ungracious men contra ingratos The Arminians too much follow the Pelagians Of Arminius and his opinions Vide Praefat. ad Eccles. Act. Synod Dordrecht The five Articles of the Remonstrants do exalt mans free-will In the first Article God is said to have chosen them which would beleeve obey and continue in faith and obedience In the second it is affirmed that Christ obtained reconciliation with God and remission of sins for all and every one if by faith they be able to receive these his benefits In the third and fourth Article the efficacy of conversion depends upon mans will so that it is efficacious to conversion if a man will and inefficacious if he will not In the fifth Article perseverance in faith is ascribed to mans will which is to derogate from the Fathers free Election the Sons Redemption and the holy Ghosts Conversion Hypocrisie Hypocrisie is that vice by which men content themselves to seem good but are not carefull to be so in very deed that is a good description of it 2 Tim. 1. 3 5. See Matth. 23. 14. 24. 51. In that measure we like of sin in that measure is hypocrisie in us Greenham There are two kindes of Hypocrites 1. Such as are grosse and know they do dissemble 2. Such as have great works of Gods Spirit as knowledge joy sorrow and reformation of their sins which do take these to be true graces because they come near them and are like them as the foolish Virgins A very hypocrite may make some account of serving God Saul durst not fight till he had offered sacrifice 1 Sam. 13. 11 12. A man may hear and that with joy and beleeve and bring forth a blade of forward profession and yet be an hypocrite The Pharisee boasted that he paid tithe of all that he possessed that he fasted twice a week Paul was unrebukable according to the law and after a sort conscionable in exercises of Religion Psalm 50. God tels the hypocrite he will not reprove him for his sacrifices this way he was not much behinde hand Reasons 1. A certain natural spark of the knowledge of God is left in man since the fall 2. It is a credit to be somewhat Religious 3. It is fit to feed their pride and a conceit of their own goodnesse 4. This is a means of nourishing him in his false and presumptuous hope of salvation The difference between the religion of the hypocrite and true-hearted 1. In the matter the one meditateth in the word read and heard applying it to himself by turning it into matter of sorrow or joy confession or petition the hypocrite will never thus apply the word of God unto himself in the several parts of it 2. The hypocrite hath alwaies a false or evil end in his devotion either he aims at praise amongst men or earning heaven to himself notwithstanding his bearing with himself in some sins he aims not at the pleasing of God and getting grace and power to himself that he may overcome sin 3. They differ in the fruit and manner of performing these exercises the hypocrite neither hath nor careth to have the power of these acts working mightily in his heart The Pharisees contented themselves to wash the outside of the cup and platter and to be zealous observers of the letter of the law being yet within full of all wickednesse The most accomplisht hypocrite cannot expresse 1. The life and power of a Christian 2. Nor the joy of a Christian. The open prophane man may be worse then the hypocrite in some respect he dishonoureth God more and sinneth with a higher hand and with more contempt of God and also with more hurt to ●●en by his example then the wicked man doth Yet the hypocrites case in other respects is worse then the state of the prophane man 1. In this life he is hardlier
1. When mens thoughts run after what they shall eat or drink Matth. 6. 25. When animus est in patinis Rom. 12. 13. 2. When we delight too much in it as Philoxenus who wisht he had a neck like a Crane that he might take the longer delight in swallowing of his meat and drink 3. When we feed securely Iude 12. are too much taken up with the creatures 2. More notorious 1. When men eat more then their stomacks will digest Prov. 23. 1 2. When they are too dainty nothing will down but what is delicious and costly as the rich man in the Gospel 3. When they eat and drink unseasonably as Isa. 12. 13. Amos 6. 1 2. when they eat one meal too hastily after another not allowing nature sufficient time for concoction and those that will be still tipling Helps against it 1. Reade hear and practise the word 2. Pray 3. Joyn fasting with prayer 4. Consider the bounty of the Lord in giving us good things and for what end viz. strength CHAP. XX. Of Lying Malice Murmuring Oppression LYING LYing is a voluntary uttering of that which is false against a mans knowledge and conscience with an intention to deceive see Proverbs 12. 19. 22. 13. 5. In respect of the end it is distinguished into perniciosum officiosum and jocosum a hurtfull officious and merry lie August in Enchirid. ad Laurent Aquinas 2ª 2ae quaest 110. Art 2. The end of a pernicious lie is to hurt of an officious lie to profit of a merry lie to delight We must not tell a lie for Gods glory Iob 13. 7. much lesse for to help my neighbour Officious lying is neither permitted nor approved in the word of God God threatens to destroy all those that speak leasing Psal. 5. 6. See Prov. 6. 16. Matth. 5. 37. Ephes. 4. 25. Col. 3. 9. Rev. 21. 27. 22. 15. The very Heathens themselves abhorred all lying Aristotle saith A lie is evil in it self and to be dispraised It is a great sin Reasons 1. The Law of God is against it the ninth Commandment and the Gospel Col. 3. 9. 2. It is against the nature of God the Father is the God of truth Iohn 17. 3. the Son is truth Iohn 14. 6. the holy Ghost is the Spirit of truth Iohn 16. 13. and the Word of God which is the word of truth Ephes. 1. 13. It makes us like the devil Iohn 8. 44. 3. It is against natural conscience a little childe will blush at a lye 4. It is basely esteemed of by all generous men they abhorre above all things the imputation of lying It was in great reproach among the Persians saith Brissonius 5. It is contrary to all civil society takes away all commerce betwixt man and man Mendax hoc lucratar ut cum vera dixerit ei non credatur it is the just reward of a lier not to be beleeved when he tels truth 6. Omnibus peccatis cooperatur Aug. It hath an influence on all sins Lying and stealing are joyned together Ephes. 4. 7. The punishment of it is great as we may see in Gehezi Ananias and Saphira Psal. 5. and often in the Proverbs the Lord abhorres it Rev. 21. 8. 22. 15. liars are joyned with great sinners See Isa. 63. 8. Prov. 6. 17. Popery is a doctrine of lies 1 Tim. 4. 2. The great honour of the Saints is to walk in the truth 3 Iohn 4. see Ephes. 4. 5 Buy the truth and sell it not Erasmus had such an antipathy with lying that from his youth he would usually tremble at the sight of a noted liar Malice It causeth a man to receive pleasure in the practice of cruelty so the brethren of Ioseph and Cain 1 Sam. 19. 13 to the 18. Reasons 1. It is most of all contrary to charity therefore it must needs bring forth quite contrary effects to it and as that makes a man to take pleasure in doing good so this in doing evil for both vertues and vices cause him in whom they rule to take content in those things wherein they are exercised and by which they are strengthened and increased as both charity is by well doing and malice by doing evil 2. Where malice doth rule the Spirit of God is quite gone and the light of nature extreamly dimmed and a man is given over into the power of Satan for in giving place to wrath a man gives place to the devil 3. It distempers the judgement will and affections Murmuring It is first a sin reproved by God and a provocation of him Ion. 4. 8. The Israelites were very guilty of it see Numb 17. 12. Psal. 106 25. Secondly It is a high degree of sin 1. Hereby thou exaltest thy will above Gods and makest it the rule of goodnesse 2. You put God out of his throne out of Government in every murmuring against his dispensations thou deniest his Sovereignty 3. Hereby thou makest thy self wiser then God in divine things 4. This is a way to provoke God to greater displeasure Amos 4. 12. Arguments against murmuring and discontent under Gods administrations 1. It is a Christians duty to be content with the things present Heb. 13. 1 Thess. 518. such a one can never be thankfull 2. All your murmurings are against God Numb 14. 27. Exod. 16. 8. you charge God with folly Iob 1. ult 3. This will heighten your sin and add to your plagues Rev. 16. 19. Isa. 51. 20. 4. If the Lord should hearken to your murmuring you would quickly destroy your selves Hos. 13. 11. Oppression Oppression is a great sin Isa. 3. 15. Psal. 14 4. 17. 12. Amos 8. 5. Mic. 3. 3. Hab. 2. 11 12. 1. 14. Ier. 12. 13. 5. 27 28. Pride and unjustice in the extremity meet in an oppressour The Prophet cries out of them which grinde the faces of the poor of them which are like the wolves in the evening of them which covet fields and take them by force because there is might in their hands Reason It is an abuse of a special gift of God quite contrary to his appointment which gave it God made the stronger therefore to be the stronger that he might defend the weak as the greater sims and bones of the body hold up the burden of it CHAP. XXI Of Perjury Polygamy Pride PERJURY PErjury is mendacium juramento firmatum a lie confirmed with an oath so Peter Lombard Distinct. 39. The same thing by the addition of an oath that a lie is in a bare promise saith Dr. Sanderson It is double 1. When a man affirmeth or denieth upon oath that which he beleeveth in his own heart to be quite contrary 2. When he bindeth himself by oath to do or forbear that which he for the present time hath no purpose nor intention to perform The old saying is Once forsworn ever forlorn No Casuist doubts of it that a Turk may be guilty of perjury and for it be punished by the
contrary to charity either because a man loves not or hates his neighbour Charity doth no evil we should do as we would be done to The effects of it are bad it sets one man against another and so doth mischief to both slanderous tongues that told Saul in secret David sought his hurt made him to persecute him so vehemently The slanders of Haman caused Ahashuerus to make a Decree for the destruction of all the Jews in his Kingdom Iosephs Mistresses slanderous accusation brought him into much trouble Principall parts of slander There are four principall parts of slander The 1. and worst when a man doth purposely forge a lie against his neighbour without any so much as shew or ground as Mephibosheth was served by his naughty servant Ziba and as David himself was served by the bad Courtiers about Saul 2. When there hath been such a thing done or said but he misreports it adding or diminishing wresting and perverting it and so makes it seem evil that was not so in the intention and practice of the doer as they wrested our Saviours words to a blasphemous sense The third kinde when one reports a false report that he hath heard and taken up upon trust as Tobiah said it was reported and such a one did speak it that Nehemiah meant to rebell 4. When men complain of a good deed as if it were ill to them that will account it so as the enemies of the three children accused them to Nebuchadnezzar and those that told Iesabel of Obadiahs hiding the Prophets Helps against it 1. Speak nothing of any man that tends to his hurt and disgrace of which you are not certain which you cannot prove to be true Report is a lyar therefore trust it not 2. Though you do know any evil of your neighbour yet report it not but when duty bindes you and only to such as duty bindes you I mean chiefly of private faults or of publike if they be such as cannot be made better by speaking of nor do good to others by being known 3. Be not tatlers persons full of tongue apt to be still speaking he that speaketh much will speak much evil and among the rest some slanders when other talk faileth he will fall upon the faults of men 4. When you talk forbear medling with other mens matters be not busie-bodies He that 1. is of few words 2. When he speaks medleth as little as may be with others matters 3. Forbears to talk of their faults but as much as he must needs by the bond of duty and then is sure to say nothing but what he knows and can prove that man shall not prove a slanderer Make not your selves petty Devils by slandering and false accusing many have learned that evill precept of accusing boldly because something will stick CHAP. XXIV Of Tale-bearing Vain-glory Violence Unbelief Unkindenesse Unsetlednesse Unthankefullnesse Usury Of TALE-BEARING TAle-bearing It is a sin easily to beleeve false tales as Saul had an open ear to those Sycophants which were ready to accuse David to him of treason and conspiracy Ahashuerus to Haman who traduced the Jews as a people carelesse of the Kings Laws David to Ziba Reasons 1. It is an encouragement and hearkening unto those whose trade is to invent and beleeve lies 2. It makes a man guilty of those lies to which he hath given furtherance and countenance and so he is partaker of anothers sins 3. It is against the clear principle and rule of all actions viz. to do as we would be done by one is offended if another readily receive false tales against him Men are subject to this fault because they are not so perfect in wisedom and charity as they ought to be uncharitablenesse evill suspitions guiltinesse willingnesse to have other faulty and imprudent temerity are the causes of this over-hasty crediting tales A good man neither taketh up nor receiveth a slander against his neighbour Psalm 15. 2. let thy countenance be like the Northwinde to back-biting tongues Vain-glory. Vain-glory is a great sin Iohn 7. 18. Matth. 6. beg We are naturally prone to it Gal. 5. 26. It is when either by vain means which deserve not praise or when by good duties in themselves praise-worthy men seek the praise of men more then the glory of God Iohn 12. 44. But by holy means to seek a good name amongst men with intentional reference to the glory of God is not to be vain-glorious see Phil. 4 7. It is an inordinate desire of account and esteem from men The Philosophers which Ierome was wont to call Animalia gloriae popularis aurae mancipia in those very Books which they wrote against vain-glory whiles they did underwrite their own names are condemned as guil●y of that vanity which they seemed to oppose It is inordinate 1. When a man desires to be esteemed for those things which are in truth so vile mean base that they do not at all commend grace or countenance him which hath them as riches high place in the world learning wit strength beauty nimblenesse eloquence 2. When a man desires esteem from men with a neglect of the esteem and account which he should desire to have with God As Mr. Fox was going along London streets a woman of his acquaintance met him and as they discoursed together she pulled out a Bible telling him that she was going to hear a Sermon whereupon he said to her If you will be advised by me go home again but said she when shall I then go To whom he answered When you tell no body of it One must deny himself in all vain-glory attributed to him Rom. 12. 3. 2 Cor. 12. 6. see Acts 14. 14 15. Rev. 19. 10. He must 1. Be nothing in his own esteem 1 Cor. 11. 31. he must judge aright of his estate indowments and actions 2. He must be content to be nothing in the thoughts of other men Zach. 13. 5. Motives to shun vain-glory 1. There is no greater folly in the world then flattery and there is no greater flattery then self flattery 2. This disposition will betray a man to divers enemies 1. It will make a man exalt himself 2. It will strengthen a mans heart against admonition 3. It s easie for the vilest men to keep up a credit in the world the Pharisees were counted the only Saints 4. God will be highly displeased if we take to us false honour as he was with Herod How to distinguish real glory and vain-glory 1. All true honour is grounded on real excellency and that which is so in Gods account 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. 2. True honour must be à laudato viro from one that is praise worthy 3. From persons that know you Violence Violence is a great sin It is unrighteousnesse born forth with strong hand with strength of body wit or purse of friends unjustice maintained and backed with strength Two things must concur to it 1. An unequal and unrighteous intent
and practice 2. A prosecuting such intent and practice with might of any kinde as in one instance the Prophet noteth They covet fields and take them by force A man of violence is he who will bear out a bad matter with mony favour wit strength or any outward helps he can use for that purpose That this is evil appears by that place where David affirms of God that the man which loveth violence his soul hateth that is he hates him in all extremity with an utter hatred the reason is because he hath sold over himself to sin he sins of wilfulnesse is an obstinate sinner a despiser of God he hath buried all justice and equity love and charity and shamefully abuseth those gifts to mischief which God hath furnished him with for better purposes it begins in very children the stronger bigger and craftier will wrong the weaker and sillier Violence bursting forth into any extremities of dealing was in the old law punished with the like of that that was done Lev. 24. 17. Unbelief Infidelity was the first sin Gen. 3. 4 and is the mother of all sins Heb. 3. 12. The evil heart is called the heart of unbelief as faith is the fountain of all graces Act. 15. 9. Our Saviour often checks his disciples for this Matth. 6. 30. It is against those most lovely and soul-ravishing Attributes of God his mercy goodnesse free-grace longanimity patience bowels of compassion It is called a provocation Psal. 78. 4. Heb. 3 8. which notes the highest act of displeasure the unbeliever is abominable to God and good men Psal. 15. 4. It is a departing from God Heb. 3. 12. see Iohn 3. 33. Christ marvelled at it Mark 6. 6. It is hard to finde out unbelief to be a sin not that unbelief whereby we assent not to the doctrine of the Scripture but that whereby we do not apply Christ for our only Saviour for seeing the Law of God is partly ingra●ted in our nature we easily beleeve that what opposeth that is a sin but the Gospel being wholly supernaturall and meerly by divine revelation therefore what opposeth that is not presently acknowledged to be a sin the Scripture discovers this unbelief The Spirit convinceth us of unbelief and the sinfulnesse of that state Iohn 16. 9. 1. It discovers the nature of it and therein our ignorance 2 Cor. 4. 4. 1. In respect of the reality of the Gospel that there is such a thing as pardon a reconciled justified state faith hope 2. In respect of the glory of the Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2 Cor. 3. ult Christ is precious to them that beleeve 2. Shews the distance that unbelief makes between God and us in our approaches to him Heb. 3. 12. 3. Discovers our rebellion and opposition to God and the righteousness of Christ Rom. 10. 3. by cavilling objecting and hard thoughts of Christ. Secondly The Spirit convinceth us of our unbelief in respect of the objects and effects of it 1. Its objects 1. Christ as he hath all merit and satisfaction in our approaches to God we cannot set that which is in Christ by way of satisfaction against our own guilt 2. We are not able to see pardoning promises speak pardon to us through the bloud of Christ as that promise Isa. 1. 18. 2. We improve not the Covenant we look not upon Christ as the Head of it As he is the party that makes good the Covenant with God for us though I have many miscarriages yet he hath fully satisfied and made reconciliation with God for me as he is the Head of the Covenant also to us what need I doubt but I shall have strength pardon is given into the hands of my Mediator 2. In reference to the effects of unbelief 1. The Spirit shews a man what weaknesse and corruption he lies under still by reason of unbelief 2. Le ts him see how much terrour and guilt he still lies under he cannot call God father Heb. 10. 22. 3. Discovers the comforts and joyes of beleevers both from Scripture and the experiences of others of Gods people 1 Iohn 1. 4. 15. 11. and yet much wrath and guilt still lies upon his conscience 4. The Spirit convinceth of unbelief by a Saints often being at a losse in the things of the Gospel 1. He goes a long time together and cannot meet with one promise to suit his condition 2. When he hath a promise he can make no use of it cannot plead it with faith and expectation 3. He cannot walk in the strength of a promise Lastly Gods Spirit convinceth us also of the sinfulnesse of unbelief 1. By clearing up to the soul that he lies under the breach of the great Gospel-command 2. By shewing what it is to neglect the love and grace of the Gospel Heb. 2. 3. Matth. 24. 51. 3. By presenting to the soul how ill God takes it when we will not beleeve him There are divers aggravations of this sin 1. Other sins deserve damnation but this formally opposeth the way of salvation Some say only unbelief damns a man which is not true in a rigid sense for every sin damns a man unrepented of but only unbelief is more opposite to the way of curing then other sins 2. It is opposite to the chiefest grace faith Illud est optimum cujus privatio est pessima The Scripture honours faith giving remission of sins the righteousnesse of Christ and salvation it self to it 3. It dishonours God and Christ and the holy Ghost it is the glory of Gods love that he becomes thy God though he so great and thou so vile this is the honour of Christ to thee A Son is born a Childe is given God shews the riches of his free-grace here thou grudgest him the honour to be the pardoner of thy sins 4. It is most rooted in us hence the Lord so often checks his disciples for their unbelief and faith is called The work of God in a speciall manner because of the difficulty of it and the contrariety of our natures Hence Comfort you comfort you again and again because the heart of man terrified for sin doth utterly refuse all true comfort in a right way 5. It hath more fair pretences for it more arguments then any other sin that is a dangerous sin which comes upon us as a duty I am unworthy 6. It puts the lie upon God Iohn 1. 5. God saith he will be thy God Christ saith he will put away thy sins thou saiest he will not 7. The devil most tempts a godly man to this sin as the incestuous person the devil had almost tempted him to finall despair as he would hold the prophane man in security so the penitent sinner in irksome unbelief 8. It hath the most terrible and sad effects it breeds daily unsetlednesse and tossings of heart therefore doubting and uncertainty is opposed to faith at last it will breed secret impatience and grudging against God and in the end open hatred
Father the condition of satisfying his Justice and to us the condition of being accepted into favour notwithstanding our sin upon our conversion to him The Lord most good is exceeding willing to imbrace the condition yea he did offer it to Christ upon that condition that his justice might be duly satisfied some other way without mans ruine he would save him only man stands off and is not willing to return to God again and Christ hath more to do to perswade us to accept of favour on his terms then to perswade him as it were to accept us on those terms yet he doth perswade win and draw all those to it to whom the benefit of this Covenant redoundeth therefore is he a Mediator of the New Covenant Christ is the treasury of all that riches of grace which God in his eternal pleasure intended to bestow on his elect 1 Iohn 5. 11. Ephes. 1. 22. Acts 3. 15. It was Gods great plot to make Christ Canalis grati● to all the reasonable creatures to the creature fallen the channel of the grace of Reconciliation to the Angels the channel of the grace of confirmation Reasons why God would have all deposited in the hand of a Mediator 1. Man fallen could receive no good thing from God immediately the change of the Covenant brought in a change of the government Ioh. 5. 22. All must come to us by vertue of a Covenant God dealt with man at first in a Covenant-way Adam and Christ were both heads of the Covenant 1 Cor. 15. 47. God appointed them 2. Nothing can be conveyed to us without a paiment in reference to the old debt and a purchase in reference to the new benefit onely a Mediator could do this There is more righteousnesse required to justifie man fallen then Adam had in innocency or the Angels have in heaven that answered but the precept of the Law yours must answer the curse you are bound to the precept as a creature to the curse as a transgressour and there is more holinesse required to your sanctification not only a conformity to God in his Law but a destroying of the old Image All the holinesse of the Angels could not mortifie one sin Christ had an instrumental fitnesse for the Office of a Mediator to answer all Gods ends which were either I. Principal which respect God First The manifestation of his own excellencies to the creature 1. His manifold Wisdom is declared in the Gospel 2. His Love to take a humane Nature to an actuall Union with the Godhead 3. The Mercy of God was never before discovered 4. His Justice in bruising his own Son 5. Soveraignty for Christ to be his servant Secondly The Communication of his Goodnesse to the creature the ground of communication is union there is the fullest union betwixt God and Christ. II. Lesse principal In reference to man so God hath two ends Reconciliation and Communion Luk 2. 14. 1. Reconciliation 1 Tim. 2. 6. a price every way answerable to the wrong God hath sustained by sin 2. Communion Christ in his bosom the seat of love and secrecy by Christ we have a manuduction to God He was near to God whom he would accept and near to us whom we may trust he pleads with God for us and treats with us for God he was faithful to him and merciful to us tender of his honour and our salvation There is a controversie between the Papists and us An Christus sit Mediator secundum utramque naturam Bellarm. Tom. 1. de Christo Mediatore c. 1 3 4. 5 6 7 8. Aquinas part 3. Quaest. 26. Art 2. say Christ is Mediator only as man not as God they urge that Text 1 Tim. 2. 5. we say Christ as God-man is Mediator Christ cals himself the Sonne of man is he not therefore the Sonne of God In Christo solus Deus non est Mediator nec solus homo sed Deus homo saith à Lapide in 1 Tim. 2. 5. The God-head concurred with the manhood in all the acts of Mediatorship and that place 1 Tim. 2. 9. proves that Christ qui fuit homo which was a man is our Mediator but not qua homo as a man The Papists say that Saints are Mediators to God see 1 Tim. 2. 5. There is one Mediator say they of Redemption but of Intercession there are many The Papists make the Saints Mediators of Satisfaction Redemption is nothing else but the paiment of a price of Satisfaction See Iohn 14. 6. Ephes. 2. 18. 3. 12. why may not the Manichees so defend their two principles although it be said there is one God they may elude it by saying there is but one good God and the Scriptures are to be understood of him but there is another evil God No man saith Sadeel against the Papists must expect integram salutem à Christo diviso We are to understand that place 1 Tim. 2. 5. exclusively one and but one as in the former part of the verse there is one God one and but one Vide Estium ad loc You may as well say an intercessor of mediation as a Mediator of Intercession for Intercessour and Mediator are both one The Papists received this from the Gentiles the devils their gods which were reputed of the lower sort were made as means to come unto the higher whence they were called also Dii medi●ximi that is Gods only for Intercession as if Neptune would speak to Iupiter he made Mercury his means and intercessour Mr Deering upon the 4th Chapter to the Heb. v. 14 15 16. Christ is also called a Surety of the new Covenant Now a Surety is a person that undertaketh some thing therefore it is used of a person that undertaketh to see another mans debt satisfied and it is applied to those which present a childe to be baptized because they undertake to do that for the childe which is specified in the charge to use the means there mentioned of bringing them to believe and repent I say a Surety undertaketh some things He that is a surety in case of debt undertaketh the debt he that is a surety of any covenant undertaketh to see the covenant performed and undertaketh to and for both parties that one may not doubt of the other in regard of any insufficiency or other hinderance So Christ is a Surety in his Fathers behalf to us that he should undoubtedly pardon us if we turn let us not be farther carefull about that but only strive to believe and he will deserve remission of sins and do that for us which shall without fail procure his Father to accept and pardon us Again he undertaketh for us too that we shall repent and turn to him and he will cause us to come to him and will make a sufficient Atonement He undertaketh I say that there shall be a sufficient Atonement made and that we shall turn to him and for him that he shall accept the attonement so
behalf Christ prayers ex vi pretii we ex vi promissi He tenders to God all his promises and the ancient decrees and purposes Iohn 7. 13. 2. He addes his own desires that they may be accomplished Iohn 17. 24. 3. He makes answer to any thing which is objected against any of these as the devil is an Accuser so he is an Advocate 1 Iohn 1. 2. 4. Christ doth this constantly and earnestly Rev. 8. 21. 5. He tenders also your desires mixeth his incense with your odours and he tenders them as his own as truely as he bears your sins he prayes your prayers Christs Intercession 1. Began immediately upon the fall he began to be Intercessour when he began to be a Priest this was part of his Priestly Office Revel 13. 8. Heb. 3. 4. Before he came in the flesh he interceded vi pretii praestandi since he ascended into heaven he intercedes vi pretii praestiti 2. His Intercession was effectual in all ages of the world ever since there was a golden Altar and an Altar of Incense one referred to Christs oblation the other to his Intercession Heb. 7. 25. Rev. 8. 2. 3. His Intercession is of as great extent as all Gods promises and Christs purchase Lev. 16. 12 13. Ioh. 16. 24. 4. All the long prayers Christ hath made for the accomplishment of the promises and necessities of the Church God hath heard Zech. 1. 12 13. 3. 23. Ioh. 1. 41. see 22. Because 1. Christ hath with God the Father one and the same will Ioh. 10. 30. 2. Because of the acceptation of his Person Ephes. 1. 6. Cant. 5. 6. 3. They are all offered on the Altar of his Godhead Heb. 9 14. So Christs Priesthood hath two parts 1. The work of our Redemption 2. The applying of it By Intercession forus and then by bestowing his bloud upon us to purge our consciences and actually to justifie us for these two go still together that the whole work may be Christs The Effects of this Priestly Office 1. Satisfaction This is implied in all those places where Christ is said to lay down his life as a price for sin and to become an Atonement for our iniquities Justice is satisfied by declaring a due measure of hatred against sinne and a due respect of his honour who is wronged by it 2. Reconciliation with God God is reconciled with us in Christ. 3. Obtaining of Remission of sins 4. Communication of his Spirit and Graces By his stripes we are healed The Priestly Office of Jesus Christ is the greatest Magazine and Store-house of comfort and grace on this side Heaven to all Christians Paul opens and presseth it on the Hebrews labouring with unbelief the Priestly Office of Jesus Christ. Both the Kingly and Prophetical Offices of Jesus Christ are principiated in this Revel 1. 16 18. See vers 13. Antichristianism is an invasion on the Priestly Office of Christ the Masse that Incruentum Sacificium is a derogation to the Sacrifice of Christ their prayers to Saints to his Intercession their satisfaction to his Satisfaction The Pope is styled Pontifex maximus Christ did by one Sacrifice perfect for ever those that are sanctified This Office of Christ is set up out of meer love and compassion for the relief of distressed souls Christs princely Office is for terrour Psal. 2. there is a mixture of terrour in his prophetical Office The light shined in darknesse and the darknesse comprehended it not The Covenant of Grace is laid upon the satisfaction of Christ Heb. 9. 14 15. He made full satisfaction to Divine Justice for all our sins else the Lord might come on the Debtor if the Surety had not made full satisfaction to the Creditor Ephes. 5. 2. Christ did more fully satisfie God and Divine Justice then if all we had gone to hell and been damned to all eternity the debt was now paid all at once not by a little weekly the Divine Justice would have been satisfying not satisfied by us We are not able to make any Atonement for sin Micah 6. 6 7. Psal. 49. 7 8. The Jews to this day believe that God is atoned by Sacrifices the Papists that he is pacified by penance and works of Supererogation But God now rejects all those things of his own appointment Heb. 10. 3 4 5 6 7 8. and Christ is set forth as a propitiation for sinne through faith in his bloud The Arminians although in words for shew they professe the satisfaction of Christ yet indeed they no lesse then the Socinians deny and overthrow the satisfaction of Christ and the efficacy of his merit They place not the nature of Christs satisfaction in that he on the Crosse sustained the person of the elect for this they deny and so satisfied God the Father for them as if they had satisfied him in their own person But in that that he got the Father a right and will of entering into a New Covenant with men which he might make with them upon any condition as well of works as faith Also they deny that the end of the satisfaction or merit and death of Christ is the application of the reconciliation and remission of sins Sacrifices of the old Testament were 1. Living things 2. Not living but solid as bread 3. Not living and liquid as wine and oyl There was alwayes Destructio rei oblatae if it was a living thing it was slain answerable to which Christ is said to be a Lamb slain Heb. 9. 22. if it were not living and solid it was bruised so Christ was bruised for our iniquities if it was not living and liquid it was poured out so Christ. Some object against the equity of this How could God punish an innocent person for the nocent This was equal since all parties were agreed 1. God the Father Matth. 3. 17. 2. Christ Heb. 10. 7. There was the ordination of the Father and free submission in Christ. It is no injury to require the debt of the Surety Again Some object this How could Christ being one Person expiate the offences of so many thousands Adam by vertue of his publick capacity could ruine all Rom. 5. 15. to the end therefore Christ might much more expiate the offences of many because of the dignity of his Person And for this reason his sufferings though but temporary might compensate Justice for the eternal torments of sinners sith sufferings are not finite in their merit and efficacy though discharged in a short time Act. 20. 28. God was more pleased with his sufferings then displeased with Adams sin The Socinians make this the only cause of Christs suffering to be an example to us this is the lesse principal They say God may have that liberty which man hath a man may forgive his neighbour offending without satisfaction and so may God God could have pardoned sin without satisfaction Quid omnipotente potentius saith Austin But this way of Christs suffering was expedient First In reference
and hooting at him out of disdain as accounting him undoubtedly a blasphemous impostor because pretending to be the Messiah from whom they looked for the restitution of their earthly Kingdom he was so farre from doing that as now he could not so they thought deliver himself from the hands of men Then Pilate sets him in balance with a seditious murderer and they require the murderer to be saved and him to be crucified renouncing him and denying him before Pilate as not the lawfull King of the Jews but a grand Impostor and will have no nay but with importunate clamours inforce the timerous Judge to condemn him Now is sentence solemnly pronounced upon him That for as much as he was a Seditious person a Traitor and one that went about to usurp the Kingdom against the Royal dignity of C●sars Imperiall Majesty therefore he should be taken by the Roman Officers and led to a place without the City where malefactors used according to the fashion of the Romans with their basest slaves to be nailed to a Crosse and so hang till they were dead No sooner was the sentence passed but that it began to be executed The souldiers seize upon him and having gotten him as a Dove among Kites a Sheep among Lions they sport themselves with mocking deriding and abusing him by words and gestures of counterfeit honour which are the greatest dishonours thereby upbraiding him with folly that would needs make a King of himself To the place of crucifying they lead him bearing his own Crosse till he being spent with watching bleeding wearinesse and grief was no longer able to bear it then they compelled another whom they met to bear one end of it after him So being arrived at the dismall place of dead mens skuls they offer him the potion of malefactors wine mingled with myrrhe as it is thought to intoxicate his brain which he refusing they stretch his hands and legs till all his bones might be told and so nailing one hand to one horn of the Crosse the other to the other and his feet to the stump at the bottom they leave him hanging and that also betwixt two theeves with a scornfull superscription of his fault I. N. R. I. Ierusalem was chosen for the place of his suffering Ibi peractum est verum hoc summum sacrificium ubi reliqua legis sacrificia umbrae istius Ludovic Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 15. His soul was filled with unspeakable grief in the sense of the curse of the Law which there he bare and so vehement was his anguish that he cried out for thirst when they gave him the cold comfort of a little vinegar and gall with a scoff to make it relish the bitterer Let us see if Elias will come All the people wagge their heads at him the Pharisees they insult over him with Oh thou that didst destroy the Temple His poor mother and some friends stood by and lamented him till at the end of three full hours he mightily crying did give up the ghost into his Fathers hands So he died a most vile and shamefull death a most hard and painfull a most execrable and cursed death the death of the Crosse. The death of the Crosse was 1. A shamefull death Heb. 12. 2. 13. 13. Isa. 53. 12. A filthy death Alexander ab Alexandro so termeth it Mors turpissima Bernard Therefore Iulian called Christ the crucified or staked God And the Jews continue still in railing on Christ and cursing him and ignominiously call him Talui him that was hanged in which the Christians glory Gal. 6. 14. They teach their children to curse Christ. The Turks mock us at this day with our crucified God He died In medio latronum tanquam latronum maximus He was counted a malefactour by wicked men Matth. 26. 65. Good men lookt on him as an Impostor Luk. 24. 21. God lookt on him as a malefactour Heb. 9. 28. Tully saith Facinus est vincire civem Romanum scelus verberare quid dicam in crucem tollere It is a great offence to binde a Citizen of Rome a greater to beat him the greatest to set him on the Crosse. 2. It is a painfull death He endured the crosse Heb. 12. 2. Christs strong cries like womens in their travell argued strong pain Acts 2. 24. see Lament ● 24. Bruising hath pain Gen. 3. 15. Isa. 53. 10. He was nailed in the hands and feet the most sinewy and sensitive parts Psal. 22. 16. 3. It was a cursed death Gal. 3. 13. that is yielded himself to a cursed death for us so the Fathers glosse it It was a cursed death by the decree and appointment of God Deut. 21. 23. Christs hanging on the Crosse seems to be prefigured by the Heave offering of which the Law makes mention and the brazen Serpent Numb 21. 1. was a Type of Christ crucified Iohn 3. 14 15. 12. 32 33. The reason was That he might free us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. The Prince of darknesse would not let so great an advantage passe without proving once more whether in this last hideous pang of death he might not prevail to have fastened some stain of sinne upon the pure soul of that immaculate and now dying Lamb of God He could not have fitly been said to have triumphed over them on the Crosse if he had not properly grappled and fought with them there wherefore assuredly the whole band of that hellish kingdom of darknesse was let loose upon our Saviour he having at once the Creator and the creatures men and devils against him and yet maintaining himself in perfect faith and patience might indeed make a full satisfaction to the Divine justice for the miserable disobedience of man Christ died for the reprobate five waies 1. By way of proclamation Remission of sins is proclaimed to thee if thou wilt beleeve Luke 24. 47. Act. 13. 38. 10. 43. 2. By way of obligation Thou art bound to beleeve that thy sins may be forgiven thee in Christ Mark 1. 15. Rom. 7. 2. 3. By way of obsignation 4. By way of generall merit Iohn 3. 16. 5. By way of special intention too for all that thou knowest Act. 8. 22. M. Fenners Hidden Manna That is an Argument of great fame but little credit used by the Arminians Quod unusquisque tenetur credere hoc verum c. That which every one is bound to beleeve is true But every one is bound to beleeve that Jesus Christ died for him Therefore it is true that Jesus Christ died for every one The first object of faith is not to beleeve that Christ died for us but that there is salvation in no other Act. 4. 12. To beleeve that Christ died for me is one of the heights of Religion Rom. 8. 33. Gal. 2. 20. Faith is grounded on the word assurance on experience A wicked man going on in sin is not
bound to beleeve that Christ died for him Adams disobedience is generall and universall not in power alone but in act too it maketh all sinners The obedience of Christ hath a potentiall universality and is sufficient to make all righteous but actually it justifies the faithfull only Dr Hampton on Rom. 5. 19. Every man is bound upon pain of damnation to beleeve in Christ according to the first degree of faith Iohn 3. 18. that is by a true and lively assent to beleeve That Jesus is the Saviour of all that truly beleeve in him and having this faith thou art bound to beleeve that he is thy Saviour that he died for thy sins and rose again for thy justification but every individual person is not bound to beleeve that Christ died for him for then the greater part of men should be bound to beleeve untruths so some answer it Others say that all generally have the offer of Christ to whom the Gospel is preached Act. 13. 38 39. yet Christ died not alike for all as the Arminians hold but for the Elect more especially so as not only to save them if they beleeve but also that they may beleeve and so be saved Iohn 17. 2 6 9. Acts 13. 48. Phil. 1. 29. Vide Davenant Dissertat de morte Christi Mori pro aliquo propriè est morte sua aliquem à morte liberare seu mori alicujus loco ut ipse vivat 2 Sam. 18. 33. Rom. 5. 6 8. 2 Cor. 5. 15. 1 Joh. 3. 16. 4. 9. Act. Synod nation Dordrecht Artic. 2. exam Vide plura ibid. Testatur Scriptura Christum pro omnibus mortuum nusquam autem pro singulis nec disertis nec aequivalentibus verbis Quamobrem Omnes in hac propositione aut not at gentes pariter Iudaeos Rom. 3. 9. aut not at varia hominum genera ut 1 Tim. 2. 5. aut denique omnes singulos fideles ut 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. Id. ib. p. 133. Vide plura ibid. Ponit enim aliquando Scriptura pro omnibus multos Gen. 17. 4. 22. 18. Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 20. c. 23. Now after his death follow two things more for his further humbling viz. his burial and his descending into hell For his burial the Scripture is plain in it Matth. 27. 59 60. Luke 23. 53. and there are good reasons for it 1. To fulfill the Scripture Isa. 53. 9. 2. To shew that he was truly dead for none but those that are dead use to be buried and Pilate would not grant that he should be buried untill by diligent search he found that Christ was dead 3. To bury sinne Rom. 6. 4. 4. That his resurrection might be the more evident to which the manner of his buriall belonged for therefore was he laid in a new sepulchre in which none yet ever lay least they should say that he rose again not by his own vertue but by the touch of some other there buried 2 King 13. 21. 5. To sanctifie our burial and sweeten the grave to us 6. That he might conquer death in his strongest hold Iob 17. 13. It was an honour to be buried of so worthy a man and with such store of ointment but to be put prisoner into the dungeon of death the grave and to seem to be swallowed up of death by giving so farre way unto it that it might also bear him as it were captive into its strongest hold this was an abasement Had our Saviour rose again so soon as the souldier had run him through the midriff with a spear or so soon as Ioseph had taken him down from the Crosse and then shewed himself in glory in an instant all his enemies would have been dismaied and he should have put them to confusion but in tarrying so long afore he rose till he might be laid in a Tomb as other dead men are he even yielded himself as it were for a space to the flouts of his enemies this was to abase him yet lower then dying Now for Christs descending into hell there is a deal of quarrelling about it in so much that one saith It is a kinde of descent into hell to reade the Controversies about it This Article is grounded on most evident words of Scripture Psal. 16. 10. Acts 2. 25. St Austin might justly say Quis ergo nisi infidelis negaverit fuisse apud Inferos Christum And all men agree in this as Bellarmine de Christo l. 4. c. 6. hath well observed that Christ some way descended into hell but the question saith he is altogether about the exposition of this Article for the whole difficulty lieth in the word Hell The Word Scheol is taken four waies in Scripture 1. For the grave Psal. 16. 10. 2. For the place of the damned Luke 16. 23. 3. For the torments of hell 1 Sam. 2. 6. 4. For extream humiliation or abasement Isa. 14. 15. In like manner saith Altingius to descend into hell is taken four waies 1. To be buried Gen. 42. 38. 2. To come into the place of the damned Numb 16. 33. 3. To feel the torments of hell 1 Sam. 2. 6. 4. Extreamly to be abased Matth. 11. 23. I shall rehearse four severall expositions of this Article and deliver my judgement at last First Some Interpret it of the inward sorrows of Christs soul which were very great as the Scripture testifieth Mark 14. 33 34. and as appears by Christs prayer thrice repeated to his Father that the cup might passe from him by his agony and bloudy sweat Luke 22. 24. By his words uttered upon the Crosse and lastly by that testimony of the Apostle Heb. 5. 7. The word Hell is often put Metaphorically for great and grievous troubles here suffered Psal. 18. 5. 116. 3. Psal. 86. 13. Ionah 2. 2. But this exposition can in no wise stand with the order and series of the Creed for since there is mention made of Christs descent into hell after his death and burial it cannot be understood of that which happened before his death They which expound this Article thus give this reason thereof The former words Was crucified dead and buried do contain say they the outward sufferings of Christ. Now because he suffered not only outwardly in body but also inwardly in soul therefore these words may be so interpreted But this reason is invalid for neither is it true that by the first words only bodily torments are expressed but those of the soul also are meant for Christ was wounded for our transgressions bore our iniquities and made his soul an offering for sin And by the words of David and Peter whence this Article hath its foundation and originall it is most evident that these words ought to be understood of that which Christ suffered after death For the word Hell is not to be taken otherwise in the Creed then in those places of Scripture whence the Creed is taken but it is manifest to any one
hath not the Church for his Mother 1. The Act of Faith in these words tacitly implied I beleeve 2. The Object of this Faith the Church described by two Properties vi● 1. Sanctity in that it is called Holy 2. Universality in that it is stiled Catholick Concerning the act of this Faith I beleeve though it be not prefixed to the beginning of this Article as neither to the rest which follow it yet it is to be understood the former I beleeve which precedes the Article of the holy Ghost communicating it self to this and the subsequent and that chiefly for two Reasons The one to teach us that the principal object of our Faith is God himself considered in Unity of Essence and Trinity of Persons and therefore to each of the Persons there is either a Beleeve prefixed or the particle in set before to shew that on them we are to build the certainty and assurance of our hope but as for these Articles of the Church The forgivenesse of sins The Resurrection of the body and the like they being creatures are but the secondary objects of our Faith not to be trusted upon immediately in themselves and therefore have not a Credo a Beleeve apart to themselves but prefixt to one of the Persons I beleeve in the holy Ghost The other to set out and divide by this means unto every of the Persons a special work Creation to the Father Redemption to the Sonne Sanctification to the holy Ghost Question is made What the words are which are to be supplied in this Article The holy Catholick Church whether I beleeve or I beleeve in I beleeve as is generally determined by the Orthodox Kahal in Hebrew ordinarily translated Ecclesia sometimes Synagoga is taken for an Assembly or Congregation and that sometimes in the evil part for an Assembly of wicked men as Gen. 49. 6. Psal. 2● 5. sometimes in the good sense for an Assembly of men gathered together for a holy or civil use or end Nehem. 5. 13. 1 Sam. 17. 47. 1 Chron. 13. 2. Deut. 23. 1 2 3. Psal. 8. 22 23. Gnedah or Hedah ordinarily translated Synagoga doth also signifie an Assembly or Congregation gathered at set hours and places appointed Sometimes it notes a rebellious tumultuous and evil Assembly Psal. 106. 17 18. Numb 16. 48. and sometimes an orderly and lawful Congregation as Psal. 1. 5. Ier. 30. 20. Exod. 12. 19 47. Gnedah signifieth something more noble then Kahal as being the special Ecclesia in prophane Authours signifieth an Assembly of Citizens which by the voice of the Crier was called from their domestick affairs and the rest of the multitude to hear the sentence of the Senate so it is all one with Concio which is derived à Ciendo because all were called by publick Edict into the Assembly In the New Testament it is once taken for a disorderly and confused Assembly Act. 19. 32 39 40. But that one place excepted it is ever taken for a multitude or society with a disposition or relation to Religion And so it notes 1. The company of all the faithful Mat. 16. 18. Ephes. 1. 21 22. 4. 16. 5. 25 26. Col. 1. 18 24. Ephes. 5. 27 32. it is also taken indefinitely for every multitude and society of beleevers in Christ Act. 2. 47. Gal. 1. 13. 1 Cor. 15. 9. 12. 20. Act. 5. 11. 8. 1. 2. More particularly it signifieth any Assembly gathered together for the worship of God Act. 9. 31. 14. 23. 1 Cor. 11. 16. The Church in its primary signification may be defined A multitude or society of faithful men called out of all mankinde corrupted by the Ministery of the Word according to the good pleasure of God united as living members to Christ their Head and in him partaking of grace in this life and glory in the life to come to the praise of Gods wisdom power and riches of his mercy 1. It is a multitude 1 Cor. 10. 17. and that out of every Nation Language Tribe and People Apoc. 5. 9. 2. It is a society of men not of Angels Heb. 12. 22. See Ephes. 3. 10. L'Empereur in his Theses saith If the word Church be generally taken it is certain that the Angels also belong to it for the Church is the body of Christ Ephes. 1. 23. but Christ is the Head not only of men but also of Angels Col. 2. 10 18 19. They are our fellow-servants Revel 19. 10. and fellow-brethren Iob 1. 6. by Christ Ephes. 3. 15. 3. A society of the faithful called effectually and savingly out of the world or mankinde corrupted by the Gospel The Church is either Jewish or Christian the Christian either Primitive or Successive and they again in respect of Manners are Pure or Impure in respect of Worship Sound or Idololatrical in respect of Doctrine Orthodox or Heretical in respect of mutual Communion Catholick or Schismatical There are divers and glorious Elogies of this Church visible in the Scriptures it is called The City of God Heb. 12. 22. The heavenly Ierusalem there also Ierusalem which is from above Gal. 4. 26. The house of God the pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3. 15. Christs sheepfold John 10. 16. The Spouse of Christ Cant. 4. 8. 2 Cor. 11. 2. Revel 21. 9. The body of Christ Eph. 1. 22 23. Col. 1. 18. The Church is Triumphant or Comprehensorum and Militant or Viatorum 1. Triumphant viz. that part of men who having overcome the flesh the world and the Devil now reign with God and Christ gloriously in Heaven 2. Militant viz. that part of men which yet conflict with those adversaties That distinction relies on the words of the Apostle Ephes. 3. 15. The Apostle speaks of the Triumphant Church 2 Tim. 4. ●6 7. Heb. 12. 23. Revel 7. 9. Hence their errour is refuted who think that the souls of the dead do sleep even to the Resurrection or who think that the souls of the godly and faithful till that time are excluded from the vision of God and heavenly glory See 2 Cor. 5. 6 7 8. Phil. 1. 23. Revel 14. 13. the Apostle speaks of the Militant Church 1 Tim. 6. 12. That which is spoken to one is understood of all Gal. 5. 17. 1 Pet. 2. 11. 1 Iohn 5. 4. Ephes. 6. 11 12. The Church is Militant either in deed or in shew only and profession those indeed belong to the Militant Church which are called according to purpose viz. the truly faithful and elect Those are the true members of the body of Christ who by faith are united to Christ and ingraffed in him who are partakers of the holy Ghost who draw grace and spiritual life from Christ Rom. 8. 9. Col. 2. 19. Ephes. 5. 25 26 27. but the wicked and hypocrites onely in name and profession belong to the Church for they have no true Communion with Christ they no more belong to the mystical body of Christ then a
Firm therefore called the riches of assurance of understanding and so opposite to doubting 2. Absolute and illimited beleeves precepts promises and threats Some expressions of Scripture seem to lay much upon assent as 1 Iohn 4. 2. 5. 1. 1 Cor. 12. 3. Matth. 16. 17. The truths of God at first suffering under so many prejudices the Gospel was a novel Doctrine contrary to the ordinary and received principles of reason persecuted in the world no friend to natural and carnal affections and therefore apt to be suspected Assent now is nothing so much as it was then 3. There is a consent to the goodnesse as well as an assent to the truth the one is the act of the understanding the other of the will The soul upon the information that Gods Spirit gives me of the excellency of Christ and his suitablenesse to me assents to the truth of it and consents to the goodnesse of it and makes choice of him for its portion Faith is the consent of the whole soul to receive and accept of Christ as God the Father hath offered him in the Gospel 4. A resting and relying upon Christ alone for grace and salvation Psal. 23. 1 2 6. Psal. 27. 1. Iob 19. 25 27. Rom. 8. 31. The soul leanes on Christ as a feeble man on a staff 2 Chron. 16. 7 8. Prov. 3. 5. Psal. 22. 8. What the Old Testament cals trusting the New cals beleeving This confidence of special mercy is the form and essence of faith without which faith is not faith nor justifies the sinner The Papists and Arminians cannot endure this that faith should be such a special confidence of the remission of sins They say it is a confidence that God may remit and a good hope that he will or it is a conditional confidence that God will remit if we shall be constant in piety to the end of our life The Doctrine of Faith is in three things 1. There is a necessity of relying on Christ alone 2. There is an allsufficiency of ability in him being God and man to be an high-Priest to make intercession for us 3. Of his willingnesse that we should have pardon grace comfort and salvation by him There are promises 1. Of free-grace that God will justifie the ungodly and pardon sin for his own names sake 2. Of grace that God will give Faith Repentance Love and a new heart 3. Unto grace that if we beleeve and repent we shall be saved These promises are all we have to build our faith on for our eternal salvation In all recumbency it is not enough to regard the strength of the act and rightnesse of the object carnal men will say I place my hope in Jesus Christ for salvation Micah 3. 11. but there are other circumstances to be observed First The method and order of this recumbency the resolution of an humbled sinner to cast himself upon Christ the main end and use of faith is to comfort those that are cast down Faith is exprest by taking hold of Christ or the Covenant Isa. 56. 4. by staying our selves upon or leaning upon God which supposeth a sense of misery Secondly The warrant and ground of it we must go to work considerately understand what we do 2 Tim. 1. 12. Psal. 119. 49. natural conscience may pretend fairly to trust in Christ but have no ground for it Ier. 7. 4. Thirdly The effects and fruits it cannot stand with a purpose to sin Ioh. 13. 10. Heb. 10. 23. We are said to be justified by faith to live by it to be saved by it to have it imputed unto us for righteousnesse all which is to be understood not principally immediately meritoriously in regard of any worth or dignity of it or efficaciously in regard of any power or efficacy in it self but mediately subserviently organically as it is a means to apprehend Christ his satisfaction and sufferings by the price and merit whereof we are justified and saved and stand as righteous in Gods sight and as it hath a special respect and relation thereunto There are divers degrees of faith Little faith Mat. 8. 26. Great faith Mat. 15. 28. Full assurance of faith Rom. 4. 21. First There is some unbelief in all the servants of God because there is not in any man in this world a perfection of faith faith is mixt with unbelief Secondly Many have a true faith yet a very weak faith Christ will not break the bruised reed Christ chides his Disciples for their weak faith and Peter Mat. 13. O you of little faith And how is it that you have not faith Luk. 4. See Iohn 4. and Matth. 9. Moses David Abraham Isaac were subject to great weaknesse of faith Reasons 1. Sense and reason do in many things contradict the conclusions of faith to beleeve in the mercy of God when we have so much sin 2. The knowledge of God in the best of Gods people which is the pillar and foundation of their faith is but imperfect 3. Satan above all things most opposeth the faith of Gods Saints because he knows that in this their very strength lies Ephes. 6. 14. 1 Tim. 6. 12. and they resist him by their faith 1 Pet. 5. 9. 1 Iohn 5. 4. In two things the weaknesse of faith most discovers it self First In thinking that we shall not finde the good things which God promiseth to give Secondly That we shall not be delivered from the evil things which he hath undertaken to deliver us from Faith in Gods threats must be confirmed as a principal means of beating back sinful temptations faith in Gods promises must be confirmed as a principal means of keeping us in comfort and obedience All holy exercises serve to strengthen faith especially two First Prayer with the Apostles to the Lord to increase our faith and to fill us with joy and peace through beleeving 2. Meditations specially directed to that end of the omnipotency of God his perfect truth and his accomplishment of his Word formerly to our selves and others There is a twofold state of faith a state of Adherence and a state of Assurance First A state of Adherence Affiance and Recumbence the act of the soul accepting Christ and giving it self to him Isa. 50. 10. Luk. 18. 13. There is a great peace in a faith of Adherence Heb. 4. 3. 1. In respect of the guilt of sinne it shewes the Lord Jesus as a Sacrifice for sinne 2. In reference to God I have heard saith such a one that the Lord is a God pardoning iniquity transgression and sinne there is tranquillity when one casts his sinne on Christ and ventures his soul on the free-grace of God Isa. 50. 10. Secondly Of Assurance 1 Iohn 4. 16. when one hath obtained the witnesse and sealing of the Spirit 1. One may have the faith of adherence roll his soul on Christ and be willing to accept him that hath not the faith of evidence as Heman Psal. 88. The fearing of God
walk by faith we die by faith we are saved Faith is an infused not an acquired habit Grevinchovius saith That habitual faith is begot in us by frequent acts of faith proceeding from the special grace of God as by often acts of justice and liberality the acts of justice and liberality are produced in us This opinion of his is not only contrary to the Doctrine of the Schoolmen and Modern Divines both Papists and Protestants which with unanimous consent call Theological Vertues infused habits but also is subject to divers inconveniencies that place Heb. 11. 6 must needs be understood of the habit of faith for if it be to be understood of the act of faith it will follow that the regenerate when they sleep and do not actually beleeve do displease God and are not in a state of Grace That faith is the gift of God the Apostle teacheth Ephes. 2. 8. Phil. 1. 29. 2. 13. See Iohn 6. 44. To come to Christ is to beleeve in Christ witnesse Christ himself ver 35. Whether actual or habitual faith be in Infants Some call it efficacious faith some a principle others an inclination Some dislike the word habit that is more proper to faith grown and ripe the word seed or principle is better 1 Iohn 4. 9. Some think the Question about Infants beleeving is unnecessary and curious and that they must be left to the free-grace of God Mark 16. 16. Such places do not onely concern grown persons The Lord promiseth grace to Infants Isa. 44. 3. and glory Matth. 19. 14. 18. 6. compared with Mark 9. 36. See 1 Cor. 7. 14. Pelagians say Infants are saved by Gods fore-sight of those good works which they should have done if they had lived Augustine refutes this opinion 2 Cor. 5. 10. every one is to be saved according to what he hath done The Lutherans would have them saved by an actual faith though it be unexpressible Beza saith The faith of the parents is imputed to them by vertue of the Covenant of grace Mr. Down hath a Treatise of the faith of Infants and how they are justified and saved and goes much that way but denies that they have habituall or actuall Faith Whether Faith be in the Saints when they are translated into Heaven and see God face to face Some say there is a kinde of faith in the blessed Saints since they both beleeve things past all things which Christ hath done for our sake and things to come viz. the second coming of Christ the resurrection of the flesh the last judgment and the perfection of the Church and this knowledge of things past and to come depends upon the authority of God The office and imployment of faith shall cease though the nature of it doe not It is a great Question An sides justisicans in decalogo praecipiatur Whether justifying faith be commanded in the Decalogue Adam had a power to beleeve what God propounded as an object of faith the righteousnesse of Christ was not propounded to him it is commanded there therefore not directè because not revealed to Adam but redisctivé It stood not with Adams Covenant he was to be righteous himself not to look for the righteousnesse of another Adam in the state of innocency had a power of many things which in that state could not be reduced to act he had the affection of sorrow but could not mourn for want of an object so the Angels had a power to beleeve in Christ for their confirmation though Christ was not made known till the second Covenant There was a power then given not only to obey God in the duties of the first Covenant but to submit to God for the change of the Covenant when the will of the Lord should be not to submit to the change of the Covenant in man fallen is a sin Gal. 4. 21. therefore Adam had a power to submit to it Whether Faith or Repentance precede To repent is prefixed before beleeve Mark 1. 15. In the order of things repentance must needs be first in respect of the act of contrition acknowledgemement and grief for sinne the Law precedes the Gospel and one is not to be raised before he knows himself to be cast down And although saving Repentance considered compleatly according to all its acts be not without faith yet it precedes it according to some act Christians should indeavour to live the life of Faith First The necessity of it It is a Question An sine speciali Revelatione possumus credere mysteria fidei Whether without a special Revelation we can beleeve the mysteries of faith The Arminians cry down faith and call it Scripturarum tyrannidem Theologorum ludibrium and cry down all infused habits would have none but acquired There is a necessity of faith in respect of divers truths of Scripture that are to be beleeved 1. The resurrection of the body none of the Heathens beleeved this See Act. 23. 8. Matth. 22. 23 29. Some that profest the Christian Religion perverted this Doctrine of the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 18. the Disciples themselves were long in beleeving it Luk. 24. 11. Ioh. 20. 25. 2. The depravednesse of the soul and the enmity of natural reason to the things of God The Philosophers saw clearly the common principles of justice and injustice but not the corruption of nature Rom. 7. 7. The Wisdom of the flesh is enmity against God 3. The necessity of renovation of the soul and body the great Doctrine of Regeneration Iohn 3. 3. When our Saviour had brought Arguments to prove this Doctrine and answered Objections against it how blinde still is Nicodemus v. 9. of that Chapter 4. The necessity of a Mediator and that Christ is this Mediator 1 Tim. 3. 16. The Devils and damned beleeve these truths with a common faith But we need faith to beleeve these truths savingly 2. We need faith also to bring us unto God Rom. 5. 3. we cannot come to God but by Christ nor to Christ but by faith 3. To conform us to Gods Image Acts 15. 9. 4. Without the life of faith we cannot abide with God Matth. 11. 6. Heb. 3. 12. 13. 5. We cannot take fulnesse of delight and complacency in God but by faith Heb. 11. 6. we cannot please God nor he us till we beleeve The life of a Christian is to please God and to be well pleased with him Secondly What it is to live by faith 1. It is to beleive the goodnesse of all that which God commands as well as that which he promiseth and the real evil of all that evil he forbids as well as threatens The precepts of God are good and for our good as well as his promises Deut. 10. 12. Psal. 73. ult The Devils tremble at Gods threatnings but they beleeve not the evil of sin which he forbids for then they would not rebell against God 2. To look after those things principally that are future rather then the
compleatly righteous 2 Cor. 5. 21. Our sinne was in Christ not inherently but by way of imputation therefore his righteousnesse is so in us See Act. 13. 38 39. Phil. 3. 9. The Papists acknowledge all to be by grace as well as we but when we come to the particular explication there is a vast difference they mean grace inherent in us and we grace without us that is the love and favour of God Arguments against them 1. That grace by which we are justified is called the love of God Rom. 5. 8. not love active whereby we love God but love passive that is that whereby we are loved of him Rom. 9 15. All our salvation is ascribed to the mercy of God which is not something in us but we are the objects of it Titus 3 4. Those words imply some acts of God to us which we are only the objects of To be justified or saved by the grace of God is no more then to be saved by the love the mercy the philanthropy of God all which do evidently note that it is not any thing in us but all in God 2. Grace cannot be explained to be a gracious habit or work because it is opposed to these Rom. 11. 4. Titus 3. 5. Ephes. 2. 8. by grace is as much as not by works not of our selves 3. It appears by the condition we are described to be in when justified which is set down Rom. 4. a not imputing sin a justifying the ungodly the Apostle there instanceth in Abraham who had so much inward grace in him yet was considered in Justification as unholy and he was justified in this that God imputed not to him the imperfections he was guilty of For the imputation of Christs righteousnesse there is justitia mediatoris that is imputed not justitia mediatoria as they say in Logick Natura generis communicatur non natura generica The righteousnesse by which the just are justified before God is justitia legis though not legalis Isa. 53. He bore our sins in his body on the tree He was made sin for us See Rom. 3. 25. To speak properly the will or grace of God is the efficient cause of Justification the material is Christs righteousnesse the formal is the imputing of this righteousnesse unto us and the final is the praise and glory of God so that there is no formal cause to be sought for in us Some say but falsly the righteousnesse by which we are formally justified before God is not the righteousnesse of Christ but of faith that being accepted in the righteousnesse of the Law Fides tincta sanguine Christi Whether inherent justice be actual or habitual Bishop Davenant cap. 3. de habituali justitia saith a certain habitual or inherent justice is infused into all that are justified Iohn 1. 13. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 15. 1 Cor. 6. 11 19. 2 Pet. 1. 4. All those that are justified do supernatural works Ergò It is certain that they are endued with supernatural grace and holinesse We are said to be righteous from this inherent justice we are said to be just and that by God himself Gen. 6. 9. Heb. 11. 4. Luk 1. 61. 2. 25. 1 Pet. 4. 18. Bellarmine lib. 5. de Iustificatione cap. 7. prop. 3. saith Propter incertitudine●● propriae justitiae periculum inanis gloriae tutissimum est fiduciam in sola Dei misericordia benignitate reponere By which saying he overthrows all his former Dispute about inherent righteousnesse Whether we be justified by the passive obedience of Christ alone or also by his active In this Controversie many learned Divines of our own differ among themselves and it doth not seem to be of that importance that some others are about Justification We are justified in part by Christs active obedience for by it we obtain the imputation of that perfect righteousnesse which giveth us title to the Kingdom of Heaven Seeing it was not possible for us to enter into life till we had kept the Commandments of God Mat. 19. 17. and we were not able to keep them our selves it was necessary our Surety should keep them for us Dan. 9. 24. Rom. 10. 4. Rom. 3. 21. The Scripture seemeth to ascribe our Redemption wholly to Christs bodily death and the bloud that he shed for us Eph. 1. 7. Rev. 5. 9. but in these places the holy Ghost useth a Synecdoche it putteth one part of Christs passion for the whole 1. Because the shedding of his bloud was a sensible sign and evidence that he died for us 2. This declared him to be the true propitiatory Sacrifice that was figured by all the Sacrifices under the Law Some urge this Argument By Christs active Obedience imputed to them the faithful be made perfectly righteous what need is there then of his passive righteousnesse need there any more then to be made righteous Christ fulfilled the duty of the Law and did undergo the penalty that last was a satisfaction for the trespasse which was as it were the forfeiture and the fulfilling the Law was the principal Psal. 40. 4. Ior. 31. 3. Gal. 4. 4. Some to avoid Christs active Obedience question Whether Christ as man was not bound to fulfill the Law for himself All creatures are subject to Gods authority Yet this detracts not from his active Obedience partly from his own free condescension and partly because his whole person God and man obeyed CHAP. VII Of the Parts and Termes of Iustification Remission of sins and Imputation of Christs Righteousnesse JUstification is used so largely in the Scripture as to comprehend under it Remission of sins but if we will speak accurately there is a difference between Remission of sin and the justification of the sinner The justification of a sinner properly and strictly is the cleansing and purging of a sinner from the guilt of his sins by the gift and imputation of the righteousnesse of his Surety Jesus Christ for which his sins are pardoned and the sinner freed from the punishment of sinne and received into the favour of God Remission or forgivenesse of sins may be thus described It is a blessing of God upon his Church procured by the death and passion of Christ whereby God esteems of sinne as no sinne or as not committed Or thus It is an act of grace acquitting the sinner from the guilt and whole punishment of sin Every subject of Christs Kingdom hath his sins pardoned Isa. 33. ult This is one of the priviledges of the Church in the Apostles Creed Acts 2. 38 39. and all his sins totally pardoned Exod. 34. 6 7. Micah 7. 18 19. This is a great priviledge Psal. 32. 1. Exod. 31. 34. It is no where to be had but in the Church because it is purchased by Christs bloud and is a fruit of Gods eternal love Remission of sins is the principal part of Redemption Col. 1. 14. Ephes. 1. 7. one of the chief things
our sins be pardoned 1. Did you ever repent for sin that is a necessary condition though not a cause of the forgivenesse of it Act. 3. 19. 2. Examine your faith in Christ Rom. 4. 3. Being justified by faith we have peace with God 3. Remission and Sanctification go together Heb. 9. 14. 4. There is a witnesse of bloud 1 Iohn 5. 8. the Spirit of God gives testimony of our Justification as well as Sanctification Whether peccata remissa redeant Whom God justifieth Rom. 8. 30. that is forgiveth their sins them he glorifieth The Remission of sins is perfect it makes as if the sin had never been it is called blotting out and throwing into the bottom of the Sea taking of them away there is much difference between taking away the guilt and power of sinne the later is taken away by degrees and in part but the guilt of sinne is quite discharged He will remember them no more the godly who have their sins fully remitted do feel the sting and terrour of it in their consciences as David Psal. 51. yet it is not because it is not forgiven but to make us humble and taste of the bitternesse of sin thou maist yet take as much comfort in the pardon of all thy offences as if they had never been acted by thee When God hath pardoned the fault all punishment is not necessarily taken away but only punishment which is satisfactory to Gods justice Remissa culpa remittitur poena Isa. 53. 5. How are we healed if notwithstanding Christs passion and satisfaction we are to be tormented for our sins with most bitter torments God is fully reconciled by Christs satisfaction with the truly penitent Rom. 5. 1 10. The chastisements of Gods people come from a loving Father and are medicinal not penal This overthrows 1. Popish Indulgences viz. relaxations from satisfactory pains in Purgatory flames after this life which Rivet fitly termes Emulgences 2. Prayers for the dead Where sins are forgiven whether only in this world That Parable Matth. 18. is brought by some to prove that they are not only forgiven here This man who was forgiven say they because he did not do as he should therefore had he all his former debts laid to his charge nothing is argumentative from a Parable but what is from the scope and intention of it This is the time only wherein a sin may be forgiven the foolish Virgins would have got oyl when it was too late but then they ran up and down to no purpose thus it is with all after death then comes judgement to day is the time of repentance reconciliation it is too late to cry out in hell thou wilt be drunk unclean no more CHAP. VIII II. Imputation of Christs Righteousness TO impute in the general is to acknowledge that to be anothers which is not indeed his and it is used either in a good or bad sense so that it is no more then to account or reckon It is the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to us and accepted for us by which we are judged righteous Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth right co●snesse without works and again that justifieth the ungodly There is no appearing before God without the righteousnesse of Christ Revel 19. 8. If we be sinners by the imputation of Adams sin then are we also righteous by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse Rom. 5. 12 19. because his disobedience is imputed to us Peccatum Adami it a posteris omnibus imputatur ac si omnes idem peccatum patravissent There is some difference between the imputation of our sins to Christ and his righteousnesse to us for though our sinne was by imputation his as his righteousnesse by imputation ours yet the manner of this imputation is not to be urged as Bellarmine would stretch it by our tenets as by Christs righteousnesse imputed to us we are righteous truly though not inherently yet Christ by our sins cannot be called a sinner truly he was reckoned among sinners and God laid our sins upon him yet he cannot be called a sinner because he took our sins upon him not to abide but vanquish them he so took them on him that he took them away but his righteousnesse is so made ours as that it is to abide in us Object The righteousnesse of Christ as it flows from him being God and man is infinite but we need no infinite righteousnesse for we are not bound to do any more then Adam was he was not bound to be infinitely righteous Answ. Christ must needs have infinite righteousnesse to be a Mediatour and to satisfie the justice of God but for that righteousnesse which is communicated to us it is so farre given as we need it therefore some partake of it more some lesse Three things will help us to judge whether we have Christs righteousnesse 1. If thou laist hold upon Christ by faith and choosest him to be thy Lord and adherest to him with all thy heart 2. If thou loathe thy self in thy approaches to God as the Publicane Luke 18. 3. Where ever Christ puts on the soul imputed righteousnesse he fails not to give inherent 1 Cor. 5. 11. Tit. 3. 5 6. Means to get the righteousnesse of Christ 1. Labour to be thorowly convinced of thy own miserable condition what a vile sinner thou art Rev. 3. lat end 2. Study much the holinesse and purity of Gods nature Iob 42. 3. Study much Christs righteousnesse See Mr Burr on Matth 5. 6. 1. How beautiful a garment is the righteousnesse of God 2. Christs willingnesse to have thee put it on by faith 4. Put it on by faith rely on Christ venture thy soul on him Whether God sees sin in justified persons God is not so affected with the sins of his people to whom he is reconciled as to be an enemy to them for them but he is angry with them for their sins Exod. 4. 14. Deut 9. 20. reproves them Numb 12. 8. and often punisheth them for them 2 Kings 12. 10 11 14. 1 Cor. 11. 30 32. they are said to be committed in his sight Psal. 51. 4. That Text Numb 23. 21. is sufficiently vindicated from the Antinomians by M. Gataker in his Treatise on the Text and elswhere That place Hab. 1. 3. 13. agrees with that in Numbers Videt visione contemplationis non visione comprobationis He sees it because he beholds it but not without displeasure and detestation although he bear for a time God could bestow such a measure of grace on his people and so guide them with his Spirit that they should not sin but he doth not dispense his grace and Spirit in such a measure as to keep his people free from sin for then they should have no use of the Lords Prayer to beg remission of sins The Priests in the Old Testament offered first for their own sins and then for the sins of others and Christ taught the
this life thus 1. In the letter of it though delivered by never so faithful Ministers it is able to do nothing therefore these things are often preacht and men not bettered when the Spirit accompanies it it is efficacious See Rom. 1. 16. Phil. 2. 15. The preaching of the Gospel is 1. The only means of the revelation of this life 2 Tim. 1. 10. 2. It is the divine seed whereby the Lord conveys this life and begets it in the soul 1 Pet. 1. 23 25. This work of the Gospel consists in five things 1. The preaching of the Gospel opens the understanding makes us see the misery of sinne and the excellency of Christ and the things of God Ephes. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 2. It makes the will and affections to relish Christs sweetnesse perswades the heart to chuse him and consent that God and they may be united in a league of friendship this is the work of faith 3. Turns the heart from all evil wayes it walkt in men are said to be pull'd out of the power of Satan 4. Creates in the soul and stampes in it all the Graces wherein Gods Image stands 5. By administration of the promise and instruction fortifieth the soul and makes one do all things belonging to this life Arminians give too much to man and too little to Christ. Antinomians and Familists give too much to Christ and too little to man They give so much to Christ that they abolish the nature and act of the creature they say Christ must do all and we can do nothing They dream of an insensible motion without us place Grace in a naked apprehension there must be not onely a work for us but in and by us The work of the Father is in heaven of Christ on the Crosse of the Spirit within us Col. 1. 29. They deny not onely mans work but the Spirits work in us Rom. 16. 20. Secondly They say Christ must do all and we after we have received Grace nothing there is not a coordination but subordination of our wils to his grace though at our first conversion we were meerly passive yet when Grace is received we may act motion follows life Col. 2. 4. The Familists deny all inherent graces in the Saints because it is said we do not live but Christ he they say beleeves repents as if we lived not at all and he is formally all habits and graces but the Scripture grants habits and graces to be in a man Iohn 19. 28. Matth. 12. 33. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 2. The sins of our actions then could not be charged on our selves but on the faint operations of his grace Marks and Evidences of spiritual life First Every creature which lives values life A living dog is better then a dead Lion If one values his life he will prize 1. Pabulum vitae Attend on the Ordinances the Word Sacrament Prayer Communion of Saints 1 Peter 2. As new born Babes Cantic 4. latter end 2. He will avoid what is destructive to life Beware of grieving and quenching the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 1 Thess. 5. 19. by neglecting the motions of it or noysome lusts 3. He will endure any evil and part with any good rather then part with life Secondly This new life brings alwayes a great change along with it when a childe quickens in the mothers womb she findes a great change so when Paul and Manass●h and the blinde man Ioh. 9. were converted unlesse they were religiously trained up as Timothy from their youth Thirdly Sense a spiritual sense in the soul senses exercised savour the things of God Rom. 8. Fourthly Every life hath some kinde of motions and actions that are sutable to it as in this spiritual life 1. That inward work of adhering to Christ as their chief portion the fountain of all their good a true faith 2. Repentance labouring to cast out corruption and to turn to God 3. The Spirit of Prayer You have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby you cry Abba Father Our Law judgeth a childe alive that was heard to cry 4. The minding of heavenly things Col. 3. 1 2. 5. Life hath a sympathy a fellowship with those that are members of the body the same quickning Spirit lives in all Christians weep with them that weep and rejoyce with them that rejoyce 6. If we be regenerated we do that to God which children do to their Father 1. Honour him and stand in awe of him 2. Rely on him as the fountain of all our good as children do on their parent● for a supply of all their wants 3. Are obedient to him Motives to live to God 1. It is a dishonour to God when the creature seeks to exalt self that which I make my utmost end I make my God Phil. 3. 10. 2. Consider the self-denial of Christ he came from heaven to do the will of him that sent him Rom. 15. 3. Means of spiritual life 1. Labour to get thy miserable condition by nature set close upon thy spirit how thou art dead in sin 2. Study to get into Christ 1 Iohn 5. 12. onely he can quicken he is never got but by Faith Luke 15. the Prodigal is the pattern of a converted soul. See vers 31. CHAP. XIV The Sanctification of the whole Man Soul and Body VVE should live more to the soul then body Psal. 119. 175. 141. 8. 142. 7. 143. 11. 1. The soul is distinct from the body as the operations of it shew 2. It lives when the body dies Eccles. 12. 7. Mat. 10. 28. 3. It is far better then the body 4. The concernments of the soul are higher then those of the body 1 Pet. 3. beginning 5. The sicknesse and death of the soul is worse then that of the body 1 King 8. 38. Ioh. 8. 21 23. 6. We never live to any purpose but when the soul lives 1. Of the faculties of the soul. Grace spreads it self through all the faculties A faculty is an ability of producing some effect or operation agreeable to our nature and for our good implanted in man by nature There are three reasonable faculties proper to men alone 1. The Understanding by which we know truth 2. The Will by which we desire good 3. Conscience a power of ordering our selves to and with God I. Of the Understanding It is that power which God hath given a man to acquaint himself with the Being Properties and Differences of all things by discourse Or it is that faculty by which we are able to inform our selves of the general natures of things Sense alone perceives particulars the understanding abstracts things and forms in it self the general natures of things I see this or that man but understand the nature of man The Object of it is omne intelligibile Truth in general in the utmost latitude and universality of it is the object of the Understanding good in the general in the universality of its nature is the object of the Will therefore till
is naturally cauterized 1 Tim. 4. 2. it puts feeling and apprehension into us this is the first work of Grace converting upon the soul when it begins to be tender Act. 24. 16. and is not able to endure those heavy burdens of sinne which before though mountains it never felt is also now active that was silent Dan. 9. 8. Ezra 9. 6. 2. Whereas naturally it is self-flattering it will accuse when it ought naturally it stirreth in a false way promising heaven and salvation when there is no such matter Deut. 29. 19. Davids heart soon smote him and Psal. 51. he acknowledged his sinne and bewailed it and again I and my house have sinned Conscience speaketh the truth Thus often thou hast prophaned the Sabbath abused thy self and that in all the aggravations this makes the godly lie so low in their humiliation 3. The erroneousnesse of it is taken away the mischief of an erroneous conscience is seen in Popery and other heresies how they make conscience of worshipping that which is an Idol if they should eat meat on a fasting-day not odore the Sacrament how much would their hearts be wounded this erroneous conscience brought in all the superstition in the world but the godly obtain a sound judgment conscience is to be a guide 4. The partial working of it about some works but not others is taken away as Herod Psal. 50. those that abhorred Idols did yet commit sacriledge they neglect the duties of one of the tables as the civil mans conscience is very defective he will not be drunk unjust yet regards not his duty to God is ignorant seldome prayeth in his Family the hypocritical Jews and Pharisees would have Sacrifice but not Mercy Secondly Inward motions and thoughts of sinne as well as outward acts his conscience now deeply smites and humbleth him for those things which only God knoweth and which no civil or worldly man ever taketh notice of So Paul Rom. 7. How tender is Pauls conscience Every motion of sin is a greater trouble and burden to him then any grosse sinne to the worldling Hezekiah humbleth himself for his pride of heart Matth. 5. the Word condemneth all those inward lusts and sins which are in the fountain of the heart though they never empty themselves into the actions of men the conscience of a godly man condemneth as farre as the Word it is not thus with the natural mans conscience nor with the refined Moralist he condemneth not himself in secret he takes not notice of such proud earthly motions they are not a pressure to him Thirdly In doing of duties to take notice of all the imperfections and defects of them as well as the total omission of them his unbelief lazinesse rovings in the duty I beleeve Lord help my unbelief All our righteousnesse is a menstr●ous ragge A godly man riseth from his duties bewailing himself Fourthly To witnesse the good things of God in us as well as the evil that is of our selves it is broken and humbled for sinne yet this very mourning is from God Fifthly About sins of omission as well as commission whereas the wicked if they be drunk steal have no rest in their consciences but if they omit Christian duties they are not troubled Mat. 25. 36. Sixthly In the extremity of it being rectified from one extream fals into another from the neglect of the Sacrament they fall to adoring of it this is rectified by grace it will so encline him to repent as that he shall be disposed to believe so to be humble as that he shall be couragious Seventhly Converting grace also removes 1. The slavishnesse and security of conscience and puts in us a spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. All the men in the world could not perswade Cain but that his sins were greater then could be pardoned 2. That natural pronenesse to finde something in our selves for comfort men think if they be not their own saviours they cannot be saved at all Phil. 3. I desire to know nothing but Christ and him crucified and count all things dung for his righteousnesse 3. The unsubduednesse and contumacy in it to the Scripture Conscience is wonderfully repugnant to the precepts and holinesse of Gods Law in the troubles of it contradicts the Scripture way of Justification CHAP. XVII Sanctification of the Memory MEmory is a faculty of the minde whereby it preserves the species of what it once knew 1 Chron. 16. 15. Memory is the great keeper or master of the rols of the soul ●rari●m animae the souls Exchequer Sense and understanding is of things present hope of things to come Memoria rerum praeteritarum memory of things past It is one part of the sanctity of the memory when it can stedfastly retain and seasonably recal the works of the living God A sanctified memory consists in three things First In laying up good things concerning God Christ Gods word his Works experiments Mary laid up these things in her heart Secondly For a good end sinne to be sorry and ashamed of it Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sinne against thee Remember the Sabbath to sanctifie it Thirdly In seasonably recalling them thy personal sins on a day of humiliation Gods mercies on a day of thanksgiving good instructions where there is occasion to practise them A sanctified memory is a practical memory as the Lord sayes Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy Psal. 109. 16. A Countrey-woman after the hearing of a Sermon met as she was going home with the Minister he asked her where she had been she told him at a good Sermon he asked her the Ministers name and Text she answered she knew not him nor remembred the Text her memory was so bad but she would go home and mend her life Another complained that for the expressions and other things delivered in a Sermon he could remember but little but he had learned by it to hate sin and love Christ more CHAP. XVIII Sanctification of the Affections THe affections were called by Tully perturbations by some Affectiones or affectus by others passions The affections are different from the vertues which are called by their names They are certain powers of the soul by which it worketh and moveth it self with the body to good and from evil Or They are powers of the soul subordinate to the will by which they are carried to pursue and follow after that which is good and to shun and avoid that which is evil They are the forcible and sensible motions of the will according as an object is presented to them to be good or evil 1. Motions Rom. 7. 5. Anger Love Joy are the putting forth of the will this or that way The Scripture cals them the feet of the soul Psal. 119. 59 101. Eccles. 5. 1. 2. Motions of the will Some Philosophers place them in the sensitive soul but Angels and the souls of men separate from the body have these affections 1
to the precise number of seven for we find it not in any of the Fathers or other Writers whatsoever before a thousand years after Christ have shewed that the seven are not all Sacraments if the name of Sacrament be taken properly and straitly Rainolds against Hart. The number of seven Sacraments was not determined untill the dayes of Peter Lombard which lived 1151 years after Christ. None but Christ onely can institute a Sacrament Their Schoolmen Alensis and Holcot have denied confirmation to be from Christ his Institution their Hugo Lombard Bonaventure Alensis Altisiodorus have affirmed the same of extream Unction which in the primitive Church by the judgement of their Cassander was not so extream Matrimony and Confirmation were held by the Schoolmen to be no Sacrament Iohn the Evangelist notes that out of the side of Christ being dead there came bloud and water hence arose the Sacraments of the Church Paul twice joynes them both together 1 Cor. 10. 1. 12. 12 13. The Fathers intreating precisely of the Sacraments of the New Testament do only expresse two Baptism and the Eucharist so Ambrose in his Treatise properly written of the Sacraments and Cyril in his Book entituled a Catechism Onely Baptism and the Lords Supper in the New Testament were instituted by Christ Matth. 28. 24. therefore they onely are Sacraments of the New Testament Christ did onely partake in these two Paul acknowledgeth but these two 1 Cor. 10. 2 3 4. Matrimony 1. being ordained before the fall can be no Sacrament which is a seal of the Promise and Covenant of Grace after and by reason of the fall 2. It is not proper to the Church as Sacraments are but common to Jews Turks and Infidels 3. Every Sacrament belongs to every member of the Church but this belongs not to their Priests and Votaries See M. Cartw. Rejoynd par 2. p. 82 83. Cajetane denies that the Text of Iohn 20. 23. and Ephes. 5. 32. and Iam. 5. 4. being the sole grounds of Scripture which Papists have for three of their Sacraments Auricular Confession Matrimony and Extream Unction do teach any such thing It came not from the Lord to ordain one Sacrament for the Clergy as Orders a second for the Laity alone as Marriage a third for catechized ones as Confirmation a fourth for sick ones as Unction a fifth for lapsed ones as Penance These are no Scripture but tradition Sacraments The Councel of Trent thus argues There are seven defects of a man seven degrees of the body seven Aegyptian plagues seven planets seven dayes in the week they should adde also seven heads of the Beast Therefore there are seven Sacraments Vide Aquin. part 3. Quaest. 65. Art 1. X. The use of the Sacraments of the New Testament 1. To quicken our dulnesse and stirre up our care in performing the duties whereto the Gospel bindeth us viz. to endeavour and labour to repent and beleeve and obey out of an assured confidence that God will accept and help our endeavours 2. To confirm and stablish our hearts in faith that we may setledly beleeve that God hath and will perform the good things sealed up viz. Remission of sins sanctification and salvation all the spiritual blessings of the new Covenant The uses or ends of the Sacraments are especially three 1. To strengthen faith 2. To seal the Covenant between God and us 3. To be a badge of our profession Atters of the Sac. l. 1. c. 3. XI Whether any other but a Minister lawfully called and ordained may administer the Sacraments Baptism and the Lords Supper It is held by the Reformed Churches and by the soundest Protestant Writers That neither of these Sacraments may be dispensed by any but by a Minister of the Word lawfully ordained 1. God hath appointed the Ministers of the Word lawfully called and ordained and no other to be stewards and dispensers of the mysteries of Christ 1 Cor. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 5 7. 2. He hath appointed them to be Pas●ors or Shepherds To feed the stock of God Ier. 3. 15. Ephes. 4. 11. Acts 20. 28. 1 Pet. 5. 2. much of this feeding consists in the dispensation of the Sacraments 3. Christ gives a Commission to the Apostles to teach and baptize and extends the same Commission to all teaching Ministers to the end of the world Matth. 28. 19. 20. Ephes. 4. 11 12 13. Neither of the Sacraments have efficacy unlesse they be administred by him that is lawfully called thereunto or a person made publick and cloathed with Authority by Ordination This errour in the matter of Baptism is begot by another errour of the absolute necessity of Baptism Mr. Hendersons second Paper to the King The Scripture joyneth together the preaching of the Word and dispensations of the seals both belonging to the Officers who have received Commission from Jesus Christ Mat. 28. 19. 1 Cor. 1. M. Ball. Heb. 5. 4. No man takes this honour but he which is called as was Aaron which sentence doth manifestly shut out all private persons from administration of Baptism seeing it is a singular honour in the Church of God Cartw. 2d Reply 11th Tractate The example of Zipporah either was rash or singular and also no way like womens baptizing Circumcision was then commanded the Head of the Family Baptism belongs only to Ministers Matth. 28. she circumcised her son when he was not in danger of death as these baptize CHAP. VIII Of Baptism BAptism is taken sometimes for the superstitious Jewish ablutions and legal purifications as certain representations of our Baptism as Mark 7. 3 4. and Heb. 9. 10. Sometimes by a Synecdoche for the Ministery of the Doctrine and Baptism of Iohn Mat. 21. 25. Acts 1. 5. Sometimes for the miraculous and extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost Acts 1. 5. Sometimes by a Metaphor for the crosse and afflictions Matth. 20. 22. Luke 12. 50. Lastly for the sign of the Covenant of Grace Mat. 28. 19 20. Mar. 16. 15 15. Our Lord took Baptism as some have observed from the Jews baptizing of Proselytes and washing of themselves from uncleannesse which was known and usual among them And he chose the Lords Supper likewise from a custom observed among the Jews at the Passeover at the end of the celebration whereof the Fathers of Families were wont to take a Cake of bread and after the blessing thereof to break and distribute it to the Communicants As also after that a Cup of wine in the like sort Whereunto that may have reference Ps. 116. 12 13. Iohns Pref. to his Christian Plea This custom Nestrezat Tableandu Sacrament de la Saincte Cene also mentions and saith The Master of the Family in giving the bread to every one of his domesticks set at a Table used these words Hold Eat This is the bread of the misery which our Parents did eat in Egypt and he quotes Deut. 16. 3. Baptism is the Sacrament of our initiation or ingraffing into Christ
Infants are comprehended under houses and families it is evident by the use of the whole Scripture Gen. 14. 16. 18. 19. Prov. 31. 15. Luke 19. 9. Acts 11. 16. 16. 31. Parents must bring their children therefore to Baptism with an high esteem of that Ordinance and with fervent prayers to God for his blessing upon it that it may be effectual for their regeneration Set a day at least some good time apart to seek the face of God to confesse thy sins chiefly the original sinne which thou hast derived to thine Infant lament it in thy self and lament it in and for him Baptism cannot be reiterated as the Lords Supper therefore what thou canst do but once for thy childe be careful to do it in the best manner Parents should offer their children to God in Baptism 1. With earnest prayers to God for a blessing on his Ordinance 2. In faith plead your right with God he hath promised to be the God of his people and of their seed there are promises which sute with the Ordinance Deut. 13. 6. Isa. 44. 3. 3. With reverence Gen. 17. 2 3. 2 Sam. 7. 18 19. their hearts should be affected with that great priviledge that God should take themselves and their seed into the Covenant The Baptism of Infants without a weighty cause and in a sort compelling is not to be deferred First Because the equity of the eighth day appointed for Circumcision hinders the procrastination of it Secondly Because this delaying of it shews a kinde of contempt of the Ordinance It was a common but an erroneous practice even in the Primitive Church to deferre their Baptism till they were old so some of the Christian Emperours because an opinion prevailed upon them that Baptism discharged them of all sinnes I think that the delay of Baptism which Constantine and some others were guilty of did creep in among other corruptions and was grounded on the false doctrines of those hereticks that denied forgivenesse of sinne to those that fell after Baptism which afrighted poor people from that speedy use of it which the Scripture prescribeth Mr Baxt. Inf. Church-memb par 2. c. 15. Constantine much esteemed and favoured Eusebius who was a very subtil and malicious Arian and yet Constantine even to his death extreamly hated and detested Arianism one token of which love was his receiving the Sacrament of Baptism at his hands when he was extreamly sick and near his death Crakanth Defence of Constant. c. 6. See p. 80. to 86. 92 93. But Constantine received Baptism at Eusebius his hands when he was a Catholick Professour and earnest in that profession The Apostles and Christ himself held communion and received the Sacrament with Iudas Matth. 26. 23. c. so long as he kept the outward and catholick profession though in his heart he was an Apostata yea Devil Id. ib. p. 96 97. Chrysostom and Gregory Nazianzen saith Grotius were not baptized till they were twenty years old at least Plerosque Baptismum suum distulisse in articulum mortis res est notissima ex Historia Ecclesiastica unde Clinicorum nomen Maresius de precibus pro mortuis Augustine Ierome and Ambrose were baptized when grown up men yea but when they better understood the point they disallow neglect of childrens Baptism as the Parents sinne as Ierom in his Epistle to Laeta and Augustine frequently and so Ambrose all one for Poedobaptisme as an Ordinance of God and so as counting it sinne to neglect it Cobbet of Baptism part 2. Sect. 5. Some hold that only Infants of Church-members are to be baptized But although the Parents of those Infants be not members of any particular Church yet if they be members of the universal Church as they are certainly if they be baptized and professe the Catholick Faith that is enough for the administring of Baptism to their Infants otherwise there will be no difference between their Infants and the Infants of Turks which is not to be admitted We admit children to Baptism 1. By vertue of their remote Parents who may be good though their immediate Parents be bad Act. 2. 39. 2. They may be admitted by stipulation of others to see them educated in the faith into which they are baptized be the Parents themselves never so wicked Vide Ames Cas. Consc. l. 4. c. 27. Whether the use of Witnesses be necessary Peter Martyr in loc Commun cals it utile institutum a profitable constitution In ancient time the Parents of children which were Heathen and newly converted to Christian Religion were either ignorant and could not or carelesse and would not bring up their children agreeably to the Word of God and the Religion which they newly professed Hence it was thought meet that some persons of good knowledge and life should be called to witnesse the Baptism and promise their care for the childrens education It is an ancient commendable practice continued in the Church of God above the space of twelve hundred years M. Perk. Cas. of Consc. It was but a bare prudential thing in the Church whether it were Hyginus of Rome that first brought in God-fathers and God-mothers about the year of Christ 140. as Platina and others write or some other it is not greatly material Ford of the Covenant between God and man Vide Zepperum de Sac. Some urge Isa. 8. 1 2 3. for it Because from the beginning those that were of years when they were to be baptized were asked divers Questions Whether they believed Whether they renounced the Devil The same custom also remained even then when Infants alone were offered and the Papists cannot be moved from thence Chamier de Canone lib. 11. c. 9. The Churches by an unadvised imitation drew the interrogatories ministred in the Primitive Church to those which were of years to professe their faith in Baptism unto young children Cartw. on Mat. 3. Whether the immediate or remote parents give the children a right to Baptism Some say immediate Parents only can give the children a right Because if we go higher to remote Parents Where shall we then stop May we go to Noah or Adam say they Where shall we stay Why may not the children of Jews and Turks then be admitted into the Church since they formerly descended from believers This Objection carries some force with it and there is a very strong Objection likewise against this opinion since those for the most part that maintain this say the Parents that give the federal right to their children must be visible Saints or Church-members as they phrase it The Argument then is this The wickednesse of a Jew could not prejudice the childes right that was to be circumcised therefore neither the wickednesse of a Christian a childes right that is to be baptized And whether their Baptism be not null which had no right and so they ought to be rebaptized should be seriously considered by them that hold that tenet Quest. What if the
6. 36. so to Gospel-repentance there must be a right sense of sin 2. Sorrow for sin a spirit of mourning goes along with Gospel-repentance Zec. 12. 10. Ezek. 7. 16. Hos. 11. 12. a sorrow according to God 2 Cor. 7. 10. 3. A self-judging Psal. 51. 4. condemning his acts and judging himself worthy of all the curses of the Law 4. A turning from sin to the Lord Hos. 14. 8. Dan. 4. 27. 5. It must be grounded upon the apprehension and hope of mercy Isa. 55. 7. Poenitentia non est sola contritio sed sides Luther Therefore the Lutherans commonly make faith a part of repentance it is the foundation of it Non pars sed principium P. Martyr One saith True repentance consists in four things 1. In a humble lamenting and bewailing of our sins our sinful nature and wicked lives whereby we are subject to Gods wrath and eternal death even a giving our selves so to consider and feel the cursed effects of sinne in that it angers God and enforceth his justice to punish us till it makes our hearts to ake and be troubled perplexed and disquieted 1 Sam. 7. 6. Psal. 38. 18. Ioel 2. 12. Iam. 4. 9. so David and Peter wept for their sins 2. A confessing the same to God particularly Prov. 28. 13. Psal. 32. 3 5. judging our selves worthy to be destroyed therefore and to perish eternally David saith I will confesse mine iniquity and be sorry for my sin And Iohn If we confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins 3. An earnest crying to God for pardon of sinne and for power against it in the name of Christ. David Psal. 51. saith Sprinkle me with hysop that is forgive me for his bloud sake whom that hysop represented We must take words and beseech the Lord to receive us graciously 4. A hearty and sincere purpose to reform our heart and life to cast away all our transgressions to resist and forbear the practice of sinne in all things and to exercise our selves in all righteousnesse i. e. A firm purpose to leave all the evil that I know condemned and to do all the good that I know required a fixed resolution of heart so to do in consideration of Gods goodnesse and grace that hath sent Christ to save the penitent The Antinomians say The Saints of God once justified and in Christ need not repentance they cry down this as an un Gospel-like practice and dislike mourning for sinne they would have nothing but faith in Christ and rejoycing in him To be troubled for sinne they say is a dishonour to the grace of God and satisfaction of Christ our repentance and humiliation indeed cannot satisfie God Christ hath done that laid down a price answerable to the debt but the Lord hath inseparably annexed repentance and remission Act. 2. 38. 3. 19. 8. 22. and he requires not only an initial repentance in reference to a mans state but a daily repentance in reference to the acts of sinne he must daily wash his feet See Gal. 5. 31. The sinne against the holy Ghost is therefore unpardonable because the Lord will not give repentance Heb. 6. Repentance is Evangelical and a Duty in regenerate persons First Because it is a fruit of the holy Ghost Act. 11. 18. Secondly Because none but regenerate persons can perform it to bewail sinne and aggravate it justifying God condemning themselves and laying hold on Christ. Thirdly The Gospel enjoyns it and threatens the neglect of it Some places joyn Repentance and pardon together Act. 5. 31. Luke 24. 47. Some it and faith Mar. 1. 15. Act. 20. 21. Fourthly Christ Iohn Baptist and all the Apostles preacht repentance Mat. 3. 2. 4. 17. Mark 6. 12. Fifthly Because it may and doth work most kindely in and with faith when they look upon Christ whom they have pierced and consider that they have crucified him Sixthly Because it conforms us to God and Christ in hating and subduing sinne in us it breedeth in us a loathing of sinne and gives us a victory over it What the Pump is to the Ship Repentance is to the soul it keeps it clean Seventhly Because we have still flesh in us to be awed as well as the Spirit in us to be cherished Object Justification is but one indivisible act of grace pardoning all sins past present and to come There is a two-fold forgivenesse 1. In foro poli in the Court of God so all sins past present and to come are actually pardoned at the first act of believing and repenting 2. In foro soli in the Court of Conscience so they are not pardoned we shall have no comfort or assurance of their pardon till we actually repent of them Repentance is a part of the exercise of our whole Christian conversation and a work to be ordinarily practised though there be one great and universal repentance for the change of our state In Revel 2. 3. chap. among the duties God requires of the seven Churches which were all converted of four of them he requires the exercise of repentance Revel 2. 5. 3. 13 19. But there are some special seasons wherein God in a more special manner cals his people to repent when he would have the practice of it more full and extraordinary 2 Cor. 7. 11. when we should more strictly examine our selves and our sorrow should be much inlarged 1 Sam. 7. 6. Iudg. 2. There are five special times for renewing of Repentance First The time when Gods hand is upon us in any special correction 1. God expects and requires it then Isa. 22. the first 15 verses Zeph. 2. begin 2. The servants of God have ordinarily practised it then Ieremiah Iob David Lam. 3. 39 40. 3. God hath severely threatned them when they have not repented at such times 2 Chron. 28 22. Ier. 5. 3. Amos 4. The reason is because the Lord hath appointed this exercise of repentance as the only means to remove the rod or turn it to a blessing Secondly Another special time when God would have his servants to renew their repentance is upon their fall when they have committed any grosse sin as David after defiling Urijahs wife Psal. 51. and when he had fallen into the sin of numbring the people 2 Sam. 24. So Ezra 9. when the people had married with strange wives they wept exceedingly So when the Church of Corinth had wrapt themselves in the guilt of the incestuous persons sin 2 Cor. 7. Peter when he had denied his Master Our sorrow doth not make God amends or pacifie his wrath when it is kindled it is only a condition of the Covenant of Grace the exercise of repentance it satisfieth not God but the Church it is a help to our own souls whereby our sins are subdued Thirdly When the Lord cals any of his people to any special service that he would have them do for him and the Church then they ought to renew their
alwayes bound not to deny his faith and religion either by word or deed A man is no● bound alwayes to speak the truth but he is bound never to lie seign or play the hypocrite All the Commandments are delivered negatively save the fourth and the fifth 5. The Lord that gave us his Law made none for himself and being the Law-giver he is above his own Law and may dispense with it upon his own will and pleasure as he did to Abraham commanding him to offer up his onely Sonne in Sacrifice which being commanded was to him just and honest by speciall prerogative which in another had been dishonest and unjust 6. The meaning of every precept must be taken from the main scope and end for which it was given and all those things to be included without which the precept cannot be performed therefore one and the same work may be referred to divers precepts as it pertaineth to divers ends 7. Under one vice expresly forbidden all of the same kinde and that necessarily depend thereon as also the least cause occasion or incitement thereunto are likewise forbidden Mat. 5. 21 22 27 28 29. 1 Thess. 5. 22. Under one duty expressed all of like nature are comprehended as all meanes effects and whatsoever is necessarily required for the performance of that duty The cause is commanded or forbidden in the effect and the effect in the cause 8. Where the more honourable person is expressed as the man let the woman understand that the precept concerns her where the duty of one man standing in relation to another is taught there are taught the duties of all that stand in like relation one to another as when the duty of one Inferiour toward his Superiour is taught there is taught the general duty which all Superiours owe to those that be under them which Inferiours owe to those that are over them and which Equals owe one to another 9. The Law forbids the doing of evil in our own persons and the helping or furtherance of others in evil though but by silence connivence or slight reproof and it commands not onely that we observe it our selves but that we preserve it and what lieth in us cause others to keep it Thou thy Sonne and thy Daughter must go over all the rest of the Commandments as well as the fourth 10. The Law is set forth as a rule of life to them that be in Covenant with God in Jesus Christ God in Christ is the object of Christian religion and of that obedience which is prescribed in that Covenant That immediate worship and service which we owe to God and must perform according to his prescription which is usually called Piety or Godlinesse is taught in the Commandments of the first Table Our Saviour reduceth the summe of these Commandments to this one Head Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart soul strength and thought that is whatsoever is within thee or without thee even to the losse of thy life goods and good name all must yeeld to the Lords calling whensoever he will make trial of thy love towards him This particular duty may well comprehend all the rest for as is our love so is our faith and obedience God is loved above all things when in all that he promiseth he is believed and in all that he commandeth he is obeyed The general sins against the Commandments of the first Table are 1. Impiety which is a neglect or contempt of Gods true worship and service inward and outward Isa. 43. 22 23. 2. Idolatry which is the worship of false gods or of the true God after a devised manner of our own Amos 5. 26. That duty which we owe unto men by the Lords Commandment and for his glory which is usually called honesty or righteousnesse is taught in the Commandments of the second Table Our Saviour bringeth them to one head Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self that is without fainting coldnesse delay or feigning from the heart fervently when and so long as occasion is given By Neighbour is meant not only our Friend or Kinsman but whosoever and of what Countrey soever that wanteth our help especially he that is of the houshold of faith The general sins against the Commandments of the second Table are 1. Inhumanity and injustice when we disregard our neighbour or deal injuriously with him 2. Partiality in affection when we love our friends but hate our enemies favour some for carnal respects contemn others that are to be respected Six Commandments are set down in many words and four nakedly in hare words as the sixth seventh eighth and ninth because men will easily be brought to yeeld to them The Scripture shews to man two wayes of attaining happinesse one by his own works called the Law the other by faith in Christ called the Gospel The Law driveth us to Christ and faith doth establish the Law Rom 3. 31. The Summe of the Law is abridged in the ten Commandments which God delivered on Mount Sinai and after wrote in two Tables This declareth our whole Duty 1. To God immediately which is in the first Table 1. Principal to make him our God Command 1. 2. Lesse principal in regard of 1. Sorts of worship to be performed unto him which are two 1. Solemn Command 2. 2. Common Command 3. 2. The giving of a set time to him Comman 4. 2. To God mediately and immediately to man for Gods sake in the second Table here his duty is shew'd 1. Severally to 1. Some kinde of persons specially Command 5. 2. To all generally in regard of 1. Their Persons for 1. Life Command 6. 2. Chastity Command 7. 2. The things of their Persons both Goods Command 8. Good Name Command 9. 2. Joyntly to all these in regard of the first motions of the minde and will in Command 10. CHAP. II. Of the first Commandment THou shalt have no other Gods before me SOme Divines judge that those words I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt do contain the affirmative part of the first precept and the latter Thou shalt have no other Gods before my face the negative For these two sentences are elsewhere often joyned together as they be here and our Saviour citing the first Commandment rehearseth it thus Hear O Israel the Lord our God is one Lord. Besides say they if the words be not conceived as a form of commandment yet it must necessarily be understood to command the Worship of the true God and it so pertains to the understanding of the Precept that it cannot be separated from it Other Divines hold the first words to be a Preface to all the Commandments Buxtorf de Decalogo saith these words contain an Enunciative not an Imparative speech therefore they are not a Precept but rather a general Preface to the whole Decalogue in which reasons are brought why we are bound to obey him
one another this company adds to their misery Of Purgatory Limbus Infantium Patrum Because the Papists divide hell into four regions 1. The hell of the damned the place of eternal torment 2. Purgatory where they say the souls of such are as were not sufficiently purged from their sins while they were upon earth and therefore for the thorow purging of them are there in torment equal for the time to that of the damned 3. Limbus Infantium where they place such Infants as die without Baptism whom they make to suffer the losse of heaven and heavenly happinesse and no pain or torment 4. Limbus Patrum where in like manner the Fathers before Christ as they hold were suffering no pain but only wanting the joyes of heaven and because I have not yet spoke of these I shall handle them here being willing to discusse most of the main controversies betwixt us and the Papists Of Purgatory Bellarmine saith there are three things to which the purging of sins is attributed and which may therefore be called Purgatories 1. Christ himself Heb. 1. 3. 2. The tribulations of this life Mal. 3. 3. Iohn 15. 2. 3. A certain place in which as in a prison souls are purged after this life which were not fully purged in this life that so they being cleansed may be able to enter heaven into which no unclean thing shall enter about this saith he is all the controversie Therefore whereas we distinguish the Church into militant here on earth and triumphant in heaven he adds and labouring in Purgatory We believe no other purgation for sinne but only by the bloud of Jesus Christ 1 Iohn 1. 7. through the sanctification of the holy Ghost Tit. 3. 5. The Papists charged Luther that he spake of Purgatory such a Purgatory there is said he meaning temptation Hoc Purgatorium non est fictum If there be a Purgatory it should be as well for the body as the soul because it hath been partaker of those pleasures and delights for which the souls pay dear in Purgatory fire but they deny any Purgatory for the body Epiphanius saith Thus shall the judgement of God be just while both participate either punishment for sinne or reward for vertue Origen excepted all the expressions of the Fathers this way appear clearly to have been understood not of a Purgatory but only of a Probatory fire whether they meant that of affliction or of the day of Judgement My L. Digby in his answ to Sir Ken. Digb We say with Augustine We believe according to the authority of God that the kingdom of heaven is in the first place appointed for Gods elect and that hell is the second place where all the reprobate shall suffer eternal punishment Tertium locum penitus ignoramus imò nec esse in Scripturis sanctis invenimus The third place we are utterly ignorant of and that it is not we finde in the holy Scriptures It is not yet agreed among the Papists either for the fire or the place or the time of it only thus farre they seem at length to concurre that souls do therein satisfie both for venial sins and for the guilt of punishment due unto mortal sins when the guilt of the sin it self is forgiven Dr. Chaloner on Matth. 13. 27. See Dr. Prid. Serm. 2. on Matth. 5. 25. pag. 58. to the end Mr. Cartwrights Rejoynd pag. 34● c. Ezek. 18. 22. Micah 7. 18. 1 Iohn 1. 2. Rom. 8. 1. If our sins shall not be so much as mentioned surely they shall not be sentenced to be punished with fire Ier. 50. 20. From which Text we thus argue All their sins whom God pardoneth shall be found no more then to be purged no more especially after this life The learned Romanists generally accord That Purgatory fire differeth little from hell but in time that the one is eternal the other temporal they believe it to equalize or rather exceed any fiery torment on earth The Apostle calleth the Church the whole family in heaven and earth whence we reason thus All the family whereof Christ is head is either in heaven or upon earth Now Purgatory is neither in heaven nor upon the earth but in hell wherefore no part of the Family of Christ is there Papists will not grant that God imputeth to us the merits and sufferings of his Sonne although the Scripture is expresse for it and yet they teach that merits and satisfaction by the Pope may be applied to us and that they satisfie for our temporal punishments Purgatory is described by Gregory de Valentia and Bellarm. l. 2. de Purgat cap. 10 11. 14. to be a fire of hell adjoyning to the place of the damned wherein the souls of the faithful departing in the guilt of venial sins or for the more full satisfaction of mortal sins which have been remitted are tormented which torment is nothing differing from the punishment of the damned in respect of the extremity of pain but only in respect of continuance of time which may be ten or a hundred or three hundred years or longer except they be delivered by the prayers Sacrifices or alms of the living And the confession of this Purgatory saith Bellarmine lib. 1. de Purgat cap. 11. is a part of the Catholick Faith The principal places of Canonical Scripture which they urge for it are these In the Old Testament Psal. 66. 12. Isa. 9. 18. Micah 7. 8. Zech. 9. 11. Mal. 3. 2. In the New Matth. 5. 25 26. Luk. 16. 6. Acts 2. 24. 1 Cor. 3. 11 13. 1 Cor. 15. 29. 1 Pet. 3. 19. All which places have been taken off by learned Papists And also by Calvin in his Institut lib. 3. cap. 5. and Chemnit in his Examinat Concil Trident. and others If the Scriptures before urged had been so evident for Purgatory Father Cotton the Jesuite needed not to have enquired of the devil a plain place to prove Purgatory as some of the learned Protestant Divines in France affirm I shall conclude therefore with that saying of Bishop Iewel in his Defence of the Apology of the Church of England part 2. cap. 16. The phantasie of Purgatory sprang first from the Heathens and was received amongst them in that time of darknesse long before the coming of Christ as it may plainly appear by Plato and Virgil in whom ye shall finde described at large the whole Commonweal and all the orders and degrees of Purgatory Of Limbus Infantium Patrum Limbus signifies a border or edge and is not used in the Scripture nor any approved Author in their sense Limbus Infantium is a peaceable receptacle for all Infants dying before Baptism This is so groundlesse a conceit that the very rehearsal of it is a sufficient refutation Limbus Patrum is a place where the Papists say the souls of the godly that died before Christ were But Col. 1. 20. God could reconcile none to him in heaven
love our own souls and the souls of others since Christ manifested such love to our souls 5. We should not crosse the ends of Christs suffering 1. He died to redeem you from this present evil world 2. To destroy the works of Satan We should live to him * 〈…〉 are some particular cases wherein it is not safe for some particular persons at that time ●●● in 〈…〉 to p●t them to try themselves by signs But for the general it is necessary and the duty of all people to ●●ok to signs and to try themselves by them M. Hooker on Rom. 8. 10. A two-sold knowledge is required of every receiver 1. A di●cernning of the body and bloud of Christ he must be able in some competent measure to understand the Doctrine Nature Use and End of a Sacrament by whom it was instituted and why and for what end 1 Cor. 11. 29. they were to instruct their children what this and that action signified in the Passeover 2. Of himself implied in the duty commanded of examining our selves Edere Christum est credere in Christum Qu●d paras dentem ventrem Crede tantùm manducasti August He that comes without faith receives Sacramentum not●em ●em Sacramenti Iesus Christus isque crucifixus debet esse proprium sidei nostrae objectum Rivetus Instruct. Praepar ad Coenam Domini cap 10. Prayer profits not without faith Rom. 10 13 14. Mark 11. 24. Luk. 18 lat end Mark 9. 23. Faith only makes up the union between Christ and us John 6. 56. The people of God have a four-fold glorious sight in this life John 14. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 19. 1. They see God in Christ. 2. They see Christ in God 3. They see Christ in themselves 4. They see themselves in Christ. See Rom. 8. 9 10. Common people say they have believed as long as they can remember and they thank God they never doubted While men are in their natural condition they think it is nothing to believe in Christ though they walk contrary to him but when sinne is fully discovered and one sees the severity of Gods justice it is then hard to believe Rom. 1. 17. 2 Thess. 1. 3. Consider 1. Thy natural estate is a state of death damnation John 3. 18. Gal. 3. 23. 2. So long as thou abidest out of Christ thou abidest in death John 3. 36. 1 Joh. 3. 14. All sins de merito are damnable they deserve death but not de facto no sinne necessarily brings death but unbelief because it keeps a man off from Christ the fountain of life John 6. 5 7. 3. Thou canst not be the fountain of thine own life 4. Life is to be had in no other but Christ John 5. 40. 5. There is no way of having life from him but by union with him 1 John 5. 12. the first thing that grace puts forth in the soul is an instinct after union Faith is an instinct put in by the teaching of the Father after union with Christ. The sole way to get this supernatural grace is with hearty ●amenting of its absence and weakness to beg it of him who is able to work it in the heart and to feed and nourish it by a continual meditation of his greatness and great works which he hath formerly wrought for our confirmation Poenitentia est dolor de peccato cum adjunct● proposito melioris vitae Luth. in loc commun de poenitentia All the Sermons of the Prophets and Apostles run on this Christ commanded his Disciples to preach it It is one of the two parts of the Gospel the summe of the Gospel is Faith Repentance It is Praeterita peccata plangere plangenda non committere Aug. It 's secunda ta bula post naufragium medicina est spiritualis animi vitiorum say others See Mr Calamy on Act. 17. 30. and Cameron on Mark 1. 15. Our sorrow for sin should be our chiefest sorrow because sin is the greatest evil and it is so in respect of the intellectual part and in respect of the displicency of the will wherein the strength of repentance lieth According to the multitude of thy mercies blot out all my offences and create in me a new heart and a right spirit Lord do away the sinne of thy servant Petit 5. It is not only among the precepts but promises and priviledges of the Gospel Act. 9. 18. Da pr●●s poenitentiam postea indulgentiam Fulgentius They are therfore Ministers of the Gospel not legal preachers which preach repentance There is one act of faith to be done once for all to lay hold on Christ and be united to him and justified by him yet I must live by it and do every duty by it so for repentance Isa. 27. 9. Jer. 2 19. Heb. 12. 11 Before the Supper and the offering of a childe in Baptism then Christs death is represented Rom. 6. 4. Gal. 3. 1. a On a mans death-bed the day of repentance is past for repentance being the renewing of a holy life the living the life of grace it is a contradiction to say that a man can live a holy life upon his death-bed D. Taylors Rule of holy living chap. 4. Sect. 4. That place Ezek. 33. 14. is it which is so often mistaken for that common saying At what time soever a sinner repents him of his sins from the bottom of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. Let not that be made a colour to countenance a death-bed penitent D. Taylor on Jer. 13. 16. Serm. 2. One may repent on his death-bed as well as the thief on the Crosse but it is dangerous to put off repentance till then it will be harder to come in It s a rare sight saith one to finde a young man godly and an old man penitent We acknowledge that as God cals some at the first hour so may some be called at the last hour of the day yea inter pontem fontem D. Iackson indeed hath an opinion that a man may proceed so farre in sin in this life that the door of repentance may be th●t upon him none of our Divines deny the possibility of any mans Salvation while he lives in this world D. Twiss ag Hord. p. 45. There is a Gospel-command to repent Mat 9. 13. Act. 17. 30. 2. The very space of repentance is a mercy and given you that you may repent Revel 2. 21. 3. It is the natural fruit of a regenerate heart Ezek. 11. 19. 4. It is repentance to salvation 1 Cor. 7. 10. There is more joy in heaven for one sinner that repents then for ninty nine that need no repentance as if he had aimed at the Antinomians * Act. 5. 31. 11. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 12. Whosoever hath truly repented is 1. Low in his own eyes so Paul 2. Fears sin ever after Eccl. 9. 2. 3. Is pitiful to others in their fals Gal. 6. 1. 4. There will be a growth in the