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A73267 The dignitie of Gods children. Or An exposition of 1. Iohn 3. 1.2.3 Plentifully shewing the comfortable, happie, and most blessed state of all Gods children, and also on the contrarie, the base, fearefull, and most wofull condition of all other that are not the children of God. Stoughton, Thomas. 1610 (1610) STC 23315.5; ESTC S117855 406,069 519

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name to the men which thou gauest me out of the world thine they were and thou gauest them mee verse 6. In this one verse is the same word and tense twice The same phrase and tense is often vsed afterward in the same chapter to the same purpose viz. verse 7. verse 9. and verse 12. So before he had said This is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath giuen me I should lose nothing c. Iohn 6. 39. But this shall bee sufficient for this obseruation touching the tense heere vsed by the Apostle And thus much also for the fifth particular word in this text CHAP III. Of the foure next particular words in this text viz. of the word to vs of the word that we should be called of the word the children and lastly of the word of God THE sixt particular word to bee considered is to vs. This setteth forth the persons of whom the Apostle speaketh and to whom God hath giuen this loue to bee called the children of God Whom therefore hath God thus aduanced and to whom hath hee giuen this great and admirable loue to be called his children Euen to elect men to miserable and wretched men before blind lame deafe dumme leprous dead in sinnes and trespasses sitting in darknes and in the shadow of death seruants of sin and bondmen of the Deuill yea bound with such chaynes of Satan as were ten thousand times worse then all iron chaines in the world Euen as men I say that were before in this wofull lamentable and most fearefull plight and condition hath hee thus aduanced to the honour of his children Is not this loue of God admirable Is it not incomprehensible Who is able to comprehend the bredth and length and depth and height thereof Ephes 3. 18. Truly this loue is such that as the Apostle cryeth out touching the reiection of the Iewes for a time and touching the calling of the Gentils O the depth of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God! How vnsearchable are his iudgements and his waies past finding out Rom. 11. 33. So wee likewise touching this loue of God may with admiration cry out O the depth of the riches thereof Yea if we should measure Gods doing herein by carnall reason wee should condemne Gods wisdome for foolishnes for louing vs beeing euery way so vile so base and so vnworthy of any loue of any other of his creatures much more of his Yea so much the more may we cry out with such admiratiō as before of this loue of God because herein God hath passed ouer the Angels that fel as we had fallen and hath not vouchsafed them the like loue for restoring them and making them his children that he hath vouchsafed vnto vs. But of this more afterward In the meane time this briefly shall suffice for this sixt word The seuenth is that we should be called What meaneth the Apostle by this phrase That we should only haue the name That we should be called and title of Gods children and not be indeede the children of God Not so for our Sauiour reproueth the Angell of the Church of Sardi For hauing a name to be aliue who yet was dead Reuel 3. 1. In the world indeed so it is oftentimes that men haue bare names and titles not the thing or benefit signified by such names or belonging to such names and titles Absolon was saluted by this name of King God saue the King God saue the King 2 Sam. 16. 16. And that not onely by Hushai the Archit in policy but also by many other yet hee was not the King The like title was for a time giuen also to Adonija 1. King 1. 18. Yet he was not the King So we haue known the name of the king of Portugal giuen to one that had no priuileges or royalties belonging to that name So some noble men being condemned for high treason and thereby tainted in their bloud and hauing lost all then honours are notwithstanding by many whiles they liue in courtesy called by such honorable names as before they had though they haue no other priuiledges belonging to such honorable names the cutting off only of their heads excepted whereas meaner persons for the like trespasses are hanged drawen and quartered Thus I say it is in the world and with men of the world But this is not the meaning of the Apostle in this place but that indeed we be as well as called the children of God For he speaketh not of our being so called by men only ●ut also by God himselfe who knoweth how to call euery thing by the right name and calleth nothing amisse This is manifest by the very next verse where the Apostle saith not Dearely beloued now are we called the sonnes of God but now we be the sonnes of God So also the word called is taken in some other places The Angell sayth of Christ to the virgine Mary Thou shalt call his name Iesus Luc. 1. 31. And againe he shall be called the Son of the most high verse 32. Doth the Angel meane Christ should be called Iesus or Sauiour and not bee a Iesus or Sauiour indeed or that he should only be called the sonne of the most high and not be so indeed verily he had no such meaning When Christ sayth of the temple Mine house shall be called the house of praier c. Marke 11. 17. his meaning is that it should be so indeed So therfore is the meaning of the same phrase in this place But why doth the Apostle rather vse this phrase then plainly Note say that wee should bee his children It may bee hee would heerby insinuate the meanes whereby we come to this honor to be the outward calling by the ministry of the word As when our Sauiour sayth I came not to call the rig●teous but sinners to repentance Mat. 9. 13. hee insinuateth his calling by the word to bee the meanes of repentance so the Apostle by this phrase that we should be called the children of God may insinuate the outward calling by the preaching of the word to bee the meanes whereby God bringeth vs to this honour of his children Secondly not to stand vpon this reason by this phrase that we should be called he meaneth not only that we should bee indeed his children but also that we should be so known and declared yea publikely proclaimed to all the world to bee the children of God As an other Apostile sayth that God was not ashamed to bee called the God of his ancient people Hebr. 11. 16. Where also note the phrase to be called to signify so to bee indeed so heere this Apostle telleth vs that God is not ashamed that wee should professe our selues to bee and that wee should be called by other his children Herein therefore God differeth from many men especially from some princes who though they purpose secretly with themselues whom by adoption to make their children
immediately make our soules how then c●me we stained with originall sinne it may receiue a double answer First that they come by sinne at their entrance into the body as in old time men might get the leprosie by entring into an house only infected with the leprosie and as men may now get the plague by going to the house lately visited therewith though no man dwell in the said house as also by putting on a garment comming from one that had the plague For the body is an house or garment of the soule comming from our polluted and defiled parents Secondly touching the said great obiection it is altogether curious to inquire of the manner when the thing is manifest For a man may as well inquire of Note them that were raised from death to life by the Prophets and by our Sauiour and his Apostles especially of the faithfull so raised Lazarus Dorcas c. how after their said restoring to life againe they became sinners againe and so subiect to death againe For being dead and their soules and bodies in death separated it cannot be denied but that during that time they were free from sinne both in body and in soule If therefore this bee a curious question how they became againe def●led with sinne and to need to pray for forgiuenesse of their trespasses then also is the former For there is the like reason of the one and of the other To returne to our former speech of adoption although God haue such a Sonne of his owne in whom he is well pleased yea many other sonnes likewise by creation keeping still that glorious image wherein they were created viz. al the blessed Angels yet because Adam had transgressed and that through his fal he had no children amongst the sons of men therefore it pleased him also to adopt vs vnto himselfe This then is one difference betwixt the adoption of God and the adoption of men that men only adopt children when they haue none of their owne but God adopteth vs though he haue one of his owne by nature and many by creation like vnto himselfe Another difference is that when men doe adopt there is Note not neither can be any second generation of him that is adopted whereby to make him like to him that doth adopt him being before vnlike vnto him For to make one like to another passeth the worke of any man But in our adoption to God there is not onely an acceptation of vs for his children but there is also an actuall regeneration and second birth wrought in vs by Gods spirit therefore called the spirit of adoption whereby we are made like to our Father that doth adopt vs. Secondly men hauing no children of their owne cannot adopt other in any or by any but God hauing a Sonne of his owne as we said doth in him and by him and through him as it were by marying of vs vnto him and incorporating vs into him adopt vs for his children Moreouer touching adoption the whole number of children adopted to God considered iointly together are accounted as one viz. as a daughter so made by marriage to the only Sonne of God Psal 45. 10. Hos 2. 9. in which respect the whole Catholike Church comprehending all the elect and children of God and no other is often called by the name of a Spouse and of one spouse vnto Christ Cantic 4. 8. 9. 10. and 5. 1. Iohn 3. 29. Reu 21. 2. and 9. and as of one wife Ierem. 3. 1. c. and the Church is said to be but one euen one alone and the only daughter of her mother Cantic 6. 8. and one body in Christ Rom. 12. 5. 1. Cor. 12. 12. Ephes 4. 4. But the children of God being seuerally considered according to the seuerall sex of euery one they are called the sonnes and daughters of God as before we heard Thus much of the eighth particular word in this text In the last place the Apostle doth rather repeat the name of 〈◊〉 God God then vse the relatiue his saying that we should be called the children of God rather then his children the more to keepe them to whom he wrote in a serious consideration of this their dignity whereof he speaketh and to make them the more to lift vp their eies and their minds and whole hearts to him whose children they are Thus much as breefly as I well could for the consideration of the particular words of this exhortation to the beholding of the great loue of God in making vs his children CHAP. IIII. Of the dignity of Gods children from the excellency of God himselfe who is their Father the rather because it is further prooued by the difficulty and greatnesse of the worke of regeneration that the sayd worke is altogether and only the worke of God NOW according to my method and order first propounded to my selfe I will more amply lay forth the mayne point of the dignity of Gods childrē viz. How great how admirable how incomprehensible this loue of God is in making declaring vs to be the childrē of God in such fort as hath been before touched For it cannot be but of very great excellency sith the Apostle hath made such a graue exhortatiō to the beholding thereof cuery word wherof is so emphatical significant as we haue heard And indeed so excellēt is it that as M. Rogers saith Chap. 3. of his sixt treatise so I may also say that when I haue said what I can of their state I must confesse that I haue said but a little NOtwithstanding I hope that this little shall be somwhat for the helping of them that considered not so much before and for the prouoking like wise of other to enter into further meditation of this argument and perhaps to write more largely there of then I haue done or could do For it is well worthy of the best meditation and largest writing that may be for the better comfort of such weake ones as whose hearts are almost broken with the manifold indiguities that dayly they meete with in the world and for the prouoking of all aduanced thereunto to more thankful ●es to him that hath so aduanced them and to make such other vses as after the point it selfe more largely handled shall be breefely noted To come therefore to the matter touching this dignity of the children of God let vs first of all consider the same by the excellency of him whose children they are h●●e sayd to bee For he is described to be high and excellent to inhabite the eternity to be called by the name of The holy one and to dwelin the high and holy place Isai 57. 15. He is called The God of Gods and Lord of Lords A great God mighty and terrible Deut. 10. 17. Hens●d to haue 〈◊〉 his hands the deep places of the earth the height of the mountains the sea c. Psalm 95. 5. and to haue greatnesse and power and gl●ry and victory
Cor. 5. 17. Galat. 6. 5. and to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. and 4. 24. So farforth therefore as we are in Christ we are the children of God And so many as are not thus incorporated into Christ are not in truth neither ought to be called the children of God Such perhaps may be so accounted by other yea peraduenture they may so account themselues But as those that are begotten in adultery by an adulterer may be reputed the children of the lawfull husband to the adulteresse and yet are indeed bastards and for the most part may be discerned so to be by their bastardly conditions so is it with them that liuing in the Church of God doe professe them selues to be the children of God and be so reputed by other and yet haue no communion with Christ Though they be reputed to be the children of God yet they are no better then bastards and bastards they bewray themselues to be by their bastardly minds and conuersation Although therefore in one respect we reckoned Christ before amongst the efficient causes of our regeneration and that therfore in respect of his excellēcy our regeneration also is to be accounted the more excellent yet in another respect he may also be accounted the materiall cause of our regeneration euen as naturall parents are both the efficient causes of our naturall birth and doe likewise communicate the matter of their bodies vnto ours And so the more excellent that before we heard Christ to be the more we may againe conclude the dignity of Gods children to be by his being the chiefe materiall cause as well as the efficient cause of their regeneration For as that that is made of siluer or gold or any other such like pretious matter is it selfe more pretious then other things made of brasse tinne lead yron Copper or any other such vile and base matter the quantity of things being alike otherwise a great vessell of copper may be better then a very small cup of siluer so the more excellent that Christ himselfe is who is the chiefe matter of Gods children and of whom they be called Christians as that that is made of gold is called golden and the children of God the more excellent needs must be their state and condition CHAP. IX More largely shewing other things concerning the matter of regeneration especially the renewing of the life of God in vs all that are new borne which before were vtterly void of the said life BVT leauing that point till afterward let vs in the next place looke into the excellent gifts and graces which by the former incorporation into Christ the children of God doe receiue and in respect whereof we are said to be partaker of the diuine nature and the which likewise may be esteemed as parts as it were of that matter whereof they do consist These things let vs consider by opposition of that vnto them that men are since the fall of Adam as naturally descending from Adam and being as it were boughs and branches of him In Adam and by Adam since his fall all men Christ himselfe onely excepted haue vtterly lost that excellent and glorious image wherein Adam and Eue at the first were both created Genes 1. 26. 27. This losse of that excellent and glorious image is described by this phrase of dying the death Genes 2. 17. This death was not a naturall death but it was a spirituall death It was not the separation of the soule and the body but it was the separation of God and man as touching that gratious familiarity which before had beene betwixt them As the soule is the life of the body so is God the spirituall life of the whole man For man is not said to be aliue vnto God any longer then he is in grace and fauour with God so that to die the death in that place was to be vtterly depriued of the inherent grace and fauour of God which before they were created in From that time therefore that our first parents had eaten of the forbidden fruit and thereby had defaced the image of God in them they were drowned ouer head and eares in all sinne and so now also in the state of condemnation and were no more able of themselues to haue gotten out of the same then a man drowned and dead in the bottom of a great riuer or pond is able of himselfe to get out And this is that dying the death before spoken of euen a spirituall death ten thousand times worse then any naturall death I meane then any separation of the soule and body though the same be by neuer so violent meanes For it is the beginning and first step vnto that euerlasting death of body and soule whereof afterward we shall speake more at large and from the which neither wee could haue freed our selues neither could any other creatures or all creatures if God himselfe had not sent his owne sonne as before hath been shewed And that spirituall life which is contrary to the said death and which is also the first effect of Christ in vs after that once wee are ingrafted and incorporated into him is the next point of the matter of our regeneration and being the children of God That we may the better see what this life of God is in vs let vs first more largely consider what the former death is and how all men are by nature wholly possessed thereof That therefore which the Apostle saith of the Ephesians is to be vnderstood of all men by nature viz. that they are dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes 2. 1. without God and without Christ in the world verse 12. as not beleeuing in God or Christ and therefore being condemned already as before we heard our Sauiour to say Ioh. 3. 18. and the rather were they so indeed dead in their sinnes because they were the children of him that had the power of death that is of the diuell Heb. 2. 14. compared with Ioh. 8. 44. For Sathan hauing once put out the light and the life of God in Adam whereby he was the child of God like vnto God did make him a sonne to himselfe so that as before hee did beare the image of God so for euer afterward hee and all his Christ onely excepted did beare the image of the diuell in which respect it is saide generally that hee that committeth sinne is of the diuell 1. Iohn 3. 8. Thus we see that our naturall state is not as the Papists plead it to be by allegorizing vpon him that our Sauiour saith did fall into the hands of theeues and was by them wounded and left halfe dead Luk 10. 30. but farre worse not halfe miserable but altogether miserable not wounded and yet aliue though halfe dead but so wounded that we are altogether dead We haue a vegetatiue and an animall life as all liuing and brutish creatures haue we haue a reasonable life to talke and reason and discourse and determine and conclude of
where there is no fruit and whereof after recouery of health and true knowledge wee are ashamed Rom. 6. 21. As sicknesse continued and not recouered causeth death at the last so sinne when it is finished and as it were thoroughly ripened bringeth forth death Iames 1. 15. Sinne is likewise compared to an heauy and intolerable burden Come vnto me all ye that are weary and heauy laden viz. with your sinnes and I will refresh you Mat. 11. 28. Therefore Cain complained that his sinne was greater then hee could beare Genes 4. 13. And alas so heauy was the burden of sinne vpon Iudas that to ease himselfe of that burden hee did not onely cast away or deliuer againe to the cheefe Priests and Elders the thirty peeces of siluer which he had taken as wages of vnrighteousnesse to betray the innocent bloud of Christ but that also departing afterward in most dolefull sort he went and most desperately hanged himselfe Mat. 27. 3. The like fearefull euent of the heauy burden of sinne we do too often see by too many examples Wee heard also before that the very imputation onely of our sinnes to Christ Iesus the sonne of God God himselfe made him not only exceedingly to feare and in his feare to offer vp praiers and supplications with strong crying teares vnto God Heb 5. 7. but also to sweat water and bloud Luk. 22. 44. and lastly to cry out most bitterly vpon the crosse vnder the burden of our sinnes My God my God why hast thou forsaken me ' Mat. 27. 46. That some men feele not the sicknes and waight of sinne it is because of another comparison also of sinne viz. vnto death itselfe O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee out of this body of death Rom. 7. 24. And you that were dead in trespasses and sinnes c. Ephes 2. 1. As men therefore that are dead though they died with an hundred plague-sores about them not healed or hauing the waight of a great Church vpon them doe feele nothing either of such sores or of such waight euen so is to bee sayd of them that feele not either the sicknesse or the heauinesse of sinne namely that it is because they are dead in their sinne By these things we see that all whose sinnes are forgiuen are rid and healed of so many diseases Psal 103. 3. and released of so many burdens as they haue sinnes and finally that they are translated from death to life 1. Ioh. 3. 14. Is not then the forgiuenes of sinnes a singular benefit Moreouer the greatnes of this benefit doth further appeare by another comparison of sinne viz. vnto debt Mat. 18. 24. c. In which respect Christ teacheth vs to pray Forgiue vs our debts Mat. 6. 12. Yea he whose sinne is least is more in Gods debt then he is able any way to discharge Therefore in the parable of two debters he that owed but fifty pence is sayd to haue beene as vnable to pay as he that owed siue hundred pence Luke 7. 41. 42. Is it not a great misery yea a kind of hell tormenting a man to be in greater debt then he is able to fatissie Indeed some men are so desperate that they bid their creditors take care how to come by that that is owing vnto them for they will take no care to pay any man therefore they borrow of euery man and pay almost no man so that it is half a wonder what becommeth of all the mony they doe borrow But though some be thus leaudly minded yet most men haue so much ciuill honesty at the least by the light of nature that they finde it very greeuous and troublesome continually to their minds to owe more the they can pay Al debt also aboue ability to pay is the more grecuous the greater and mightier the creditor is to whom the same is owing How great then is the debt of man vnto God by sinnelyea by the least sin The danger of the least sinne much more of many and great sins is the curse of God and euerlasting condemnation of body soule euen an infinit punishment according to the infinit maiesty of God that is by sin offended Who the can expresse the greatnes of the benefit of forgiuenes of sinnes It is a great benefit to be out of debt with men so that a man may walke go any where securely without danger much more then is the benefite of the discharge of all our debt with God Last of al sinne against God is compared vnto treason and rebellion against a prince 1. Sam. 15. 23. Lamon 3. 42. Dan. 5. 9. As therefore it is a great benefit for a traitour and rebell to bee pardoned by his Soueraigne so is it not so much the more to be pardoned by God himselfe of all our treasons and rebellions against him by how much hee is greater then all earthlie princes Verily this is not only more then any tongue of man can expresse but also then any heart of man or wisedome of Angels can comprehend The same benefit of forgiuenes of sinnes is yet the greater because to whom God remitteth one sinne to him hee remitteth all and whose sinnes he doth once forgiue his sinnes hee doth forgiue for euer whom once he doth acquit discharge and iustifie them hee wil neuer condemne or cal to account By all sinnes I meane al the sinnes of Gods children both originall and actuall before baptisme and after baptism before conuersion and after conuersion of knowledge and of ignorance and once or often yea as wel deliberately as vnaduisedly committed Therefore Dauid in the place before vsed Psal 32. 1. 2. speaketh of sinne indefinitely without exception of any and in the other place praiseth God expressely for forgiuing al his sins The Apostle saith that Christ hath not redeemed vs from sin but from all iniquity Tit. 2. 14. So likewise in the other places before mentioned the Apostles speake of sinnes indefinitely c. Ephes 1. 7. Colos 1. 14. not of sinnes before or after baptisme or conuersion c. If by Christ wee haue forgiuenesse onely of originall sinne or of sinnes before baptisme and that wee or some other must make satisfaction for our actuall sinnes or for sinnes after baptisme as the Papists teach then hath Christ satisfied onely for the lesse and left the greater to vs. For who knoweth not actuall sinnes to be greater then originall and sinnes after baptisme to bee more at least for most part then sinnes before baptisme But of the vniuersality of the forgiuenesse of sinnes I hope to speak more to the further comfort of such as are heauy loaden with theyr sinnes in another treatise The second point that whose sinnes are once remitted they are remitted for euer is as certaine as the former Because the couenant of the Lord is an euerlasting couenant and his mercies are the sure mercies of Dauid Isa 55. 3. As high as the heauen is aboue the earth so great is
elders of the Iewes vnto our Sauiour in behalfe of his sicke seruant Luc. 7. 3. was it not to doe the more honour to our Sauiour If the sending of such honourable messengers were some honour to them to whom they were sent what shall we thinke of Gods sending his owne sonne to vs and for vs to make vs his children Doth not God thereby greatly honor vs verely it cannot be denied sith the sending of Christ was more then if he had sent all the Angels in heauen For Christ is made so much more excellent then the Angels by how much more he hath obtained a more excellent name then they Heb. 1. 4. This is so much the more because God sent not his sonne in glory and to liue here in glory but in basenesse and in forme of a seruant cloathed with our base nature yet purged from all corruption as soone as it was separated in the wombe of the Virgin to be that which afterward it was and so to liue a while in pouerty in shame and in all contempt and at the last to be put to the most shamefull death of the crosse as though he had been a worme and no man or as though he had been the vilest man that had before come into the world Were it not a very great honor to a poore yea to a trayterous subiect being somewhere in captiuity bondage and great misery if his Prince should abase his only sonne and send him disguised in base apparell and to vndergoe much pouerty and other hardnesse with shame also and contempt for a time for the redeeming the said subiect and to bring him home to the Court of the Prince there to eat meat with the Prince his sonne and to be accounted as a companion of his How great then is this honour that God hath done vnto vs in sending his own sonne and in exposing him to many yea to all indignities to redeeme vs that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes Before I proceed any further let me here insert another principall cause of our regeneration viz. the mercy of God This may seeme to be all one with the loue of God before handled And indeed it is so like thereunto that it is often confounded therewith so that the word loue is often taken for mercy and mercy is often taken for loue when there is speech of the dealing of God with men especially in the matter of election calling and saluation This may be obserued in diuers places before alledged and therefore I stand not vpon it But although there be great similitude betwixt them yet Note they are also to be distinguished For first of all both are in God towards man but both cannot be in man towards God Loue may be and must be in man towards God but it is very absurd to say that a man may shew mercy vnto God Againe the loue of God hath respect vnto vs as being only the creatures of God euen base creatures such as were altogether vnworthy so great honour of being made the children of God But the mercy of God hath respect and relation vnto vs not only as we are creatures base and vnworthy of the foresayd loue but also as we were miserable especially polluted with infinit 〈◊〉 yea dead in all sinnes and trespasses more then vnworthy of his fauour euen such as had deserued his euerlasting displeasure and indignation as hauing been traitors and rebells against him in the highest degree Furthermore the loue of God is in order before the sending or giuing of Christ being the cause both of our election and also of sending or giuing Christ Iesus as hath beene shewed touching election out of Ephes 1. 5. 6. and touching the sending of Christ out of Ioh. 3. 16. But the mercy of God is only in Christ Iesus and for Christ Iesus his sake as afterward shall appeare Whereas it is said that we are elected in Christ that is not to be vnderstood simply of election itselfe but rather of the ends whereto we are elected viz. adoption and saluation To speake simply of election itselfe it was meerly of the free loue of God and the efficient cause thereof was only in God himselfe And so God hauing eternally decreed our saluation did also at the same instant decree the meanes of our saluation namely the giuing of his only sonne to be made man for vs. We were first in order elected to be saued and then Christ was appointed and at the same instant destinated to be the person by whom we should be saued Therefore as Peter saith that the Iewes had put Christ to death by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God Acts 2. 23. so he calleth Christ alambe vnspotted c. ordained before the foundations of the world 1. Pet. 1. 20. Notwithstanding this priority of decreeing our saluation before the sending of Christ was decreed must be vnderstood of a priority in order in the nature of things not of a priority in time For both being eternall and before all times to wit the decree for sauing vs and the decree for sending Christ to worke out that saluation for vs one could not bee before an other in time For in things eternall there can be neither priority or posteriority in time Thus then we see a plaine distinction betwixt the loue of God and the mercy of God either in our election or in the worke of regeneration or in any other thing That the mercy of God was one of the principall mouing causes of our regeneration viz. which moued God to worke this worke in vs it is manifest also by the testimony of Peter For he in his first Epistle and Chapter hauing after his Apostolicall maner saluted the Christians to whom he wrote maketh this entrance into the rest of the Epistle saying Blessed be God the father of our Lord Iesus Christ who according to his abundant or rich mercy hath begotten vs againe c. 1. Pet. 1. 3. Is it not in these words plaine that the Apostle doth make the mercy of God a principall cause first mouing God to beget vs againe So the Apostle Paul in the worke of our saluation ioineth together the mercy of God and the washing of the new birth Tit. 3. 5. So also particularly speaking of his owne conuersion from blaspheming and from persecuting and oppressing of the Church to the true feare of God and loue of his Saints he attributeth the same to the mercy of God saying I was a blasphemer and a persecuter and an oppressor but I was receiued to mercy or I found mercy By the mercy of God here I vnderstand the pity and compassion that God tooke vpon vs beholding vs in our miserable state by nature being blind deafe dumb lame sicke dead c. as hath been said and so his bowels of compassion being moued towards vs and neuer ceasing to worke as it were in him till by the worke of our regeneration he had released and discharged vs from
them and therein had shed their bloud for vs it had been nothing to the blood of Christ because Christ was the Lord of the Angels and all the Angels were to worship him Heb. 1. 6. But to leaue that which was not and to returne to that which was it is much and exceeding much that God hath honored mankind especially his children by giuing vnto them all liuing creatures to be killed for preseruation of their present life Much more then is this honor and ten times greater then the heart of man can conceiue that God hath not spared his owne sonne but giuen him to the death Rom. 8. 32. yea to such a death as he suffered euen the cursed death of the Crosse that being dead in sinnes we might be made aliue Ephes 2. 5. and so receiue the promise of the spirit Gal. 3. 14. where by to call God our father and to be called the children of God This were a worthy meditation euery time we see sheepe or lamb or pigeon or chicken or any thing els by butcher or by any other body to be killed for vs it were I say a worthy meditation if then we could thinke and say This is a great honor of God towards vs that this innocent and harmelesse creature must die to preserue vs aliue But O Lord how hast thou honored vs by giuing thy sonne thy only sonne thy sonne whom thou louedst most deerely euen as thy owne soule thy sonne Iesus to be slaine and to suffer more then a thousand bodily deaths to make vs thy children that so we might liue in thy sight Did not Abraham greatly honor God when he was so willing to take now without delay or any stay for issue of him his sonne his only sonne his sonne Isaack in whom the promise was made of blessing for all nations his sonne whom he loued most tenderly not only for natures sake but also for the promise sake and to goe to the land of Moriah an vnknown country and to offer him that is to kill him with his own hands not to giue him to another to be offered and killed for a burnt offring an honourable but an hard and wofull kind of death for the naturall father to put his own naturall sonne vnto vpon one of the mountaines which God should shew him Genes 22. 2. he could not tell where did not Abraham I say greatly honor God by being willing and ready to doe it and by going so farre in the doing of it that the knife was in his hand to haue killed his owne sonne vpon Gods commandement in that behalfe and that therefore he had done it indeed if God himselfe had not countermanded him and forbidden it Doubtlesse Abraham did so thereby honour God that Abrahams faith in that behalfe hath beene the more renowned and honorable euer sithence and shall be renowned and honorable to the end of the world How then hath God honored vs by giuing his sonne for vs and how hath Christ Iesus honoured vs by giuing and offring vp himselfe a sweet smelling sauour and sacrifice to God for vs that did by our sinnes stinke most noy somely in the nostrills of God Abraham had receiued his sonne from God God had not receiued his sonne from vs. Abraham might haue had an other sonne from God as well as he had Isaak God could not haue an other besides Christ Abraham did owe his sonne and all that he had yea himselfe also to God God oweth nothing to vs. Abraham had a commandement to offer his sonne Isaak vnto God Had God any commandement or could any command God to giue his sonne vnto vs and for vs. Abraham and his sonne both were to dy at the last The sonne of God was as immortall and free from death as God himselfe because he was God with his father Abraham had had his sonne but a while but God had had his sonne from all eternity Abrahams sonne was like to himselfe but in part Gods sonne was perfectly and fully like vnto him In all these respects and in diuers other we plainly see how much more God hath honored vs by giuing his sonne as also how much more Christ hath honoured vs by giuing himselfe for vs then Abraham honored God by giuing his sonne vnto God that had first giuen him to Abraham Againe were it not a great honour to any poore and base subiect c. being in miserable bondage and captiuity as before I said for his Prince being wise and knowing what he doth or for such a sonne of such a Prince to giue a very great price for his ransome who then can expresse the honor that Christ Iesus hath done to vs in that being the sonne of his father tender and deere vnto him as Salomon speaketh of himselfe in respect both of his father and mother Pro. 4. 3. and being euen the sonne of his fathers desires as Bethsheba spake of Salomon and to Salomon Pro. 31. 2. and being full of wisedome and grace Luk 2. 40. and being the wisedome of his father Luk. 11. 44. And hauing all treasures of wisedome and knowledge hid in him Coloss 2. 3. who I say can expresse the honor that Christ Iesus being such as he is and alwaies was hath done vnto vs in giuing a greater price for our ransome and adoption to his father then all the kingdomes of the world ten thousand times told are worth For do we not account of all things according to the price that wise men doe giue for them Is then the adoption of Gods children lightly to be accounted for which Christ gaue as great a price as for our saluation This of the price which Christ hath giuen to make vs the children of God is the more because he gaue not the same price or any other for to redeeme the Angels that kept not their standing that they might with vs receiue the adoption of sonnes Before their fall they were so much more glorious then man before his fall by how much more their habitation and employment in heauen was more glorious then Adams in earth yet hath Christ Iesus in making in vs his children altogether passed them ouer and they are still reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day Iude 6. How greatly therefore hath Christ honoured vs by giuing such a price to make vs the children of God who dwell in houses of clay and who touching part of vs are but wormes meat whereas he hath giuen none at all for them that before their fall were most glorious spirits dwelling with God himselfe in heauen Because also the holy ghost is of the same glory and excellency with God the father and God the sonne therefore the worke of the holy ghost in our adoption is likewise to be considered with the worke of the father and of the sonne For the father and the sonne worke not without the holy ghost As in the first creation it is said that the spirit of God
vpon him that he though he were God and man was in such an agony that his sweat was like drops of bloud yet doe all men remaining in their naturall state and not being born againe go vnder their own inherent sinnes originall and actuall how long so euer they haue continued in them and howsoeuer they haue multiplied and aggrauated them they goe vnder them I say as lightly without any sense or feeling of the waight and burden of them as though indeed they had none at all Is not this an euident argument of extreme deadnesse For what do they that are once dead feele whatsoeuer is laid vpon them To speake all in a word and not to stand any longer vpon particulars the Apostle from other scriptures doth not only say that we are dead vnto all goodnesse but also that in euery part member of our whole man we are aliue vnto all euill For thus he describeth the naturall state of all men There is none righteous no not one There is none that doth vnderstand there is none that seeketh God They haue all gone out of the way they haue been made altogether vnprofitable there is none that doth good no not one their throat is an open sepulchre they haue vsed their tongues to deceit the poison of Aspes is vnder their lips Their mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse Their feet are swift to shed bloud c. Rom. 3. 10. By these things we see that though naturall men do liue yet as it is said of the widdow that liueth in pleasures that she is dead whiles she liueth 1. Tim. 5. 6. so it may be said of all naturall men liuing in the pleasures of sinne that they are dead whiles they so liue This our liuing vnto sinne and in sinne being dead to all goodnesse may in some sort be called a spirituall life not as spirituall is opposed to carnall but in two other respects first because it is from that vncleane spirit Mark 1. 23. 7. 25. 26 who is not only the father of lies Ioh. 8. 44. but also of all other euill secondly because all the workes of a sinfull life are performed to the same vncleane spirit Therefore the Apostle saith not only that we are naturally dead in trespasses but also that wee walked in them after the Prince that ruleth in the aire that is according to his commaundement and prescription Ephes 2. 2 Our Sauiour also saith that such sinnes are the workes and lusts of the diuell Ioh. 8. 41. 44. And as Idolaters are said to sacrifice to diuels 1. Cor. 10. 20. so all wicked men may be said to do all that they doe vnto diuels Thus we see in part the miserable and wofull state of all naturall men For what is more fearefull then death when Saul did but heare only by the father of lyes in the likenesse of Samuel and therefore the rather speaking the truth that he might the more confirme Saul in his error touching the raising of Samuel when I say Saul did but heare that the next day hee should be deliuered into the hands of the Philistines and bee slaine how did it affect him How did it strike him with feare verily so that he fell straightway all along vpon the earth and there was no strength in him yea so that neither the woman the witch that had raised vp the diuell in the likenesse of Samuel nor any of his own seruants with him could scarce fasten any comfort vpon him 1. Sam. 28. 20. c. If the very tidings of this naturall death be so fearefull how much more fearefull is that spirituall death before spoken of Hauing thus in part shewed our naturall misery by these things spoken of our spirituall deadnesse let vs now see the change that is made in vs by our incorporation into Christ in our adoption and regeneration Let vs therefore vnderstand that in our said regeneration and new birth by Iesus Christ we are deliuered from that our foresaid miserable state As before we did beare the image of the earthly man so now we beare the image of him that is from heauen heauenly that is of the Lord Christ As Christ in his diuine essence is the brightnesse of the glory of the father and the ingraued forme of his person Heb. 1. 3. so we in quality being made partaker of the diuine nature and being in Christ made new creatures and being also the workmanship of God in Christ Iesus created vnto good workes that wee should walke in them as hath been before shewed by seuerall scriptures we are by this meanes made like to Christ Iesus and consequently also to God himselfe As therefore the Apostle saith that naturally we are dead in sinnes and trespasses so hee saith in the same place that God which is rich in mercy through his great loue wherewith he loued vs euen when we were so dead by sinnes or in sinnes hath quickned vs or made vs aliue in Christ Ephe. 2. 4. 5. Where let it be obserued that the word quickned is only expressed originally in that Note fift verse and that although it be interposed by translators in the first verse for perspicuities sake as they thought yet it is rather there to be omitted and that that first verse is rather to be read with the last verse of the first chapter of Christs filling all things in all things or with all things that is with all gifts fit for euery one so that the verb filled is rather to be vnderstood in the first verse then the verb quickned and that first verse to be vnderstood as an amplification of the generall handled in the end of the former Chapter by the particular instance of the Ephesians as if he should haue said As Christ hath generally filled all things giuen vnto him by the father with all gifts fit for them so particularly he hath filled you that were by nature dead in your trespasses and sinnes and so he describeth by that occasion their naturall state vers 1. 2. 3. and then he describeth our new and spirituall state in the 4. and 5. verses by Iesus Christ But to leaue this place and to returne to the former point of Christs freeing vs from spirituall death and quickning vs and making vs aliue againe Paul saith further that Christ hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospell 2. Tim. 1. 10. which Gospell is therefore called the word of life Ioh. 6. 68. Philip. 2. 16. Our Sauiour likewise saith Verely verely I say vnto you the houre shall come and now is when the dead shall heare the voice of the sonne of God and they that heare it shall liue For as the father hath life in himselfe so likewise hath he giuen to the sonne to haue life in himselfe Ioh. 5. 25. 26. viz. to bestow life vpon all that the father hath giuen vnto him Ioh. 10. 28. 29. Euery where saith Paul againe we beare about in our bodies the
dying of our Lord Iesus that is euery where we doe in a manner die daily for Iesus his sake 1. Cor. 15. 38. But wherefore That the life of Iesus might also be made manifest in our bodies 2. Cor. 4. 10. But what meaneth he by making manifest the life of Iesus in our bodies Nothing but this that by their constant patient and cheerfull sufferings of so many things as it were so many deaths for Christs sake all men might the better see how Christ had quickned them and what great measure of spirituall life he had wrought in them So the Apostle telleth the Romanes that they were dead to sinne but aliue to God in Iesus Christ our Lord. Rom. 6. 11. Of himselfe he saith I am crucified with Christ but I liue yet not I any more but Christ liueth in me and in that that now I liue in the flesh that is in this fraile and mortall condition as the word flesh is taken Heb. 5. 7. I liue by faith in the sonne of God c Gal. 2. 20. Many other the like places to the same purpose I doe willingly for beare that I may not be too tedious By these we doe sufficiently see that being borne anew vnto God in Christ we are not still-borne as men vse to speake of children dead before birth but that we haue a spirituall life in him and by him Yet let vs vnderstand this by the way that our spirituall life by Christ Iesus is not altogether the Note same that our former spirituall death was by Adam and by our sinnes traduced from Adam For as we haue heard we were perfectly dead not halfe dead in our sinnes by Adam euen so dead that wee were altogether void of the life of God and without any remnants of the former image of God in vs. But our life renewed by Iesus Christ is not in this world perfect and without some remnant of the old Adam in vs. Therefore we are willed euery day to put off the old man Ephes 4. 2. and that we cast away all filthinesse and superfluity of malitiousnesse I am 1. 21. 1. Pet. 2. 1. as also that we put on Christ Rom. 13. 14. and the new man which after God or according to God is created vnto righteousnesse in true holinesse Ephes 4. 24. c. No man therfore hath so put off or cast off the old man but that there be still some ragges and patches remaining of him No man hath so put on the new man but that he may put him on somewhat more As no man putteth on all his apparell at once but first one thing then another so is it with putting on of Christ Iesus All our life here is but as it were the morning of the life to come to dresse vs for our mariage vnto Christ as Paul saith that he had prepared the Corinthians that is he had laboured to dresse them for one husband and to present them a pure virgin vnto Christ 2. Cor. 11. 2. Notwithstanding that which remaineth of the old man is but as I said peeces and patches For there is such a rent made in him by Christ that all remaining is but as ragges torne one from another and not sowen together and therefore such as in the end will be the more easily shaken off Though all our former sinnes doe remaine in substance in vs yet Christ hath so taken away their life from them that they are but as wounds in a dead body As Christ in his resurrection Note had some scarres remaining in his body of the wounds which he had receiued before his death and that the better to assure weake and vnbeleeuing Thomas and all other therein like to Thomas that he was the same that had been before put to death so in our regeneration to be the children of God whereby we are buried with Christ vnto his death Rom. 6. 4. Colos 2. 12. and raised vp likewise with him by his resurrection to newnesse of life Coloss 3. 1. there remaine some scarres of our old man and of those things whereby and wherein before we were dead to put vs the better in mind what we were by nature before Christ quickned vs and restored vs to life The said sinnes also so remaining touching their bodies as it were are so without life by Christs quickning of vs that they are but as dead carcases to shew what a mighty victory Christ hath gotten in vs. Furthermore the most that can be said of the sinnes remaining in the regenerated is this that being wounded to death they are mortified as quicksiluer is mortified in oyntments For as the quicksiluer in the bodily substance of it remaineth but is killed touching the life and all hurtfull power that before it had and so is made soueraigne to some healthfull vses by mixture of other things with it which also may be said of the conuerting of any other things of a venemous nature in themselues to be antidots and preseruatiues against poison by art and mixture of other things with them so the sinnes of the regenerate remaining touching their carcases are spoiled of their life and of all hurtfull power before in them and being mixt as it were with the grace of God infused in vs and communicated vnto vs by Christ in some respects partly before and partly afterward to be more spoken of are turned to our good Finally touching the life of our sinnes remaining in vs after regeneration it is no other then the life that remaineth in the body of a serpent the head whereof is crushed in pieces For though the body of such a serpent may perhaps moue a little yet it is but for a time and it can doe no harme at all This spirituall life thus hitherto spoken of is to be discerned by our spirituall breathing and by other spirituall effects thereof As the naturall life is to be discerned by naturall breathing and by other naturall effects sutable thereunto so is our spirituall life by spirituall breathing and by other spirituall effects By spirituall breathing I meane spirituall thoughts and meditations of the mind and the like motions and affections of the heart If therefore whereas naturally our minds are set altogether vpon earthly things there shall be such a change wrought in vs that they shall be as much set vpon the things that are aboue where Christ Iesus sitteth at the right hand of God Coloss 3. 1. as before they were set vpon the things here below and if we shall couet and desire and euery way affect heauenly things as much as euer we haue done earthly then shall we haue good testimony to our selues that we are borne from aboue and are the children of him that is the father of lights and of euery good and perfect gift whereas before also we loathed the Manna that came down from heauen as much as the people of Israel euen loathed that Manna that God gaue them in the wildernesse for feeding of their bodies we shall
his mercy towards them that feare him As farre as the East is from the west so far hath he remooued our sins from vs. Ps 103. 11. 12. As therefore the heauē and the earth shall neuer come together and as the East and the West shall neuer meete so the pardon of sinnes once graunted by the Lord to his children shall neuer be reuoked called backe The same is more plainly testified in the prophecy of Ieremie If the heauens can be measured or the foundations of the earth be searched on beneath then will I cast off all the seed of Israel for all that they haue done saith the Lord Ier. 31. 37. The first of these things is impossible to wit the measuring of the heauens and searching of the bottome of the earth therefore also impossible is the second viz. that the Lord should cast off his people and children for their sinnes Can a woman saith the Lord also forget her child and not haue compassion on the sonne of her wombe note that hee vseth the singular number to teach that he compareth him not to a woman that hath many children but to a woman that hath but one child and that a sonne Though they should forget yet will I not forget them Bebold I haue grauen thee vpon the palmes of my hands thy walles are euer before me or in my sight Isai 44. 15. 16. Is this only spoken of the whole body of the Church No It is also to be vnderstood of euery part and member thereof especially of them that by regeneration are indeed made the children of God as here we speake and for their sakes only and no otherwise of the body of the visible Church The same is yet further testified Isai 63. 16. Doubtlesse thou art our father Though Abraham be ignorant of vs and Israel know vs not that is though if these were liuing they would perhaps renounce vs and cast vs off as hauing transgressed their precepts and not walked in the steps of their faith yet thou O lord ●●t our father and our redeemer thy name is for euer that is hough our sinnes be great and many whereby we haue pro●oked thee and haue made our selues vnworthy to be called thy ●hildren Luk. 15. 21. yet thou hast pardoned our transgressi●n and so redeemed vs that thou wilt still continue thy mer●y towards vs. The same did Samuel teach the Israelites when they feared ●eath because of their sinne in asking a King besides all their other sinnes Feare not saith he The Lord will not forsake his people for ●●s great names sake because it hath pleased him to make you his ●●ople 1. Sam. 12. 72. If the Lord for his names sake will not for●●ke his people then for his names sake also the Lord will not euoke any pardon of sinnes once granted by him to his children regenerated What an happy state and condition therefore is this of the children of God so to haue all their great and manifold iniquities pardoned that none of them shall euer be laid to their charge as it is written Who shall lay anything to the charge of Gods chosen whom before in the same Chapter he had called Gods children It is God that iustifieth Rom. 8. 9. Therefore Iob being assured that God would so iustifie him and pardon all his sinnes triumphantly saith Who is he that will pleade with me Iob 13. 19. I might further amplifie this benefit of forgiuenesse of sinnes because the Lord therein hath passed ouer the Angells that haue forsaken their standing and vouchsafed this grace onely to his children adopted amongst men But because I haue had the like argument before therefore it shall not now be needfull to repeat the same Thus much of this point touching the forgiuenesse of sinnes proper only to the children of God and therefore also of their greater dignity thereby CHAP. XVIII Of the dying more and more of the children of God vnto sinne and of their preseruation from many great sinnes which the wicked doe daily commit and of their liuing more and more to righteousnesse NExt to the forgiuenesse of sinnes let vs further consider that as before we heard concerning the matter wherein consisteth the being of the children of God they were restored from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse so being thus altred and changed they neither go backward neither stand at a stay but doe daily die more and more vnto sinne and doe daily likewise liue more and more vnto righteousnesse And thus to proceed from the forgiuenesse of sinnes to these things is the method of the holy ghost in the scriptures For Dauid doth not only pray to be clensed from secret faults that is to haue such sinnes pardoned vnto him and therefore much more to be pardoned of his open sinnes but also that hee might bee kept from presumptuous sinnes Psal 19 12. 13. Our Sauiour also teacheth to pray not onely for forgiuenesse of sinnes but also not to bee led into tentation and to bee deliuered from euill Mat. 6. 12. 13. Therefore the Apostle Peter preacheth repentance and forgiuenes of sinnes together Acts 2. 38 Touching this present point as before we heard the children of God by their incorporation into Christ in their new birth to be reuiued again and made aliue to God in true knowledge and wisedome and in true holines and righteousnesse so now let vs vnderstand that the longer the said children of God continue so incorporated into Christ the more sap and vertue they receiue from him and that therefore that which is natural in them doth more and more decay and that that is of grace and by the new birth of the spirit doth more and more grow and encrease So it is with plantes grafted into any stocke the longer they continue in the stocke the more they are incorporated therinto and the more they thriue and grow and beare fruit First therefore for dying more and more vnto sinne or for the dying more and more of sinne in vs this phrase may seem somwhat harsh strange because in natural things that that is once dead indeed cannot properly be sayd to die any more There cannot bee a continuall dying or a dying by piece-meales but where there is a remnant of life To this I answer first that euen in naturall things that may be said to be killed that receiueth such a deadly wound that from the day of receiuing thereof it neuer thriueth or ioyeth as we speake but pineth wasteth away euery day more and more till it perish So both man and also vnreasonable creatures vpon some wounds giuen them by other creatures or taken by their owne vntulines doe many times consume vnto death it selfe So many trees being either blasted aboue or canker-eaten in the midst or hauing the strings of their rootes cut beneath do from that day wither till they bee altogether dead aboue in the midst and beneath Secondly let vs remember the comparison vsed before chap 8. of sinnes
more therefore are we forbidden the worship of dead and helplesse images Thirdly because there should be some resemblance betwixt that that putteth vs in mind of another thing and the thing it selfe whereof it putteth vs in mind But there is not so much similitude betwixt God and images as there is according to our common speech betwixt an apple and an oyster For both these are the good creatures of God they are both meat for man either of both are beyond the power of man to make But there is no agreement at all betwixt God and idols or images What fellowship hath righteousnesse with vnrighteousnesse and what communion hath light with darknes c. 2. Cor. 6. 14. c. Images haue mouthes and speake not eies and see not eares and heare not hands and handle not feet and walke not as before we heard Deut. 4. 28. Psal 15. 5. c. But God hath no eies and yet seeth all things no eares and yet heareth all things no mouth and yet speaketh vnto vs by his word no hands and yet doth and ruleth all things he hath no feet and yet is euery where Last of all for images to put vs in mind of God is derogatory to the Sacraments especially to the supper of the Lord which Christ himselfe instituted chiefly in remembrance of him That which I haue said of some of the chiefe heresies of Popery I might shew of the rest so likewise of other heresies To deale in like manner with all would be too large for this place By these things but thus briefly written other may be vnderstood And thus we see what an excellent priuiledge the children of God haue by the word of God being such an armor of proofe as we haue heard it to be for defence of themselues against all sinnes both of practise and also of iudgement Yea this priuiledge is the greater because all the wicked and meer naturall men being without this word are therfore in a wofull state altogether vnarmed naked lying open to the enemy of their soules yea being indeed in his posession as before we haue often heard For although the Apostle doe describe other parts of the christian armor yet none can haue any of those other parts except he haue the word The word is the most principall of all the rest as being the meanes as before hath been shewed of all the rest Thus much for the second consideration of the word in this place viz. as it is a speciall part of our spirituall armor to defend our selues against the enemies of our saluation CHAP. XX. Of the word as it is giuen for consolation and comfort of the children of God in their afflictions and also of the Sacraments THe third consideration of the word before mentioned yet remaining is as it is the speciallest consolation and comfort of the children of God in their afflictions This I haue reserued for this last place because it ariseth from the two former For if the word of God be so perfect as before wee heard then it must needs be a word of comfort If also it be such a speciall part of our christian armor for our defence as before also we haue seen it to be then it cannot but minister likewise great comfort vnto vs. For where a man hath many and mighty enemies there cannot but be great feare where there is great feare there cannot but be great heauinesse also Yea what almost is feare but the heauinesse of heart from the expectation of some euill So far therefore as the word doth arme vs against our enemies whom we haue most cause to feare so far it cannot but be a great comfort vnto vs. This that I speake of the comfort of the children of God by the word of God Dauid testifieth Psal 19. both saying that the statutes of the Lord are right and reioice the heart verse 8. and also adding that they are sweeter then the hony and the hony combe vers 10. But we are there to obserue these commendations to bee placed after some other attributes and effects for which in the same Psalme he had before commended the word viz. after the perfection of it and the conuersion of the soule thereby after the faithfulnesse or surenesse of it and the giuing wisedome vnto the simple c. Thereby the Prophet giueth vs to vnderstand that the word of God doth reioice and comfort the heart only of those whom first it hath inwardly conuerted or restored whom first it hath made wise vnto saluation c. Therfore also he saith againe This is my comfort in my trouble that thy promise or thy word doth quicken me Psal 119. 50. that whereas by nature I am dead in sinnes and trespasses thy word hath awakened me and restored me to life and so giuen me much comfort and againe This is my comfort that I keep thy commandement verse 56. and againe Except thy lawes had been my delight or my comfort I had long sithence perished in mine afflictions verse 92 Paul also doth not obscurely signifie the word of God to be the word of comfort when he saith that whatsoeuer things are written afore time are written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. 4. Do we not here plainly see true comfort to be called the comfort of the scriptures Another Apostle also setteth down the word for one of the two immutable things whereby we might haue strong consolation c. Heb. 6. 18. But what shall I need to stand long vpon this point For as afterward in the vses of this dignity of Gods children we shall heare this whole treatise is as well for comfort as for instruction And how shall we know that God hath so loued vs as to make vs his children but by the word How are we made the children of God but by the word How doe we vnderstand any thing else either before or after in this treatise concerning the dignitie of Gods children but by the word Yea and that all true comfort is to be had by the word our Sauiour seemeth to insinuate because his disciples being in great feare partly by a great tempest vpon the sea partly and more specially because seeing him come towards them walking vpon the sea they imagined him to be a spirit though our sauiour by his bodily eies seeing their trouble by the tempest and by his diuine nature vnderstanding their imagination of him could secretly by his said diuine nature and power haue taken all feare from them and comforted them yet he did rather comfort them by his word and speech Note saying vnto them Be of good comfort it is I bee not afraid Matth. 14. 27. Wherefore did hee thus rather then otherwise comfort them Euen the better to sanctifie and commend the word for the word of comfort for euer to his disciples and to all other in any feare or heauinesse that so all might alwaies seek comfort at
better manifestation of the glorie of God by his miraculous raising againe after buriall and after death and buriall diuers daies So our Sauiour saith to his disciples before hee was dead This sicknesse is not vnto death viz. to lie or continue in death till the generall resurrection but for the glory of God that the sonne of God might be glorified thereby Ioh. 11. 4. So he said after he was dead and buried vnto Martha who obiected that he had been dead foure daies Said I not vnto thee that if thou didst beleeue thou shouldst see the glory of God vers 40. Fourthly the godly are sometimes taken away by an extraordinary kind of death not onlie to teach other the more to take heede of all such sinnes as for which they are so taken away but also to admonish men not alwaies to iudge other by their end except their life haue also been wicked but rather to hope well of them if their former life haue been godly albeit their end be somewhat vncomfortable Finally to make an end of my answer to the former obiection touching the afflictions of the children of God sith all afflictions are threatned only to the wicked as all blessings are promised only to the godly though the troubles of the righteous be great yet the Lord deliuereth him out of all Yea though they continue long yet the Lord keepeth all his bones not one of them shall be broken whereas the afflictions of the wicked shall slaie them and they that hate the righteous shall perish Psal 34. 19. 20. 21. Therefore Salomon admonisheth the wicked not to lay waite at the house of the righteous because though the iust man fall seuen times yet he riseth again that is though he haue many afflictions be now vp now presently down yet at the last the Lord deliuereth him out of all but the wicked doe fall into mischiefe or do perish and be vtterly at the last ouerthrowne in their misery Pro. 24. 15. 16. Yea though they crie yet there shall be none to saue yea though they cry vnto the Lord yet he shall not answer them Psal 18. 41. Of both these viz. of the deliuerance of the children of God out of their troubles and of the perishing of the wicked in theirs wee haue mentioned diuers examples before not needfull now to be repeated Though also the Lord do suffer the afflictions of his children to continue yet in the end he will most gratiously deliuer them by death and translate them to himselfe where they shall rest from their labor and where they shall reap the fruit of all their workes Reuel 14 13. of the which rest and other reward of their workes all the afflictions of this life are not to be accounted worthy Rom 8. 18. Yea in respect of which most excellent and eternall weight of glorie all affliction here is but exceeding light and momentany 2. Cor. 4. 17. But of this more afterward In the meane time the Lord will either mitigate the said afflictions of his children or shew his power in their weaknesse not laying more vpon them then he giueth strength to beare neither suffering them to be tempted aboue their strength 1. Cor. 10. 13. The Lord knoweth to deliuer the godly out of tentation and to reserue the vniust vnto the day of iudgment vnder punishment or to be punished 2. Pet. 2. 9. Are not these things singular priuileges Are they not excellent dignities To haue the right of all the blessings of this life and to haue the very afflictions of this life made so many waies beneficiall so that the children of God may not only say that light is sowen for the righteous and ioy for the vpright in heart Psal 97. 11. but also that vnto the righteous ariseth light in darknesse it selfe Psal 112. 4. But is this all that may be said touching the blessings of this life and the afflictions thereof in respect of the children of God No we may further adde both of such blessings and of such afflictions and also of all other things that we that are the children of God do not vncertainly hope but fully and most certainly know that all things work together for the good of them that loue God Rom. 8. 28. What all things yea all things youth as well as age weaknesse as well as strength trouble as well as peace sicknesse as well as health pouerty as well as wealth the single state as well as the married disgrace as well as credit contempt as well as honor low degree as well as high imprisonment as well as walking at large bondage as well as freedome losses as well as gaine barrennesse of the body as well as fruitfulnesse a troublesome wife as well as a comfortable wife wicked and rebellious children as well as good and dutifull death of father mother brother sister husband wife children and other friends as well as the life and long continuance of them trauelling abroad as well as keeping at home banishment as well as abiding in our owne country the hatred and displeasure of men euen of the mighty men of the world as well as their loue and friendship dangers as well as safety foule or cold weather as well as faire and hot weather to conclude death as well as life and any one thing els as well as another All this is so to be vnderstood that wee may admire the wisedome of God in turning all things to good to them that loue Note him and that we acknowledge the state and condition of such to be the more honorable and happy not that therefore we make choice of one thing as well as of another but that we direct our choice according to his reuealed will and yet to be content with whatsoeuer the Lord shall doe and to possesse our soules in patience as knowing that howsoeuer things fall out a while yet at the last the end will be good for vs. But this being a matter of good moment it shall not be lost labor to insist somewhat more vpon it and to make it more plaine that all men may the better see that all things worke indeed to the good of them that loue God that is of his children because we haue heard before that they only do loue him and that all the wicked are often said to be enemies and haters of him This therefore is manifest first because God is with al them that loue him as hath been before declared If God bee with them who can be against them Rom. 8. 31. or what skilleth it who or what is against them They may then say as Elisha said 2. Kings 6. 16. and as Hezekiah did 2. Chron. 32. 7. They that be with vs are more then they that be against vs. God is greater then all Ioh. 10. 29. viz. not only in power but also in wisedome and goodnesse as before also hath been shewed Whatsoeuer he will in heauen or in earth that he doth Psal 135. 6. He will not
vnruly They comfort the feeble minded they be are with the weake they be patient towards all men they doe not recompence euill for euill to any man but euer follow that which is good both towards themselues and towards others 2. Thess 5. 14. 15. They exhort one another daily whiles it is called to day lest any should be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne and so depart from the liuing God Heb. 3. 12. They consider one another to prouoke or whet to loue and to good workes they forsake not the fellowship that they haue one with another in the exercises of religion Heb. 10. 24. They are mercifull and lend they distribute and giue to the poore Psal 112. 5. They doe good and be rich in good workes ready to distribute and communicate 1. Tim. 6. 18. They are iust and giue to euery man his right owing nothing to any man but loue Rom. 13. 8. If in the time of their ignorance and their vnregenerate state or afterward through the corruption of nature they haue taken or gotten any thing vniustly being conuerted and knowing the wrong they haue done they will willingly make restitution with recompence also for their wrong So did Samuel offer to doe if any man could haue charged him rustly with doing wrong to any 1. Sam. 12. 3. So did Zaccheus Luk 19. 8. They comfort the afflicted they strengthen the weake ● they raise vp them that are fallen by the spirit of meeknesse considering themselues lest they also be tempted Gal 6. 1. That which Iob saith of himselfe that he was etes to the blinde and feet to the lame c. Iob 31. 16. they likewise put in practise towards others in the like necessitie Yea howsoeuer the wicked hate and abhorre the children of God yet they also haue great benefits by them They fare the better for them euery day they rise and the godly are the fairest flowers of the garland of the wicked They escape many outward iudgements and enioy the like mercies by their meanes This is plaine not onely by the words of Ioash King of Israel touching Elisha neither by the example of Laban that confessed himselfe to haue fared much the better by Iacob and of Potiphar who saw that God blessed him for Iosephs sake but also by diuers other examples The whole world escaped drowning so long as Noah was among them Fire and brimstone came not from heauen vpon Sodome and Gomorrha all the while that Lot was in their Cities For Pauls sake all that were in the ship in great danger were preserued and safely set on land though the ship it selfe were broken in peeces Acts 27. 14. The like may bee said of diuers other As before wee heard that sometime the wicked are kept from sinnes by meanes of the godly so also they are sometime prouoked to doe that good by them which otherwise they would not doe Did not Saul many good things in suppressing of the Witches c. by the meanes of Samuel which otherwise hee would not haue done Did not Ioash King of Iuda most worthily repaire the house of the Lord and otherwise doe that which was vpright in the eies of the Lord all the daies of Iehoiadah the Priest who notwithstanding as soone as Iehoiadah was dead hearkned to the flatteries of the Princes of Iudah and fell so greeuously that hee commanded Zachariah the sonne of the foresaid Iehoiadah to bee stoned to death onely for rebuking him by the word of God for his sinnes and exhorting him and the rest of the people to repentance 2. Chron 24. 2. and vers 17. 18. 19. Is not Herod said to haue done many things by meanes of Iohn Baptist Mark 6. 10. Neither onely doe the children of God much good generally to the wicked but euen particularly also to them that are their enemies according to Gods Commandement in that behalfe doing well to them that hate them and praying for them that persecute them and bate them Lu● 6. 27. If also they that hate them bee hungry they giue them bread to eat if they bee thirstie they giue them water to ●rinke Prou. 25. 21. Rom. 12. 20. And all this they doe as they are the children of God and that they may declare themselues so to bee Matt. 5. 45. As our Sauiour the naturall sonne of God healed the high Priests seruants ●are that Peter had with his sword strucken off Luk 22. 51. and praied for them that did crucifie him Luk. 23. 34. So Stephen one of Gods children by adoption praied for them that stoned him to death that God would not lay that great sinne to their charge Act. 7. 60. So Mela a certaine Bishop of Rhinocurum set the best and dainti●st fare hee had before them that were sent to kill him Sozomen Lib. 6. Cap. 31. Polyearpus did the like to them that were sent to apprehend him Euseb Eccles Hist. Lib. 4. Cap. 15. Yea the children of God doe good not onely to the liuing but also to the dead not by praying for them whereby they should dishonour God and doe them no good as before hath beene shewed but otherwise and that both to their friends and also to their enemies So Naomi commended Booz for not ceasing to doe good to the liuing and to the dead Ruth 2. 10. because hee had shewed great kindnesse vnto Ruth her selfe for her husbands sake that then was dead So Dauid shewed kindnesse to Mephibosheth the sonne of his ancient faithfull friend Ionathan for Ionathans sake that was dead 2. Sam. 9. 7. and commanded also Salomon his son to shew kindnes to the sons of Barzilla● the Gileadite then dead because Barzillai whilest hee liued had shewed kindnesse vnto him 1 King 2. 7. The same Dauid also put the Amalekite to death that had brought him tidings of the death of Saul and that had told him that hee had quite killed him being halfe dead before 2. Sam. 1. 13. Then hee made likewise a most excellent mournfull song in commendation of the good things that had beene in Saul whiles hee l●ued verse 19. Afterward also hee sent messengers vnto Iabesh Gilead with great thankes as it were to them and most high commendation of them as men blessed of the Lord or whom hee praied to bee blessed of the Lord because they had shewed kindnesse to their Lord Saul and had buried him 2. Sam 2. 5. Yet who knoweth not how mortall an enemi● Saul had been vnto Dauid Neither do the children of God themselues onely good to their enemies liuing or dead but they sometime cause the very wicked that are wholly set v●on reuenge to shew kindnesse to their enemies For when Elisha had brought the armie of the Aramites that had beene sent to fetch him into the midst of Samaria so that they were in the hands of the King of Israel and when the King of Israels fingers itched against them so that hee said to Elisha My father shall I smite them shall I smite them this repetition
the snow euen so white as no fuller can make vpon the earth Mark 9. 3. but Moses also and Elias appeared and were talking with him both which likewise are said to haue appeared in glory Luk 9. 31. For that they appeared not in soule only but also in body it is cleere first by that that they were visibly seene of those Apostles Secondly because it is further said that they talked with Christ Thirdly because Luke also expresly calleth them by the name not of two spirits but of two men This our likenesse also vnto Christ Christ himselfe promiseth to those few names in Sardi which had not defiled their garments saying of them that they should walke with him in white Reuel 4. 34. What is it to be clothed in white and to walke in white with Christ but in glory to be made like vnto Christ who before in his transfiguration had shewed himselfe in white And by this colour of white is the glory of Christ and of Gods children rather described then by any other colour because Princes and great potentates of the earth when they would shew themselues in their greatest pompe and glory did vse to cloath themselues in white yea so did our late most renowned Queene oftentime at the entertainment of some great Embassadors and other great solemnities This our likenes likewise vnto Christ is further promised in the same chapter verse 21. to euery one that ouer commeth namely in these words that to such Christ will giue to sit yea to sit with him in his throne What more as himselfe sitteth in the throne of his Father So then as Christ is in glory like to his Father so shall the children of God also be like vnto Christ This point of our likenesse vnto Christ is a most sweet and heauenly point so full of comfort that it is able to comfort vs though neuer so much compassed with sorrowes and loaden with griefes It is able to recouer vs though neuer so sicke of sinne It is able to reuiue and restore vs though not only halfe dead but also altogether dead in sinnes and trespasses It is much that wee shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and as the starres for euer Dan. 12. as also that we shall shine as the Sunne it selfe in the kingdome of our Father Mat. 13. 34. It is more that we shall be like to the Angels of God in heauen Mat. 22. 30. of whose great glory we haue heard before Who therfore can expresse or conceiue this that is here spoken that we shall be like vnto Christ himselfe For what is the brightnes of the firmament what is the glistering of the starres what is the light of the Sunne in the greatest and cleerest height thereof what is the glory of the Angels in respect of Christ Iesus When he was in the shape of a seruant he taught with such power and authority that all that heard him were astonied at his doctrine Mat. 7. 28. 29. and wondred at the gratious words that proceeded out of his mouth Luk 4. 22. Yea the very officers of the high Priests and Pharisies that were sent to take him being rauished with his words returned without him and being asked why they had not brought him they answered Neuer man spake like this man Iohn 7. 32. 45. Afterward also his aduersaries that came out to apprehend him with one word of his mouth were turned backe and fell to the ground Ioh. 18. 6. I omit heere the amplification of this point by the glory of Moses his face comming from receiuing the law which Moses was but a seruant as also by the rauishment of Peter Iames and Iohn with the transfiguration of Christ in the mount to giue them a tast of his glory These things I say I do omit as hauing spoken of them before Neither also is it to any great purpose to compare the glory of Christ with the glory of the Monarchs of the world and so thereby to amplifie our glory in regard that we shall be like vnto Christ For alas all the glory of earthly Princes is not so much as a picture or a shadow of the glory of Christ who is the first begotten of the dead the Prince of the kings of the earth Reu. 1. 5. and who walketh in middes of the seuen candlestickes is cloathed with a garment downe to the feete and girded about the pappes with a golden girdle whose head and haire are white as white as wooll and as snowe and his eies as a flame of fire and his feete like vnto fi●e brasse burning as in a fornace and his voice as the sound of many waters hauing in his right hand seuen starres and a sharpe two-edged sword going out of his mouth and whose face shineth as the Sunne in his strength Reuel 1. 13. c. To whom also being newlie borne certaine wise men did not only come out of the East but also fell downe and worshipped him opening their treasures and presenting vnto him gifts of gold and incense and myrrhe Mat. 2. 1. and 11. Yea who is so excellent that not only a multitude of heauenly souldiers sang at his birth though he were borne in a stable and laid in a manger Glory to God in the high heauens and peace in earth and towards men good will Luke 2. 14. but also that afterward the foure and twenty Elders did sing vnto him a new song saying Thou art worthy to take the booke viz. which before Iohn had seene in the right hand of him that sate vpon the throne written within and on the backeside sealed with seauen seales and which none in heauen and in earth or vnder the earth was worthie to open and to open the seales thereof because thou wast killed and hast redeemed vs to God by thy bloud out of euerie kindred and tongue and people and nation and hast made vs vnto our God Kings and Priests c. Reuelat. 5. 9. 10. Yea whose excellencie and glorie and worthinesse is such that not only they did so sing but that also Iohn did heare many other Angels round about the throne c. euen thousand thousands to sing with a loud voice saying Worthy is the lambe that was killed to receiue power and riches and wisedome and strength and honor and glory and praise Yea concerning whom also he heard all creatures in heauen on earth and vnder the earth and in the sea c. saying Praise and honor and glory and power be vnto him that sitteth vpon the throne and vnto the Lambe for euermore verse 11. c. If Christ himselfe be thus excellent shall not we also be excellent that shall be like vnto him Why then should we be dismaied why should we feare why should any affliction any disgrace with men any threatning of men any pouerty any banishment any imprisonment any losses or any other calamities make vs to hang down our head yea why should any thing take away our ioy from vs why should we
would haue the yonger women to be chast Tit. 2. 5. Notwithstanding by the figure synecdoche that putteth the speciall for the general this word is vsed for all vertues and in this very place here is not only the verbe but also the primitiue whereof it is deriued in the words following as he is pure which being spoken of Christ noteth all the vertues that were in him euen his perfect holinesse and righteousnesse without any sinne at all This verbe in the generall signification thereof is borrowed as now it is vsed from the manner of the law for purifying themselues according to the ceremonies of the law either after they had any waies defiled themselues or before they were to come to the passeouer or to be imploied in any other holy worke So it is vsed Iohn 11. 55. Acts 21. 24. and 24. 18. The law being abrogated when the Apostle wrote this it cannot be taken for any ceremoniall purging but for a morall purging from sinne So also it is taken Iames 48. Clense your hands ye sinners and purge your hearts ye wauering minded men So also 1. Pet. 1. 22. Seeing your soules are purified in obeying the truth This word therefore in this signification of it noteth all sinne to be a filthy thing and not only adultery fornication and other such bodily vncleannes which euery man accounteth filthy to be filthy but euery other sinne also The wicked do account of some sinnes as speciall ornaments Pride is vnto them as a cbaine and cruelty as a garment Psal 73. 6. So we see that many in these daies thinke themselues the trimmer and the gaier for going in strange apparell fet from other countries and contrary to their sexe the man wearing womans apparell especially the woman wearing mans apparrell and contrary to their kind men and women conforming themselues rather to beasts then to any sobrietie and the men wearing long haire euen long locks behind contrary to nature and not only like to women but also like to some vnreasonable creatures and women wearing such kindes of periwigs that if a man should come out of the land of the liuing where he had not seene any such thing hee would hardly know what kind of creatures they bee but would take them to be some strange monsters only bred in this country These things haue beene proued before to be condemned in the word and to be greeuous sinnes yet in these things diuers take a great pride esteeming of them as of goodly ornaments yea so farre are some gone in impiety that they thinke it a great ornament ●o sweare great and fearefull othes and that they doe not account of him for a gentleman but rather for a clowne and a foole that cannot and doth not ordinarily in his common speech most wickedly and prophanely rap out all manner of othes The like doe some account of that foule and more then beastly sinne of drunkennesse But howsoeuer these and other the like sinnes be accounted as ornaments yet the holy Ghost doth account them as foule things and doth often call all sinne by the name of filthinesse 2. Cor. 7. 1. Iames 1. 21. or of uncleannesse Rom 1. 24. and 6. 19. 2. pet 2. 10. And it is not to be neglected that in cuery one of these places there is in the originall a seuerall word though they be all interpreted either filthinesse or vncleannesse For 2. Cor. 7. 1. is one word Ian●es 1. 21. another the primatiue whereof signifieth most properly such filthinesse as is gathered in the top of the fingers betwixt the nailes and the flesh Rom. 1. 24. and 6. 19. is another word and another in 2 Pet. 2. 10. what doth all this variety of words teach vs Truly this that such is the foulnesse and filthinesse of all sinne that no one word is sufficient to expresse or set forth the same Let men therefore please themselues as much as they will in it it is but a foule and filthy thing yea so foule filthy and lothsome that they that hauing been deliuered from it do returne againe vnto it are compared to the dog that returneth to his vemit and to the sow that being washed doth also returne to her mire againe wherin before she had wallowed 2. Pet. 2. 22. Can any thing be more lothsome then such mire and then the vomit of a dog Let no man blame me for writing so homely I vse the words and phrase of the Apostle yea it is the cloquence of most wise King Salemon Pro. 26. 11. and in both places of the holy ghost himselfe to make all sinne the more odious vnto all men But alas is it not a strange thing that many base persons should be so squaimish nice and dainty that they should condemn● that for rudenesse and thinke much to heare it spoken which that great and mighty King Salomen and God himselfe haue vsed for eloquence Is it not much more strange that men euen of the greatest sort should daily defile themselues with that and tumble and wallow in it ouer head and cares soule and body which is a thousand times more filthy and beastly then either the mire of a sow or the vomit of a dog and reproue those that set forth such filthinesse by the words of King Salomen of the Apostle and of the holy ghost Thus much touching the first respect of my obseruation of this word viz. concerning the signification thereof Touching the tence the Apostle speaketh not in the time past or in the time to come saying either he hath purged himselfe or he will purge himselfe but in the time present saying purgeth or doth purge This teacheth that this is and must be a continuall worke because sinne whereof this purging is doth alwaies remaine touching the blot stame and blemish thereof Though they that once be regenerated to be the children of God be iustisied and discharged from the guilt of all their sinnes as also freed from the bondage of them yet touching the staine of sinne that doth and shall alwaies remaine as along as we be clothed with corruption For who can say I haue made my heart cleane I am cleane from my sinne Pro. 20. 9. There is no man that sinneth not 1. Kings 8. 46. In many things we sinne all Iames 3. 2. And who needeth not daily to pray for forgiuenesse of trespasses What man also lineth and shall not see death There are certaine times of the yeere fitter for purging of the body for bodily health then other as the spring is best of all and the fall of the lease next to that So also in those times that are sit there are some daies fitter to purge either with pilles or with potions or by vomits or by clysters or by letting of bloud But for this spirituall purging of our selues from sinne all times are like all daies ahke none better then other except only when there is fitter opportunity in respect of fitter meanes as also in respect of some iudgement and
vnto Christ Iesus by adoption and incorporation into him Furthermore concerning these children of God let vs remember that before said touching their regeneration by God himselfe It is the worke of God only to make a child of God in this maner In the time of the law to speake according to the phrase of those times men might beget children to other and raise vp seed vnto other For we know that a man after mariage dying without issue Note the next of that kindred not maried before was bound to take the wife of him deceased and so to raise seed vnto him and this seed so raised was accounted the seed of the dead not of the liuing Deut. 25. 5. 6. By adultery also in these daies the children of some are accounted the children of other But certainly to raise vp such children to God as here I intreate of is the worke only of God himselfe Men and Angels cannot beget such a sonne or daughter vnto God This hath been proued by testimonies of Scripture before Notwithstanding I will now further prooue the same by the greatnesse of the sayd worke of regeneration For indeed it is the greatest of all other the personall vnion of the diuine and humane nature in the person of Christ only excepted because it containeth almost all miracles mentioned in the Gospell to haue been wrought vpon men What be those miracles The giuing sight to the blind hearing to the deafe speech to the dumb health to the sicke strength to the lame cleannesse to the leapers life to the dead and release and liberty to them that were possessed of diuels All these are wrought at once in the worke of our regeneration Wheras we were by nature spiritually blind the eyes of our mind are lightned to see the great things of God and the deepe secrets of his kingdome Whereas by nature we are spiritually deafe our hearts are opened that our eares do attend to the word of God Whereas by nature we are spiritually dumb not able to speake a good word our lips are so opened that our mouth doth shew foorth the praise of God and is able to speak of righteousnesse Whereas by nature we were spiritually sicke heart sicke sicke vnto death we are in regeneration restored to spirituall health in part and certainly assured of perfect recouery of all our spirituall infirmities at the last Whereas by nature we were spiritually lame and impotent not able to stirre hand or foot toward any thing that good is we are in regeneration made strong in time to walke about and to doe the workes of God in some measure Whereas by nature we were wholly defiled from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot with a most noysome spirituall leprosie ten thousand times more infectious and dangerous then any bodily leprosie we are in regeneration clensed thereof and made as whole as we say as a roch yea wheras by nature we were dead in our sinnes we are in regeneration raised vp to the life of God Finally whereas by nature wee were possessed spiritually of the diuell yea touching both our soules and bodies in his thraldome not able to doe any thing but what he would haue vs to doe and doing that with all delight we are in regeneration released of this bondage and made the freemen of God himselfe Are not all these great things How did men admire the least such miracle wrought vpon the bodies of men Since the world began saith the blind man restored to bodily sight it was not heard that any man opened the eyes of one that was borne blind Ioh. 9. 32. How great then and how wonderfull is the worke of all the former miracles at one instant wrought Verily farre greater vpon the inner man and being spiritually wrought then all the former outwardly wrought vpon the outward man yea all the former are the greater because by working of them in our regeneration we are in a moment aduanced from hell to heauen it selfe The disciples which Iohn sent vnto Christ to know whether he were the Messias or no or whether they should looke for another were returned by Christ to Iohn with this message Goe and shew Iohn what things ye heare and see The blind receiue sight the halt doe goe and the leapers are cleansed and the deafe heare the dead are raised vp and lastly he addeth as the greatest of all the poore receiue the Gospell Mat. 11. 4. 5. How did the poore receiue the Gospell viz. to their regeneration of being the children of God And that the meaning of our Sauiour by setting this in the last place was to commend it as the greatest it appeareth because in the place next before that he had mentioned the greatest of all the former For who will deny the raising vp of the dead to be greater then making the blind to see the halt to goe the leapers to be cleane or the deafe to heare The proofe of all these particular miracles to be wrought in our regeneration wee shall heare afterward In the meane time hereby it is most euident that the worke of our regeneration is the worke only of God For God only worketh all miracles Blessed be the Lord God euen the God of Israel which only doth wondrous things Psal 72. 18. Thou artgreat and dost wondrous things thou art God alone Psa 86. 10. So the Prophet proueth God to be God alone by the effect of doing wondrous things Praise ye the Lord of Lords for his mercy endureth for euer which only doth great wonders Psal 136. 3. 4. Darius an Heathen could acknowledge the working of signes and wonders in heauen and in earth as a thing belonging to God only Dan. 6. 27. And indeed if the working of miracles did not belong to God only it had beene no good argument of our Sauiour to returne the messengers of Iohn with report of his miracles for demonstration of himselfe to be the Messias which should come and no other to be looked for If any that is learned desire further handling of this generall point I referre him to Beza against Holderus in pages 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. c. To returne to the former matter the worke of our regeneration is not only a miracle and the greatest miracle of all other except only before excepted but it is also as great as the creation of man at the first For therefore it is called by the very name of a creation If any man be in Christ let him bee a new creature 2. Cor. 5. 17. In Christ Iesus neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but a new creature Galat. 6. 15. We are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. Our new man also is said to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 4. 24. Neither is our regeneration as great only as the first creation of man but also greater yea then the first creation of all things This is manifest by these reasons 1. Because
is to be obserued viz. that he saith not but one foole destroieth Note much good but that he saith but one sinner destroieth much good so he sheweth his meaning by wisedome to be such wisedome as whereby men take heed of sinne and that according to my former writing all sinners are fooles whereunto it accordeth that Dauid saith not The wicked man or the sinner but The foole hath said in his heart there is no God Psal 14. 1. and 53. 1. by the foole meaning the sinner and the wicked man Againe what was it that first deceiued our first mother Eue was it not a false hope of further knowledge doth not this therefore shew that knowledge is a thing much to be desired and that true knowledge is highly to be esteemed Doth not Paul professe that he accounted all things losse yea as very dung euen a● the dung that is in the inwards of beasts so the word signifieth in respect of the excellent knowledge of Christ his Lord Philip. 3. 78. All these things doe plainly shew the great dignity of the children of God in respect of the said knowledge and wisedome as wherein as well as in other things consisteth the very matter as it were of their so being the children of God CHAP. XI Of some other branches of the former life of God in all new borne viz. of holinesse and righteousnesse both generally and also in someparticulars LET vs now proceede to some other points both of the life of God before mentioned and also consequently of the further matter of our regeneration and new birth that is of other things wherein our said new birth and regeneration doth consist and that according to our former method in this point viz. of opposition of contraries Here therefore let vs remember that before said namely that euen when men are dead in their sinnes and vtterly voide of the life of God before handled then they are aliue vnto sinne Being so aliue vnto sinne they are likewise seruants not only thereunto but also to satan himselfe For to whomsoeuer we giue our selues as seruants to obey his seruants we are Rom. 6. 16. Iob. 8. 34. 2. Pet. 2. 19. This seruice is the greatest slauery and bondage of all other far greater then the bondage of the Israelites in the house of bondage in the land of Egypt because that was with such feeling that it wrought great heauinesse in them and many praiers and earnest desires to be released thereof But this bondage is such by the meanes of spirituall death that there is no sense at all either of the heauinesse of sinne as hath been before shewed or of the bitternesse thereof yea though for bitternesse no wormewood nor gall be comparable to it yet they thinke it as sweet as hony and the hony combe yea such delight and pleasure doe they take therein that they commit the same with greedinesse Eph. 4. 19. Therefore being offered liberty with most gracious conditions they will by no meanes accept thereof Fearefull therefore in this behalfe is the estate and condition of all men by nature yea hereby also doth that the better appeare which before I handled concerning the naturall foolishnesse and madnesse of men For who but fooles and mad men could beare such burdens as sinnes are without sense and feeling As therefore the very Philosophers accounted such sottish and senselesse persons for seruants by nature so this seruile and slauish condition of all men by nature is the more fitly handled in this place next to that before of the foolishnesse and madnesse of all naturall men because it is an effect or at least a consequent thereof But what is the state of men by Iesus Christ in their regeneration Truly a most sweet and gratious liberty and freedome For as Christ is made wisedome and righteousnesse so also is he made redemption vnto vs. 1. Cor. 1. 30. and often doe we read that Christ hath redeemed vs. Tit. 2. 14. Galat. 3. 13. 1. Pet. 1. 19. and often elsewhere Our Sauiour himselfe saith that If men did continue in his word then they should shew themselues to be his disciples indeed and they should know the truth and the truth should make them free Ioh. 8. 32. and againe If the sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed vers 36. He meaneth in this place freedome from the yoke bondage and extreme slauery of sinne When Peter had answered our Sauiour that Princes tooke toll or custome of strangers our Sauiour replieth then are the children free Mat. 17. 26. That which our Sauiour speaketh in that case may be much more vnderstood in this whereof now we speake because we speake of the children of God What Prince of power to deliuer will suffer his subiects especially his children to be in bondage and captiuity How then can it be that God being of all power should suffer his children to be in bondage especially so great a bondage as the bondage of sinne Notwithstanding being freed from the seruitude of sinne we are made the seruants of righteousnesse Rom. 6. 18. But this seruice is perfect freedome When any child especially the sonne of a Prince hauing been in captiuity to some enemies is freed from the said captiuity doth he account it any bondage to serue his Father and soueraigne No it is his liberty and great honor that he may serue him When men therefore are freed from the bondage of sinne and Satan how great is their liberty how vnspeakable is their honour to serue their heauenly father the king of kings It is not possible to serue God in holinesse and righteousnesse till first we be deliuered from our enemies Luk. 1. 74. 75. As a man loaden with many fetters and irons cannot in any thing serue his Prince till his said fetters and irons be knocked off so no man can serue God except first he be discharged from the bolts and fetters of sinne ten thousand times more heauy then any irons Therefore Paul saith in the place before alledged that Christ gaue himselfe for vs first that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity secondly that he might purge vs and thirdly to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes T it 2. 14. We cannot therefore be zealous of good works except first we be redeemed from the guilt of all iniquity and purged from the blemish and freed from the bondage thereof This our freedome likewise and liberty is signified by that which before was alleged that he that is borne of God sinneth not neither can sinne because the seed of God abideth in him 1. Ioh. 3. 8. that is sinne hath not dominion ouer him as before it had neither can haue because being once freed he shall neuer returne into the bondage thereof neither doth hee sinne with delight therein so far foorth as hee is regenerated and borne of God That sinne wherewith at any time he is ouertaken is but a suddain passion of the old man remaining in
once mortified vnto the carcases of men slaine in warre As therefore carcases of men so slaine must be remoued and buried or else they will bee very infectious to them that liue where such dead carcases lye euen so the dead carcases of our sins mortified in vs must be more and more remoued and as it were daily buried that so they may not bee infectious to the vertues that are aliue in vs. And this remoouing or burying of the dead carcases of our sinnes before mortified and slaine by the sword of Gods spirit accompanied with the rest of the spirituall armour is a kind of daily killing sinne more and more Wheras likewise before in the said 8 chapter I compared the remnants of sinne in vs to old rags or patches of an old coate vpon a newe to the disgrace of the said new coate the casting shaking off of such sins remaining that so they may not be disgracefull to the new man which we haue put on in our regeneration is putting off more and more of the old man and therfore also a killing likewise or mortifying of sin more and more in vs. For to put off the old mā or to mortify crucifie sin wherin consisteth the old man do both signify one thing To proceede therefore further in this point as the children of God are commanded thus to put off the old man daily and thus to mortifie and crucifie the same and al earthly members thereof Ephes 4 22. Col. 3. 5. c so the same commandements do imply a promise of a blessing viz. of strength and grace for performance of that which is commanded especially such commandements being not only legal but also euangelicall The legall and the euangelicall commandements teach one Note thing touching the eschewing of euill and doing of good For euen the grace of God that is the gospell which bringeth saluation to all men hauing appeared that is in most bright and glorious maner broken foorth through the clouds of the ceremonies and of the law of ordinances wherewith before it was obscured doth teach vs as it were little children to deny all vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue godly and righteously and soberly in this present world Tit. 2. 11. 12. The same things the law also did teach But there is a great difference betwixt the teaching of these things by the law and by the gospell For the law teacheth onely demostratiuely and imperatiuely shewing vs what we should do commanding vs to do it but the gospell teacheth operatiuely and effectiuely giuing grace to perform that which it teacheth and therfore as the law going no further then to shew and command vs what to doe is called the letter that killeth as a man that requires much and giueth not wherewith to do it doth as it were kill the heart of him of whom he requireth such things so the Gospell quickning and enabling a man to do that which it requireth is therefore called a quickning spirit 2. Cor. 36. To returne to the former point the old man being thus daily mortified and crucified in the children of God they haue thereby a further priuilege for their better preseruation from presumptuous and reprochfull sinnes so that either they fall not into them or if they doe it is for some speciall good intended by God permitting them so to fall and in the end they are raised vp againe and made so much the stronger afterward by how much the weaker they shewed themselues in their fall and so much the more circumspect and fearefull of falling againe in like manner by how much the more secure and fearlesse they had been and lastly so much the more zealous of and forward vnto euery good work by how much the more grieuously they had before fallen into euill And this is partly the meaning of the Apostle Iohn when he saith that he that abideth in him that is in Christ sinneth not 1. Ioh. 3. 6. and againe that he that is borne of God sinneth not for his seed remaineth in him neither can be sinne because bee is borne of God vers 9. For these speeches signifie that they that are in Christ and regenerated are not only so freed from sinne that it doth not raigne and beare dominion in them generally as before their regeneration and incorporation into Christ it did but that also they make not a trade of any one sinne but that they so watch ouer themselues and are watched ouer by the Lord that they fall not into such reprochfull and disgracefull sinnes as the naturall and vnregenerate men doe daily commit This is more plentifully taught by the Apostle Paul For it is the chiefe argument of all the first fourteen verses of the sixt Chapter to the Romans It is also further euident by the example of Isaack For though the Lord before the birth of Iacob and Esau had expresly said that the elder should serue the yonger Genes 25. 23. And although Esau had most wickedly and prophanely sold his birthright vnto Iacob verse 33. and Heb. 12. 16. yet Isack had fully purposed to haue bestowed the blessing vpon Esau Had not this been a matter of great reproch For such a patriark so to haue crossed the former word of the Lord touching the blessing of Iacob well notwithstanding the purpose of Isack yet the Lord by the wisedome of Rebecca crossed him kept him from that sinne and directed him to bestow the blessing according to his former word The most of the brethren of Ioseph hauing fully and most vnnaturally and wickedly determined to haue murdered him for his dreames and for his accusing them to their father were notwithstanding by the counsell of Reuben kept from that fearefull sinne and so they sold him by the aduice of Iudah which afterward turned not onely to the great aduancement of Ioseph according to his former dreames but also to the preseruation of themselues and of their father and of all their families in the time of famine and to the accomplishment of the former word of God touching their soiourning in the land of Egypt Genes 37. 8 c. Dauid hauing through the reliques of the old man in him both fully intended and also earnestly protested the vtter destruction of the house of Nabal at least of Nabal himselfe and all the males appertaining vnto him by the gracious prouidence notwithstanding of God in sending Abigail to counsell and perswade him to the contrary was kept and restrained from the execution of that cruell and bloudy purpose 1. Sam. 25. 32 c. By all these examples as we see the speciall priuilege of the children of God in being kept from such hainous sinnes so by the two former examples we see also that God turneth such sinnes as wherinto the righteous of infirmity doe fall to their great good The same point viz. the preseruing of the children of God from many great sinnes is also cleere by daily experience of these things that before wee spake
peace for thou Lord makest me dwell in safety Psal 4. 8. this peace of the children of God is not only common to them all neither only proper to them alone neither only alwaies in them euen in all troubles and in death it selfe in manner notwithstanding and with the exceptions before expressed but it is also accompanied with great ioy of the holy ghost and such as none of the wicked doe enioy though they be kings and Princes or otherwise abounding in all prosperity Indeed commonly the state of the children of God is accounted the most lumpish dumpish heauy and solitary state of all other Yea amongst many other things that do discourage men from being the children of God this is not the least that they thinke there is no ioy no mirth no gladnesse belonging to them but that if once men will frame themselues to be the children of God then they must bid farewell to all ioy and they must prepare themselues to all sadnesse and heauinesse But this is a foule and grosse error euen proceeding from the father of lies For the truth is that as the righteous and none but the righteous are often bid be glad and reioice Psal 32. 11. and 33. 1. Phil. 4 4. and elsewhere so indeed in respect of the forgiuenesse of sinnes and of the fauour of God and of all other benefits before mentioned they haue more cause to be glad and reioice then all the world besides Yea none but they haue sound cause to be glad and reioice For ioy and peace are as well as accounted fruits of the spirit as loue patience goodnesse faith gentlenesse and temperance Gal. 5. 22. and the kingdome of heauen is as well said to be in peace and ioy in the holy ghost as in righteousnesse Rom. 14. 17. in both which places this is to be obserued that the Apostie ioines peace and ioy together as I now doe euen as the cause the effect it is therefore euident that there is no sound ioy but where there is the spirit and kingdome of God The Lord speaking of the wicked and of the godly saith thus Behold my seruants shall reioice and ye shall be astonted behold my seruants shall sing for ioy of heart and ye shall cry for sorrow of heart and shall howle for vexation of mind Isai 65. 13. 14. Before likewise the Lord had said by the same Prophet The redeemed of the Lord shall returne and come to Ston with proise and euerlasting ioy shall be vpon their head they shall obtaine ioy and gladnesse and sorrow and mourning shall flie away Isai 35. 10. Therefore the Apostle commendeth this peacero be the peace of God and to passe all vnderstanding Phil. 4. 7. first because no humane vnderstanding can sufficiently comprehend it Secondly because no humane vnderstanding can prize or value it according to the worth thereof Salomon also speaking of a good conscience which is only to be found in the children of God saith that it is a continuall feast Pro. 15. 15. because it bringeth that ioy before spoken of and maketh men alwaies as merry as if they were at a greatfeast alwaies I say and not somtimes only doth a good conscience make a man merry viz. not only in abundance of other things and in prosperity but also in want and penury vea vnder many greatand heauy afflictions For so the Apostle testifieth of them to whom he did write that being by the rich mercy of God begotten againe to a liuely hope of that excellent inheritāce wherof before wespake they didreioice although by many afflictions they were in heauinesse 1. Pet. 1. 6. yea afterward he describeth their sound ioy by two notable attributes vnspeakable and glorious vers 8. As these christians did so reioice so the Apostle Paul though continually vnder great and heauy afflictions and persecutions Acts 20. 23. 2. Cor. 11. 23. yet he testifieth that the testimony of his conscience was his reioicing 2. Cor. 1. 12. Therefore often elsewhere he professeth that he was so far from being ashamed of his crosses and manifold troubles that he did rather reioice and glory in them and so we see indeed that he and Stlas being in prison did not mourne and weep but sang Psalmes euen at midnight Acts 16. 25. The like ioy we read to haue been if not in all yet diuers of the martyrs mentioned in the book of the Acts and Monuments Yea the truth is that in respect of the premises the meanest child of God that hath faith and regeneration but as a grain of mustard seed hath more sound and true matter of reioicing euen in afflictions then the greatest the richest and the mightiest monarch in all the world that hath not receiued the spirit of adoption Yea how can they reioice that haue no communion with Christ that are dead in their sinnes that are no better then fooles and madmen that are in bondage vnto sins yea vnto satan himselfe that haue no freedome in heauen neither any trade for any merchandise therof whose sins doe all remaine in the book of Gods account and that may continually feare when God will enter into iudgement with them that haue no liberty to come to God once to aske pardon of the said sinnes because they haue not faith wherein they should offer vp their praiers and without which all their praiers are abominable vnto God that haue no benefit by the word of God either for their direction or for their comfort or for their defence against the enemies of their saluation that therefore are alwaies naked and lie open to all their assaults that much lesse haue any thing to do with the sacramēts which are seales of Gods word that haue no right or interest in any blessings of this life but shall giue an account of euery thing they haue had vsed as vsurpers as thieues against whom all things work together for their euill prosperity and aduersity friends and foes their good deeds which they seem to haue done as well as their apparant euill deeds that are excluded out of the kingdome of heauen and are in the state of condemnation euen so long as they continue without the spirit of adoption condemned already what ioy I say can any haue that are in such a case though they be neuer so great neuer so rich and neuer so mighty monarchs in the world Verily as they shall if they repent not bee throwne into vtter darknesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth and where they shall be tormented for euermore with the diuell and his Angels so if they know their wofull and miserable condition they haue cause to mourne and to houle continually in this life yea more cause so to doe then the poorest man in the world good or bad because the more God doth aduance them in this world the greater shall their damnation bee in the world to come if in this life they do not glorifie God according to their said